45 Best Albums of 2016 So Far

The year of the "surprise release" has given us monster showings from Beyoncé, Radiohead, Drake, Rihanna, Kanye West and Chance the Rapper. But traditional release schedules have brought a wealth of music from hard-rhyming hip-hoppers, buzzy indie-punks, up-and-coming country songwriters, veteran Hall of Famers and more. Here's the best from New Year's Day to now.
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Beyoncé, ‘Lemonade’
We Say: Lemonade is an entire album of emotional discord and marital meltdown, from the world's most famous celebrity; it's also a major personal statement from the most respected and creative artist in the pop game. All over these songs, she rolls through heartbreak and betrayal and infidelity and the hangover that follows "Drunk In Love." Yet despite all the rage and pain in the music, she makes it all seem affirming…. Like the professional heartbreaker she sings about in "6 Inch," she murdered everybody and the world was her witness.
Learn More: Beyonce's 'Lemonade': Everything You Need to Know About Video Album
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Kanye West, ‘The Life of Pablo’
We Say: This is a messy album that feels like it was made that way on purpose…. It's a labored-over opus that wishes it were a mixtape, trying hard to curate the vibe of a sprawling mess, and that's because it's made by an artist who feels like a mess and doesn't care to hide it. "My psychiatrist got kids that I inspired" is the most brilliant line on the album: Ye can't even go to the shrink without getting his ass kissed about what a big shot he is, so he has to go to the studio instead. And dude knows he's got some issues to work on…. Pablo doesn't go for any grand musical and emotional statements on the level of "Bound 2" or "Runaway" or "Hey Mama." West just drops broken pieces of his psyche all over the album and challenges you to fit them together.
Learn More: Kanye West Blends Sacred and Profane on Startling, Gospel-Inflected New LP
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Radiohead, ‘A Moon-Shaped Pool’
We Say: If Radiohead have made the dehumanizing effects of technology their great theme, A Moon Shaped Pool is the first record in which, musically, they kick their way out of the machine, or at least make their cyborg soul more vestigial. Where Kid A and Amnesiac were defined by electronic music vernacular, this record is defined by its orchestral arrangements…. Electronics haven't been abandoned, and the orchestrations, like the band's "rock," often seem shaped by techno and its kin. But the magic is in the blending…. As always, it's Yorke's voice that holds the emotional center, and it's never been more affecting. Credit both his delivery and the production clarity, a statement in and of itself.
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David Bowie, ‘Blackstar’
We Say: Produced with longtime collaborator Tony Visconti and cut with a small combo of New York-based jazz musicians whose sound is wreathed in arctic electronics, Blackstar is a ricochet of textural eccentricity and pictorial-shrapnel writing. It's confounding on first impact: the firm swing and giddy vulgarity of " 'Tis a Pity She Was a Whore"; Bowie's croons and groans, like a doo-wop Kraftwerk, in the sexual dystopia of "Girl Loves Me"; the spare beaten-spirit soul of "Dollar Days." But the mounting effect is wickedly compelling. This album represents Bowie's most fulfilling spin away from glam-legend pop charm since 1977's Low. Blackstar is that strange, and that good.
Learn More: David Bowie Planned Post-'Blackstar' Album, 'Thought He Had Few More Months'
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Rihanna, ‘Anti’
We Say: [A] sprawling masterpiece of psychedelic soul that's far more straightforward than its tangled rollout…. After more than a decade as a superstar of the singles chart, Rihanna has become an album artist…. This is an album that forces us to question the boxes we've placed Rihanna in all along. Is she queen of the clubs or a break-up balladeer? Are her pop instincts sharper than her hip-hop ones? The answer, as provided here, is all of the above and more.
Learn More: Rihanna Looks for Something More on Banger-Free Anti
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Chance the Rapper, ‘Coloring Book’
We Say: Coloring Book is the richest hip hop album of 2016 so far. Gospel choirs are the backbone of the LP, rocketing skyward in the background the same way soul samples did on Kanye records, James Brown breaks did on Public Enemy records or disco interpolations did in the Sugar Hill catalog. Reaching back to the very beginning of black music in America, Chance recontextualizes one of the most enduring African-American art forms for 2016's most urgent one…. And, as a rapper, Chance is everything we love about hip-hop in 2016. The convoluted and conscious-minded bars of Kendrick Lamar, the melodic gymnastics of Young Thug, the Oculus Rift ambitions of Kanye West.
