Music Reviews tagged with Believe The Hype
Wild Beasts Two Dancers
Wild Beasts' second album within a year is an intricate, insightful and rather incredible offering.
Daniel Dylan Wray reviews...Fiery Furnaces I'm Going Away
The Fiery Furnaces sixth and most accessible album is also one of their best.
Brett Oronzio reviews...Worriedaboutsatan Arrivals
The best, and probably only, IDM infused post-rock (or is it post-rock infused IDM?) record you'll buy all year.
Andrew Baer would be paranoid if he listened to this by himself late at night...Foreign Born Person to Person
Foreign Born's sophomore release offers slick, intricate indie rock complete with horns, harmonicas, strings, woodwinds, and more than a few percussive instruments. If these guys don't make it big, I'll eat my ironic hat.
Jaclyn Elgeness has something new to exhaustively push on her friends...Bibio Ambivalence Avenue
A surprising genre-hopping gem.
Cara Nash reviews...Future of the Left Travels with Myself and Another
Perhaps it is only a circumstance of the times, but in this synth-soaked musical landscape Future of the Left have decided to up and be the toughest, most muscular, smartest and most aggressive punk band since Ian McKaye decided to scream at a wall.
Nate Adams rocks out with throaty ex-Mclusky monsters...Sunn O))) Monoliths & Dimensions
SunnO)))’s seventh album, Monoliths & Dimensions, presents Stephen O’Malley and Greg Anderson’s sonic murk as something to delve into, their inescapable walls of low-end suddenly beaming with purpose and a million and one instruments.
Sean Caldwell reviews...Sonic Youth The Eternal
Sonic Youth's sixteenth studio album is a landmark release that sees the band returning to its indie label roots.
To celebrate its release, we're posting a handful of reviews from various members of the No Ripcord team...
