Album Review: Kota the Friend releases a feel-good album with ‘EVERYTHING’
By Joey Perkins | May 25, 2020A perfect album to lift spirits during these troubling times.
A perfect album to lift spirits during these troubling times.
It is seemingly ungenuine with jam packed, distracting back beats and an unusual amount of autotune.
Lil Durk shows his openness to discuss his personal experiences along with issues that continue to corrupt America.
Don’t go into this album thinking you’re going to hear Hayley Williams from Paramore. She and this Williams aren’t the same, and that’s OK.
The ‘Half of It’ doesn’t revolve around two beautifully flawed individuals, but instead, many flawed and convincing characters who love each other in different ways.
The disrespect on Drake’s name lately is hushed by his latest mixtape.
The duo released a lyric video to go with the song.
Only a handful of people can make this ethereal sound work. Hazel English is among them.
The film is a love letter to their fans and their experience as brothers.
Lennon Stella delivers flawless vocals on Three. Two. One, a project in which she shares both relationship problems and effects of growing up as a child star.
The two artists sound phenomenal on the track.
The album fails to portray a cohesive portrait of Gunn as an artist.
It feels like one long, underwhelming song.
The R&B duo dvsn released ‘A Muse In Her Feelings,’ a project full of honest emotions and captivating production.
The Loves of Your Life paints a beautiful picture of the intimate, unassuming factors of love in a person’s life.
‘The New Abnormal’ is the new normal for The Strokes.
It’ll only take a few minutes of watching to see why she deserves every view she gets.
Ambar Lucid delivers a nine-track project of broken-heart ballads with a dash of appreciation for her individuality.
Jed Wyatt is crying somewhere.
A couple of cat documentaries, some old favorites and a brainless reality show fill my quarantine queue.