Death metal and campy horror: A match made in hell.
The Georgia hard rock band’s first for Spinefarm is more of a slow-burner.
Once-controversial metalgazers progress while showing there’s still growth ahead.
Austin psych-rockers deliver one hell of a trip on their fifth album.
German post-punk metalheads conjure a fun, evil hybrid.
Darren Cunningham captivates the listener with meticulous simplicity.
Technical death metal troupe evade cliches while delivering a more accessible effort.
A bridge between art, dance music and ambience in one intricate package.
Hot Chip member’s latest solo effort is a slow burner that balances ballads with acidic techno.
New York duo’s excellent debut is one that speaks to a certain time in one’s life.
The Norwegian shape-shifters have learned to be sexy again.
Arca’s self-titled effort is exhilarating and enthralling.
The transformation from rock band to highly entertaining cyborgs is complete.
Where does noise end and a song begin?
Dan Bejar is curiously absent on the Canadian supergroup’s seventh effort.
The singer/songwriter offers a companion album to his 2016 release Ruminations.
The synth-pop trio makes more emotional connections via powerful melodic anthems.
German death metal troupe offers something alien, exploratory and exciting.
Converge’s Jacob Bannon steps out on his own with a solo work of dark, atmospheric sounds.
Josh Tillman’s most ambitious album yet is also often his prettiest.