On their first album since member Stepa J. Groggs’ death, the Phoenix rap trio reintroduces themselves as wide-eyed explorers, a rep that suits their fascination with rap’s mechanics, its margins, and its future.
The breakout Nigerian star’s second EP explores new sounds even as it returns to familiar ideas—her ongoing search for peace, love, and emotional clarity.
Featuring contributions from Lemmy, a pair of Hot 100 hits, and a newly vulnerable outlook, this peak from the rock star’s solo career gets a 30th anniversary reissue.
Performed on a 132-year-old pipe organ, the latest project from the Australian sound artist dials up the volume and revels in the rumble.
Shackleton’s first solo full-length in nine years is stripped of some of his customary idiosyncrasies, but it remains heady, beaded-curtains, incense-in-the-air music, filled with occult mystique.
The 8xLP box set gathers the ’60s and ’70s studio recordings of a singer-songwriter whose melodically intricate work had a profound impact on Joni Mitchell, Elton John, and Steely Dan.
In the studio with the hyperpop renegades as they toil on their new album, 10000 gecs.
Three decades into his indie rock career, frontman Alan Sparhawk talks about staying unpredictable, the ecstasy of distortion, and his band’s colossal new album, HEY WHAT.
Lil Nas X also rates fake IDs and puberty in this episode of Over/Under.
On his latest EP, the Indiana-raised hyperpop upstart takes a step closer toward the mainstream, sharpening his style without losing the irreverence that makes up his volatile vision.
Knit together with ambient passages and found sound, the teenage rapper and producer’s debut feels like a jumbled journey through folders of ideas that reveals new layers with every listen.
Though the Philadelphia experimental poet and sound artist has called this her most “accessible” album, her aims remain as radical as ever.
The first compilation album from the Brooklyn beatmaker is an entertaining ride through the sounds of one of New York’s most underappreciated producers.