AllMusic | Record Reviews, Streaming Songs, Genres & Bands (original) (raw)

New Music This Week

New Reviews for June 28, 2024

LoomEditor's choice

Interscope / Kid ina Korner

The Vegas crew's seventh set returns them to bombastic anthem territory after a period of introspection on their previous LP.

- Neil Z. Yeung

Valley of Abandoned SongsEditor's choice

15 Passenger / Million Stars

A surprisingly cohesive, poetic, lyrically tight album of characteristically ragged indie folk from the Upstate New Yorkers.

- James Wilkinson

Love Heart Cheat CodeEditor's choice

Brainfeeder

Joy, optimism, and otherness fill the fourth album by Australia's premier hardcore avant-soul/jazz/funk/hip-hop band.

- Andy Kellman

Horsie

Shhoamkee

After an unexpectedly guitar-heavy detour, Peter Sagar returns to his comfort zone of bummed-out, semi-electronic bedroom pop.

- Paul Simpson

Redd KrossEditor's choice

In the Red Records

The power pop-meets-hard rock legends celebrate their longevity with the angriest, hookiest, and most intense album of their career.

- Tim Sendra

Let's Walk

Just One Records / Orchard

For the first time in her career, the iconic singer writes her own songs, that meld of jazz, gospel, folk, and jump blues.

- Thom Jurek

Notes from a Quiet Life

Sub Pop

The second album in a row of chillwave throwbacks from one of the sound's originators.

- Tim Sendra

How Will I Live Without a Body?Editor's choice

Sub Pop

Sounding refortified but no less mesmerizing, the trio's cinematic third LP shifts settings from pastoral Texas to haunted seaside England.

- Marcy Donelson

Editors' Choice for May, 2024

Tomorrow Never Comes

AllMusic Staff Pick - June 30, 2024

March, 2002

With their compelling 2002 debut album, the Japanese experimental rock duo announced their place among legends like Sonic Youth, Suicide, My Bloody Valentine, and Boredoms. Xinlisupreme play with blistering noise, cavernous atmospheres, and submerged melodies brilliantly, but it's the emotional undercurrent that makes Tomorrow Never Comes so special.
- Heather Phares