mixtapes for weathers and moods / music for good days and bad days


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2019. május 29., szerda

29-05-2019 alter:MiX # 33 alter tracks in PRSNT_PRFCT_MiX

The Duke Spirit
29-05-2019 alter:MiX # 33 alter tracks in PRSNT_PRFCT_MiX [from the recent past] The Duke Spirit, Charlie Hunter, Jackson MacIntosh, Jack White, The Yawpers, Ultramarine, Anna Domino, The Limiñanas, Anton Newcombe, Peter Hook, Emmanuelle Seigner, Priests, Giorgio Tuma, Matilde Davoli, The James Hunter Six, Niia, Eyes of Love, Le SuperHomard


M U S I C



pres_perf_mix # The player always plays the latest playlist tracks. / A lejátszó mindig a legújabb playlist számait játssza. 

LISTEN THE PLAYLIST ON DEEZER.COM
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A spirited melding of Northern Soul, garage punk, and noisy shoegaze. 
The Duke Spirit
See Power 4:48
Magenta 3:17
from Sky Is Mine 2017
Most of the Duke Spirit's albums are graced by only one or two of their stately ballads, but on Sky Is Mine, they're in the majority...  Indeed, the somber restraint they show on Sky Is Mine ends up feeling and sounding liberating, and the result is the band's most beautiful album yet.


Greatly talented jazz guitarist whose remarkably fluent style is suited to styles from early bop to fusion. 
Charlie Hunter
Everybody Has a Plan Until They Get Punched in the Mouth 5:01
No Money, No Honey 3:52
from Everybody Has a Plan Until They Get Punched in the Mouth 2016
Charlie Hunter's Everybody Has a Plan Until They Get Punched in the Mouth is not only his first recording for a major label in nine years, but his first with a larger-than-trio-sized band since 2003. His personnel include drummer Bobby Previte, trombonist Curtis Fowlkes (who both played on 2015's Let the Bells Ring On and 2003's Right Now Move), and cornetist Kirk Knuffke. The album's title paraphrases a quote by former heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson. It's a metaphorical reference to the contrast between an envisioned plan for living and the reality that transpires later.
Hunter saturates his approach in blues and vintage R&B here. To get the vibe right, the band recorded live in a Hudson, New York studio; there are no overdubs -- everybody walked the tightrope. First single "No Money, No Honey" opens with a guitar hammer on, but the band quickly establishes a funky Meters-esque vamp that gets inverted by knotty jazz syncopation...
Charlie Hunter - 7-string guitar, Curtis Fowlkes - trombone, Kirk Knuffke - cornet, Bobby Previte - drums

Busy Montreal musician/producer known for running the Drones Club studio and fronting Sheer Agony, but also for his solo work. 
Jackson MacIntosh
Can It Be Love 2:40
My Dark Side 3:07
from My Dark Side 2018
... He decided to turn them into an album, and 2018's My Dark Side is the result. Digging into subdued '70s ballads like one might hear on a Todd Rundgren or Harry Nilsson record, dishing out heartbroken lyrics that were the result of two breakups in the span of three years, and keeping things sparse and simple, MacIntosh reveals himself as a very credible singer/songwriter in the classic sense. The record begins with a suite of slow, sad songs that showcase his aching, melancholy vocals and create a late-night, crying-in-a-drink mood that's hard to shake. Built around clunky drum machines, electric pianos, occasional guitars, and a thick coat of reverb, the songs come off like bedroom Memphis soul at times, only MacIntosh seems far too bummed to break a soulful sweat...

