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Reviews

Hovvdy

Hovvdy
Best New Album
The Austin duo’s hushed and unassuming double album is a capstone to their career so far, a scrapbook of moments of love and loss from a life well-lived.

Time Is Glass

Six Organs of Admittance
Returning home to Humboldt after 20 years of roaming, Ben Chasny finds new connections between the modes—fingerpicked guitar, hushed folk, experimental noise—that have long crisscrossed his work.

CAROUSEL FROM HELL

LustSickPuppy
The Brooklyn artist’s debut is 20 minutes of chaotic, passionate, electronic rage music. Think Lil’ Kim and rhinestones, Bring Me the Horizon and silver spiderweb bras, Death Grips and latex doggy gear.

The Blue Mask

Lou Reed
Each Sunday, Pitchfork takes an in-depth look at a significant album from the past, and any record not in our archives is eligible. Today, we revisit Lou Reed’s 1982 solo album, a strangely alluring comeback that made good on the promise of a lasting rock’n’roll icon.

Light Verse

Iron & Wine
On his first album of new material in six years, Sam Beam mines the onset of middle age for sharp-eyed songs that are lively and relatively breezy, despite the melancholy subject matter.

Features

Parannoul and the New Generation of Korean Indie

How Waxahatchee Made the Album of Her (Second) Life