The Leeds junglist tells a story in the wrong order, in the right way.
Don Toliver, Doja Cat, Ed Sheeran, Tate McRae, Raye, Rosé, and More Feature on ‘F1’ Soundtrack
The soundtrack accompanies the upcoming action film starring Brad Pitt.
The album is a critical reminder that rock ‘n’ roll can and often should be an audacious thing.
The track builds to a cathartic release, as the singer unpacks a years-long courtship.
The album feels like the moment Richard D. James fully embraced his own contradictions.
This is transformation by scalpel, told in songs that are defiant and unflinchingly honest.
There’s little to no mystique to the album’s stories of spiritual crisis.
The Portishead singer’s unignorable voice suggests untold generations of love and loss.
The Weeknd Drowns Himself in Sorrow in Moody Music Video for “Drive,” Starring Jenny Ortega
Directed by Trey Edward Shults, the clip is a preview of an upcoming psychological thriller.
The new track boasts a smooth, new jack swing bounce straight out of 1994.
Ken Carson ‘More Chaos’ Review: A Second Course That Trades the Fresh for the Familiar
There’s enough solid material here to ensure that the album isn’t a complete wash.
On their first album as a duo, the singers reclaim the honky-tonk music they grew up on.
The singer has announced the release of her sophomore mixtape and London residency.
The album attempts to unpack the empty spectacle of celebrity—and largely succeeds.
Miley Cyrus Drops “End of the World,” Lead Single from ‘Something Beautiful’ Visual Album
The song finds the singer pining for her lover in a pre-apocalyptic landscape.
Despite being marketed as a penetrating self-reflection, the album offers few pearls of wisdom.
Ariana Grande’s “Brighter Days Ahead” Short Film Closes the Chapter on ‘Eternal Sunshine’
The film serves as a continuation of the video for “We Can’t Be Friends (Wait for Your Love).”
The artist takes on the music industry in the star-studded video for her latest single.
The pop icon continues to redefine what it means to be an artist in the 21st century.
A range of genres is complemented by lush production and creeping dissonance.
Mike Hadreas delivers tactile poetry and self-examinations, extracting catharsis from isolation.