Album Review: The Stooges’ Debut
Before punk had a name, The Stooges gave it a voice. With snarling vocals, savage riffs, and unapologetic simplicity, their debut album didn’t just break the mold—it tore it apart.
Before punk had a name, The Stooges gave it a voice. With snarling vocals, savage riffs, and unapologetic simplicity, their debut album didn’t just break the mold—it tore it apart.
Björk’s Biophilia isn’t just an album—it’s a living experiment.
With Sea Change, Beck trades irony for introspection in a bold stylistic shift.
With biting lyrics, genre-blending swagger, and a razor-sharp take on class and desire, Different Class isn’t just a Britpop gem—it’s Pulp at their most fearless.
Zenyatta Mondatta finds The Police at a crossroads—sharpening their sound, expanding their themes, and delivering one of their most intriguing records.
Emerging from the grit of 1970s New York, Marquee Moon wasn’t just another punk record—it was a radical reimagining of what rock could be.
Nick Drake’s Five Leaves Left didn’t shout to be heard—but over time, its whispered truths and elegant arrangements have echoed louder than most.
David Bowie didn’t follow trends—he created them. From chart-topping hits to groundbreaking innovations, his career was marked by constant evolution and bold moves.
David Bowie was never content with being one thing for too long. This is the story of how a South London dreamer became pop’s greatest shape-shifter.
Women in experimental music have always pushed sonic boundaries, but too often their work is framed as strange or unstable instead of visionary.
Punk promised chaos, rebellion, and a break from the norm—but did it stay true to its roots, or get swallowed by the very system it fought against?
Deluxe editions once felt like bonus content for loyal fans. Now, they’re strategic chart weapons reshaping the industry. Is the music losing out in the process?