Sweet Western Sound review | Everything you could want from a Tanya Tucker record
★★★★☆
Tanya Tucker provides the full, authentic country experience on her latest and 26th studio album, Sweet Western Sound.
★★★★☆
Tanya Tucker provides the full, authentic country experience on her latest and 26th studio album, Sweet Western Sound.
★★★★☆
Kassi Valazza’s sophomore album, Kassi Valazza Knows Nothing, is a poetic package of tender tunes – for home, healing or the highway. Read our review.
★★★★☆
In I Think You Should Leave season 3, Tim Robinson continues his run of the best, and dumbest, sketch show on TV. Here’s our review:
★★★★☆
Ecuadorian-Swiss brothers Hermanos Gutiérrez took the crowd on a desert road trip at Cross The Tracks, with their hypnotic, soulful instrumentals. Read our review.
★★★★★
After Stade de France had practically run out of alcohol and the Parisian sun had begun to set, the one and only Beyoncé – a true Queen of our times – arrived for the sixth night of her highly coveted tour.
★★☆☆☆
Lil Durk has a lot to say and a track record for possessing an ability to deliver it – but that’s not what we get on his latest album, Almost Healed.
★★★★☆
Written and recorded in the wake of the death of drummer Taylor Hawkins and Virginia Grohl, But Here We Are is a heavy album, both in lyric and sound, which lends it a tremendous power.
★☆☆☆☆
Kodak Black’s Pistolz & Pearlz is likely to be the Florida rapper’s final album with Atlantic Records, but he seems as uninterested making the album as I am listening to it.
★★★★☆
Lola Young sets out her stall as a bold new force on her debut album, My Mind Wanders and Sometimes Leaves Completely. Read our review.
★★★★★
The Mael brothers, Sparks, show they’re as willing as ever to push boundaries they’ve set for themselves on their 26th studio album, The Girl is Crying In Her Latte.
★★★☆☆
Prima Queen took to London’s Lafayette amid a current run of headline UK shows, in a gig that demonstrated just why they’re ones to watch – and how much more they’ll give in years ahead.
★★★☆☆
Following the hype and Mercury Prize-winning success of her debut, the latest album from Arlo Parks – My Soft Machine – is more accessible but less compelling than its predecessor.