2019. május 25., szombat

037 ALTER.NATION: weekly favtraX 25-05-2019

ALTER.NATION #37

The Raconteurs, Mavis Staples, Flying Lotus feat. Anderson .Paak, Cate Le Bon, Earth, Black Mountain, Amyl and the Sniffers, Sebadoh, L'Eclair, The Intelligence, Empath, The Raconteurs


weekly favtraX 
2 5 - 0 5 - 2 0 1 9





ALTER.NATION #37 on deezer


Indie rock supergroup featuring Jack White of the White Stripes, Brendan Benson, and two members of the Greenhornes. 
The RaconteursHelp Me Stranger
The sorta-title track from their first album in 11 years
The Raconteurs—the band featuring Jack White, Brendan Benson, Jack Lawrence, and Patrick Keeler—have shared the new song “Help Me Stranger.” It appears on Help Us Stranger, their first album in over a decade, due out June 21 via Third Man.
The Raconteurs have previously shared the Help Us Stranger tracks “Sunday Driver,” “Now That You’re Gone,”


Grammy-winning national treasure who has masterfully balanced gospel and secular music since her early years with the Staple Singers. 
Mavis Staples has announced a new album titled We Get By... “These songs are delivering such a strong message,” Staples said in a statement. “We truly need to make a change if we want this world to be better.” ... We Get By’s album art features the photograph “Outside Looking In” by Gordon Parks from his 1956 photo essay The Restraints: Open and Hidden. Parks co-founded Essence magazine and was the first African American staff photographer and writer for Life magazine. In 2017, Mavis received the Gordon Parks Foundation Award.


Grandnephew of Alice and John Coltrane whose acclaimed productions blend experimental electronics with jazz-flavored hip-hop. 
Flying Lotus feat. Anderson .Paak - More
Flying Lotus has a gargantuan 27-track album coming out soon called Flamagra, his first full-length since 2014’s You’re Dead! So far, we’ve heard two proper singles, the Little Dragon collab “Spontaneous” and “Takashi,” plus our eerie introduction to the album “Fire Is Coming” with David Lynch. Today, FlyLo has shared a new song, “More,” which features fellow LA luminary Anderson .Paak, arguably one of the most anticipated guests on the album.
“More” blends .Paak’s singular vocals with FlyLo’s crisp percussion and swirling synths. Listed as a co-writer, Thundercat’s masterful bass input is heard all over the track. It’s one of the more concrete-sounding bangers from Flamagra so far, complementing David Lynch’s forboding monologue and Little Dragon’s airy verses.

Welsh indie singer/songwriter who produced for Deerhunter and other peers in addition to crafting her own intricate solo albums. 
Cate Le Bon - Miami from Reward
Welsh artist Cate Le Bon's fifth album, Reward, was created in a vacuum of solitude. While Le Bon was in an intensive furniture-making course by day, she spent her nights alone at the piano writing the skeletons that would be fleshed out as songs here... Where that album and much of Le Bon's work were centered around nervous, angular guitar rock, Reward exposes new dimensions of her songwriting. A controlled, confident vocalist and inventive guitarist, Le Bon has built many of her best songs around fluid riffs and unexpected vocal turns. Reward is comparatively restrained, composed on piano and focusing largely on synthesizers, saxophones, and metallic percussion sounds in open-ended arrangements. The album opens with "Miami," a song that eases the album into being with synthetic bell tones and a patient sequence of slow arpeggios. The song oozes slowly, unfolding until Le Bon's rich, layered vocals trade off with saxophone harmonies. The song is distant and playful at once and sets the tone for an album that communicates joy as much as it does crushing loneliness...

Dylan Carlson-led project based in Seattle whose sporadic bursts of ambient metal wowed critics. 
EarthThe Colour of Poison
“The Colour Of Poison” is exactly the type of track you think of when you think of Earth — a vast, heavy, elementally satisfying slow-trudge riff-monster. Part of the appeal with Earth is that you never know when they’re going to launch into free-jazz freakouts or Ennio Morricone soundscapes. But there’s still something satisfying about them doing basic stick-to-your-ribs doom metal with this kind of majestic mastery.
Earth is a full band, but these days, it’s largely a collaboration between Carlson and longtime percussionist Adrienne Davies. Carlson has said that the new album took shape as the two of them worked on writing and recording it, not imposing any kind of concept on what they were doing. “The Colour Of Poison” is proof of that — a band intuitively doing what it does best.

