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Rosalía, MIKE, Hayley Williams, and More: This Week’s Pitchfork Selects Playlist
Music

Rosalía, MIKE, Hayley Williams, and More: This Week’s Pitchfork Selects Playlist

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

The staff of Pitchfork listens to a lot of new music. A lot of it. On any given day our writers, editors, and contributors go through an imposing number of new releases, giving recommendations to each other and discovering new favorites along the way. Each Monday, with our Pitchfork Selects playlist, we’re sharing what our writers are playing obsessively and highlighting some of the Pitchfork staff’s favorite new music. The playlist is a grab-bag of tracks: Its only guiding principle is that these are the songs you’d gladly send to a friend.

This week’s Pitchfork Selects playlist features Rosalía, Hayley Williams, Grace Ives, Oneohtrix Point Never, a Smerz edit featuring MIKE and Zack Sekoff, and more. Listen below and follow our playlists on Apple Music and Spotify. (Pitchfork earns a commission from purchases made through affiliate links on our site.)

Pitchfork Selects: November 10, 2025

Smerz: “You Got Time and I Got Money” [ft. Elias Rønnenfelt & Fousheé] [MIKE + Zack Sekoff Edit]
Rosalía: “Mio Cristo Piange Diamanti”
Grace Ives: “My Mans”
Hayley Williams: “Showbiz”
Oneohtrix Point Never: “D.I.S.”
Hydroplane: “Houdini’s Plane”
Wata Igarashi: “Shockwave”
JT: “Girls Gone Wild”
Lerado Khalil & Surf Gang: “Nobody Calls”
WNC Whopbezzy & 70th Street Carlos: “WTF”

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Rosalía: “Berghain” Track Review | Pitchfork
Music

Rosalía: LUX Album Review | Pitchfork

by jummy84 November 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Rosalía is redrawing pop’s map at a stunning pace. Her first two records, Los Ángeles and El Mal Querer, brought flamenco into the mainstream; the second fractured the genre from its tradition, unearthing a pop architect intent on stitching sacred text with street expression. Then came MOTOMAMI, a world born of Caribbean heat and unbridled nerve, cementing her as an experimental auteur burning through sounds like a master technician. But when the earthly map felt complete, she spoke directly from the heavens: LUX.

The Spanish superstar’s fourth album is a heartfelt offering of avant-garde classical pop that roars through genre, romance, and religion. Arranged in four movements and sung in 13 languages, its orchestral pop storms down from the skies and leaves, in its thundering aftermath, a field guide for pop’s seekers, those who believe the answers to love, desire, and creative purpose might yet be contained in three or four minutes at a time. It’s not a dopamine machine like MOTOMAMI, but it rewards listeners who ache for more from pop artists: more feeling, more risk.

For all its scholarship and borderless histories, LUX isn’t a massive homework assignment; it’s an operatic lament for a new generation, an exquisite oratorio for the messy heart. Yes, the credits read like a conservatory (the London Symphony Orchestra; Catalan choirs; MOTOMAMI collaborators Noah Goldstein and Dylan Wiggins; Pharrell; and arrangements from Caroline Shaw and Angélica Negrón, to name a few), but Rosalía’s voice remains at its center. With her as its lodestar, LUX advances like a crusade to conquer the mysteries of human existence. On opener “Sexo, Violencia, y Llantas,” she announces her plan: “How nice it’d be, to come from this Earth, go to Heaven, and come back to the Earth.” She spends the next hour detailing this process from start to finish through flamenco pop revelations (“La Rumba Del Perdon”), waltzing insults (“La Perla”), existential operatic swells (“Memoria”), and songs that feel entirely new and genreless (like “Focu’Ranni or “Novia Robot”).

November 7, 2025 0 comments
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Common: Resurrection Album Review | Pitchfork
Music

Common: Resurrection Album Review | Pitchfork

by jummy84 November 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Though it might seem crazy now—considering their personalities, and five years after Cube virtually ended N.W.A. on “No Vaseline”—Common annihilated Cube with his response. The Pete Rock-produced “The Bitch In Yoo,” issued as the A-side of a split single with No I.D. in 1996, is one of rap’s most brutal diss tracks. The first verse alone is a thorough dismantling of Cube’s career, with Common claiming his West Coast cred is ridiculous (hiring the Long Island-based Bomb Squad for his debut), calling out his blatant careerism (“Went from gangsta to Islam to the dick of Das EFX”), and insinuating he’s a bad actor (with sly references to Higher Learning and Friday).

