The singer has teased a new release date for the set and announced a companion album to boot.
The best way to approach The Singing Mailman Delivers is as a kind of shadow greatest hits.
Bad As Me is a brash return to form that finds Tom Waits still occupying his usual comfort zones.
Have the Beach Boys, or any of the group’s illustrious splinters, and Disney really never worked together before?
The only real argument for listening to Violence Begets Violence is as historical curio.
Nightlife could have been more appropriately titled Eyelid Movies: The Addendum.
With Tarot Classics, Surfer Blood returns in a format that perfectly complements their breezy garage-pop sound: the EP.
The album lives or dies by whether it holds true to its mellow, thoroughly evocative format.
The title track draws the dullness of the rest of Revelation Road into sharp relief.
At least Jonas and his team had the smarts to enlist producers who know how to construct solid pop songs.
Dixie Lullabies is a welcome reminder that Kentucky Headhunters are still one of the finest Southern-rock outfits around.
The majority of The Great Escape Artist is more likely to be uninvolving than outright bad.
Several years after leaving Sufjan Steven’s backing band, Shara Worden is making music that sounds more like his than ever.
Miss Little Havana makes an impression, even though you probably won’t want to wear it again.
“Rapprocher” adequately describes the jump in mood between Class Actress’s Journal of Ardency EP to her debut full-length.
Phantogram continues to evolve their sound, this time in a more straightforward pop direction.
Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming sounds much more like an M83 wannabe’s poor imitation than the real deal.
Ryan Adams goes full-on into sensitive troubadour mode on Ashes & Fire.
Next time out, Hawthorne may want to make use of Auto-Tune.
Bad Ingredients drags its relevant sense of political frustration and remarkable insight and empathy through the dirtiest of country and blues.
Aabenbaringen Over Aaskammen’s most vital resource is Casiokids’s boundless sense of playfulness.