Vancouver indie band that combines doomy riffage with risky experimentation. 
Black MountainBoogie Lover
Vancouver psych-metal warriors Black Mountain are returning this spring with Destroyer, their first album in three years... Destroyer’s second single is out. It’s called “Boogie Lover.” Unlike their colleagues in the prolific Australian outfit King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Black Mountain’s song about boogie does not actually boogie. It’s a spacey, doomy slow creep on which the band sounds as towering and geological as their band name suggests.


Boisterous '70s rock-inspired garage-punk four-piece famed for their lawless live shows. 
Amyl and the Sniffers - Starfire 500 from Amyl and the Sniffers
With an energy befitting a tiny tornado, Australian punk crew Amyl and the Sniffers deliver a series of punches to the jaw with their rollicking self-titled debut. Clocking in at less than 30 minutes, Amyl and the Sniffers is an absolute thrill, the ideal soundtrack to a sweat-and-beer-covered bar brawl. Here, black eyes and bruises are a welcome trade for the fun and complete abandon within, which owes much to the band's electrifying vocalist, Amy Taylor...  While Taylor is undeniably the star of the show, the group -- guitarist Dec Martens, drummer Bryce Wilson, and bassist Gus Romer -- shine when they are given space to breathe. From the instrumental prelude to "Starfire 500" to the steadily building "Control," Amyl and the Sniffers prove there's more beneath the surface than their scuzzy, mosh-friendly, three-pronged attack.

The quintessential lo-fi band of the '90s, centered around the neurotic observational genius of depressive-obsessive Lou Barlow. 
Sebadoh - phantom from Act Surprised
It's fairly remarkable that Sebadoh still has a trademark sound, given how much they've changed over the years. Lou Barlow's days as a nerdy, introspective guy playing with a four-track cassette machine are ancient history in 2019, the year they released Act Surprised, but to this day that's what many folks think of first when they hear the group's name... But the performances are significantly brawnier in 2019; D'Amico hits a lot harder than Eric Gaffney or Bob Fay did in Sebadoh's earlier incarnations, and that has encouraged Barlow and Loewenstein to turn it up and rock out a bit. Justin Pizzoferrato's engineering sounds a bit buzzy in the low end, but the highs are clear, bright, and punchy, adding considerably to the impact of the performances, and though this is a long, long way from the resin-infused thunder of Dinosaur Jr.

Swiss sextet whose groove-heavy instrumentals effortlessly fuse influences such as Krautrock, funk, and library music. 
L'Eclair - Endless Dave from Sauropoda
Going strictly by the sound of their records, one might assume that Swiss sextet L'Eclair spend virtually all of their time either listening to records or making music. It's hard to pin down exactly what type of music they produce, but whatever it is, it's clearly the result of people who have impeccable taste, and have spent a considerable amount of time developing their chemistry as musicians. The group seem to have an ear for anything with a spacy, expansive groove, and their music equally recalls everything from Can to William Onyeabor to various library music composers. More so than their first two albums, Sauropoda has more of a cosmic disco tinge to it, mixing proto-house and space vibes into the group's funk-blasted sound...  "Endless Dave" is a much more laid-back Afrobeat-dub chiller, and it really does seem to go on forever, but it doesn't get tiring.

Combining jagged new wave and no wave-inspired beats, guitars, and keyboards with downright poppy melodies and a wry outlook, the Intelligence is the brainchild of Lars Finberg. While living in Seattle, he played in some of that city's noisiest, weirdest bands, including the A Frames, Unnatural Helpers, and the Dipers. The Intelligence began in 1999, shortly after Finberg, Min Yee, and Erin Sullivan formed the A Frames (who were called Bend Sinister at the time). Finberg recorded the Intelligence's earliest work in his bedroom, playing his five-year-old son's drum kit and slathering everything in reverb and distortion to get a distinctive lo-fi sound.
The Intelligence - L’appel du Vide
The Intelligence will release new album, Un-Psychedelic In Peavy City, on May 24. It’s their 10th album, first in four years and, after years on In the Red, the first for main brain Lars Finberg’s new label, Vapid Moonlighting Inc... “I developed these bad existential psychedelic hangovers that were giving me panic or anxiety attacks, especially while driving, that were really awful, trying to analyze what exactly keeps me from crashing this van or unbuckling my seatbelt and voluntarily rolling out the door onto the speeding highway,” Lars tells us of the song. “I quit drinking and they seem to have gone away, touch wood. I was thrilled when I found there is a French term for this: ‘L’appel du Vide’ or ‘Call of the Void.’ I decided to try to take a month off alcohol and I liked it so I just kept going. In a lot of ways life got much sunnier and much easier, and I am much happier, but it’s not perfect so I’m bitching/joking about the extremely minimal things I don’t like about it. But it’s supposed to be fun and funny and a celebration and I hope the animals party to it.”

