In an era where much of pop music feels increasingly manufactured and disposable, Mitski continues to prove why she remains one of the few artists capable of creating genuinely thoughtful and emotionally rich pop records. Nothing's About to Happen to Me is a surprisingly delicate album, one that hides a fragile emotional core beneath a composed and often distant exterior. In many ways, the album mirrors Mitski herself: soft and vulnerable on the inside, yet guarded and resilient on the ... read more
As expected from Gorillaz, The Mountain refuses to follow convention. Rather than relying on a single sound or identity, the album constantly experiments with different styles, influences, and musical traditions. However, what truly makes the project stand out is not the variety itself, but the way these different elements are blended together. The transitions feel natural, allowing the album to move between genres and ideas without losing its momentum.
This diversity becomes one of the ... read more
I feel like Justin start sing about love with a random beat, not more than a teenager songs
One of the best albums I have heard this year, if not the very best.
My Ghosts Go Ghost is hip-hop at its most emotionally immersive. The album builds its identity around gentle yet deeply moving melodies, powerful lyricism, and slow, deliberate flows that force the listener to sit with every word and every note. Rather than overwhelming the audience through intensity, the album takes a quieter approach, allowing its emotions to slowly settle into the listener's mind.
What makes the ... read more
Kid A remains one of the most controversial and influential albums ever released. At a time when Radiohead could have comfortably repeated their previous success, they instead chose to create something alien, unsettling, and completely detached from the expectations surrounding them. The result is an album that often feels mysterious and difficult to grasp, yet impossible to ignore.
The atmosphere is the album's defining strength. Anxiety, paranoia, and emotional disconnection dominate ... read more
Wifiskelton is not even trying new things, I feel he's just putting random beats on a cringe lyrics and then, yeah let's put the "you're so goddamn pathetic" sound.
But at least, there's a few moments here that really makes you understand what Wifiskelton is doing.
Take Care remains one of the most emotionally influential albums I have ever heard. The amount of honesty and vulnerability present throughout the project is genuinely remarkable, especially when combined with its soft and deeply atmospheric production. Unlike many emotional albums that attempt to overwhelm the listener through dramatic intensity, Take Care works differently. The album does not attack your emotions directly. Instead, it slowly creates the perfect emotional environment for your ... read more
Few albums manage to capture the feeling of anxiety, confusion, and emotional instability as perfectly as Favourite Worst Nightmare. What makes the album so compelling is that it feels less like a collection of songs and more like a direct journey through the mind of Alex Turner himself. It is chaotic, restless, emotionally impulsive, and constantly on the edge of losing control.
This is not an album that fully reveals itself on the first listen. With every replay, it becomes clearer that the ... read more
After years of inconsistency and artistic stagnation, Drake finally delivers a project that feels genuinely focused again with Iceman. While the album is far from flawless, it succeeds in something many of Drake’s recent releases failed to achieve: creating an actual artistic identity instead of relying purely on formulas and commercial instincts.
The album’s greatest strength is undoubtedly its production. From the very beginning, Iceman establishes a cold and isolated atmosphere ... read more
It's one of the worst albums I've ever heard, nothing good at all, that's an insult to his mom that he puts her picture on the cover
I am not a huge rage guy, but Bad Religion somehow manages to remove everything that makes the genre enjoyable. The beats lack energy, the writing is painfully weak, and the album feels completely lifeless from start to finish. I just gave it 10 because he didn't use AI.
Simply a waste of time.
Kanye West returns with one of his most controversial and divisive projects in years, but despite all its flaws, Bully still feels like the comeback many fans were desperately waiting for. From the very first moments of the album, Kanye creates the feeling of a king reclaiming his throne. The introduction is grand, emotional, and full of presence, immediately reminding listeners why he remains one of the most influential artists in modern music.
The album’s strongest section is easily its ... read more
Drake begins his new trilogy with an album that feels almost completely detached from artistic ambition. Habibti is not simply disappointing because it lacks experimentation or risk-taking, but because it barely feels interested in music as an art form at all. The album sounds empty, repetitive, and emotionally lifeless, as though Drake is operating entirely on autopilot.
Throughout the project, there is an overwhelming absence of creativity. Many of the songs blend together into the same ... read more
Unlike many of Radiohead’s strongest albums, where cohesion becomes one of the project’s greatest strengths, Amnesiac often turns that same quality into a weakness. The album feels fragmented, unstable, and emotionally disconnected from itself at times, as though the ideas never fully unite into a singular vision. While this fractured identity can occasionally enhance the album’s surreal atmosphere, it also prevents many of the tracks from reaching their full ... read more
Few hip-hop albums embrace chaos as confidently as MM..FOOD. What makes MF DOOM so fascinating on this project is not simply his lyricism or production choices, but the way he constantly reshapes the structure of the music itself. The album refuses consistency in the traditional sense. Instead, it thrives on unpredictability, turning every track into a different kind of experience.
The diversity of styles throughout the album is extraordinary. At times, the sample completely dominates the ... read more
More than anything else, Wolf feels like a turning point. It is the moment where Tyler, The Creator begins separating himself from the purely aggressive and chaotic persona that defined much of his earlier work. While traces of the old Tyler still exist throughout the album, Wolf represents the beginning of a more emotionally aware artist emerging beneath the shock value and disorder. In many ways, it feels like the final chapter of Tyler’s older identity before his later artistic ... read more
Some albums tell stories directly. Others hide their meaning beneath layers of symbolism, contradiction, and fragmented perspectives. DAMN. belongs entirely to the second category. Instead of constructing a linear narrative like good kid, m.A.A.d city, Kendrick Lamar chooses a more abstract and psychological approach here, building an album that feels less like a story and more like a philosophical puzzle.
Every track on DAMN. represents an aspect of Kendrick’s worldview, with each title ... read more
Some albums define a genre. Others define an era. Ready to Die accomplishes both. More than just a hip-hop classic, the album stands as one of the clearest representations of East Coast rap at its rawest and most human. This is music born directly from pain, violence, poverty, and emotional exhaustion within the streets of America, transformed into stories carried by cold lyricism and unforgettable production.
What separates The Notorious B.I.G. from many rappers of his era is that he never ... read more
Some rap albums are built around dominance, while others are built around reflection. 4:44 belongs entirely to the second category. Instead of chasing status, luxury, or power like much of his earlier work, JAY-Z turns inward, confronting the consequences of his own life with a level of honesty rarely seen from artists of his stature.
What makes the album especially compelling is that it does not feel like an attempt to seek forgiveness. JAY-Z is not begging for sympathy, nor is he trying to ... read more