Kendrick Lamar - 'untitled unmastered.'
The Compton rapper's return is unexpected, explosive and brilliant
The Compton rapper's return is unexpected, explosive and brilliant
The Coral used to be amazing. Then they got a bit boring. Now they're amazing again
The once-placid electro-poppers tackle police brutality and fear for the future on their third album
Merseyside newcomer tackles relationship turmoil with soul, disco and big, bassy beats
'Life Of Pause' is a fine return to form for Jack Tatum's once hyped project
The dreamy New Yorkers’ last ever album is a moving eulogy for the late Benjamin Curtis
Manchester indie boys threaten their chart-friendly image with a dark, druggy, bombastic and labyrinthine second album
He was a self-styled rock god set on world domination, but the former Razorlight frontman's latter-day weird period is certainly no fad.
When Macklemore concentrates on being a doofus, not a serious rapper, he’s actually kinda loveable
Occasionally brilliant, often too serious, mostly impressive, from a singer on the cusp of stardom
The Baltimore band’s 10th album is a dizzying, lurid treat that’ll blow minds when played live
Kanye West’s dangerous, disjointed and confused seventh album retains the rapper’s status as the most interesting musician on the planet
Indie-poppers are equal parts blissed out and moody
Further proof that Young Thug is jolting new life into hip-hop
A worthy heir to their last album's industry-dismissing eccentricity
Zachary Cole Smith has overcome a multitude of problems to make this intensely powerful album
A defiantly bangerless take-me-seriously-as-an-artist album that reveals new charms every time you spin it
Hitmaker-for-hire makes a silk purse out of songs rejected by Rihanna, Adele and others
After losing two members – and hiring some new ones – the pioneering underground band take a dark and spiritual turn
New York City rocks with this new trio
Britpop survivors Suede are back - again = sounding bolder, braver and better than they have in 20 years
Savages add soulfulness to their serious sound on an album of love songs
South London hooligans Fat White Family’s second album is a dark, groovy and occasionally unlistenable thrill
The freaky Londoners abandon Americana in favour of paisley pro and songs about planets