album
-
With Conformicide, Havok works some progressive elements into their brand of politically-charged thrash.
-
Spoon incorporates some strange experiments into their slick indie rock sound.
-
While In Mind is Real Estate’s best-sounding album yet, the band still fails to provide anything beyond the surface of their blissful sound.
-
Rick Ross takes a more introspective approach on his latest album.
-
With PACKS, Brooklyn’s Your Old Droog continues to flex his lyrical muscles on his most focused album yet.
-
Laura Marling follows up her relatively bold 2015 album Short Movie with an album that’s, more often than not, void of emotion.
-
Brutalism, the debut album by UK five piece IDLES, may not reinvent the punk rock wheel but is loaded with some of the most fiery performances and brutally honest lyrics I’ve heard in years.
-
Blanck Mass makes a grand, industrial-flavored return with World Eater.
-
Ed Sheeran: The motivational poster of singer-songwriters.
-
The UK’s Sleaford Mods return with a slightly tweaked version of their idiosyncratic style on English Tapas.