Hazel Cills
Tuesday
Tuesday
Freak Slug's "Ya Ready," from her latest album, I Blow Out Big Candles, is one of the tracks we can't stop playing this week. El Hardwick/Courtesy of the artist hide caption
Friday
Laura Marling's new album, Patterns in Repeat, is out today. Courtesy of Partisan Records hide caption
Tuesday
Jack Nicholson in a memorable moment from The Shining. The 1980 film's original music, by Wendy Carlos and Rachel Elkind, is among our picks for the most terrifying scores of all time. All Star Picture Library / Alamy/Warner Bros. hide caption
Tuesday
Beabadoobee's "California," from her album This is How Tomorrow Moves, is one of the tracks we can't stop playing this week. Jules Moskovtchenko/Courtesy of the artist hide caption
Friday
Following her death, SOPHIE's family says she left behind a collection of hundreds of unreleased songs, as well as a follow-up album to her debut. But the album wasn't finished. James Bentley for NPR hide caption
Friday
Miranda Lambert leads the pack in a crowded field of new music releases
For Miranda Lambert's 10th studio album, Postcards From Texas, the country star recorded in her home state for the first time since she was a teenager. James Macari/Courtesy of the artist hide caption
Tuesday
A recently discovered lost recording from Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, titled Chain of Light, is one of the most-anticipated albums due out this fall. Robert Leslie/Courtesy of the artist hide caption
Wednesday
Sabrina Carpenter's new album Short 'n Sweet is out now. Courtesy of the artist hide caption
Sabrina Carpenter's 'Short n' Sweet' is smart and silly
Friday
This week, we got new albums from Tinashe, Post Malone, Charly Bliss and Morgan Wade
Tinashe's new album, Quantum Baby, is out Friday, Aug. 16. Nice Life Recording Company hide caption
Tuesday
"Love Me Je Je," from the Tems album Born in the Wild, is one of our summer song picks. Bet Bettencourt/Courtesy of the artist hide caption
Thursday
The artist's star power is distinctive and grounded in a moment where the music industry, and its ability to break dependable new artists, is chaotic. Erika Goldring/Getty Images hide caption