No one makes noise quite like Empath. On Liberating Guilt and Fear, the excellent four-song EP they released this spring, the Philadelphia quartet whirl psychedelic guitar, found sounds, New Age drones and more into an exhilarating 16-minute blur. 
Empath - Roses That Cry
After a brief, delicate synth intro, “Roses That Cry” launches into a kaleidoscopic squall. Catherine Elicson’s guitar sounds as if it is breaking into pieces, Garrett Koloski’s drums whip up a ferocious gale, and Em Shanahan and Randal Coon’s synths swirl and squawk in the undertow, bringing a generous levity. Elicson’s words echo the jumbled progression of this turmoil as she conjures fading memories. “Are you coming around/You’d like to, but you don’t know how,” Elicson nudges, her voice gently bending with compassion. “Remember when that tree fell on your car/Glass spilled all over the yard.” When the dust finally settles on “Roses That Cry,” Empath emerge unscathed.


Indie rock supergroup featuring Jack White of the White Stripes, Brendan Benson, and two members of the Greenhornes. 
The RaconteursHey Gyp (Dig The Slowness)
Jack White’s rock quartet shares their cover of Donovan’s “Hey Gyp (Dig the Slowness)”
Third Man Records is now on Bandcamp. An announcement on Bandcamp Daily detailed the selection of records from the Third Man catalog that are now available to purchase via the platform, including Sleep’s latest album The Sciences, Margo Price’s All American Made, the Raconteurs’ first two studio albums, and more. Jack White’s recently reformed rock quartet have also shared a new cover to celebrate the occasion, performing their take on Donovan’s “Hey Gyp (Dig the Slowness).”



The Raconteurs, Mavis Staples, Flying Lotus feat. Anderson .Paak, Cate Le Bon, Earth, Black Mountain, Amyl and the Sniffers, Sebadoh, L'Eclair, The Intelligence, Empath, The Raconteurs

2019. május 24., péntek

24-05-2019 ~ PREHiSTORiC:MiX ~ 33 pieces excavation finds from ancient sounds / before 1959

Charlie Parker
24-05-2019 ~ PREHiSTORiC:MiX ~ 33 pieces excavation finds from ancient sounds / before 1959   >>Charlie Parker, Fats Navarro, Tadd Dameron, Evelyn Knight, Nat King Cole, Pee Wee Hunt & His Orchestra, Wilmoth Houdini, Sam Manning, King Radio, Calypso Pionners, Lionel Hampton, Dinah Washington, Fernando Gody, Los Gomez y Orquesta José Granados, Grand Orquesta de Baile Cisneros, Antoñita Colomé y Orquesta, Django Reinhardt, Tommy Dorsey / Frank Sinatra, Xavier Cugat, Arthur "Dooley" Wilson, Muddy Waters, Charlie Christian<<

Z E N E  /  M U S I C



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preHiSTORY:MiX tag A lejátszó mindig a legújabb playlist számait játssza. / The player always plays the latest playlist tracks.

