We weren’t sure if Madonna could surprise us anymore. Until she did.
Tinderbox is an album of nearly limitless depth.
A Little Bit Longer is hard to envision as an album that will allow the Jonas Brothers to transcend their place in this teen-pop cycle.
You & Me is a thoroughly Walkmen-esque album, however tautological it may be to say so.
Dark Shades of Blue is richer and more dynamic, experimental, and psychedelic than Rudd’s previous releases.
Newman’s arrangements, first of all, have never seemed quite this obvious and theatrical.
With Fasciination, though, the Faint find themselves in the middle of the road.
“Everybody But Me” is such a triumphant ode to being antisocial that it makes you want to follow Li into whatever quiet corner of the bar she manages to escape to.
Score one for proponents of teaching sex ed in school.
While filled with rich textures, layered sounds, hypnotic percussion and rippling waves of noise, it ends up being more plodding than epic.
Ra Ra Riot has fashioned a gritty yet polished post-punk sound fit for a Sofia Coppola film.
Inside’s best moments go a long way toward justifying Sugarland’s high profile.
The wanderlust that led to the album’s recording is also reflected in Oberst’s songwriting, which emphasizes the appeal of a transient lifestyle.
That Lonesome Song is one of the best, purest country albums to come out of Nashville in ages.
With rare exceptions, Fleet Foxes’s lyrics suggest that they’ve been living in the backwoods watching animals.
On Fate, Dr. Dog wears their influences on their Americana rolled-up shirtsleeves no more or less blatantly than they have in the past.
Top Ranking’s hotness can’t—and shouldn’t—be downplayed.
Unlike Björk, Elsiane plays it too safe and the material doesn’t live up to the uniqueness of her voice.
A mad collage of curly-cueing rhymes, direct addresses, sly reproachments, playful chest thumping, and self-beatdowns.
None of the album’s ornamentation takes away from Mike Rosenberg’s lyrics and plaintive vocals, which remain front and center.
Delta Goodrem is already a massive star in her native Australia, and Delta marks the singer’s first bid for success in the U.S.