Learn More: Chance the Rapper Takes Fans on Journey Into Magnificent Coloring World
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Car Seat Headrest, ‘Teens of Denial’
We Say: Like past work, Denial conjures Nineties indie aesthetics – Guided By Voices' British Invasion logorrhea, Liz Phair's emo sucker-punching, Pavement's accidental-on-purpose hooks. Instead of playing everything, Toledo has a band now, and access to proper studios, so the sound is fuller and crisper. But the main difference is his voice, no longer muffled in effects but spitting out Moleskines-worth of pain, disgust, anger, confusion, and music-geek inside jokes with clarity and presence…. Like Courtney Barnett, he comes off as a rock-loving child of alt-rock's skepticism working backwards towards something to believe in.
Learn More: 10 Artists Defining the Sound of Now: Car Seat Headrest
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Parquet Courts, ‘Human Performance’
We Say: Even in an absurdly abundant time for brilliant young indie bands, Parquet Courts approach their jittery art-punk guitar buzz with a playful sense of adventure that sets them way ahead of the pack…. Despite the songs' loose-limbed wit, there's anxiety and paranoia all over them. The title tune is a disarmingly somber breakup ballad, as [Andrew] Savage power-mumbles about a bleak room, staring at overflowing ashtrays and empty bottles, listening for the footsteps of that girl who's never coming back. "Captive of the Sun" is a snapshot of contemporary New York malaise ("Trucks pave the roads with amphetamine salt"), and "Berlin Got Blurry" is a nerve-racked European travelogue, full of homesick surf-guitar tremors.
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Sturgill Simpson, ‘A Sailor’s Guide to Earth’
We Say: "[C]ountry" is a limiting term for Simpson, who embodies the word in its most inclusive sense. That's him snarling "Sugar Daddy," the nasty blues-boogie theme song to HBO's Vinyl, a song that doesn't appear here. His cover of Nirvana's "In Bloom" does, however, and it's the album's most brilliant WTF moment…. Sailor's Guide is classic album length – nine songs, 39 minutes – and best heard in one sitting; this is Nashville craft less as pop science than as rangy headphone storytelling. That's clearest on "Sea Stories," a cautionary tale that involves an enlisted man in Southeast Asia who gets booted from the Navy and ends up back home with a drug habit he regrets, but not completely. "Flying high beats dying for lies in a politician's war," he hollers. It's one of many powerfully defiant moments from an artist who's just getting started.
Learn More: Sturgill Simpson on Staying Country, Covering Nirvana on New Album
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Mitski, ‘Puberty 2’
We Say: Following the breakout success of 2014's Bury Me At Makeout Creek, 25-year-old Mitski Miyawaki takes a walk on the weird side in her fourth LP. Assisted by producer and instrumentalist Patrick Hyland, she shrugs off indie rock convention from the onset…. As bawdy and unpredictable as anyone is in their first puberty, Puberty 2 shows Miyawaki indulging her whims with a devil-may-care attitude – the result is an incendiary self-portrait.
Learn More: 10 Artists You Need to Know: February 2015: Mitski
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Esperanza Spalding, ‘Emily’s D+Evolution’
We Say: Esperanza Spalding['s] … Radio Music Society, transmuted the textures of neo-soul through tricky changes and unlikely arrangements – avant-garde, yes, but ultimately as welcoming as pop music. Follow-up Emily's D+Evolution is a far more ambitious and thornier affair. The lyrics, flowing in disjunctive clusters, are about deleted narratives, glass ceilings and dreams deferred – ultimately a complex, funky prog-rock concept opera about love and identity. It’s a scorching art-pop statement.
