On her first album in eight years, the iconic singer-songwriter continues to take the lyrical road less traveled on a vulnerable, sedate, ballad-heavy album.
The fast-rising Santa Cruz hardcore band attack their murderously intense new LP like quarantine might last the rest of their lives.
The London-based singer-songwriter takes a leap forward with a nuanced and meticulous set of electro-pop.
Experimental electronic musicians including Loraine James, Rupert Clervaux, and Oliver Coates tackle the spooky, microtonal source material of last year’s Music for Detuned Pianos.
In this Rising interview, the Brooklyn-based R&B experimentalist talks about how music, spirituality, and community help her to heal.
A discussion of the late rapper’s life and influence, on the latest episode of our new podcast The Pitchfork Review
FINNEAS explores the sounds that sparked his greatest musical breakthroughs in this episode of “Critical Breakthroughs”
The “vocal bible” of pop R&B returns with her first album in eight years, sounding poised and warm but lacking some spark.
On her solo debut, the L.A.-based singer and songwriter taps members of the War on Drugs and Warpaint for winning songs about finding delight in despair.
The composer turns to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948 for inspiration in his bittersweet new orchestral work.
Featuring habitual collaborators like Jamael Dean and Miguel Atwood-Ferguson, the L.A. percussionist and producer’s sprawling, shape-shifting seventh album finds joy in unexpected connections.