before 1959




Jazz giant who changed the face of the entire form, practically inventing modern jazz and shaping the course of 20th century music. 
Charlie Parker
Summertime 2:45
Just Friends 3:30
Blues (Fast) 2:46
from Charlie Parker Vol. 7 (1949-50)
One of a handful of musicians who can be said to have permanently changed jazz, Charlie Parker was arguably the greatest saxophonist of all time. He could play remarkably fast lines that, if slowed down to half speed, would reveal that every note made sense. "Bird," along with his contemporaries Dizzy Gillespie and Bud Powell, is considered a founder of bebop; in reality he was an intuitive player who simply was expressing himself. Rather than basing his improvisations closely on the melody as was done in swing, he was a master of chordal improvising, creating new melodies that were based on the structure of a song. In fact, Bird wrote several future standards (such as "Anthropology," "Ornithology," "Scrapple from the Apple," and "Ko Ko," along with such blues numbers as "Now's the Time" and "Parker's Mood") that "borrowed" and modernized the chord structures of older tunes. Parker's remarkable technique, fairly original sound, and ability to come up with harmonically advanced phrases that could be both logical and whimsical were highly influential. By 1950, it was impossible to play "modern jazz" with credibility without closely studying Charlie Parker...



Trumpeter whose big, brawny sound set the tone for the rise of bebop; also notable for his quick attack and Spanish-tinged phrasings. 
Fats Navarro
The Tadd Dameron Sextet - The Chase (1947-09-26) 2:43
Fats Navarro Quintet Nostalgia (1947-12-05) 2:41
The Tadd Dameron Sextet Jahbero (1948-09-13) 2:52
from The Ultimate Jazz Archive - Set 24/42 CD 4
One of the greatest jazz trumpeters of all time, Fats Navarro had a tragically brief career yet his influence is still being felt. His fat sound combined aspects of Howard McGhee, Roy Eldridge, and Dizzy Gillespie, became the main inspiration for Clifford Brown, and through Brownie greatly affected the tones and styles of Lee Morgan, Freddie Hubbard, and Woody Shaw. Navarro originally played piano and tenor before switching to trumpet. He started gigging with dance bands when he was 17, was with Andy Kirk during 1943-1944, and replaced Dizzy Gillespie with the Billy Eckstine big band during 1945-1946. During the next three years, Fats was second to only Dizzy among bop trumpeters. Navarro recorded with Kenny Clarke's Be Bop Boys, Coleman Hawkins, Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, Illinois Jacquet, and most significantly Tadd Dameron during 1946-1947. He had short stints with the big bands of Lionel Hampton and Benny Goodman, continued working with Dameron, made classic recordings with Bud Powell (in a quintet with a young Sonny Rollins) and the Metronome All-Stars, and a 1950 Birdland appearance with Charlie Parker was privately recorded. However, Navarro was a heroin addict and that affliction certainly did not help him in what would be a fatal bout with tuberculosis that ended his life at age 26. He was well documented during the 1946-1949 period and most of his sessions are currently available on CD, but Fats Navarro could have done so much more...


1948
Evelyn Knight - A Little Bird Told Me 2:40
Nat King Cole - Nature Boy 2:39
Pee Wee Hunt & His Orchestra - Twelfth Street Rag 2:52
from The Million Sellers Of The 40's - 1948


Calypso is the most prominent 20th century musical style in the islands of Trinidad and Tobago. The instrumentation is primarily percussion and a brass section. Vocals can describe carnival partying or involve pointed social commentary. The political aspect of calypso caused successive bans on different percussion materials in the early 20th century leading to the introduction of the steel pan into calypso bands in the 1930s. 
Wilmoth Houdini - Caroline 3:07
Sam Manning - Lieutnant Julian 3:01
King Radio - Jitterbug 3:03
from Calypso Pionners, Vol. 2 (1925 - 1947)
Although recordings of calypso music outside of Trinidad and Tobago have always been common, calypso gained a broad audience in the US and UK in the mid-20th century thanks to several celebrated songs and artists. In 1944, Lord Invader's song Rum and Coca Cola was recorded without permission by the The Andrews Sisters and spent 10 weeks at #1 on the US pop charts. Around 1950, Lord Kitchener, The Mighty Terror, and Lord Beginner all relocated temporarily to London, and were part of a growing wave of Caribbean Music in the UK. 