Learn More: Esperanza Spalding on Role-Playing Jazz-Rock Opus 'Emily's D+Evolution'
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Elton John, ‘Wonderful Crazy Night’
We Say: Wonderful Crazy Night is the latest stage in an extended return to form for John – his third straight album with co-producer T Bone Burnett…. [T]here is a matured pacing and weight to the music and John's vocal performances that make this record one of his finest in its own right. Wonderful Crazy Night is about what happens after those loose clothes and cool drinks. The final tally: It's all worth it.
Learn More: Elton John: The Bitch at Peace
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Mavis Staples, ‘Livin’ on a High Note’
We Say: [A]fter two Jeff Tweedy-produced LPs did for her what Rick Rubin's benchmark American Recordings did for Johnny Cash, Mavis Staples takes her comeback higher still with this set, using an A list of songwriters informed, but not bound, by roots music. Valerie June, Ben Harper, Justin Vernon, Aloe Blacc and Nick Cave all rise powerfully to the occasion. Credit the challenge of writing for an icon who addresses spiritual and political matters with minimal abstraction: You either step up, or step off.
Learn More: Mavis Staples' Ode to Joy: How M. Ward, Neko Case and More Shaped New LP
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Paul Simon, ‘Stranger to Stranger’
We Say: Stranger to Stranger … draws together nearly all of the man's accrued vernacular with seeming effortlessness: the gentle folk of Simon and Garfunkel; the gospel flavor of There Goes Rhymin' Simon; the percolating Afropop of Graceland; the samba fireworks from The Rhythm of the Saints; the vintage-sample flipping of 2011's So Beautiful or So What. His latest continues in the same vein; it's as inviting, immaculately produced, jokey and unsettled a record as any he has ever made.
Learn More: Inside Paul Simon's Genre-Bending New Album Stranger to Stranger
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Loretta Lynn, ‘Full Circle’
We Say: For Loretta Lynn's first album since 2004's Van Lear Rose … the iconic queen of no-bullshit country music, now 83, looks more backwards than forwards. Culled from a decade's worth of sessions and co-produced by John Carter Cash – Johnny's son, whose diapers Lynn changed back in the day – Full Circle is a homey set…. There are well-travelled traditional numbers – "Black Jack David," popularized by the Carter Family, and Kurt Cobain's beloved "In The Pines" – that one could imagine being sung in a sitting room down in Butcher Holler.
Learn More: Loretta Lynn on How New Album Full Circle Tells Her Life Story
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Margo Price, ‘Midwest Farmer’s Daughter’
We Say: Price is a thirty-something East Nashvillian originally from Illinois; the vocal style is restrained yet mighty, her songcraft amazingly vivid, and the arranging instinct spot on, with a taste for retro styling that never tilts into Gramma's attic dress-up. The set opener "Hands of Time" comes close, a six-minute memoir-style wrapped in lush strings that channel late Sixties Bobbie Gentry-style country soul. But by the time Price sings about losing a first-born and crying out to God, bruised stoicism muting the sound of her knees hitting the floorboards, you're reminded of the incredible power that lies in tradition well-used.
Learn More: Rising Country Star Margo Price on Why She Feels 'Like One of the Men'
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Iggy Pop, ‘Post Pop Depression’
We Say: On his awesomely gnarled 17th solo album, he plays the low-rent elder statesman, a spectacularly scuzzball Leonard Cohen still snarling, still hoping to get his rocks off. "America’s greatest living poet/Was ogling you all night," he sings modestly on "Gardenia," addressing a girl "much taller and stronger" than he, with an "hourglass ass" and a "powerful back." (What woman wouldn’t be flattered?) His sinewy visions are shaped by producer Josh Homme and Dean Fertita (bunkmates in Queens of the Stone Age), and Matt Helders, the hip-hop-snappy drummer with the Arctic Monkeys. Over nine songs and 42 minutes – old-school LP length – they juggle tight and loose, conjuring a ravaged cadaver in a sharp funeral suit.
Learn More: How Iggy Pop Recaptured Berlin Glory Days
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Lucinda Williams, ‘The Ghosts of Highway 20’
We Say: With blowsy, parched vocals, languorous tempos, straggly melodies and flyaway guitar lines, Lucinda Williams' 12th album feels a little like an alt-country picture of Dorian Gray. You could also call it a portrait of the artist as an older woman: time-scarred, unapologetic, but still potent. [I]ts jazzy rawness represents a high point of emotional craft in a career defined by it.
