Celebrate our tenth anniversary with the biggest issue we’ve ever made. FLOOD 13 is deluxe, 252-page commemorative edition—a collectible, coffee-table-style volume in a 12″ x 12″ format—packed with dynamic graphic design, stunning photography and artwork, and dozens of amazing artists representing the past, present, and future of FLOOD’s editorial spectrum, while also looking back at key moments and events in our history. Inside, you’ll find in-depth cover stories on Gorillaz and Magdalena Bay, plus interviews with Mac DeMarco, Lord Huron, Wolf Alice, Norman Reedus, The Zombies, Nation of Language, Bootsy Collins, Fred Armisen, Jazz Is Dead, Automatic, Rocket, and many more.
Dua Saleh, Of Earth & Wires
The Sudanese-American songwriter’s second album blends R&B and electronic pop with spoken-word poetry to create a tapestry of lush sounds and mythic language.
Kraftwerk, Radio-Activity [50th Anniversary Edition]
This re-release presents a band that’s palatably gleeful to have figured out their formula with an astonishingly cohesive and weirdly poppy picture of a Cold War–fogged world.
Towa Bird, Gentleman
The shred-bending guitarist is out for blood on her second LP as she channels femme-punk fury and four-on-the-floor disco beats into songs aiming to bust the heads of the pop patriarchy.
Josh Hurst
If a sudden shift toward EDM trappings sounds like an awkward fit for an alt-country band, on “FLOTUS,” it plays out as neither sudden nor awkward.
The My Morning Jacket frontman’s second solo record is not a hymn to destruction, but an anthem of resolve.
Nothing is held back.
The Bad Plus / photo by Josh Goleman
If you found yourself lost in the cosmos of Kamasi Washington’s triple-LP “The Epic” last year wondering which star to reach for next, 2016 has a few answers for you.
Mary Oliver has received many honors for her poetry, including the Pulitzer Prize and The National Book Award
With the essay collection “Upstream,” the lauded poet offers a portrait of herself and the world that is no less shrouded in mystery than her best work.
Rumors of Leonard Cohen’s desire for death have been greatly exaggerated.
“Ruminations” is what it claims to be: a series of ponderous reflections that abide and even cultivate solitude, finding the melancholy romance in moments of quiet introspection.
These are songs that tangle with love as a force both personal and political, and with the love of self, the love of God, the love a people must have for one another if any of them are going to last.
Wilco-2016-Schmilco
Though it turns out this isn’t a Harry Nilsson tribute album, the title is still a good omen.
Daptone’s inaugural reggae release is freighted with a tragic backstory.
The Chicago rapper and singer delivers an album filled with psalms of lament and hymns to hope through hard times.
Nels Cline “Lovers” cover
When presented with a collection of songs that’s explicitly billed as mood music, the correct question is: what sort of mood?
Faun Fables “Born of the Sun”
All together now: “We make fire! With our bare hands! We catch fish from the stream like a bear can!”
ScHoolboy Q “Blank Face” LP
Past ScHoolboy Q records have shown a similar grasp for introspection, but “Blank Face LP” is all immersion.
Paul Simon “Stranger to Stranger” album cover
Rhymin’ Simon’s still vital at seventy-four.
Robert Glasper / photo by Don Q. Hannah
On “Everything’s Beautiful,” the jazz pianist deconstructs Miles’s old recordings, then reassembles them with help from Stevie Wonder, Erykah Badu, KING, Bilal, and more. Here, he talks about how the legend’s legacy extends far beyond jazz.
Julianna Barwick “Will”
Like Miles and Monk, Julianna Barwick understands the importance of space; each resonant note and each distinct sound is chosen judiciously, allowing each one to echo with even greater power.
The psychedelic outlaw’s third album album doesn’t hold a lot of easy answers, necessarily, but it does have plenty of right ones.
FARGO — “The Myth of Sisyphus” — Episode 203 (Airs October 26, 10:00 pm e/p) Pictured: (l-r) Brad Mann as Gale Kitchen, Bokeem Woodbine as Mike Milligan, Todd Mann as Wayne Kitchen. CR: Chris Large/FX
The breakout star of the FX show’s second season talks about his character’s rise to the top of the show’s hierarchy of violence and what it means to be the sole black actor in a snow-white world.
Dustin Aksland for The Wall Street Journal
The National Book Award winner returns with a collection of short stories and a novella.
