The album doesn’t see the rapper experimenting with his skull-rattling sound very much.
With Versions, Jesus achieves something her previous albums hadn’t: She’s created art so unobjectionable that it attains a kind of beige obscenity.
Right Thoughts, Right Words, Right Action is a swaggering disco-rock album that doesn’t overstay its welcome.
Crocodiles’s Crimes of Passion is the high-spirited sound of a band maturing.
With Slow Focus, Fuck Buttons continue to toy with notions of what an album should be.
House Playlist: M.I.A., Zero 7, Holy Ghost!, Au Revoir Simone, Glasser, Roosevelt, & Eric Sharp
“Time Drips” is a cool, deep-bass end-of-summer jam featuring Anna Lunoe.
I Hate Music stands proudly among the best of the band’s redoubtable catalogue.
House Playlist: Janelle Monáe f/ Miguel, The Weeknd f/ Drake, Nine Inch Nails, & More
The latest track to surface from the Weeknd’s Kiss Land, out September 10th, is an impeccably produced collaboration featuring longtime friendly rival Drake.
Doris confirms that one of rap’s most technically accomplished voices has also got his conceptual vision firmly in place.
It’s been a big month for the Gagasphere.
Carrier is a disarming reminder of the therapeutic power music can hold.
Despite its lofty aspirations, White Lies’ Big TV is largely formulaic.
The Icarus Line isn’t on a rescue mission, and Slave Vows sure as hell isn’t a lifeline.
Following the M. Ward-assisted “Man,” singer-songwriter Neko Case has unveiled another new song from her economically titled latest.
Slim Shady’s back with a brand new song from the soundtrack to the latest installment of the first-person shooter game Call of Duty.
Braids’s sophomore effort has a quiet, unassuming depth that far outstrips the flash of its predecessor.
Though Where You Stand, Travis’s first album in five years, doesn’t scale quite the same heights as their best work, there’s real beauty in it.
Warp & Weft, Laura Veirs’s most expansive release yet, combines resonant melodies with atmospheric anxiety.
House Playlist: Nine Inch Nails, King Krule, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, & Snow Ghosts
Listen to new music by Nine Inch Nails, Plastic Ono Band, and more.
“Applause” is a surprisingly straightforward dance-pop song, neither forward-thinking nor retro.
With its atypical song structures and abrupt shifts between bass music and gothic folk songs, A Small Murmuration is the aural equivalent of an erdogic novel.