Learn More: See Lucinda Williams' Raw Ghosts of Highway 20 on Transmissions
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Mudcrutch, ‘2’
We Say: When Tom Petty reassembled his first, pre-Heartbreakers band in 2007, it may have seemed like a novelty. Now, with a second album, Mudcrutch feel like a steady moonlighting gig.
Learn More: Tom Petty on New Mudcrutch LP and Why He's Done With Solo Albums
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YG, ‘Still Brazy’
We Say: After surviving a shooting at a recording studio, West Coast slick-talker YG details terror on micro and macro levels: from his own paranoia after catching a bullet, to the insanity of his native Compton, to the frayed state of the nation — see "FDT," which stands for "Fuck Donald Trump"
Learn More: 'Self-Made' MC YG Talks Police Violence, Trump and the Perils of Success
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Sunflower Bean, ‘Human Ceremony’
We Say: Listening to the debut album from Brooklyn trio Sunflower Bean is a bit like flipping through some smart stoner's impeccably refined record collection. All the correct drone-rock references are present: the Velvet Underground at their beachiest, the Autobahn liftoff of vintage Seventies Kraut-rock, the Eighties drug-punk of Spaceman 3, recent garage-grind aesthetes like Ty Segall, and the entire college-jangle canon from early R.E.M. to the Smiths to Real Estate and beyond. Sunflower Bean take these influences and shape them like Silly Putty into sweet, ingenious psych-pop songs that are more economical and compact than you'd expect from a band whose hottest tune is called "Wall Watcher." "
Learn More: Hear Sunflower Bean's Sharp, Dreamy Debut
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Bob Mould, ‘Patch the Sky’
We Say: No cellos, no club music electrobeats, no acoustic guitar breathers, and no light at the end of the tunnel – precious little, anyhow. Just a classic power trio lineup in the spirit of Midwest post-punk juggernaut Hüsker Dü and its barely-sweetened descendant Sugar, with Bob Mould conjuring the ecstatic rage of his earlier bands for a grim new era, apparently still convinced that the best way to meet crushing hopelessness is by barreling head first through it with a throat-shredding howl and all amps cranked.
Learn More: Bob Mould: My Life in 15 Songs
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Peter Wolf, ‘A Cure for Loneliness’
We Say: If you've been praying for Peter Wolf to drop a bluegrass remake of his J. Geils Band classic "Love Stinks" – congratulations. The man heard you. It's just one of the welcome surprises on the Woofa Goofa's superbly rugged new solo album, rambling through various strains of roots music, yet infusing it all with his own lanky-boned rock & roll spirit.
Learn More: Peter Wolf on Rootsy New LP: 'You Just Wonder How You Can Endure'
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Kendrick Lamar, ‘Untitled Unmastered’
We Say: Ultimately, this is a set of odds and ends, inspired freestyles and funk jams; many are likely [To Pimp a] Butterfly outtakes, albeit none with the laser-focused resonance of "The Blacker The Berry" or "Alright." But there's brilliance in even Lamar's cast-offs, and an intimacy here that makes this more than just a gift for his ravenous fans — it's an illuminating look at a red-hot rapper's craft. And coming from a dude thinking hard about the price of success while creating art for a multinational corporation (listen to the single full-blast verse of "untitled 03," about being sold for $10.99), it's a shoot-from-the-hip-gesture that feels empowered. The titular pun is clearly intentional.
Learn More: Kendrick Lamar Flaunts Casual Brilliance on Untitled Unmastered
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Anohni, ‘Hopelessness’
We Say: "It's an American dream" coos the transgender artist formerly known as Antony, on "Execution," a spangled pop jam about state-sanctioned murder delivered over silvery percussive stabs and synth builds. It may leave you uncertain whether to dance or collapse in tears, which is the operative dichotomy of an extraordinary record fusing disco uplift, blues pain-purging, gospel salvation-seeking, and protest song testifying. Despite the rangy gorgeousness of her voice and the state-of-the-art electronic dazzle of the music, created with Daniel Lopatin (Oneohtrix Point Never) and Ross Birchard (Hudson Mohawke), Hopelessness isn't easy listening.
