The album gives voice to female rage in a way that finds truth in the ugliness.
The album is undeniably human in its authentic and sincere navigation of love.
For the most part, the album lives up to its title. In short: woof.
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The two performers were at turns electrifying and celebratory at their show in Los Angeles.
The airbrushed pop singer constructs a world of exaggerated femininity without drowning in irony.
The album doesn’t just feel like a return to form—it feels resurgent.
There’s a wealth of grace and unearthly beauty to be found in these glitched-out compositions.
Despite a newly chill methodology, the band still lapses into their past idiosyncrasies.
With the band’s second album, singer Emily Massey ventures outside her comfort zone.
Working with an outside producer for the first time in years, the band nudges their sound in new directions.
The album is the work of a talented MC in search of the right tonal balance.
To celebrate the release of Minogue’s Tension, we’ve ranked all 15 of the Aussie pop singer’s releases.
The album feels like it exists in a world separate to our own, but the emotions it evokes are unmistakably human.
With their third studio album, the artist expands, refines, and masters their creative vision.
The songs flit from one style or tone to the next, mirroring the mental states of the singer’s characters.
The Aussie pop singer’s latest album is fully immersed in the glory of the ’80s.
On her second album, the 20-year-old singer attempts to expand the aperture of her worldview.
The singer’s ability to pack so many gut-punches and inspired ideas into half an hour remains uncannily impactful.
It’s a serviceable enough pop effort, but much of the singer’s edges have been sanded away.
Even by the high standard of the artist’s past work, the album represents a new creative peak.
Most of the material is underdeveloped, lacking in either lyrical perspective or much in the way of sonic evolution.