The legendary Hamp created the benchmarks for the vibraphone, playing for jazz afficianados and presidents into his 90s. 
Vibe Boogie (Lionel Hampton) 5:27
Blow Top Blues feat.  Dinah Washington (Leonard Feather) 3:27
Hamp's Salty Blues (Dan Burley / Lionel Hampton) 3:14
from 1945 - 1946 Complete Jazz Series 
The sixth CD in Classics' series of Lionel Hampton records documents his music during a one-year period. Hampton's big band, riding high after "Flying Home," continued to grow in popularity during this era. The vibraphonist's showmanship and his sidemen's extroverted solos generated constant excitement, as can be heard throughout these 20 selections... 


2019. május 19., vasárnap

036 ALTER.NATION.MiX weekly favtraX 19-05-2019

ALTER.NATION #36

The Mystery Lights, Alex Lahey, Nobody, Jimmy Webb, Brad Mehldau, Theo Croker, Greys, Olden Yolk, Dommengang, Sam Cohen, Bruce Springsteen, Mannequin Pussy


weekly favtraX
19-05-2019





Brooklyn-based psych-garage combo with with a Nuggets-inspired sound and roots in California. 
The Mystery LightsThick Skin from Too Much Tension!
The Mystery Lights are a band who live in the the year 2019 by fate, not by choice. Their music suggests that they arrived in the present day after passing through some wrinkle in time adorned with paisley; they are obsessed with '60s garage rock and psychedelia, and their songs and their approach make it clear they've done their homework when it comes to re-creating the nuts and bolts of this stuff. The Mystery Lights' third album, 2019's Too Much Tension!, captures the sound of that halcyon era when America's youth stopped playing "Louie Louie" and started abusing recreational drugs with a truly impressive accuracy, as if someone discovered a long-lost collaborative project with the Strawberry Alarm Clock, the Chocolate Watch Band, and the Seeds joining forces in the studio...


An Australian singer/songwriter with a sardonic streak and a flair for crafting melodically charged and relatable pop-punk anti-anthems. 
Alex Lahey - Misery Guts from The Best of Luck Club
Some songwriters are interesting because they tell you things you may not know, and others are remarkable because they have a gift for expressing the thoughts and feelings that most of us share. Alex Lahey clearly falls into the latter category, and while the nuts and bolts of human interaction aren't uncharted territory in pop music, she builds clever and witty art from the ups and downs of friendship and relationships... especially with its singalong chorus, and "Misery Guts" is its ideal half-sibling, pure pogo'ing energy that suggests what Nirvana might have sound like if Kurt Cobain had been a level-headed woman from Australia...


Elvin Estela, better known by the moniker Nobody, is a Los Angeles-based producer whose music blurs the lines between abstract hip-hop, psychedelia, and downtempo electronic music, with jazz and R&B also figuring into his sound.
Nobody - Sweet Feeling from All Too Familiar
A longtime Dublab regular and resident DJ at the now-defunct Low End Theory weekly, L.A. beat scene forefather Elvin Estela has twisted through several modes throughout his recording career as Nobody, from moody instrumental hip-hop to gentle psychedelia. The 2010s have brought his most modern-sounding music yet, with 2010's Auto-Tune-soaked One for All Without Hesitation followed by the trap-influenced Vivid Green in 2013. All Too Familiar is another change of approach for Estela -- he wrote most of the album on his guitar, and it's completely free of samples or vocals. Joined on several tracks by regular collaborators such as Damon Aaron and former Mars Volta member Marcel Rodriguez-Lopez, Estela explores a sort of earthy post-rock not unlike David Pajo's solo work as Papa M, but still informed by a cratedigger's ear for breakbeat-like rhythms...

Songwriter, singer, and pianist whose writing career has produced a mountain of pop classics. 
Jimmy Webb has always been better known and respected as a songwriter than a performer, less because of any failings as a singer and instrumentalist and more because he's widely and justly acknowledged as one of the great pop tunesmith of the '60s and '70s... This album flies in the face of the expectations of most Jimmy Webb fans, but it works surprisingly well. Webb is a graceful and fluid pianist with a fine touch, and he brings a sense of invention to his interpretations of these songs, not losing sight of the melody but allowing other colors to find their place within the tunes...



