The latest track to surface from the Weeknd’s Kiss Land, out September 10th, is an impeccably produced collaboration featuring longtime friendly rival Drake.
Following the M. Ward-assisted “Man,” singer-songwriter Neko Case has unveiled another new song from her economically titled latest.
House Playlist: Nine Inch Nails, King Krule, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, & Snow Ghosts
Listen to new music by Nine Inch Nails, Plastic Ono Band, and more.
House Playlist: PJ Harvey, Drake, Earl Sweatshirt, Jon Hopkins f/ Purity Ring, & More
Drizzy goes disco, or rather mid-aughts disco, on the latest track from his forthcoming album.
British singer-songwriter Sam Smith’s rich, soulful vocals are pitched up and down, looped, and otherwise beautifully disfigured.
House Playlist: Yuck, Earl Sweatshirt, Colette, Crystal Stilts, & Keep Shelly in Athens
Yuck has unveiled the lead single from the follow-up to their acclaimed self-titled debut.
San Francisco’s indie-rock veterans’ upcoming album, Breakup Song, is being billed as a showcase of “Cuban-flavored party-noise-energy music.”
Go figure Crystal Castles would regard syncopation as something in need of lancing.
An even softer version of the intimate “Daniel,” “Laura” could be the song that wins Bat for Lashes the audience she deserves.
Grizzly Bear has finally emerged to bring us the first cut off Veckatimest’s long-awaited and still nameless follow-up.
“She Said OK” is a hip-hop Lars and the Real Girl.
Resplendent chaos is usually the jurisdiction of Doldrums, a.k.a. Toronto producer Airick Woodhead.
Ice Choir pays tribute to Kurt Feldman’s longtime infatuation with the radio-ready new-wave bands of the ’80s and early ’90s.
“Take a Walk” exists in that rare category of catchy, danceable music.
Propulsive drums, dense synthesizers, and Emily Haines’s enticing contralto are a reminder of Metric’s refreshingly kinetic, potent side.
Is it just me or is Hamilton Leithauser beginning to sound like Chris Martin?
Liars’s “No. 1 Against the Rush” is a tight arrangement of gloomy dance music.
“Kill for Love” is, on the surface, enraptured, but more than just a little creepy.
There’s a reason the comments section of Howse’s “VBS” is littered with words like “boner” and “orgasm.”
The latest track from Nas’s forthcoming Life Is Good won’t remind anyone of Illmatic.