[ALBUM REVIEW] 'Apogee' - Whitney Tai
Grand rock operas, tantalising synth-pop passages, and big ballads - Whitney Tai transcends her own pop horizons despite some comfort zones.
Music: the dirty baggage that comes with it, the future trying to make sense of it
Grand rock operas, tantalising synth-pop passages, and big ballads - Whitney Tai transcends her own pop horizons despite some comfort zones.
The edgiest pop rock kids in town still show great promise with a handful of amazing cuts.
Toronto jazz band, BADBADNOTGOOD, takes it down a notch in this peace-of-mind offering of a double-single.
Fall into the arms of wondrous listlessness, The Regrettes quarantine track doubles as a melancholic love song.
Just another Halsey song, but hey it's about empowerment & being nice, so there's that.
Hollywood gets a bashing by Car Seat Headrest’s post-punky tirade
Jamie xx shows he can do messy as well as minimal
The single from his upcoming album ‘Zeros’ waxes poetry on the pointlessness of finding life’s meaning
In such a short span of time with graceful simplicity, Windows Open is beautiful with a healthy dose of ironic storytelling
British folk singer-songwriter, Laura Marling has released several album trailers and a single as a preview of her 7th solo studio album.
Chester Bennington's pre-Linkin Park band, Grey Daze, has released "Sometimes", featuring a heart-rending music video
Maya Hawke, actress from Stranger Things, takes a solidly country route with new single
Margaret Glaspy's new album eschews from folksy rock roots to a more electronic, synth-oriented ode to love.
A stadium anthem with so much space and magnanimity.
The vocal harmonies on this thing somehow feel even more eerie than the Simon and Garfunkel version, but it doesn't really stick the landing
'New House' is riddled with Chaz Bear's sonic stamp, laced around a suppressed trap beat
In embodying her character, Lizzy Wizzy, from upcoming dystopian game Cyberpunk 2077, Grimes gives us the transcendental, manic, track
A fit of industrial tantric chants, while peeking through walls of electronic sound
King Krule's sophomore album effort is filled with immense yet subtle growth
Although skeletal, serpentwithfeet captures the sweet, ebullient meadow-esque picture of love.