FLOOD

FLOOD is a new, influential voice that spans the diverse cultural landscape of music, film, television, art, travel, and everything in between.
A.D. Amorosi
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Reviews
OFF!, “Free LSD”

Keith Morris’ latest hardcore-punk outlet expands outward from their rough, fast exterior without losing their fury or favor in hardcore branding.

October 03, 2022
Reviews
Björk, “Fossora”

The Icelandic songwriter, producer, and vocalist’s first album in five years sees her pulling up her own roots, replanting them, and cajoling them to blossom colorfully anew.

September 30, 2022
Reviews
Lou Reed, “Words & Music, May 1965”

Folksy, harmonic, and earnest in a way that Reed’s often-salacious songs could never be, this archival leap into memory lane is charming, scattered, sketchy, and even funny at times.

September 27, 2022
Reviews
Alex G, “God Save the Animals”

Alex Giannascoli’s latest has a density to its proceedings that his previous albums lack—all while maintaining the quirk and intimacy of the bedsit recording proposition of his project’s origin.

September 26, 2022
Reviews
Sudan Archives, “Natural Brown Prom Queen”

Brittney Parks finds more of her own soulful way with a richer sense of storytelling, focused songcraft, and studies of racial divides on her second LP.

September 13, 2022
Reviews
Lee “Scratch” Perry, “King Scratch (Musical Masterpieces from the Upsetter Ark-ive)”

This handsomely illustrated boxset is a commendable attempt at stuffing the story of the legendary producer and toaster into one collection.

September 12, 2022
Reviews
Santigold, “Spirituals”

The producer and vocalist’s fourth full-length is a haunting and deeply personal work without eschewing her usual radically manic aesthetics.

September 09, 2022
Mimi Roman Has a Rockabilly Heart, a Tin Pan Alley Soul, and Many Stories to Tell

Upon the release of two archival collections—First of the Brooklyn Cowgirls and Pussycat—the ’50s-era figure walks us through the many fortunate turns her music career took.

September 02, 2022
In Conversation
Blondie’s Clem Burke on Keeping the Beat for “Against the Odds”

The drummer discusses growing with the band over the past five decades, as well as their epic new eight-LP box set.

August 29, 2022
Reviews
Diamanda Galás, “Broken Gargoyles”

Still a pillar of the avant-garde in 2022, Galás has neither mellowed or pulled back when it comes to rage on the two extended tracks that fill her latest LP.

August 25, 2022
Reviews
Pantha du Prince, “Garden Gaia”

The improvisation and collaboration on Hendrik Weber’s latest LP vibes with Gaia’s role as an ancestral mother to all that is life in Greek mythology.

August 24, 2022
Reviews
Neil Young + Promise of the Real, “Noise & Flowers”

This live recording of a set from 2019 further proves that any musical team that could bring vintage Young into the present without watering down its tenderness or poetry is heroic.

August 22, 2022
Reviews
​​Danger Mouse & Black Thought, “Cheat Codes”

This collaborative LP places producer Danger Mouse’s lush, tense arrangements and cushiony, snapping beats in the service of The Roots’ lyricist and microphone expert.

August 16, 2022
Reviews
Beastie Boys, “Check Your Head” [30th Anniversary Edition]

The Beasties clean up nice on this reissue of the album that introduced their dirtball brand of insistently stewing lo-fi mixed-bag skronk.

August 15, 2022
Reviews
Melvin Van Peebles, “Watermelon Man” [Reissue]

The 1970 film’s OST is one long, funky collage moving jarringly from blues, jazz, honky-tonk, ragtime, rock, country, and R&B without distinction between the lines.

August 09, 2022

Beyonce Reveals the Cover Art to Seventh Studio Album Renaissance;

Credit: Beyoncé/Instagram;

https://www.instagram.com/p/Cfb3ddsFe2S/

Reviews
Beyoncé, “Renaissance”

Bey’s seventh solo album is about abandon and joy, something celebratory that hasn’t been in her music since 2006’s B’Day.

July 29, 2022
Reviews
of Montreal, “Freewave Lucifer fck”

Kevin Barnes remains an always-unexpected delight with hints of madness, the morose, and zealous merriment in the air on their latest experiment.

July 28, 2022
Reviews
She & Him, “Melt Away: A Tribute to Brian Wilson”

Trafficking in sloe-ginned-up melancholy and soft shoe-shuffling pacing, this collection of covers sees the duo at weird ease interpreting Wilson’s catalog.

July 26, 2022
The Converging Lines and Voices of “Hallelujah: Leonard Cohen, A Journey, A Song”

Journalist Larry Sloman and vocalist Sharon Robinson dig deeper into their relationship with the song at the heart of the new documentary feature from Dan Geller and Dayna Goldfine.

July 20, 2022
Reviews
Neil Young with Crazy Horse, “Toast”

On this previously unreleased collection recorded in 2001, Young and the Horse do nuance and near silence with the same raging emotion they do noise and propelled rhythm.

July 08, 2022
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