#experimental-production

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fromPitchfork
9 hours ago

James Blake: Trying Times

James Blake sometimes feels like pop music's arch, ultra-serious older brother, floating above the scene with warbly torch songs that never quite come down to earth. He's left his ghostly prints on artists ranging from Beyoncé to Rosalía to Lil Yachty, and it's a testament to his influence how widespread his once novel, weightless style of production has become.
Music production
Music production
fromPitchfork
1 week ago

Sideshow : TIGRAY FUNK

Sideshow's music captures the brutal realities of poverty, addiction, and survival through disorienting production and plainspoken lyrics delivered with emotional numbness.
Music
fromPitchfork
2 months ago

Niontay: Soulja Hate Repellant

Niontay fuses Florida, Detroit, and New York alternative rap with slurred nasal delivery, chipmunk flows, and eclectic underground production to create hyperactive, genre-blurring mixtapes.
Music
fromPitchfork
3 months ago

WRENS: Half of What You See

WRENS blend avant-garde jazz, club sound design, and street-rap tropes into playful yet sincere music, producing one of the year's strangest, skillful singles.
fromPitchfork
3 months ago

keiyaA: hooke's law

The producer and singer's second album is a freewheeling journey through clubs, bedrooms, and panic that's as cheeky and propulsive as it is heavy. Where her debut Forever, Ya Girl was affirmational and atmospheric, healing incense for working folks trying to get by, Hooke's Law is an accelerant. Over staggering tracks overrun with rhythms, melodies, and voices, keiyaA hurtles through the abyss and dares you to keep up.
Music
London music
fromPitchfork
4 months ago

Jennifer Walton: Daughters

Jennifer Walton's debut album Daughters transforms grief and overwhelm into aggressive, inventive music combining crushed organic instrumentation and intimate vocals.
Music
fromPitchfork
5 months ago

Quelle Chris: Beware Beware Beware (More Lullabies)

Beware Beware Beware portrays societal collapse through unsettling instrumentals, distorted voices, doom-loop rhythms, and idiosyncratic production.
Music
fromConsequence
5 months ago

Geese Come Alive with Getting Killed, the Most Creative Indie Rock Album of the Year: Review

Getting Killed is Geese's most adventurous, creative indie rock album to date, breaking previous molds and showcasing evolved songwriting and bold sonic experimentation.
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 months ago

Cerys Hafana: Angel review tracing the life cycle with the Welsh triple harp

Opening track Helynt Ryfeddol (An Incredible Ordeal) introduces a folk story about an old man drawn towards the purest music he has ever heard, sung by a bird, to which he listens until it stops. He returns home to find his house entirely changed and lived in by different people. Seven tracks later, the title track tells us that the bird was an angel, and that the man went away for 350 years, never to be seen again.
Music
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