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Reviews

Long Season

Fishmans
Each Sunday, Pitchfork takes an in-depth look at a significant album from the past, and any record not in our archives is eligible. Today, we revisit Fishmans’ 1996 masterpiece, a landmark of Japanese rock that fits a lifetime of aspirations and daydreams into a single 35-minute composition.

I Saw the TV Glow (Original Soundtrack)

In keeping with the film’s surreal take on nostalgia, a crew of leftfield pop and indie musicians—Caroline Polachek, Bartees Strange, Jay Som, yeule—pay knowing tribute to the ’90s.

Funeral for Justice

Mdou Moctar
Best New Album
In his most directly political album yet, the Tuareg guitarist lets his solos become the sound of his fury when his Tamasheq lyrics aren’t enough.

Poetry

Dehd
With more ambitious melodies, bolder harmonies, and compositional complexity, the Chicago trio’s new album hypercharges their already electric sound.

You Won’t Go Before You’re Supposed To

Knocked Loose
On the Kentucky metalcore band’s titanic fourth album, they’ve amplified and concentrated their sound into something so potent that it has its own gravitational pull.

Features

The Best Albums of 2024 So Far

Parannoul and the New Generation of Korean Indie