The Texas singer/songwriter’s outward-focused full-length is a balm for a burned world.
The Philadelphia indie rock outfit grows up and offers anthems of reassurance.
The Irish folk metal band’s career arc is encapsulated in this brief five-track release.
A hyperspeed, rhythmic whirlwind.
A strong set of songs that feels just out of reach of transcendence.
An evolutionary set of music for the Australian funeral doom band, with many breathtaking moments.
A bitingly satirical hip-hop album that makes these troubled times more bearable.
A Western gothic post-punk dystopia that makes spine-chilling synonymous with breathtaking.
The Philadelphia punks prove they have a lot of progression ahead of them on their sixth album.
An indulgent, often frustrating, sometimes satisfying tour through White’s chocolate factory.
Czarface, MF Doom, other words for quality.
The indie rock outfit offers an unadulterated place to feel and embrace.
Despite the prevalent darkness, the Canadian post-punk outfit’s third album features some of their best songs yet.
A batch of cerebral, fun, experimental rock that goes looooong.
An iconoclastic and celebratory Afro-Carribean jazz album that blows back against white supremacy.
A futuristic, druggy album from the Canadian indie rock outfit.
A solid set of songs that makes for an interesting stylistic clash.
The Canadian noh-wave group continues to expand their palette on third album.
A stunning record of fractured masculinity.
A sprawling and breathtaking document of learning to live with grief.