Album Review: Peter Green’s Fleetwood Mac
Before the polished pop hits and stadium tours, Fleetwood Mac was a gritty blues outfit led by the quietly brilliant Peter Green.
Before the polished pop hits and stadium tours, Fleetwood Mac was a gritty blues outfit led by the quietly brilliant Peter Green.
In Fossora, Björk trades skyward dreams for soil-bound truths.
D’Angelo’s Voodoo isn’t just an album—it’s a groove-drenched, soul-searching journey that challenged the sound of R&B and left a lasting mark on music history.
What happens when punk grows up, looks inward, and rewrites the rules of rock?
Tom Waits strips his sound to the skeleton on Bone Machine, crafting an eerie, visceral record that dances with death and drips with innovation.
Once dismissed as a commercial misstep, Spirit of Eden has since become a cult classic.
With Houses of the Holy, Led Zeppelin stepped off the mountain of myth and into uncharted terrain.
What do rock legends, pop icons, and heartfelt balladeers have in common? They’ve all found inspiration in man’s best friend.
Before they became icons of psychedelic rock, Cream introduced themselves with Fresh Cream—a raw, blues-soaked debut that hints at greatness while still finding its footing.
With Ghosteen, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds trade blood-soaked ballads for ambient elegies, crafting a luminous and sorrowful journey through loss and wonder.
With White Chalk, PJ Harvey trades electric grit for ghostly stillness, crafting an album that whispers rather than shouts.
What if building the perfect record collection only required ten unforgettable albums?