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A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Lorelle Meets the Obsolete. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Lorelle Meets the Obsolete. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

2020. március 21., szombat

"Water in My Veins" > 078 ALTER.NATION.mIx weekly favtraX 21-03-2020

ALTER.NATION #78

Ultraista, Lorelle Meets the Obsolete, Thomas Dybdahl, Baxter Dury, James Righton, Joywave, Arbouretum, The Exbats, Moaning,  Dogleg, Ratgrave, Helen Money

weekly favtraX 
2 1 - 0 3 - 2 0 2 0



ALTER.NATION #78 on DEEZER


Ultraista is the experimental electro-pop project of superstar producer Nigel Godrich, multi-instrumentalist Joey Waronker, and vocalist Laura Bettinson. Taking their name from the early 20th century Spanish literary movement ultraísmo, the trio emerged in 2012 with a sound that, according to the band, was conceived from a love of Afrobeat, electronica, art and inspired by tequila.
Ultraista - SisterWater in My Veins
...In fact, Sister may actually scratch the Radiohead itch even more than some of the actual Radiohead member’s side projects. Sister also stands tall on its own, similar enough to Nigel’s collaborations with Thom Yorke to appeal to Thom’s fanbase but different enough to register as an essential project of its own. Laura Bettison is an even more compelling singer on Sister than she was on Ultraísta’s already-great debut, and she drives these songs as much as Nigel does and helps separate them from Nigel’s other work. It may have taken eight years and some major roadblocks, but Ultraísta made it out alive and they’re even more a force of their own than they were the first time around. (Andrew Sacher)


Classic psychedelic rock and experimental pop sounds by a Baja California duo. With a sound that drew inspiration from almost every strain of psychedelic music of the '60s -- from jangling folk-rock to scuffed-up biker rock -- and taking into account the great noise rock bands of the '90s like Spacemen 3, the Mexican duo Lorelle Meets the Obsolete crafted murky, swirling sounds on albums like 2013's Corruptible Faces that reflected the claustrophobic life they were leading in the big cities of Guadalajara and Mexico City.
Lorelle Meets the Obsolete - Re-Facto / El Olivo
Mexican psych group Lorelle Meets the Obsolete's fifth album, De Facto, was their noisiest, most risk-taking work to date, and also their most rewarding. Following the triumphant 2019 full-length, the band served up companion EP Re-Facto, containing two examples of how their sound has continued to evolve and mutate, and two remixes of De Facto tracks by trusted friends...  The other original, "El Olivo," is a more bummed-out crawler made extra trippy through extensive delay effects on the vocals... (Paul Simpson)


One of Norway's most popular and acclaimed singer/songwriters, Thomas Dybdahl has also gained a growing international following for his elegant and expressive songs of love and loss -- earning him comparisons to Nick Drake and Jeff Buckley. His airy, slightly reedy voice is a sweet falsetto, and he knows how to coax maximum drama from a song, no matter how limpid its surface.
Thomas Dybdahl - Fever / Fever
On Fever, Norway's Thomas Dybdahl returns home to Starvanger from his late-night L.A. studio sojourn with producer Larry Klein on All These Things. Working at his 1micadventure studio with longtime collaborator and hip-hop producer Håvard Rosenberg, the nine tracks here are emphatically D.I.Y.: Dybdahl played virtually all the instruments and tracked almost all vocals. The most jarring thing in the mix is the absence of his trademark acoustic guitar in favor of an electric. The motivating factor was to make a soulful guitar record that didn't sound like one, and that balanced the vintage and the fresh simultaneously. They listened to classic artists ranging from Nina Simone and Aretha Franklin to Sam Cooke and Bill Withers, from Ray Charles and Sly Stone to D'Angelo, Raphael Saadiq, and Michael Kiwanuka in order to kindle the creative spark... (Thom Jurek)


