The proudly campy hyperpop singer’s debut is vibrant and ridiculous, for better or worse.
The Los Angeles-via-Toronto singer offers a finely wrought EP that showcases her oceanic voice and her austere songwriting.
With pop stars once again performing garish exaggerations of what seems like real personal trauma, Shirley Manson & co. have timed their return perfectly.
With influences ranging from Afrobeat to choral symphonies, the Brooklyn-based group’s debut is bright and bursting with detail.
Each Sunday, Pitchfork takes an in-depth look at a significant album from the past, and any record not in our archives is eligible. Today we revisit the groundbreaking 1995 soundtrack that changed Bollywood forever.
A selection of the formative pieces from our first 25 years
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When Lorde emerged onto the world stage in 2013, no one was expecting she'd be such a pop poet laureate. Four years later, she's grown up, and released the beautifully heavy album, Melodrama, full of lyrics we can't get out of our heads.
The fearless work of the late avant-garde pianist is celebrated with a momentous new anthology, showcasing his immense talent and passion.
The hit song comes with an incredible video featuring Meg running over a U.S. Senator with a garbage truck and that’s only the beginning.
Album number 18 was recorded in the band’s homes during the pandemic, and trades psych-rock blitzes for a finely-woven sprawl of synth programming and MIDI sequences
After a viral sample made her feathery vocals famous, the singer-songwriter arrives on her own terms with a debut that flits effortlessly between guitar-based soul, alt-pop, and R&B.