Learn More: Anohni Talks Protest-Minded Pop, Identity Politics, Oscar Boycott
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Savages, ‘Adore Life’
We Say: [T]heir music is driven by emotions that are almost unprecedented in the genre that gave us Joy Division and Public Image Limited: "Love is the answer," they advise, somewhat shockingly, against the spiked guitar tumult and haymaker drum assault of "Answer," like flowers of romance in full bloom.
Learn More: Savages: Post-Punk's Chilliest Band Finds Love Amid the Noise
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White Lung, ‘Paradise’
We Say: Mish Barber-Way … and her crew of Vancouver punk ruffians whip up a gloriously hostile racket, sharpening the raw attack of their 2014 breakthrough, Deep Fantasy. The songs gain a mammoth melodic crunch thanks to guitar whiz Kenny William, who sounds like Johnny Marr with his cardigan on fire.
Learn More: White Lung: Why the Political Punks Embraced Country Storytelling
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Frankie Cosmos, ‘Next Thing’
We Say: 22-year-old Greta Kline started puting intriguing song sketches online when she was in her teens, slowly amassing a cult following before releasing her promising debut Zentropy in 2014. On Next Thing, Kline, who records with a roving group of collaborators under the moniker Frankie Cosmos, moves from the lonesome bedroom to the cramped garage, updating her cloistered lo-fi aesthetic with a crisp pop minimalism best suited for the tinny Macbook speakers that will be playing this record in dorm rooms across this country. If Frankie Cosmos sounds newly professional this time around, it hasn't affected Kline's insular anxiety and winking self-doubt one bit.
Learn More: 10 New Artists Defining the Sound of Now: Frankie Cosmos
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The Monkees, ‘Good Times!’
We Say: The Monkees’ first album in nearly 20 years is also their best since the Sixties – to be precise, since the Head soundtrack in 1968. (Sorry, Instant Replay diehards.) It’s a labor of love – not just for the three surviving lads, but for all the Monkeemaniacs pitching in, headed by producer Adam Schlesinger (from Ivy and Fountains of Wayne), who contributes the gem “Our Own World.” It nails the classic summer-jangle Monkees sound, with seriously fantastic new tunes from Rivers Cuomo, Andy Partridge and the none-more-mod squad of Noel Gallagher and Paul Weller.
Learn More: How the Monkees Got Their 1960s Groove Back
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Bonnie Raitt, ‘Dig in Deep’
We Say: Raitt is … bold and sharp on Dig In Deep, made with her longtime road band. She takes sensual charge of INXS' "Need You Tonight" and renders Joe Henry's ballad "You've Changed My Mind" with healing authority. Raitt's own writing is often a secret strength, but she comes out swinging in "Unintended Consequence of Love," and closes with "The Ones We Couldn't Be," an intimate dissection of a broken affair delivered with the force of memoir.
Learn More: How Bonnie Raitt Overcame Loss for Her First LP of New Songs in a Decade
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Brian Eno, ‘The Ship’
We Say: The Ship, is a variation on the typical Eno theme, the next warm period in his glacial unthawing, and it's one of his more interesting works. Where his last release, 2012's Lux, seemed like a brighter distant cousin of Music for Airports, The Ship finds Eno combining ambience with his own voice for the first time. He's billed it as a sort of "musical novel" – a loose story collage inspired by the Titanic sinking, World War I and random throwaway lines from emails and his own writing – but it's not so much what he or his computer or his comedian friend and collaborator Peter Serafinowicz say on the record that matters as much as how it feels.
Learn More: Brian Eno on Kanye West, David Bowie and His Immersive LP The Ship
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PJ Harvey, ‘The Hope Six Demolition Project’
We Say: Harvey traveled to Afghanistan and Kosovo, and spent time in Washington, D.C., witnessing the many costs of imperialist aggression. But anyone expecting a traditional protest record hasn't paid much attention to her long career. This music is impressionistically pointed…. [T]ightly quilted tapestries of accordion, flute, violin, "field recordings" and sax, sax and more sax throughout – all recorded in an art installation where anyone could watch the singer & co. work through one-sided glass.
