Five distinct personalities, each of whom also enjoys a flourishing solo career. But when they come together, they transform into a peerless group of musicians who share a singular focus.
Limited edition of 1000 individually numbered copies on translucent red & blue marbled 180-gram audiophile vinyl. In Stereo is the 1999 debut studio album by hip hop group Bomfunk MC's.
The 1981 collab album between Willie Colón and Rubén Blades features salsa infused with exciting rhythms, including Cuban charanga, Brazilian samba, and more.
Land Back! An unadulterated opening statement intoned by Saul Williams three times as he joins Carlos Niño & Friends in sound ceremony underneath oak and black.
A sludge-stoner rock powerhouse, loaded with crushing riffs, thunderous rhythms, and infectious hooks. The Portland quartet doubles down on heavy fuzz and anthemic choruses, channeling the raw energy of metal with a beer-soaked sense of fun.
A dark, abrasive fusion of gothic metal, doom, and hardcore. Rawer and more aggressive than their later, more melodic work, the album lashes out with pounding riffs, dirge-like tempos, and sardonic, confrontational lyrics
A great example of the hard-bop genre, the album includes four Golson compositions, plus "Staccato Swing" by Ray Bryant, who plays on the album, and the jazz standard "Autumn Leaves."
Natalie Jane is rewriting pop's rules. With emotionally visceral lyrics and a seismic voice to match, the singer-songwriter is one of the most intriguing powerhouses of pop's new generation.
Leith Ross takes the audience on a journey into their own life (past, present and future) to paint a picture of what they believe the world will become outside of themselves, even long after their life ends.
On their fourth LP, RESIDE, Summer Salt continue the push and pull between where they've been and where they're going, honoring the sun-soaked charm that won them their devoted fanbase while exploring new creative terrain.
Delivers hooky pop sensibilities wrapped in his signature dark wave edge. Led by focus single "STUCK," it dives into breakup fallout, childhood scars, and the longing to forget.
Their anthemic style incorporated politics in a uniquely accessible way, melding pop and hardcore into one cohesive sound, that would later be dubbed, "The Chicago Sound".
The record features a "minimalist and crunch" sound, a more "playful vocal range" than his previous work, and explores themes of self-medication in place of self-care within everyday life.