This live album, recorded in 2017 at the venerated Toronto concert hall, shows the duo sounding reliable and downright professional. The wild utopian energy that characterizes their albums and their best performances is missing.
The Hungarian producer’s first album for Planet Mu picks up the deconstructive thread of recent left-field electronic music, splitting the difference between academic inquiry and rave hedonism.
On their beautiful second LP, the Minneapolis duo conjure the grandeur of Scandinavian extreme metal with reverence.
DeForrest Brown Jr.’s most ambitious release yet is a 49-minute suite that brings together fractured, shuddering drum programming with spoken-word poetry, collage, and noise.
With concerts on hold, it’s abundantly clear that most musicians can’t live off streaming income alone. How could the system be fixed?
In this Rising interview, the Little Rock and Los Angeles-based artist talks about being inspired by André 3000, the struggle to be understood, and not giving away her jokes for free.
FINNEAS explores the sounds that sparked his greatest musical breakthroughs in this episode of “Critical Breakthroughs”
The 20-year-old rising star was the voice of Brooklyn drill when he died. On his debut album, executive-produced by 50 Cent, his voice shines through despite a raft of unnecessary features.
On their most compelling album in more than a decade, the discursive metal trio folds their broad musical interests into a relentless series of hardcore oddities.
The London-based producer’s nostalgic, two-track EP is a love letter to classic house and the tender, unspoken, human connection found on a dance floor.
A speculative-fiction multimedia project imagines the future sounds of South Texas’ Rio Grande Valley, using an apocalyptic future to pay tribute to the border region’s resilience.