Spinning wry, observant stories of life among the well-heeled yet poorly behaved, Baxter Dury is a songwriter and vocalist with a strong and distinctive style. After a tempestuous early life, he began his musical career by performing at a memorial service for his dad, pub rock/new wave icon Ian Dury.
Baxter Dury - The Night Chancers / The Night Chancers
Over his last few albums, especially on 2018's Prince of Tears, Baxter Dury came up with a winning formula that entailed him drawling out tales of decadence and despair in a dry monotone. His prickly persona and caustic wit is surrounded by angelic female vocals on the choruses, swooning string sections, rubbery bass lines, and a slinky, trip-hop-influenced nocturnal mood. The formula is perfected on 2020's The Night Chancers. Dury and his cast of handy helpers imbue the songs with a kind of gutter-y grandeur and smudged beauty that was hinted at in the past but now comes through loud and clear. This is oddly pretty music with sneaky sweet melodies and singalong choruses peeking through the grime that are oft slashed into ribbons by Dury's nasty monologues, snipey asides, and overall Gainsbourg-ian vinegar... (Tim Sendra)


Ex-Klaxons vocalist/keyboardist delivers '70s pop-inspired songs that evoke Bryan Ferry and Nick Lowe.An English singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist, James Righton first gained notice in the late 2000s as the keyboardist and vocalist for the London "new-rave" outfit Klaxons.
James Righton - The Performer / Devil Is Loose
The debut solo effort from the Klaxons co-founder, The Performer sees James Righton distilling the neon dance-rock of his flagship band into a mostly tasty hybrid of velvety Todd Rundgren-meets Bryan Ferry retro-pop and California-kissed '70s soft rock with neo-psych underpinnings. More in line with Righton's 2017's outing under the Shock Machine moniker, The Performer, despite its affectations, feels like a more authentic rendering of Righton as a songwriter... The sensuous late-night half-banger "Devil Is Loose," with its sinister walking bassline and cascading reverb, definitely shows its Klaxons DNA... (James Christopher Monger)


Upstate New York indie band that merges dance-friendly electro grooves and a post-punk rock edge.
Joywave - PossessionBlastoffff
Like a rocket shooting into space, New York electro-rock crew Joywave go intergalactic on their shimmering third full-length, Possession. Lighter and more vibrant than their 2017 effort Content, this round of existential musings finds frontman Daniel Armbruster weighing ideas of possession and control in a contemporary existence under constant cultural bombardment by outside forces and influences... The robust burst "Blastoffff" delivers the album's crunchiest rock moment, a wry vignette about returning to a place you've grown beyond. Finding the secret to it all, Joywave concludes that the goal in this life -- beyond the fear, media burnout, and global dread -- might be simply "to be fat and old and happy." (Neil Z. Yeung)


Alternative band that combined the sludgy jams of stoner rock with melancholy folk. Centered around singer/songwriter Dave Heumann, Arbouretum became an outlet for Heumann's poetic, often mystical folk sounds.
Arbouretum - Let It All In / No Sanctuary Blues
Built around the masterful songwriting and commanding vocals of bandleader Dave Heumann, Arbouretum spent the 2000s and 2010s slowly trickling out excellent albums of slightly cosmic folk-rock. As time went on, the band leaned into a British folk influence, lacing Heumann's narrative songs with haunting traditionally informed melodies. Ninth album Let It All In finds the band at the clearest articulation of their sound ever, blurring the boundary lines between woodsy folk, rural psychedelia, and an experimental take on roots rock. "No Sanctuary Blues" finds Arbouretum at the crossroads of all of their varied impulses. Solid rhythm section playing shifts between bar room rock and sprawling drone while Heumann steps away from delivering spirited vocals only to offer Richard Thompson-grade guitar soloing. The moments of cosmic space-out are highlighted by keyboardist Matthew Pierce's unobtrusive synth textures... (Fred Thomas)


