̸ June 2023
Lewie Day and Alia Seror-O'Neill's stunning downtempo pop debut captures the thrill and seductiveness of the chase.
PC Music's resident experimentalist revels in colourful chaos on their second LP.
New York's breakbeat hero makes a crossover album that perfectly balances pop melody and dance floor heft.
Nabihah Iqbal's shoegazey new album is both deeper and dancier than we're used to.
Jam City's latest LP highlights the overlooked, sometimes unglamorous parts of formative clubbing experiences via sprightly, engaging pop music.
Silky, subterranean house washed in pop and shoegaze.
̸ May 2023
Ten years since the release of Daft Punk's final album, the Grammy-winning record has lost some of its original charm, but new bonus material takes the duo's sound to enticing places.
Fred Gibson teams up with his mentor for an LP of pleasant but ultimately wishy-washy ambient music.
A sprawling, guest-heavy collection of dance pop tracks that sparkle as often as they flail.
̸ April 2023
Avalon Emerson ducks out of dance music and resurfaces in an indie rock band—a potential risk that pays off well.
The Toronto-based artist is hungry for violence again on her debut album, but this time she explores her adolescence with gripping candour.
A history textbook of genre-defining French house cuts is remastered and reissued with new material.
Wielding rage like—you guessed it—a hammer, Yaeji opens up her work to new styles, feelings and bracingly personal lyrics.
̸ March 2023
Yves Tumor makes a convincing grab for rock star status on this explosive LP, digging into the depths of '90s radio and enriching it with raw, often religious lyrics.
Kate NV returns to RVNG Intl. for a kaleidoscopic journey through sound and joy.
The Knife cofounder Karin Dreijer zeroes in on sex and desire on their captivating third—and best—album.
A colourful and fast-paced mixtape that captures the global cross-pollination of genres in underground electronic music right now.
̸ February 2023
Trikk's debut LP sounds like the DFA and Night Slugs crew got together for a jam at Innervisions HQ.
Owsla
Nine years following his debut solo album, Skrillex releases two starkly different albums that flex his expansive sonic palette and gift for collaboration—but not without some road bumps.
An astonishing blend of modern sophisti-pop and dance music that probes into the confusing, sometimes grotesque depths of love.