It took the deaths of 2Pac and the Notorious B.I.G., and the intervention of Louis Farrakhan, to squash the beef. At the Hip-Hop Summit in Chicago in April of 1997, Farrakhan addressed the assembled rappers, including Cube, Common, Snoop Dogg, and the Dogg Pound: “All this turf you fighting for—East Coast, West Coast—who owns it? Not you.” Farrakhan is acknowledged for ending the feud, but the deeper truth is that both men had changed. For Cube, he’d successfully made a transition to acting and was gradually assuming a role as a family man. Common had also recently become a father, and he was transformed by the Million Man March, which he attended. As he writes in One Day It’ll All Make Sense, the event inspired him to be comfortable with expressing love and solidarity.

To date, Resurrection has sold fewer than 250,000 copies, but it earned Common Sense respect. It also attracted more national attention, including from a California-based reggae band with the same name that sued the rapper over the rights. Common dropped the “Sense” before the 1997 follow-up LP, One Day It’ll All Make Sense, which simultaneously refined and expanded on the approach he and No I.D. took on Resurrection.

Shortly afterwards, he will leave Chicago and move to New York City. He will go and join the Soulquarians collective, garnering him larger audiences and further accolades; then he will drop an ambitious, experimental, psych-informed album that will bomb. He will date singers and athletes and movie stars; then he will think he can act. He will become an actor, questionably; then he will fight Keanu Reeves, believably. He will constantly cycle through success and embarrassment. He will come remarkably close to an EGOT. And all along, the sun will still rise every day over Lake Michigan.

November 2, 2025 0 comments
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Snocaps: Snocaps Album Review | Pitchfork
Music

Snocaps: Snocaps Album Review | Pitchfork

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

The record is split equally between the two sisters, with each writing and taking lead vocals for half the songs. They frequently sing in harmony, their voices blending to produce a kind of magic that seems unique to sibling pairs. Katie and Allison aren’t just identical twins but mirror twins; the term comes to mind when hearing their voices—nearly indistinguishable but flecked with individuality—singing together. Allison’s songs—like “Over Our Heads,” all rollicking percussion and sunny riffs—lean toward bouncy indie rock. Katie’s make fruitful use of her newer songwriting habits: Her syncopated cadence on “Wasteland” and the triumphant twang of “Cherry Hard Candy” make the songs feel like they could be demos for last year’s Tigers Blood. But some tracks hark back to her past: The forlorn and minimal “I Don’t Want To” sounds unguarded compared to the artful poise of her recent releases, a reminder of the directness and vulnerability that made her early records such a revelation.

Both Katie and Allison can be skilled profilers of the moments when introspection verges on action, or the ways too much self-interrogation can paralyze us. But these are songs that refuse to be pinned down, with lyrics about having “the pedal to the floor,” driving down any number of numbered roads—“22,” “40 East,” “29th”—or taking “a walk down Sunset.” (This comprises another throughline from their earlier collaborations, filled with songs of restless searching: “I’ve got a racing mind and enough gas to get to Tennessee,” Katie sang on P.S. Eliot’s first album; “Planes and trains and 95 straight up” on their second.)

These are also songs of tangled relationships and messy self-regard, common themes for both songwriters. Katie has been forthright about her experience with addiction and sobriety; in a long, moving profile published earlier this year, she spoke at length about her and Allison’s relationship with the youngest Crutchfield sister, who also struggles with addiction. These lyrics seem animated by questions of care and codependency, too: “When you go down,” they sing on “Heathcliff, “You’ll take me down with you”; or later, on “Wasteland,” Katie sings of a “willful bottom line,” of abandoned “lines in the sand.” More explicitly, the album’s last full song is called “You in Rehab.” “Can’t imagine you getting better,” Allison sings, “But I never give up.” The song’s pop-punk buoyancy betrays its heartbreaking premise: “I watch myself split in two,” she sings, “One loves me/And the other loves you.” Seen through the light of this shared struggle, it’s especially moving to hear Katie and Allison backing each other up here.