Father-daughter garage punk combo with a love of simple but hooky songs and witty tales of love and pop culture.
The Exbats - Kicks, Hits and Fits / Immediate Girl
When a band bases a large portion of their appeal on seeming charmingly ramshackle, they take a calculated risk when they decide to make their fans aware that they know what they're doing. The Exbats built their initial reputation with a pair of cassette-only releases that were good rollicking fun (the highlights were collected on the 2019 LP E Is for Exbats) but sounded something less than professional. While 2020's Kicks, Hits and Flips isn't a model of high-gloss studiocraft in the 21st century, it does make them sound like a real band and not a bunch of lovable goofballs, and that makes a difference. Matt Rendon, the Exbats' former bassist, was the engineer for the Kicks, Hits and Flips sessions, and he and the group -- lead singer and drummer Inez McLain, guitarist and vocalist Kenny McLain (who is also Inez's dad), and bassist Bobby Carlson, Jr. -- have made this the cleanest and tightest Exbats album to date, complete with spot-on harmonies, commendable instrumental work, occasional keyboard and percussion overdubs, and audio crisp enough that you can notice all of the above... (Mark Deming)


Los-Angeles-based post-punk outfit whose sound shifted from raucous noise-pop to dark new wave.
Moaning - Uneasy Laughter / Running
Moaning's self-titled 2018 debut was an astonishingly focused set of noisy post-punk songs filled with scathingly bitter lyrics that attempted to uncover the problems behind faulty relationships. On the band's second album, they retain the same lyrical concerns, but they completely revamp their sound, replacing the sheets of guitars with synthesizers and electronic loops. Not that guitars have entirely left the picture, as every song contains them in some form or another, but there's a much wider range of tones on display here. Even with the switch from noise-pop to dark new wave, and the increased sonic experimentation, the band still write hook-filled songs with cutting lyrics that attempt to make sense of a constant storm of conflicting feelings...  The insistent "Brave One" begins with spaghetti Western-like chords, then gets flooded out with distorted melodies that sound uncannily like guitars... (Paul Simpson)


Dogleg - Melee / Fox
...In fact, they very rarely reach for the brake pedal on Melee, choosing instead to approach a thrash pace on standout songs like “Fox,” where drummer Parker Grissom and bassist Chase Macinski establish themselves as solid, speedy foundation-layers and a group of 11 people expertly provide backing gang-vocals. “Any moment now, I will disintegrate,” Stoitsiadis barks as the din swirls around him. “You’ll make your move and I will fade out.” Here, Dogleg sounds a lot like another band of Rust Belt scorchers: Cloud Nothings... Melee is a worthy debut for a very promising band. (Ben Salmon)


Abstract fusion-funk duo from Berlin, consisting of Julius Conrad and Max Graef. Berlin-based musicians Julius Conrad and Max Graef make up the duo Ratgrave, producing a distinctive brand of trippy, abstract fusion-funk. On their self-titled 2018 debut and 2020's Rock, the two pit virtuosic guitar chops against fractured synth rhythms and bugged-out electronic effects, resulting in a playful, lo-fi take on space-age jazz-rock.
Ratgrave - Rock / Rock
Julius Conrad and Max Graef seem to use their Ratgrave project as a creative playground, acting on some of their stranger artistic impulses and making a complete mockery of the premise of genre restrictions. Following 2018's Ratgrave, recorded over the course of three years in several different locations and touching on styles ranging from lo-fi funk to rave, the duo concocted Rock, a frankly bonkers set of heavy cosmic fusion. The musicians point to jazz-rock and psychedelic/hard rock monoliths like Frank Zappa, Jimi Hendrix, and Blue Cheer as inspirations, but that's only part of the story here. The pair mix chunky guitars with big '80s drum machines, twisting them into complex patterns, and bending them further through unruly delay and flange effects... (Paul Simpson)


Cathartic, metal-inspired solo project of Los Angeles-based cellist Alison Chesley, formerly of alternative rock band Verbow.
Helen Money - Atomic / Brave On
Alison Chesley's fifth solo full-length as Helen Money is both more expansive and more direct than her previous releases. Progressing from 2016's Become Zero, her first album to utilize multi-track digital recording, she continues to incorporate electronics and adventurous sound design into her work, this time featuring modular synthesizer textures applied by collaborator Will Thomas. The electronic enhancements give her cello playing a dreamy, unearthly glow, making it sound like an orchestra of ghosts are accompanying her performance... (Paul Simpson)