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Deftones, ‘Gore’
We Say: While evolving from dreadlocked headbangers to multihued experimentalists, they've made introspective shoegaze, anthemic alt-rock, shimmering dream-pop and speaker-melting metal seem like oddly easy bedfellows…. On much of Gore, however, the Deftones follow a slightly different route, wielding the tension between their contrasting creative urges like a weapon. The strange new demon inside them has driven the band to roughen up some of their mirrored surfaces and make a darker, more uncomfortable record.
Learn More: Deftones Talk New Album, Band Tension: 'We Like Unnerving Feelings'
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John Doe, ‘The Westerner’
We Say: Coinciding with his new book on the L.A. punk scene is an LP grounded in the West: its migrant-worker folk, Bakersfield twang, Mission district psych and lowlife Hollywood drama…. It's a short story about a dude, ex-con maybe, riding a train towards redemption – a quintessential California tale made new.
Learn More: Hear John Doe's Desert-Influenced New Album The Westerner
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Brandy Clark, ‘Big Day in a Small Town’
We Say: It's music tooled alternately for stadiums and songwriting circles, commercial and public radio, line-dance bars and coffee shops…. Clark is good at bending country boilerplate: On "Drinkin', Smokin', Cheatin'," she teetotals while listing a downward spiral of coping fantasies. She also spikes the comic with the grim; in the cheerfully deadpan "Big Day in a Small Town," a high schooler passes out in class when her water breaks, and a dude drunkenly flips his pickup en route to his son's football game.
Learn More: Brandy Clark on the Antiheroes of New Album Big Day in a Small Town
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Various Artists, ‘Day of the Dead’
We Say: This five-plus hour, 59 track Grateful Dead tribute album is a monument of living history – an image of their golden road branching out endlessly…. Pretty much every sound the band touched on or suggested gets represented – from ambient music (several sound-sculptures by Bryce Dessner of the National and experimental composer Tim Hecker's "Transitive Refraction Axis for John Oswald") to Afropop (Orchestra Baobob turning "Franklin's Tower" into a shining desert mirage) to psychedelia (Flaming Lips making throbbing lysergic mush out of "Dark Star") to roots rock (Lucinda Williams locating the lust in a slow humid "Going Down the Road Feeling Bad"). But indie songwriters and guitar nerds get most of the action; Courtney Barnett hazily savors the conversational drift of the post-Altamont rap session "New Speedway Boogie," and Stephen Malkmus does his hey-whatever guitar wizard thing on a ten minute "China Cat Sunflower → I Know You Rider," just to pick two of the more wonderful examples among many.
Learn More: Inside the National's Epic Grateful Dead Tribute
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Kevin Gates, ‘Islah’
We Say: On his major-label debut, Baton Rouge rapper Kevin Gates is not afraid to be as flashy, daring and intense as he was on the five acclaimed mixtapes he's released since 2013. He's a rapper's rapper, a lyrical Evel Knievel without any desire for a cloying pop crossover; it should be mentioned that he works with no guest appearance safety nets, save one track on the deluxe edition – ultimately resulting in a cohesive, satisfying, fat-free full-length. His prowess is evident not only in his dizzying lines ("Relationship flaking, no eczema/She catching feelings, she say we inseparable/Oyster Perpetual, it's not a replica"), but in the way his melodic flow glides so naturally, to a point where lyrics can have the sing-song feel of a hook, and a sung chorus can have the swagger of a rap.
Learn More: Watch Kevin Gates Talk Writing Process: Why Are You Trying to Dissect It?
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Flume, ‘Skin’
We Say: Layered, abrasive electronics set a grimy backdrop for MC guest spots by Vince Staples and Raekwon, and even when Flume angles for the radio, with female vocals from breathy Canadian Kai and dirty-talking Swede Tove Lo, his beats slam and skitter. But for all its harsh textures, Skin is also richly melodic.
