Music Reviews
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The Killers Pressure Machine
Brandon Flowers' sentences seem to trail off just as the story gets good on this well-intentioned but clunky concept album.
Matthew Smith reviews... -
Jungle Loving In Stereo
The electronic duo's joyful third album has no misleading messages or presumptuous metaphors. It's exactly what it sounds like: an open letter to celebrate life and love, which is not a small thing.
Fran González reviews... -
Liars The Apple Drop
The Apple Drop sounds like the reclaiming of what Liars founding member Angus Andrew had lost in the past four years after longtime member Aaron Hemphill left the band. His sense of menace remains, though possessing a higher level of maturing and confidence that can only come from 20 years of experimenting with the project.
Juan Edgardo Rodríguez reviews... -
Darkside Spiral
Spiral, the comeback LP by Chilean-born electronic musician Nicolas Jaar and American multi-instrumentalist Dave Harrington is an alchemical concoction of beats, textures, sonic flourishes, and melodies that sound like they were recorded in a world that had no precedent.
Jackson Glassey reviews... -
Inhaler It Won’t Always Be Like This
The Dublin quartet’s promising debut album combines dynamic rhythmic energy with soaring romantic touches and youthful melodrama.
Juan Edgardo Rodríguez reviews... -
Charlotte Day Wilson Alpha
The hotly-tipped Toronto singer-songwriter releases her debut album of soul, lovers rock, R&B, and torch songs, backed by the lush instrumentation that's become her hallmark.
Joe Rivers reviews... -
Japanese Breakfast Jubilee
While much has been made of Jubilee being an album about joy—and in some ways, it is—the majority of the third Japanese Breakfast album captures a full breadth of emotions.
Ethan Gordon reviews... -
Modest Mouse The Golden Casket
Though The Golden Casket shows the veteran indie rockers at their most accessible and tuneful, a creative shift that started with 2004's Good News For People Who Love Bad News, they return to some of the experimental aspects that defined so much of their early work. Frontman Isaac Brock is steeped in optimism, cleverly weaving in his weirdness into the band's sweeping sentiments.
Juan Edgardo Rodríguez reviews... -
St. Vincent Daddy's Home
Daddy's Home soundtracks St. Vincent's father’s release from a medium-security prison for a high profile, white-collar crime, and the album welcomes him with a pastiche of the 1970’s acts he raised her on.
Gabbie Nirenburg reviews... -
Erika de Casier Sensational
On her 4AD debut, Erika de Casier channels a very specific part of the world at a very specific time.
Joe Rivers hops in the time machine...