Justin Bieber’s ‘Changes’ is dead on arrival
By Jonathan Pertile | February 21, 2020I really tried to have an open mind when first listening to “Changes,” but Justin Bieber certainly doesn’t make it easy.
I really tried to have an open mind when first listening to “Changes,” but Justin Bieber certainly doesn’t make it easy.
On “The Slow Rush,” Kevin Parker’s fourth album as Tame Impala, he faces the idea of eternity head-on.
On Feb. 10, at the Bernie Sanders rally in New Hampshire, The Strokes announced the upcoming (April 10, to be exact) arrival of their newest album, “The New Abnormal.”
On this album, the band reveals how musical innovation means both crossing genre lines and transcending time and regional boundaries.
Now that rap has overtaken rock as the most profitable genre, it is reasonable to view hip-hop as its own economy.
Although it may be disappointing that Eilish gobbled up nearly every award in sight, it’s encouraging to see a new vanguard of artists winning at the Grammys.
In his brief career, Jahsen Onfroy, or XXXTentacion, quickly became a source of immense controversy.
After a year and a half, the family of beloved rapper Mac Miller has decided to release “Circles,” Miller’s sixth studio album that he had been working on prior to his death in 2018.
When Halsey confesses, “Man, I’m a f—ing liar,” at the close of her new album “Manic,” on track “929,” it comes as a revelation that, perhaps ironically, “Manic” is the most truthful work of Halsey’s career.
It’s time to take a look at the nominees and predict who should win (and who actually will) in the top categories.
With her sophomore album “Romance,” Camila Cabello has provided a fantastically cohesive, entertaining work that is a thrill from start to finish.
Recess Managing Editor Will Atkinson chooses his five favorite releases of the year.
Coldplay’s first two albums played constantly in my dad’s car when I was a kid.
In January 2018, Migos dropped all 106 minutes of “Culture II.”
To many, the term freestyling immediately inspires a vision of the XXL Freshman yearly cypher, prompting nostalgia of Kodak Black’s trouncing of whoever picked that “lil sorry a** beat.”
Mary Magdalene is one of the first women history robbed.
“Jazz, uh, finds a way,” or so says Jeff Goldblum’s Spotify playlist.
Two bands that had their heyday in the late ’90s and early 2000s both released albums this month.
The rapper’s ninth album combines the “old Kanye”’s flow and style with the “new Kanye”’s more spiritually-oriented lyrics and production.
Petras combines last year’s EP with nine new tracks to form the cohesive, tantalizing 17-track album of your nightmares.