We weren’t sure if Madonna could surprise us anymore. Until she did.
Beneath its typically oblique surface, the album registers as Radiohead’s most revealing work to date.
As its anagrammatic title suggests, Ullages aims for what remains in the post-punk canon.
Pantha du Prince remains less interested in constructivist concept pieces than interlinked studies riffing on a consistent theme.
Meghan Trainor continues to peddle a myopic, commercialized brand of feminism on her new album, Thank You.
Anderson dramatically reaffirms most of our beliefs about Radiohead’s music as the prettiest soundtrack in the world to one man’s devotion to his own alienation.
The clip is a refreshing throwback to the simplicity of the choreography-driven videos of the late ’80s and early ’90s.
“In Common” boasts a pointillistic collage of electronic beats and tropicalia-infused rhythms.
Radiohead releases the first single and music video from their upcoming ninth studio album.
Drake continues to reflexively balance out this egotism by dredging up old demons and initiating new beefs.
The album’s chief strength is its fine balance of the concrete and the abstract.
After five long years, Rihanna has reunited with Calvin Harris on first single from the producer’s upcoming album.
“True Colors” is a departure for Kesha, but the lyrics’ rebellious, unapologetic spirit seem eerily prescient.
Despite its glum title, the album features crisp beats, bubbly synths, and…Debbie Gibson.
Lemonade is Beyoncé’s most lyrically and thematically coherent effort to date.
Prince’s position as a permanent backdrop never once abated, even after his Billboard chart prowess inevitably receded.
The album is an astoundingly well-realized, consistently surprising, and mostly brilliant genre-bending experiment.
The video works by representing the body as the most direct visual expression of the self.
J Dilla runs through rap commonplaces circa the turn of the millennium.
The album stands out as a network of echoes and reverberations.
Will finds Barwick more vulnerable than ever as a performer.