The album is the result of what happens when introverts discover the power of the guitar.
Her voice, viewed by some as one of the best of our time, is the album’s centerpiece and it rarely leaves the spotlight.
Jennifer Lopez is a child of the ’80s.
Much like Moby, Fatboy Slim continues to prove that techno can have soul and that it’s a legitimate subgenre of rock.
With her new album, Lil’ Kim finds new and inventive ways to demand oral pleasure from her men.
U2 wants a hit…bad.
While Tosca’s Opera was sexy and decadent, Suzuki is enlightened and even chaste by comparison.
Harvey seems to have set out to purposely make a New York album, and its flaw is in its all-too-obvious intention.
Brisebois’s voice is distinctive and timeless, light enough for pop radio but strong enough for a good wail.
More than a few songs here would fit nicely nestled between tracks on Homogenic.
Warning misses some of the youthful vigor of Dookie and the exciting rebellion that punk once brought to the mainstream.
The songs here seem to be the result of a severely maladjusted individual rather than an intentional satirist.
No Angel is a sleepy response to the torture of lost love, its folky pop quietly accented with elements of electronica.
The album deftly blends R. Kelly’s new jack swing with Aaliyah’s sultry voice.
One In a Million solidified Aaliyah and the Timbo family as undeniable hip-hop forces.