More than a punk icon, Nina Hagen is a permanent lesson in artistic freedom, a performer who weaponized her own strangeness into a liberating doctrine.
More than a punk icon, Nina Hagen is a permanent lesson in artistic freedom, a performer who weaponized her own strangeness into a liberating doctrine.
The reissue of the Georgia songwriter’s 1970s work reveals a patient, unvarnished artistry, its contemporary resonance arriving without a calculated backstory.
After a debilitating vocal injury forced a total reinvention, Lindsey Jordan returns with a sound defined by fragility and hard-won control.
On her fourth album, the Australian songwriter’s signature style becomes a deliberate practice, moving beyond doubt into a settled craft.
The artist known as OHYUNG builds a world where abrasive noise, tender melody, and radical community are inseparable parts of a single practice.
A story of forced creation, the Shaggs’ music exists outside of taste, a raw document of obedience that became an accidental monument to artistic purity.
The Minnesota band’s new singles map a terrain where whispered intimacy and country-tinged grandeur share the same atmospheric pressure.