Korea’s first openly gay K-pop idol fuses elements of disco, house, and electronica into a laid-back, Troye Sivan-worthy club track that’ll make you want to get up and move. Hey, you’re home alone — who’s going to stop you?
was an anticipated offering. With avant-garde production, Doom and Madlib clearly worked in tandem because the songs surpass cohesion, namely on "Money Folder," which arrived before the effort itself was released. MF Doom, known for his lyrical prowess, radiates seamlessly thanks to Madlib's bas...
Pitchfork’s weekly rap column covers songs, mixtapes, albums, Instagram freestyles, memes, dances, weird tweets, fashion trends—and anything else that catches our attention in the world of hip-hop. MIKE: weight of the world MIKE albums are comforting, like visiting old friends in the ne...
Such a resurfacing is astute as the alien and resurrectionary intro “Washed Away” attests: Kelela is clearly entering a new phase of confidence and renewal. The next single “Happy Ending” provides the classic bop with a nostalgic edge that we only hope pervades more songs on the tracklis...
Victoria Legrand and Alex Scally have always known how to give their fans exactly what they want without pandering to the tropes of the genres within which they work. It seems that they’ve once again hit upon the perfect balance of density and melodic uplift on these new songs and created...