Learn More: 10 Artists Defining the Sound of Now: Flume
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Drake, ‘Views’
We Say: The best thing you can say about Drake on Views is the worst thing, too: He's a lightweight. That description suits his breathtaking nimbleness in switching between flows, intonations and genres; his fleet-footedness adapting to, and jettisoning, passing trends; his ear for killer stripped-down beats and his stunning economy when crafting hooks – singing irresistibly wounded melodies, finding unlikely musicality in barked refrains about woes and Jumpmen.
Learn More: Drake's Views: Everything You Need to Know
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The 1975, ‘I Like It When You Sleep, for You Are So Beautiful Yet So Unaware of It’
We Say: This ascendant U.K. quartet ground their second album in sleek dance rock that often feels like it was sculpted on a gaudy Eighties budget as the bandmates tried hard not to get too sweaty in their aqua-neon sport jackets. No shame in that – and they do it well, filtering in elements of spacy ambience (with echoes of acts from My Bloody Valentine to M83), Jacksonian R&B and arty dance pop…. "Love Me" funkily recalls Nile Rodgers' splashiest Duran productions; "A Change of Heart" is the John Hughes soundtrack ballad moment.
Learn More: The 1975 on Channeling Personal Issues Into Chart-Topping Rock
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Tegan and Sara, ‘Love You to Death’
We Say: Their latest continues a transformation into full-on dance-pop that began with their last LP, 2013's excellent Heartthrob, and its euphorically horny hit "Closer." Once again Tegan and Sara are collaborating with co-writer Greg Kurstin, best known for his work with Adele, Pink and Kelly Clarkson. He helps them create big, splashy songs that thrive on intricate intimacies – tangled love, barbed honesty, hard-won empowerment – with lyrics implying not only romance but friendship, familial bonds and artistic partnership as well. "Boyfriend" has a track that recalls Madonna's first album and bizarre-love-triangle lyrics that evoke New Order; "White Knuckles" builds from pensive pianos and a dolefully rumbling beat into a cloud-riding chorus as they sing about "love twisted up like a chain or a nail" and "excuses for the bruises we wear."
Learn More: Tegan and Sara Scale Back on Dancey New LP
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Maren Morris, ‘Hero’
We Say: Maren Morris' debut mixes Nashville's economical wordplay with a warm embrace of modern pop. At times she evokes Bonnie Raitt's soulful tone and at others borrows Rihanna's tough swagger — but does both with ease. By refusing to conform to genre expectations, Morris skillfully blends these disparate influences into a low-key triumph.
Learn More: Meet Maren Morris: How a Nineties Pop Fan Became Country's Breakout Star
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Fifth Harmony, ‘7/27’
We Say: The beats are mostly booming or bouncy and the swagger is all over the place. There's nothing here as good as 2014's "Bo$$," but "That's My Girl" bites its honking horns just fine and delivers a booming addendum to its empowering message: "Destiny said it, you got to get up and get it/Get mad independent, don't you ever forget it." The second Fifth Harmony LP isn't a massive step forward, but with a constant bombardment of hooks, high energy and incredible harmony there's not much time to catch your breath to compare.
Learn More: Watch Fifth Harmony, Ty Dolla $ign 'Work From Home' in New Video
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Death Grips, ‘Bottomless Pit’
We Say: On what might be their ugliest release, the elusive noise-rap crew explodes with rhythms that hearken back to the crossover punk and thrash metal of mid-Eighties California. But texturally and lyrically, Bottomless Pit is boiling with the digital chaos, paranoia and tension of Internet-era info overload: "All I do is lose my form, I'm warping."
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Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith, ‘Ears’
We Say: Aurelia Smith makes electronic music utilizing the rare, modular Buchla Music Easel synthesizer, expertly wedding its blipping arpeggios to her processed voice. A former acoustic guitarist from the isolated Orcas Island in the Pacific Northwest, Smith made "cinematic folk" with touches of Segovia, Ravel and Debussy before going electronic. Smith's classical acumen remains intact on Ears, a wholly immersive, mesmeric listen.
Learn More: 10 New Artists You Need to Know: March 2016: Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith
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