Since their last album-length collaboration, Katie and Allison Crutchfield have worked with scores of different artists, lived in different cities, triumphed over personal difficulties—but likely, many of the same challenges of love and relationships and family and identity still persist. There’s something therapeutic, then, about hearing them return to each other on a record that sounds genuinely fun, even as they continue probing these core questions. “When Katie and I feel really inspired by something,” Allison once said, “we can build each other up in this way where we have complete courage in ourselves and complete confidence.” As young songwriters, those qualities made them sound brash and fearless. But here, their candor sounds hard-earned and their uncertainty feels honest. Above all, they sound rooted: ready to head out in their own directions, confident of what they’ll find when they come back home again.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Tortoise: Touch Album Review | Pitchfork
Music

Tortoise: Touch Album Review | Pitchfork

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

There’s a lot of dirt in the gears: distortion, static and other distressed sounds. That might be illustrative: The band members—Dan Bitney, John Herndon, Douglas McCombs, McEntire, and Parker, multi-instrumentalists all—have variously noted the album’s difficult, lengthy, sometimes frustrating creation. Logistics made it the first long-distance Tortoise album, one not centered on folks making music together in a room. There are moments you sense that detached process, an airlessness that flattens some details. It rarely lasts long: One instrument or another will make a grand gesture, or get punched up in the mix Lee Perry-style, pushed through a filter and/or into the red. The destructive energy in some of the creative decisions speak to the detachment of the recording process—a shouting over the transom—and it makes for a less comforting, more unstable record.

“Promenade à deux” finally eases into something like a classic Tortoise chill-out space, albeit with a more widescreen approach, uncharacteristically graced by viola and cello. From there, beginning with “A Title Comes,” the LP’s second half finds perfect balance between signal noise and cinematic sweep, with signature vibraphone pulses and swooning guitar progressions rubbing against blissed-out Terry Riley organ tones and motorik chug. The interstitial “Rated OG,” which might easily run double its length without losing steam, hurtles into a splatter groove, tag-teaming “Oganesson,” which maintains the propulsion, locking focus with a spidery bass line that ends with another plunge into gritty discord.

“Night Gang” is the big finale. It opens like an abstracted Shangri-Las ballad, but vocals never come. There are self-consciously anthemic synths and super-sized surf guitar that suggest David Lynch directing Ben-Hur, and the song goes out on a tease of lighters-up rock-god jamming just before the fade. It’s pretty funny, actually, and moving, too. You sense the in-jokes, the teenage pleasures dusted-off and sincerely lensed through distance and accrued wisdom. You feel the miles and styles these guys have traversed over 30-plus years of music making. And while the darkness of the record’s first half doesn’t get resolved, the frame has widened and you see the bigger picture. There’s some comfort in that.

All products featured on Pitchfork are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Rosalía: “Berghain” Track Review | Pitchfork
Music

Rosalía: “Berghain” Track Review | Pitchfork

by jummy84 October 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Rosalía doesn’t do small gestures. The Spanish pop maverick’s follow-up to MOTOMAMI was always going to be an event, and then she posted a video with the London Symphony Orchestra. “Berghain,” the lead single from her forthcoming new album Lux, is all spectacle. Never before has Rosalía flexed her classical training this hard: composing in three languages, turning in a performance that’s almost all coloratura. “Berghain” feels as ambitious as Lux’s supposed four-movement structure, cantering from violin fireworks à la Vivaldi’s “Winter” to a pummeling “The Rite of Spring” grand finale. Yves Tumor is here—to usher us into the final act—as is Björk, whose own gale force presence threatens to knock the song on its side like a two-dimensional façade.

Then there’s the matter of the titular Berlin nightclub. Last year, French-Lebanese DJ Arabian Panther accused Berghain of cancelling a scheduled performance due to his pro-Palestine views. Controversy is built in with Rosalía—a Spaniard who sang in an Andalusian accent on 2018’s El Mal Querer and became a superstar making reggaeton—but “Berghain” never quite earns its provocation.

October 28, 2025 0 comments
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Korn: Korn Album Review | Pitchfork
Music

Korn: Korn Album Review | Pitchfork

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

The rest of Korn had his back. That quiet moment during “Fake” is a rare bit of respite amid these 12 tracks. They are, for the most part, like the militia at his side and rear, ready to defend Davis as he lambastes the people who have hurt and harassed him. That ability owes, at least in part, to the band’s idiosyncratic setup.

