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On his debut full-length, German music producer Recondite assembles a collection of beautiful, atmospheric experimentations on acid house music. WATCH THE REVIEW
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Though more consistent than the band’s previous album, Liars’ WIXIW may be a bit darker and quieter than most fans would expect. WATCH THE REVIEW
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Sorry by WHITE LUNG Some fierce, Vancouver-based, and female-fronted punk rock from the new White Lung album, Sorry. Stream it via the widget above, and grab a copy on Bandcamp.
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On Neil Young’s latest release with longtime band Crazy Horse, these guys bring together a collection of songs important to the history of American music, filtering them through a series of fast and loose folk rock jams. WATCH THE REVIEW
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Legendary proto-punk, art rocker, and musical eccentric Patti Smith has a new album out this week titled Banga, which is actually somewhat of a nonsensical tribute to a fictional dog who waited 2000 years on the edge of Heaven for his master who had ventured in to speak with Jesus
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On the band’s sophomore LP, Japandroids do a great job of eliciting very righteous, life-defining emotions, but don’t really surround them with anything that’s terribly engaging, musically. WATCH THE REVIEW
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Another stellar track from Fiona Apple’s forthcoming album, the Idler Wheel Is Wiser Than the Driver of the Screw and Whipping Cords Will Serve You More Than Ropes Will Ever Do. It’s officially dropping in about two weeks, and I’m psyched. Especially if I can expect dark
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Some hilarious visuals coming from El-P on this new music video for “the Full Retard,” which is a track from the New York rapper’s latest album, Cancer For Cure. It’s like a weird, coked-out scene from Fear and Loathing In Las Vegas, except the Dr. Gonzo to El-P’
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Brooklyn rapper and producer Joey BADA$$ and his Pro Era cohorts are on the cusp of blowing up, and it’s bound to happen if they keep pumping out tracks like “Survival Tactics.” It’s a rugged ‘n’ raw piece of boom bap with trigger-pulling bars coming from both Joey
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On his first major label effort, Big K.R.I.T. tricks out his trademark Southern hip hop sound with an abundance of horns, strings, piano, and guest singers. WATCH THE REVIEW