From Taylor Swift to The Tortured Poets Department, we’ve ranked all of the singer’s studio albums.
The album is a celebration of Lorely Rodriguez’s voice as both an artist and vocalist.
The album’s beautiful, serene instrumentation dovetails with the singer’s gutting truth-telling.
The album (re)establishes Whack as one of the most creative rappers in the game.
Musgraves burrows into her psyche and the sounds of folk music for an affecting set of songs.
The band’s musical arrangements can deftly swerve on a dime, but their lyricism falls short.
Though the album revolves around a breakup, it’s the songs about the singer’s relationship with the media that are most compelling.
There’s a sense throughout the album that the Los Angeles rapper is trying to make up for lost time.
The singer finds pleasure in the discomfort of feeling like she doesn’t belong.
The album strikes a meticulous balance of firebrand punk and intoxicating power pop.
The band can show off their softer underbelly just as skillfully as they do their fangs.
In hindsight, the band’s debut plays like an inverse of their final album.
While not always successful, the album is as forward-minded as it is captivating.
On their fifth studio album, the band mixes comedy with contemplation.
Timony’s melodies and arrangements retain a touch of the timeless and otherworldly.
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Alynda Segarra continues to ground urgent messaging in personal and vulnerable storytelling.
The girl may have no face, but she certainly has a voice.
On Still, de Casier expresses a newfound degree of doubt and romantic turmoil.
Whether or not Lopez views choosing love over all else as a cautionary tale, her lack of cynicism is admirable.
The album could have benefited from more free-flowing song structures and unconventional arrangements.
The album feels less driven by creative ingenuity or an aesthetic vision than by sheer showmanship.