Ultraista, Lorelle Meets the Obsolete, Thomas Dybdahl, Baxter Dury, James Righton, Joywave, Arbouretum, The Exbats, Moaning,  Dogleg, Ratgrave, Helen Money

2019. április 19., péntek

19-04-2019 alter:MiX # 33 alter tracks in PRSNT_PRFCT_MiX [from the recent past]

Roz and the Rice Cakes
19-04-2019 alter:MiX # 33 alter tracks in PRSNT_PRFCT_MiX [from the recent past] # Roz and the Rice Cakes, Maya Jane Coles, Dr. Dog, Ibeyi, Dungen / Woods, Lorelle Meets the Obsolete, Rejoicer, Porter Ray, The Duke Spirit, The Bad Plus, Charlie Hunter, Jackson MacIntosh, Jack White, The Yawpers


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
http://www.deezer.com/playlist/1681171971



Rhode Island indies who inject lustrous pop with doses of atmosphere and experimentalism. 
Roz and the Rice Cakes
Slow Motion 2:22
Open Eyes 3:02
from Devotion
Led by Roz Raskin, a nimble vocalist who counts Gwen Stefani among her biggest influences (and she sounds a little like her, too), Rhode Island's Roz and the Rice Cakes released a debut in 2014 that introduced an intricate yet catchy experimental indie pop. Three years later, they strengthen those same qualities on their more vivid follow-up, Devotion. A track like "Open Eyes" starts with a muscular vocal melody over an exposed rhythm section that quickly establishes irregular time signatures before adding melodic, syncopated guitar. Despite lengthy instrumental passages, amorphous forms, and shifting rhythms, it lands like an uptempo dance-pop tune due to the band's ability to keep the big picture simple and accommodate tapping feet... Roz and the Rice Cakes apart from many pop, electronic, and indie rock acts -- as they juggle elements of all three.

London-based producer, songwriter, and DJ who alternates between house music, downtempo, and dubstep (as Nocturnal Sunshine). 
Maya Jane Coles
Don't Leave 5:17
Waves & Whirlwinds 3:33
from Waves & Whirlwinds
Waves & Whirlwinds is a brief, EP-length follow-up to Maya Jane Coles' expansive double-album Take Flight, offering a similar blend of tech-house rhythms and pop instincts. Coles excels at producing sensuous dance tracks which float and bubble yet have a steady drive to them. "Don't Leave" has cloudy, pitch-shifted vocal fragments and loose guitars which levitate over a chunky breakbeat, punctuated by samples commanding the listener to "get yo hands up!"... Her vocals, again, are looped murmurings and intonations rather than coherent thoughts, expressing dark, vulnerable feelings rather than spelling them out.


Quirky, melodic rockers from Philadelphia who mix retro '60s psychedelia with a freewheeling indie aesthetic. 
Dr. Dog
Golden Hind 3:12
Swampedelic Pop 3:42
from The Psychedelic Swamp
Back in 2001, The Psychedelic Swamp seemed an appropriate name for the debut cassette from psychedelic pranksters Dr. Dog, but some 15 years later the title seems even more fitting given that the band decided to revisit, rework, and re-jigger the entirety of the album to create a brand-new album for 2016. It's not quite right to say Dr. Dog cover themselves here. Rather, they reconnect with the ideas originally essayed in 2001 and approach those ideas with the skill and panache they've developed in the ensuing 15 years. Because Dr. Dog rely on texture and feel as much as they do songs, this isn't a bad idea at all: they're able to execute ideas they were only able to hint at when they were a young band...

