Wednesday – Bleeds

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North Carolina’s Wednesday revived Indie rock of the 90s (power pop, grunge, shoegaze, slacker rock, country rock), sounding sort of like all of the above. Singer, Karly Hartzman falls somewhere in between Liz Phair and Alannis Morrisette. Bleeds is their most varied and dynamic album yet. Note the mix of scorching guitar riffs, tuneless singing … Read more

Geese – Getting Killed

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In an era of ‘noise rock’ and ‘dark-punk’, New York’s Geese were a breath a fresh air. 2023’s 3D Country presented a band both drowning in their influences (particularly the Rolling Stones and Led Zeppelin) but with the capacity to perform their imitations with a ‘new wave’ vivacity, with new ideas and a new presentation, … Read more

Dispatches (Hip-Hop): Playboi Carti, Yung Lean, Esdeekid, Rico Nasty, 21 Savage

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Playboi Carti – Music Carti returns with a 75 minute behemoth that abandons any pretence of quality control. The album is crafted by an extraordinarily long cast of producers, which doesn’t exactly imbue the album with much vision or purpose. Stylistically, the album shifts towards a less experimental style and abandons the androgynous vampire persona … Read more

Dave – The Boy Who Played The Harp

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London-based rapper Dave returned the autobiographical and conceptual style of Psychodrama on The Boy Who Played The Harp, also mainly self-produced but with a vital contribution from songwriter-producer, James Blake alongside his usual cast (Jo Caleb, Jonny Leslie, Kyle Evans, Fraser T. Smith). The album displays both his emotionally gripping, diaristic writing style and his … Read more

Quadeca – Vanisher, Horizon Scraper

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Former Youtube streamer, Benjamin Fernando Barajas Lasky, combines folktronica (a la Ultramarine) and emo-rap (a la Lil Peep) as Quadeca, especially on 2022’s I Didn’t Mean To Want You, a ghostly and depressive concept album constructed from dense cloudy atmospheres mixed seamlessly with trap cadences. Vanisher, Horizon Scraper, for the most part, reneges his cloud … Read more

Dispatches (Hip-Hop): Tyler, the Creator, Key Glock, John Michel and Anthony James, Armand Hammer, 2hollis

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Tyler The Creator – Don’t Tap The Glass Odd future alumni Tyler, The Creator dropped the loose 30-minute mini-album Don’t Tap The Glass which eschews the conceptual ambitions in favour of a more direct and visceral style. The album contains scuzzy atmospheres, evocative of the ‘Crunk’ era (Big Poe feat, Sk8brd), nods to original hardcore … Read more

Little Simz – Lotus

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British rapper, Simbiatu “Little Simz” Ajikaw built a reputation for introspective and conceptual raps, particularly on the kaleidoscopic Sometimes I Might Be Introvert and the more subtle but equally emotional No Thank You, both produced by Inflo. After a nasty legal battle, Simz split from Inflo and releasedLotus, which is partly a response to the … Read more

Billy Woods – GOLLIWOG

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New York rapper Billy Woods, who built a reputation across the 2010s as one of the most brilliant lyricists in the rap game and prolific writers, released his ninth studio album (but actually, including collaborations, closer to his 20th). Golliwog is perhaps his most tortured album yet and his most simultaneously personal and conceptual, though … Read more

Jim Legxacy – black british music

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British hip-hop spawned a new star with London-based producer-songwriter James ‘Jim Legxacy’ Folarunso, who built popularity with a prolific run of mixtapes and EPs and especially, a high-profile production credit on Dave and Central Cee’s hit, Sprinter.  His second self-produced mixtape black british music, a series of lively pop-rap productions, introduced a new voice to … Read more

Clipse – Let God Sort Em Out

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Rapper Terrence LeVarr Thornton ‘Pusha T’ and his older brother Gene Elliot ‘Malice’ Thornton (who had been absent from the rap game for several years) and celebrity producer, Pharell Williams reunited after 15 years on Let God Sort Em Out. The sleek production and vitriolic delivery album showcases that the group hadn’t lost the talents … Read more