The album captures the feeling of looking at oneself through a distorted mirror.
Even when the AI takes over, the LP factories will still be churning out product.
Our list encompasses party anthems, multiple diss tracks, and honest reckonings with life’s myriad disappointments.
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.
The singer attempts to illustrate how grim being a woman can be with mixed results.
The singer-songwriter’s fifth studio album is his most candid work to date.
The album lacks the clarity of the musician’s best work but still feels like a return to form.
The band spends much of the album’s half-hour runtime reliving the past.
The music is presented about as unironically as the singer’s views on marriage.
For better and worse, the rapper’s fourth studio album is the personification of despair.
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The album feels more like a product for mass consumption than a showcase of the rapper’s skills.
The album doesn’t feel overworked, and largely sounds like a band playing live in a room.
We’re taking a look back at the song the Queen of Pop has perpetually made shiny and new.
The rapper’s ambitions are grand, but the album attempts to do a lot while saying little.
The album defies easy categorization, which ultimately offers a welcome challenge.
The song finds the singer falling back on macabre imagery and brash EDM stylings.