reggae
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Twenty One Pilots take their catchy songwriting, genre blending, and emotional lyricism up a few notches on Trench.
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Colombian supergroup Ondatrópica continues to fuse genres from across South America on their sophomore album.
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Young Thug‘s new mixtape makes a good first impression with a bit of reggae fusion – a style that Thugger manages to pull off, much to our pleasant surprise. Jeffery is out now via 300 Entertainment.
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Say what you will about Serge Gainsbourg, that he and his music were overly lewd or whatever; he was arguably the most significant voice in 20th century French pop music. Even when he was penning albums comprised mostly of shit humor (Vu de l’extérieur), the man was delivering some
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Major Lazer and vocal guest MØ cover Channel Orange cut “Lost.”
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If there’s a way to hold attention, it’s to hint at a payoff that never arrives. The Bug’s trap-dub influenced beat swells quite a few times throughout the, but the song dissolves into a formless chorus before any kind of release is ever achieved. Miss Red’s
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After two electrifying tapes, Scotland’s Young Fathers come through with a huge sound on this latest album of theirs, Dead. I’m not as crazy about the songs, though.
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The UK’s Young Fathers have dropped some visuals for their reggae-infused track “Romance,” which came off the group’s recently reissued TAPE ONE. I reviewed it a while back very positively, and I’m still convinced it rules, but I’m patiently waiting to hear some kind of followup–
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The future is looking a little grim. WATCH THE REVIEW
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Check out the new single from reggae artist Courtney John above. The concept of the track kinda boils down to one lyric in the hook: “Love is the one thing that’s never out of season.” Well, ain’t it true? When has love gone out of style? I can’