Music Reviews
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King Krule Man Alive!
Where King Krule's The OOZ was a dizzying smorgasbord of styles, Man Alive! fleshes out his song crafting abilities to make for a slightly more cohesive and concise listening experience, albeit, one that remains perplexing.
Jackson Glassey reviews... -
Caribou Suddenly
The Canadian electronic producer's seventh LP is a reflective and also outgoing mood piece that shares insight into what he's learned in the six years he's been away since 2014's Our Love.
Juan Edgardo Rodríguez reviews... -
Poliça When We Stay Alive
The band’s fifth album sees singer-songwriter Channy Leaneagh writing some of her most personal and gripping songs yet as she charts her struggle recovering from a potentially fatal accident, and the process of re-examining her life as a whole.
Jeremy Monroe reviews... -
Agnes Obel Myopia
The Danish singer-songwriter/composer's fourth LP is cryptic and beautiful, eliciting feelings of escape in her somber chamber music.
Juan Edgardo Rodríguez reviews... -
The Men Mercy
The Brooklyn four-piece's latest is a broken-down, mostly acoustic album that feels deliberately tame.
Ethan Gordon reviews... -
Destroyer Have We Met
Destroyer's latest album, Have We Met, presents a sequence of songs that transpose Bejar's uniquely introvertive persona into sound.
Kirk Sever reviews... -
Tame Impala The Slow Rush
While Kevin Parker's fourth album as Tame Impala is undeniably an electronic pop album, it doesn’t teeter so far off into club banger territory that it taints their established aesthetic. Rather, it accentuates their love for sonic texture.
Jackson Glassey reviews... -
Green Day Father of All...
Even when Green Day is supposedly having fun in Father of All..., they sound tired and overworked at best.
Ethan Gordon reviews... -
Stone Temple Pilots Perdida
The veteran alt-rock band move forward with a mellow set of acoustic songs that allow them to take a pause and reflect.
Juan Edgardo Rodríguez reviews... -
Little Big Town Nightfall
On their ninth studio album, the Nashville country group doesn't manage to escape the clutches of goodness.
Ethan Gordon reviews...