The effects-laden video takes a page from Poor Things and Severance.
Fresh and inventive, Deliverance sheds light on the fact that certain troubles affect both sides of the track.
The compositional uncertainty and sometimes scruffiness of its relatively brief 11 tracks seem just slightly ungenerous.
John Mayer may have titled his sophomore disc Heavier Things, but don’t expect the album to rock you like a hurricane.
Chain Gang of Love could be the soundtrack to a murderous, perverted remake of Dirty Dancing or Grease.
First the good news: Love & Life is vintage Mary.
BT might be better off taking Beck’s lead and focus on one musical genre at a time.
Is this a metamorphosis from tween to teen? Actress to pop singer?
It’s not often that a 71-year-old is up for six awards at the MTV Video Music Awards.
The Other Side of Daybreak takes Orton’s customary mixing of folk-rock songwriting and electronic studio wizardry to a literal level.
Jeff Buckley was much more than the tragic rock god he has become.
It was inevitable really.
Waiting for My Rocket to Come is often too shameless for its own good.
Dashboard Confessional’s Chris Carrabba is, much to his chagrin, the new metrosexual poster boy for Emo-lite.
The album is weighed down by soggy, overwrought pop ballads that find Simpson repeatedly declaring her devotion to Nick Lachey.
Parts of the Process is an apt title for this greatest hits collection from British electronica/trip-hop trio Morcheeba.
Dave Gahan is a true rock n’ roll survivor.
Werner’s debut, Departure, draws on a multitude of influences that range from Zepplin to Kate Bush.
The album takes the listener on a dance-pop, electro-soul, and new wave-infused musical journey.
Teitur’s solo debut, Poetry & Aeroplanes, plays like a sonic postcard from a nomadic artist.
“Vital Pop” is a list of 50 essential pop albums. Defining the word “pop” was a task in and of itself.