The album sees the singer-songwriter moving in a different direction.
Billie Eilish Hit Me Hard and Soft Review: Pop’s Anti-Princess Gets Playful and Profound
The album is a world unto itself and the most fully realized version of the singer’s sound.
The folk singer imparts the wisdom she’s garnered through the years to the next generation.
The singer’s first official solo album is as captivating as it is devastating.
The album largely finds the producer confidently carving out his own identity as an electronic music innovator.
The album challenges assumptions about what pop is and offers an exciting glimpse of what it could be.
The album reflects both the singer’s dedication to the genre and his desire not to be confined by it.
Despite their short runtimes, many of the songs on the album still manage to pack a punch.
The album remains distinctive in its presentation of ‘60s revivalism filtered through ‘80s indie sensibilities.
Swift and Antonoff’s work together has, more often than not, resulted in pop magic.
If the band sticks too closely to familiar sonic territory, it is, at least, one that they’ve mastered.
To celebrate Annie Clark’s latest release, we’ve ranked all eight of the musician’s studio albums.
St. Vincent ‘All Born Screaming’ Review: A Playful and Ferocious Tribute to Art and Nature
A visceral examination of art and nature when both are pushed to the brink.
A live album that revisits its source material with even more grit and grime.
The album sustains a vibe that’s melancholic without sacrificing hooks, but its minimalism undercuts the singer’s strengths.
The band creates an undercurrent of anxiety with mismatched rhythms, drum fills, and subtle dissonance.
The effects-laden video takes a page from Poor Things and Severance.
The album gives voice to female rage in a way that finds truth in the ugliness.
We took a look back at the singer’s evolution as an artist and ranked all of her albums from worst to best.
The album mostly pushes forward in a way that jettisons its capacity for introspection.
Maggie Rogers ‘Don’t Forget Me’ Review: A Breezy, Contemplative Soundtrack for the Open Road
The album captures the freedom of hitting the open road and the dizziness of moving on.