Improvisational jazz pianist introduced a classical impressionist influence into modern jazz, often using pop music as source material. 
Brad Mehldau - Proverb of Ashes from Finding Gabriel
...Finding Gabriel marks his most idiosyncratically expansive release yet. Its thematically linked compositions were inspired by a close reading of Old Testament sources -- Daniel, Hosea, Psalms, Ecclesiastes, and Job -- while considering our current sociopolitical era. He also experimented with the Oberheim OB-6 analog synth while composing, an instrument whose possibilities were new to him. It's used alongside acoustic and electric pianos, organ, xylophone, mores synths, and voice. His celebrated cast of guests includes trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire, violinist Sara Caswell, saxophonist Joel Frahm, drummer Mark Guiliana, vocalists Becca Stevens, Kurt Elling, and Gabriel Kahane, and small string and horns sections...  Elling takes a killer sonically treated scat vocal on "Proverb of Ashes," with its backing track wedding EDM futurism to post-punk.

Trumpeter Theo Croker is an adventurous jazz musician known for his cosmically minded, spiritually enlightened take on post-bop, funk, and electronic-tinged fusion. The grandson of famed trumpeter Doc Cheatham...
Theo Croker - Have You Come to Stay from Star People Nation
Since 2014's Afrophysicist, trumpeter Theo Croker has been expanding upon his funky, stylistically far-reaching jazz sound with ever more electric and electronic influences. He takes this approach even further on 2019's cosmically expansive Star People Nation. The album follows his equally ambitious 2016 effort Escape Velocity and once again finds him backed by his ensemble featuring saxophonist Irwin Hall, keyboardist Michael King, bassist Eric Wheeler, and drummer Kassa Overall. Also joining him again is co-executive producer Karriem Riggins, who previously played drums on Afrophysicist and has worked with such luminaries as J Dilla, Esperanza Spalding, Common, and others. Star People Nation is a stylistically balanced album, deftly counterpoised between spacy '70s world fusion, modal jazz, alternative R&B, and forward-thinking hip-hop. It brings to mind classic works by Eddie Henderson, George Duke, and Donald Byrd, the latter of whom Croker was mentored by while a student at Oberlin College. The opening "Have You Come to Stay" is a slowly rolling electro-space-mantra that emerges like an interstellar transmission from a hazy sparkle of keyboards before giving way to a cascade of overdubbed horn lines and two transcendent solos from Croker and Hall.

Self-proclaimed "loud rock band from Toronto" has roots in noisy post-hardcore and latter-day fast punk. 
Greys - These Things Happen from Age Hasn't Spoiled You
Toronto four-piece Greys have spent the early part of their career refining their lean, ferocious post-punk, peppering their albums with occasional studio adornments, but largely adhering to the tight live unit which they present on-stage. Following a pair of 2016 albums, the excellent Outer Heaven and its full-length companion piece Warm Shadow, the group took a step back and considered their approach. Roughly six years into their career, a significant step in a new direction seemed in order and they decided to stray from their live-in-the-room approach and use whatever tools necessary to gain new ground. While it's far from an abandonment of what came before, 2019's Age Hasn't Spoiled You introduces a multitude of influences and sounds into Greys' palette and makes for a challenging but overall worthwhile listen...

Spooky, psychedelic folk-rock from Quilt's Shane Butler and fellow singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalist Caity Shaffer. 
Olden Yolk - Cotton & Cane from Living Theatre
Arriving a year after the project's debut, Living Theatre continues to explore the intimate, electronics-tinged psychedelic folk-rock already established by Olden Yolk's Shane Butler and Caity Shaffer, with some subtle shifts in approach. Whereas Olden Yolk was borne out of a series of exchanged poems between the songwriters, Living Theatre expanded upon conversations in concentrated writing sessions. Also, Olden Yolk was recorded primarily as a four-piece with their touring band, and while Living Theatre returns to engineer/co-producer Jarvis Taveniere (Woods), its guests include percussionist Booker Stardrum, who features prominently on the album, as well as Frank Maston (flute), Eliza Bagg (violin/viola), and others. It's a more sprawling, cinematic set that at the same time retains a gentle, amber-tinted tone...

