The album sees the singer-songwriter moving in a different direction.
The album is obscene, blasphemous, dirty and, quite frankly, irresistible
The album is a homegrown effort that joins the producer with a flock of other Philly-bred artists including Shawn Stockman of Boyz II Men and Questlove.
Boyz II Men return with a new label and some old friends.
Generation Y likes to play dress up.
The Red Hot Chili Peppers still sound like a band of friends in a garage somewhere, conspiring for a revolution.
Cypress Hill’s Stash is a bit more impressive, with six incarnations of songs spanning eight years.
We polled journalists, DJs, and record-label folk to find out what they thought were the most important electronic albums of the 20th century.
If Will Smith were Tom Hanks then Born to Reign would be his Philadelphia.
Anastacia should keep the sloppy slow numbers to a minimum and, like a good bombastic diva-in-training, keep her eye on the dancefloor.
The problem with mainstream rock today is that it often sounds too lazy.
With his third solo outing, Wyclef Jean offers up yet another concept album.
File under: Possible One Hit Wonder with an unfortunate moniker and potential for so much more.
Let’s get one thing straight: P. Diddy did not invent the remix.
Ripe for repeat listens, the album quickly takes on its own identity.
Cookie seems like an effortless page in the evolution of Ndegeocello’s revolution.
Ah, side projects: a rock star’s oasis of songwriting freedom.
Pop music doesn’t get much more manufactured than it does on Marc Anthony’s second English-language effort.
George Lucas is obsessed with timelessness.
The Eminem Show finds its star hyper-aware of the state of hip-hop (and the world) and even more conscious of his place in it.
In case your high school coach didn’t already tell you, then Weezer will: timing is everything.