In the early ’90s, Munky had fallen for the strange sounds of Steve Vai’s athletic guitar, always moving like an elite gymnast who had unlocked an extra limb. When he learned that Vai was playing a seven-string Ibanez, he not only got one for himself but also convinced his bandmate Head to try one, too. The tandem tweaked the instruments, adjusting the strings and springs so that the sound was deeper and thicker, covering bits of the spectrum a bass would ordinarily manage. That allowed the band’s actual bassist, Fieldy, to approach his instrument differently, channeling an early love of funk-rock into distinct lead lines. With five strings instead of four, Fieldy could slide upward into some space normally reserved for guitars, adding licks and even taking stunted solos in the room abdicated by Head and Munky. All these tonal shifts meant the bass wasn’t always tied to the drums, too, so that Silveria could move more freely. He responded to the rest of the band in real time, his hits sometimes landing, crucially, like Davis’ fists.

To wit, on “Ball Tongue,” a break-up song with an old friend, Davis recounts all the ways he’s been disappointed until he just runs out of words. He repeatedly hurls himself into inscrutable scat outbursts, his annoyance beyond ordinary expression. (He was, mind you, also freaking out on meth in his dad’s studio during this take.) Especially at the start, Silveria’s drums are enormous, each hit lasting longer than it needs. Head and Munky’s guitars sound like sirens or a mind spinning out, while Fieldy seems to be slapping at Silveria’s every beat, a mountain lion pawing at a house cat’s toy. It is intentionally mean, the four old friends telling their new pal’s old friend to fuck off forever. And during “Helmet in the Bush,” a song about trying to overcome an addiction that is breaking Davis’ body, they become his backbone, forever trying to pull him back toward the center as he spirals.

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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feeo: Goodness Album Review | Pitchfork
Music

feeo: Goodness Album Review | Pitchfork

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Even on her debut EP, at just 22 years old, feeo sounded like the weariest of old souls. She sang of a choking fear, of bombs falling like tears, of staying up to hear her lover leave because she couldn’t bear the thought of waking up to “haunted sheets.” Over toe-scuffing downtempo beats and wistfully unfurled synths, she asked questions—“Are we in love or is it just the drugs, babe?”; “Being lost is a bit like being free, isn’t it?”—in a tone that suggested she harbored few illusions about the answers.

It wasn’t just the wise-beyond-her-years lyrics that were so striking. It was feeo’s effortless balance of plaintiveness and composure, vulnerability and control. Her guarded, whisper-soft musings had a way of unexpectedly blossoming into R&B-schooled runs that proved that, for all her seeming reticence, this woman could really sing. Her tempos may have followed the halting pulse of a doubtful heart, but her voice telegraphed a quiet, determined confidence.

In the four years since, the artist born Theodora Laird has released a handful of EPs and singles, as well as collaborations with Caius Williams and Loraine James, fleshing out the bruised contours of her emotional world while burrowing deeper into the strangeness of her production. Composed of muted synths, thin tendrils of guitar, and atmospheric electronic processing, her sound atomized, turning granular and shimmery. A thin layer of dust seemed to cover everything, like a house that’s been locked up for years. Sometimes, her backing tracks were made of little more than tiny samples of her wordless voice, like a chorus of forlorn bumblebees.

On her debut album, Goodness, feeo returns with an even more experimental approach, befitting her new home on London’s adventurous AD 93 label. Her songs have gotten still quieter and more minimalist, even as her lyrical and conceptual horizons have ballooned outward. And while her voice remains as stunning as ever, some of the surface-level prettiness of her previous work has burned off, leaving a whiff of charred metal and plastic.

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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Snooper: Worldwide Album Review | Pitchfork
Music

Snooper: Worldwide Album Review | Pitchfork

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Considering the essential role that drum machines play in egg punk, it’s a bit of a shock that Snooper—arguably the genre’s biggest band right now—never used one until the end of last year. While swinging from one tour route to another, all while punching in at their day jobs, the Nashville five-piece suddenly found the beating heart of egg punk sitting in their lap. Singer Blair Tramel and guitarist Connor Cummins started writing songs synced to the hardline rhythms of a vintage Zoom MRT-3, drawn to the propulsive nature of an intentionally repetitive structure. Worldwide, the culmination of those brainstorm sessions, is expectedly jacked up and alert. It’s the beefy older brother to 2023’s slinky art-kid debut Super Snõõper, but Snooper’s unwieldy creativity bends its rigidity into moments of zany malleability.

