The album is the result of what happens when introverts discover the power of the guitar.
The album presents an artist learning to find strength in near-constant movement.
The singer battles ideas of what she thinks she wants with what her behaviors demonstrate.
The album serves as a devotional text—a shrine really—to sex and non-monogamy.
For better and worse, the rapper’s fourth studio album is the personification of despair.
Goodrich’s modest ambitions yield modest rewards.
The album leaves the ears ringing and paints a disquieting vision of modern America.
The album feels like a diluted approximation of a true visionary’s unique brand of pop.
Unexpected flashes of wit make the album much more than just a polished slice of pop.
The rapper’s debut album maintains a whirlwind clip throughout.
The album can’t help but register as Psychedelia for Dummies.
Ezra sees itself as a kind of rebuke to films like Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close.
The singer’s first official solo album is as captivating as it is devastating.
The album mostly pushes forward in a way that jettisons its capacity for introspection.
This is a band magnetically pulled toward the sounds, images, and aesthetic that define them.
Future seems content to be set dressing for Metro Boomin’s elaborate production.
The album’s beautiful, serene instrumentation dovetails with the singer’s gutting truth-telling.
The Invisible Fight’s winning visual gags commence from the outset.
Noname’s second studio album synthesizes everything that the firebrand rapper excels at.
A dramatically uneven concept album that demonstrates the rappers’ unwillingness to grow up.