Music Reviews
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Arbouretum The Gathering
Baltimore folk-rockers turn up the volume on their fourth album.
Mark Davison reviews... -
The Go! Team Rolling Blackouts
On their third album, The Go! Team change their approach to songwriting and employ a range of collaborators. A bold move - how will it turn out?
Joe Rivers reviews... -
Young Galaxy Shapeshifting
Young Galaxy are plowing the fields of reinvention here, but they’ve not abandoned the Cocteauvian dreaminess that’s consistently marked their work.
Matt Montgomery reviews... -
The Streets Cyberspace and Reds & Computers and Blues
UK rapper Mike Skinner lays his Streets moniker to rest with two very different albums that help tell one story we've all probably heard before: the man's mad talented.
Chris Coplan reviews... -
...And You Will Know Us By The Trail of Dead Tao of the Dead
Trail of Dead's latest is equal parts bombast and equanimity, rebelliously trekking space rock territory without a care in their heads.
Juan Edgardo Rodríguez rockets to space... -
Sonic Youth Simon Werner A Disparu
Sonic Youth score a film and subsequently create a cinematic masterpiece themselves.
Daniel Dylan Wray reviews... -
Talib Kweli Gutter Rainbows
Talib Kweli's latest hovers between a mainstream and an indie vibe, embracing neither and potentially isolating both audiences.
Andrew Davison reviews... -
Deerhoof Deerhoof vs. Evil
Constantly developing without straying from their signature sound, a paradoxical combination of inaccessible quirkiness and earworm-inducing hooks, this San Francisco foursome has developed an impressive discography over the years.
Gabbie Nirenburg reviews their latest... -
Religious to Damn Glass Prayer
The debut album for this Brooklyn-based band is a ritualistic gathering of dark, brooding gothic rock.
Juan Edgardo Rodríguez spins in limbo... -
Chapel Club Palace
Chapel Club's debut release, Palace, is one many have been looking forward to for a very long time, so how does it stack up?
Joe Iliff reviews...