With their new, eleventh record ‘Ode To Joy,’ the band enters a new genre. Wilco has made a protest record.
Read moreWilco Explore How to Fight Disillusionment on ‘Ode To Joy,’ Their First Protest Record | Album Review
Photo: Annabel Mehran
Photo: Annabel Mehran
With their new, eleventh record ‘Ode To Joy,’ the band enters a new genre. Wilco has made a protest record.
Read moreSwift’s seventh studio affair will leave audiences with the understanding that this project is far from a retreat into established comforts, rather the pop superstar is taking stock of her legacy, so far.
Read moreAnne has a voice capable of soaring through songs, and while it feels like she's of the clouds, she is, like all of us, on terra firma.
Read moreThe band’s fifth studio affair unfurls as an elegant and adult concept album about the demolition of a romantic relationship and how its rippling wake knocks you off balance.
Read moreNot that the Heavies ever left, but they are most definitely back with a corker of an album that will appeal to their most ardent of fans and a new generation of listeners alike.
Read moreGallagher’s expanded role in the creation of his second solo affair suggests a growing composure coupled with an emboldened introspection as a songwriter.
Read moreDeeply set in the nostalgia of American ‘80s sci-fi and pop, Natasha Khan’s fifth studio affair most definitely feels like her female riposte to the 1987 cult film ‘The Lost Boys.’
Read moreA carefully created and curated piece of musical history, Del Rey’s sixth studio affair—an album comprised of many dimensions and layers—speaks to those eager to listen.
Read moreWhile not quite a companion piece or concept album, seven of the LP’s eleven songs contain “love” in their titles and abbreviated takes on the motifs of Common’s recently released memoir.
Read more‘Ground & Water’ brings out the best in both Blu and Damu, who stretch their artistic legs without compromising what makes them distinct.
Read moreRapsody does slick wordplay and callbacks better than nearly anyone, and this album is full of rewindable rhymes and lines that will take multiple careful listens to decipher.
Read moreOn her eleventh studio LP, Crow welcomes a host of compelling collaborators including Chuck D, Eric Clapton, Stevie Nicks, Bonnie Raitt, Keith Richards, St. Vincent, and Chris Stapleton.
Read moreFull of optimism and romance, Shura has co-written every song on the album and exposed herself in a candid, vulnerable way the wider LGBTQ community all too often takes for granted.
Read moreThe country music matriarch has emerged on her twenty-fifth studio album with equal parts grit and grace. As lovers, searchers and consumers of good music, we are the better for it.
Read more‘May The Lord Watch’ sounds precisely like the Little Brother album that they would have recorded if they had never broken up in the first place.
Read moreP.P. Arnold & Steve Cradock’s musical partnership, forged over 25 years, engenders a trust between them that shines throughout the album.
Read moreOn his fifth studio affair, Saadiq freewheels, offering up a variation in tone and style that has not been readily displayed on his past solo ventures.
Read moreWhile the band’s structural experimentation could be fun, in very few instances does it feel necessary or even authentic across the duration of their seventh studio album.
Read moreThe band’s fourth studio LP is yet another installment in a series of never-ending layers that are labyrinthine upon close inspection and, from a distance, so simple and clear.
Read moreDespite a few shortcomings, ‘The Iliad Is Dead And The Odyssey is Over’ is another solid addition to the Murs & 9th Wonder canon.
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