Shell Hinds takes a look at Thumpers’ debut offering.
The Black Keys’ long awaited return has finally come – and while it may not be what you would expect, it’s certainly been worth the wait.
A deeply personal and insightful record, Lily Allen’s personality and charm runs through the very veins of Sheezus.
After three years Jamie xx is back with his beautiful new EP ‘Sleepsound’.
I first had an experience with the music of Mac DeMarco when he was a rather odd fellow from Montreal slinging seemingly surreptitious lyrics in a hushed and mellow croon back when he was preparing to release his first EP, Rock And Roll Nightclub. During this stage his music was always accompanied by a guitar…
Everyday Robots is laced with quiet intelligence, each individual track, as well as the album as a whole all feeling perfectly balanced and well thought out.
The ‘runaway slave master’s’ new album fails to live up to it’s title.
With soul, gospel and funk influences, Food is huge and brilliant departure from Kelis of the past five albums.
California’s Thee Oh Sees, the band that refuses to stop putting out albums, insist that they are going to stop putting out albums (for a while) – Drop is their latest installment.
William Control begun as the electronic side project of Aiden frontman Wil Francis, but as the fourth William Control album The Neuromancer is released, it’s clear that it has evolved to be far more than a side project. William Control has become its own entity and a thoroughly intriguing one at that, combining sinister atmospheric electronic…
Tremors, the debut album by SOHN does not disappoint, wonderfully unique, yet combining electro sounds with haunting vocals.
Having formed in 2007, New-York hard-rockers The Pretty Reckless released their second record, Going To Hell, on March 18th this year. Five years on from the release of their debut, Light Me Up, 20-year-old Taylor Momsen, originally of Gossip Girl fame, has grown up substantially and the bands’ sound has matured. Regardless of this, Going…
It’s camp, it’s pretty meaningless, and its unrelenting cheeriness might possibly drive you to homicide; but NOW + 4EVA is also a lot of fun, simple and energetic in just the right way.
Metronomy’s previously super successful album the The English Riviera captured the by-gone glamour of the seaside with wistful songs, yet their latest and fourth album Love Letters departs from the polished sounds of its predecessor and presents love in the off-season. The album has brought the band into a new form due to frontman Joe…