neo-psychedelia
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With Home Body, Dope Body improves the mixtape-esque approach of their once-swansong Kunk.
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The more direct and tuneful approach King Krule takes on Man Alive! makes it—to my ears—a vast improvement over The Ooz.
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The Slow Rush‘s deep cuts don’t deliver on the promise of its introspective and infectious lead singles.
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Dan Deacon hones his trademark fusion of electro-psychedelia and post-minimalism on Mystic Familiar.
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Beck caps off the blandest decade of his career with arguably his blandest album to date.
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While Battles maintain their unique style of math rock on Juice B Crypts, the band sounds like a shadow of its former self.
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A quick review of the new Guerilla Toss EP—it’s good!
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The times when King’s Mouth sounds like classic Flaming Lips partly make up for the album’s spotty narrative development and pacing.
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Steve Lacy still sounds as if he’s in demo mode on Apollo XXI.
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Panda Bear’s latest solo outing sees his psychedelic brand of surreal folk submerged under an ocean of cascading delays and nautical vibes.