
Marquee Moon
In 1977, Television released a record that sounded like nothing else. A post-punk masterpiece that's jagged, poetic and stripped of excess.
In 1977, Television released a record that sounded like nothing else. A post-punk masterpiece that's jagged, poetic and stripped of excess.
In 1972, Nick Drake released an album with no band, no press, no explanation. Just one voice, one guitar and a sadness so quiet it was almost holy.
In 1978, Big Star released a record that sounded like it was falling apart as you listened. Bleak, beautiful and brutally honest.
In 1972, Annette Peacock fused jazz, electronics and desire into a record that still sounds alien today. It’s raw, seductive and decades ahead of its time.
Holger Czukay - founding member of krautrock legends Can - goes solo and gets weird. Movies (1979) is a surreal collage of tape loops, radio ghosts and dadaist funk.
Released in 1970, Desertshore is Nico at her starkest - a bleak, beautiful record of drone, ritual and voice. No band, no polish. Just harmonium, silence and the sound of someone refusing to flinch.