Music Reviews
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Jessica Pratt Quiet Signs
The LA-based singer-songwriter's third effort reveals a more empathetic side to her once concealed character.
Juan Edgardo Rodríguez reviews... -
Sneaks Highway Hypnosis
Though Highway Hypnosis finds Sneaks exploring new sounds and styles, it lacks the spark and brashness of her previous albums.
Jeremy Monroe reviews... -
Bring Me the Horizon Amo
The Sheffield rock band's sixth LP is strident, difficult to categorize and, in a good way, uniquely spliced and sequenced with little fear of crossing boundaries.
Tom Parmiter reviews... -
Mike Krol Power Chords
No one can accuse Mike Krol of not calling it like it is. True to his word, there's hardly a moment of respite throughout Power Chords' vigorous 34 minutes.
Juan Edgardo Rodríguez reviews... -
Sharon Van Etten Remind Me Tomorrow
After a five-year musical hiatus, Sharon Van Etten reflects on all the changes she's gone through, opening a new chapter with her best album yet.
Joe Marvilli reviews the return of the Comeback Kid... -
Deerhunter Why Hasn't Everything Already Disappeared?
On their eighth full-length, the Atlanta art-rock trio's collaborative amalgamation of crafty tunemanship and harmony goes at odds with the bleak outlook of our increasingly troubling present.
Juan Edgardo Rodríguez reviews... -
Steve Gunn The Unseen in Between
On his fourth full-length, the folk-rock singer-songwriter tackles the concept of loss as he courses through these songs with the heart of a wanderer.
Juan Edgardo Rodríguez reviews... -
The 1975 A Brief Inquiry Into Online Relationships
The Manchester pop-rock group's latest is far-reaching in scope but also conceptually uniform, a beautiful mess of an album from a band who is inching their way towards the imperial phase of their career.
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Dead Can Dance Dionysus
The longstanding Australian musical project's ninth release is hypnotic, involving and skillful narration through two movements of music.
Tom Parmiter reviews... -
Tropical Fuck Storm A Laughing Death in Meatspace
Forget about Greta Van Fleet and just listen to this, okay?
Sean Caldwell reviews...