This week is a Christmas special!
I’ve rounded up the best and worst new Yuletide jams of 2016. Keep it current
this Christmas – play these songs as you cruise back home Christmas Eve in your driverless car
that you bought with your Leicester City bet winnings, or play in the kitchen
as you cook this year’s roast in that Smart oven you bought with that grand you
earnt from selling that AK47 plastic fiver.
“A collection of profound and epic album reviews and musical articles by former astronaut and brain surgeon, Alasdair Kennedy. Reaching levels of poetry that rival Keats and Blake, the following reviews affirm Alasdair to be a prodigy, a genius and a god whose opinion is always objectively right. He is also without a doubt the most modest man in the universe.” - Alasdair Kennedy
Friday, 9 December 2016
Wednesday, 7 December 2016
Review of 'Hardwired ... To Self-Destruct' by Metallica
Saturday, 3 December 2016
Friday, 2 December 2016
BEST AND WORST NEW TRACKS OF THE WEEK 02/12/2016: Run the Jewels, Little Death Machine, Mr. Twin Sister and more...
It’s December, which means you can
now put up your Christmas decorations and year-end lists, although a lot of you
impatient fuckers already did that back in September. For those who aren’t
currently buying Easter eggs already and planning their 2017 favourite albums
list, here are some songs from the last week to remind you what the here and
now looks like!
Tuesday, 29 November 2016
Review of 'Splendor & Misery' by clipping.
Blunt, rapey lyrics aren’t usually
my thing. I put up with them on this noise-hop trio's latest EP Wriggle (released earlier this year) because
the infectiousness made up for it, although I couldn’t help but feel frontman
Daveed Diggs was discouragingly dumbing himself down. Where was the vivid and
gritty storytelling of previous albums?
Labels:
★★★★★,
albums,
experimental,
hip hop,
industrial
Friday, 25 November 2016
Friday, 18 November 2016
Thursday, 17 November 2016
Monday, 14 November 2016
Review of 'Angelic 2 the Core: Angelic Funkadelic/Angelic Rockadelic' by Corey Feldman
How did we allow this to happen? No, I don't mean Brexit or Trump or even the
new Toblerone. I’m talking about 2016’s biggest atrocity - Corey Feldman’s new
album.
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