The Dillinger Escape Plan goes down swinging on their final album.
Crying delivers one of the most triumphant, diverse, and instrumentally intricate rock records I’ve heard this year.
Jeff Rosenstock drops a pretty ambitious and conceptual follow-up to last year’s We Cool?.
American Football’s sad but nimble sound has been replaced with soft rock complacency on their new comeback album.
FINALLY ANOTHER INSTALLMENT OF IT CAME FROM BANDCAMP, BRINGING YOU THE STRANGEST IN SELF-UPLOADED MUSIC ON THE INTERNET!
Anderson .Paak and Knxwledge return with a fruitful full-length collaboration.
The weekly segment in which Anthony touches down on some of the best and worst tracks he has heard in the past week.
This new single from Big K.R.I.T. all but confirms the suspicion that Def Jam was holding him back. Independent K.R.I.T. is best K.R.I.T.
Foxygen drops a stunning chamber pop odyssey that has singlehandedly restored my faith in the duo after their massive 2014 blunder, which shall go unnamed.
Clarence Clarity‘s latest EP is comprised of what seems to be five instances of the same song (any changes between tracks are pretty much negligible). It’s probably some sort of pop art experiment, but it’s also just convenient because this song is worth hearing five times in