Featured New Releases All Featured New Releases
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November 10, 2014Largely instrumental, unexpectedly moving farewell from David Gilmour and Nick Mason.
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November 10, 2014On her fifth 21st century album the singer co-writes with a contemporary cast to build a bridge between her musical past and present.
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November 10, 2014The rapper grows and stuns on his most eclectic and satisfying effort to date.
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November 10, 2014The Norwegian electro-pop wizards say goodbye to the album format with a star-studded, vocal-heavy finale.
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November 11, 2014The Dominican legend delivers a stellar collection of bachatas, merengues, sons, and salsas, all done with a sense of musical adventure.
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November 11, 2014The singer/songwriter's long-in-the-works third album consists of eight exquisitely sculpted songs.
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November 11, 2014The venerable band's ninth album opts for a more personal, subdued approach even as it incorporates orchestral arrangements and literary allusions.
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November 11, 2014Complete studio recordings made during the lifespan of this beautiful and restrained Dallas slowcore quintet.
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November 10, 2014The British singer/songwriter's third album of introspective, '60s and '70s-influenced soft pop.
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November 11, 2014Expanded into a concrete lineup, this long running goth-folk project has never sounded more exacting or driven.
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November 10, 2014Despite its stylish flair, this solo album from the former Jonas Brother is at its best when it relies on the classics.
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November 11, 2014The creative Danish indie pop expat delivers another idiosyncratic set full of strong hooks and some darker tones.
AllMusic Staff Picks
In Concert: The Best of Jimmy Cliff
1976
Presented by producer Andrew Loog Oldham of Rolling Stones fame, this live album is arguably overly mixed by purists standards, but the stately performances cut through all that audience sweetening real quick. Filled with enough hits to get a "Best of" in the title, this comes from the reggae singer's Harder They Come era, so consider it crucial.
October 20, 2009
Brooklyn-based heavy psych band Naam is calling it quits following one last show this weekend after five years, two full-lengths, two EPs and a seven-inch of Nirvana covers. On their 2009 debut LP, the band established its template of stoned grooves, haulin' ass riffs and bursts of speed, indebted equally to prog, grunge, European psychedelia and American stoner rock, powered by thick bass tones, reverb-washed vocals and pummeling (when appropriate) drums.