Dommengang are a Brooklyn-based, hard-edged post-psych and space rock trio whose chugging sound they describe as "Road Trip, Head Trip" music.
Dommengang - Wild Wash from No Keys
On their two previous outings, Los Angeles-based power trio Dommengang traced the lines of '70s blues rock and psychedelic sludge. Fine as they were, both long-players (though somewhat different from one another) reflected the group's influences rather than their musical identity. 2015's Everybody's Boogie was wrapped in the roadhouse biker strut of Canned Heat, early ZZ Top, and the free-form spiraling psych of Hawkwind. 2018's Love Jail was somewhat tighter structurally, drenched in the acid blues grooves explored by Earthless, Endless Boogie, and Samsara Blues Experiment. By contrast, No Keys ups the ante. While Dommengang still draw abundantly from the deep well of hard rock and psych, their move to Los Angeles from Brooklyn facilitated real growth in the songwriting and in developing a dynamic, trippy sound of their own...  "Wild Wash" is back to screaming, fast, post-psych riddled with distorted bass and blues vamps, wah-wah, and a drumkit playing a nightmarish groove to accent trancey vocals...

Former songwriter for psychedelic pop bands Apollo Sunshine and Yellowbirds, as well as a sought-after session player. Cohen spent some time working on other people's projects but still managed to write a new set of sundazzled synth-rock tunes for his first album under his own name, 2015's Cool It.
Sam Cohen - Spinning Love from The Future’s Still Ringing In My Ears
Sam Cohen's solo debut, 2015's Cool It, came after years of music from other bands that his warm psychedelic pop sat at the core of... Cohen penned blissful songs of dusky orchestral rock with nods to '60s influences. He continues working in this territory on second solo album The Future Is Still Ringing in My Ears, advancing his songcraft without straying too far from a well-established template of good-natured retro-pop...  The lyrics are overtly hopeless, but much like the rest of the album, the song manages to blend pessimism with warmth. Even in the darkest moments, the inviting production and mind-bending twists are enough to distract from the sometimes bleak realities Cohen is fixated on.

A rock & roll true believer with a poet's heart, the Boss defined mainstream American rock in the late 20th century. 
Bruce Springsteen - Hello Sunshine
...His gorgeous new song “Hello Sunshine” takes place somewhere on the journey. Its friendly, country arrangement sits within a long lineage of radio classics: “Everybody’s Talkin,’” “Gentle on My Mind,” “Good Time Charlie’s Got the Blues,” all songs borne from quiet barrooms in the early hours of the morning. As if to prove his place among them, Springsteen spends an entire verse humming along, strings guiding the way like light from a jukebox. Amid the glow, he’s surrounded by pedal steel raining on the windows, a hushed honky-tonk piano in the corner, a brush-stroked rhythm section that feels like running in place on a soft dirt road. Bold but lived-in, it’s the most vivid his music has sounded in at least two decades...

Punk rock band, formed by childhood friends Marisa Dabice and Thanasi Paul, makes room for emotions other than anger. 
Mannequin Pussy - Drunk II
...“Drunk II” opens on guitarist and vocalist Marisa Dabice in a post-breakup mania, evading despair by drinking and partying to excess. But despite her best efforts to self-anesthetize, sadness breaks through. “I still love you, you stupid fuck,” she barks with a bittersweet grimace. Yet the song quickly reveals itself to be more than sloshed yearning: Atop a melancholic and measured riff, Dabice wrangles with her behavior, revealing vulnerability with an intimate wistfulness: “And everyone says to me/‘Missy, you’re so strong!’/But what if I don’t want to be?”...


The Mystery Lights, Alex Lahey, Nobody, Jimmy Webb, Brad Mehldau, Theo Croker, Greys, Olden Yolk, Dommengang, Sam Cohen, Bruce Springsteen, Mannequin Pussy