As if powered by a metronome plugged into a high-voltage outlet, Snooper hit the ground running on Worldwide and never stop across its 28-minute runtime, turning into varsity sprinters with a cross-country runner’s endurance. From the descending, jittery melody in opener “Opt Out” to the gloomy ’80s bass casting a British new-wave shadow over “Worldwide,” each member of Snooper—Tramel, Cummins, guitarist Conner Sullivan, bassist Happy Haugen, and drummer Brad Barteau—vaults through a series of musical high-knees and shuttle lines. If their aerobic endorphins weren’t already infectious, Snooper kick it up a notch with electronics on “Star 69” and “Pom Pom.” “They made me the team captain/And told me, ‘Make it happen,’” Tramel chants during the latter. Her teammates fortify the pep rally: pulling guitar strings across the fretboard, splicing drum beats into lightening-fried stutters, layering dog barks like cymbal hits.

Snooper thrive when locking eyes with the listener and tapping their wristwatch. On “Company Call” and “On Line,” they add gloss to both re-recorded versions from last year’s split 7″ with Prison Affair, letting Haugen and Barteau steer with a thundering bassline and the accoutrements of a full drum kit determined to render the drum machine obsolete. There’s no Pro Tools trickery speeding up the tempo without altering the pitch; Snooper really are playing that fast, and they’ve got the bloody fingers to prove it. The album’s best sprint is an unlikely cover of the Beatles’ “Come Together.” Snooper smash their pointer finger on the fast forward button of a CD player, zipping through the Abbey Road single in highlight reel-style. The all-timer bassline waggles in Haugen’s hands like that old rubber pencil trick, the guitars wait on the sidelines for the riff-ready chorus, and sparse drums more than halve the original’s runtime. It’d be a perplexing cover if not for how well the imagery aligns with the papier-mâché puppets of Snooper’s concerts: juju eyeballs, holy roller getup, hair down to his knee (singular).

October 13, 2025 0 comments
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Blawan: SickElixir Album Review | Pitchfork
Music

Blawan: SickElixir Album Review | Pitchfork

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Spirals of blaring noise echo as though chained to the bottom of some long-forgotten cistern. A voice, far removed from normal diction, barks syllables in a harsh, lurching cadence. What remains of regular meter exists only as a log of controlled chaos—fetid, cavernous rhythms that batter a crumbling foundation. It all sounds ready to break apart. British producer Blawan holds it together on “The GL Lights,” the opening track of SickElixir. He extracts techno from within dense strata of mechanized grit, maneuvering through sharp edges and switchbacks until the mangled frame contorts into a new picture. The aesthetic is startling; his corroded dance music, steeped in hellish glossolalia, conjures a vast, violent, and unknowable world.

It hasn’t always been like this. When charting his development, the artist born Jamie Roberts recalls feverish after-school drum practice and a fascination with the metallic shrieks of an industrial mincer that soundtracked work as a maggot farmer in South Yorkshire. In his earliest releases, tidy post-dubstep singles for labels like the legendary Hessle Audio, this fascination manifested as mechanistic perfection: skeletal grooves dominated by surgically arranged percussion. As his experience grew, his work underwent a sea change. The beats became noisier, grittier, more organic, without compromising the slick arrangements. By the time of his first album, 2018’s Wet Will Always Dry, many of Roberts’ now-perennial fascinations were beginning to calcify: “Tasser,” for instance, propelled its eroded techno pulse forward with a throaty digital rasp. A new poetics of distortion was taking shape.

Seven years on, the leering, all-encompassing grime of SickElixir melds dozens of Roberts’ subsequent discoveries and revelations into a brutish, unhinged gestalt; its clamorous swagger makes “Tasser” look like a curio. Tracks groan and caterwaul as though wounded, cataloging a vast library of scabbed-over synth leads and guttural vocal hooks. The sound rides an uncanny middle between the scratchy, live-wire jam sessions of Syclops and the kitschy throat-singing augments of Ummet Ozcan. Roberts operates with finesse, finding a distinct place in the mix for each element in his tapestry. The yo-yoing volume dynamics in lead single “NOS”—from ruthless, blown-out bass to a clipped whisper—are at once organic and painstakingly contrived, compressing opposed timbres into a continuous, unified eruption.

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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