Music That Takes Me Places
What a year for music. From Kendrick Lamar to Beyonce. From The Avalanches to Glass Animals. Month after month, I was overwh…
On Running Out of Love, The Radio Dept. sharpen their pop sensibilities into protest, pairing bright melodies with biting di…
With Act V, The Dear Hunter brings its rock opera saga to a dramatic apex, folding orchestration, progressive rock, and musi…
Brent Cobb’s Shine On Rainy Day is easygoing but not lightweight, a Southern singer-songwriter record that invites you onto …
Marillion’s F.E.A.R. (F*** Everyone and Run) is a sprawling and deeply political suite, dressed in the band’s signature lush…
On Love & Hate, Michael Kiwanuka steps fully into his own voice, shedding the retro-soul comparisons to deliver somethin…
Airbag’s Disconnected is filled with widescreen longing, built on the bones of Floydian atmospheres and emotional gravity. I…
Max Jury’s self-titled debut took me by surprise. Paste magazine wrote that it is 'a winning collection of songs with a …
Twenty-three years in, Radiohead are still challenging themselves and surprising with their music. Their ninth album, A Moon…
Blackstar is a parting gift wrapped in mystery and cosmic noise, an album that stares straight into the void and grins. Bowi…
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