From Taylor Swift to The Tortured Poets Department, we’ve ranked all of the singer’s studio albums.
For the most part, the album delivers the kind of deceptively simple, fleet pop for which the band is best known.
The DJ and producer looks back on his own musical past, taking inspiration from the artists that shaped his youth.
Rihanna has released her first solo single in six years, but it’s not the return to form that fans have likely been waiting for.
The album traces a personal narrative about growing weary of casual sex and embracing love, all in the span of just half an hour.
The singer proves she’s unwilling to operate on anyone’s terms other than her own.
The band sounds reinvigorated, proving that the sonic risks of their last album were far from a dead end.
The video is a horror-comedy that, at turns, evokes Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and Alice in Wonderland.
The album is a markedly more stoic effort from a singer who, up until now, has been relentlessly upbeat.
The rapper-singer continues to triangulate sociopolitical commentary and personal identity in consistently clever ways.
The album remains the singer’s most daring effort, one which snuffs out afterglow and imprints itself like a rash on the soul.
Lil Baby’s third album plays as if ripped from the rapper’s diary, confronting trust issues and the loss of friends.
The songs click almost immediately, but they’re subtler and pricklier than a first listen would imply.
The rapper-singer’s first album in 30 years exists in its own out-of-time universe, where Brit-pop, pop-rap, and disco coexist.
For Eno, late adulthood doesn’t just bring forth new perspectives on humanity or the universe at large, but on one’s own existence as well.
Helen Ballentine’s debut offers copious moments of hushed self-reflection and aching sadness.
Paramore attracted one of the biggest crowds at ACL, putting on an electrifying set.
We took in over 100 performances across nine different stages and narrowed down the 10 best sets.
Since the rappers seem so averse to innovating their sound, perhaps a more fitting title for the album would be Culture 3.5.
The album is quaveringly beautiful and intimate, reflecting the deeply personal nature of its songs.
The album is a collection of occasionally catchy dance-floor filler, but it’s burdened with a concept that feels under-explored.