Paris-based Cuban duo of twin sisters Lisa-Kaindé and Naomi Dia who play an electro-tinged variety of Afro-Cuban and soul-influenced music. 
Ibeyi
Deathless feat. Kamasi Washington (Lisa Kainde Diaz) 3:11
Transmission/Michaelion feat. Meshell Ndegeocello, (Maya Dagnino / Lisa Kainde Diaz / Claudia Rankine / Richard Russell) 6:30
from Ash
Ibeyi's stellar self-titled debut album was a flashpoint that steeped itself in brittle electro-drenched R&B and roots Yoruban percussion and openly engaged the saints of Santeria: its introduction was an invocation to Elegua (the gatekeeper between worlds) and the goddess of wind and storms in "Oya." On the French/Cuban sibling duo's sophomore effort, Lisa-Kaindé and Naomi Diaz address matters more corporeal and rooted in lived experience. The spiritual here is an inspirational tool for understanding and confronting suffering and injustice. Ash is an album directly affected by the tension of the times. Its songs address female empowerment, racial injustice, loneliness, and love in a brittle yet warm mix less frenetic than its predecessor. Singing again in mixed French, English, and Yoruba...


2019. március 15., péntek

15-03-2019 alter:MiX # 33 alter tracks in PRSNT_PRFCT_MiX

15-03-2019 alter:MiX # 33 alter tracks in PRSNT_PRFCT_MiX [from the recent past] Electric Six, The Trouble with Templeton, Fat White Family, King Khan / The Gris Gris, Tav Falco, Le Butcherettes, Foals, Dido, Maya Jane Coles, Roz and the Rice Cakes, Dr. Dog, Ibeyi, Dungen / Woods, Lorelle Meets the Obsolete


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
http://www.deezer.com/playlist/1681171971


Detroit rockers who became surprise British hitmakers with a blend of garage rock, post-punk, and disco. Mixing garage rock, disco, punk, new wave, and metal into cleverly dumb, in-your-face songs celebrating hedonism in multiple forms, Electric Six emerged from the same late-'90s/early-2000s Detroit garage-punk scene that produced the White Stripes and the Dirtbombs. 
Electric Six
Chicken Wine 2:25
Sex With Somebody 3:29
Dark Politics 3:59
from How Dare You 2017
Once upon a time -- back in the '60s and '70s, you know, the Bronze Age -- it was pretty much a given that a working rock band put out an album every year, toured behind it, and then rolled back into the studio to repeat the cycle. That time line has all but vanished in the 21st century, but the men of Electric Six have the sort of work ethic that harks back to those halcyon days. Since 2005, Electric Six have dropped at least one album every year, sometimes more, and 2017 has proven to be no exception, as How Dare You was delivered unto their fans in October of that year. Along with being industrious, the E6 are also reliable; while they haven't delivered a lunatic masterpiece like Switzerland or I Shall Exterminate Everything Around Me That Restricts Me from Being the Master in a while, they haven't been tossing off duds, either, and How Dare You is a testimony that this band's devotion to its own strange creation is not a sometime thing. Still dealing in hard rock bombast, dance-rock pomp, and a wisenheimer's worldview, How Dare You is Electric Six doing what they do best, with Dick Valentine's gloriously mannered vocals expounding on his myriad obsessions as the guitars, keys, and drums pop behind him like an exceptionally long string of firecrackers...


Introspective and occasionally epic indie pop from this Brisbane-based quintet led by singer/songwriter Thomas Calder. Australian indie rock quintet the Trouble with Templeton (named after an episode of The Twilight Zone) began in 2011 as the recording project of then 20-year-old Brisbane-based singer/songwriter Thomas Calder.
The Trouble with Templeton
Bad Mistake 3:05
Double Life 5:34
from Someday, Buddy 2016
Built around the talents of singer and songwriter Thomas Calder, the Trouble with Templeton self-released what was essentially a solo album before making their Bella Union debut as a five-piece with 2014's Rookie. The bricolage of indie folk, synthier pop, and more direct alt-rock led to touring opportunities with the likes of Of Monsters and Men and Father John Misty. Playing more to their strengths, however, the follow-up sees the group, which slimmed down to a trio, simplify their approach. The more focused Someday, Buddy re-places the emphasis on songwriting. It takes on an almost lo-fi character with '90s Pavement-type ambling guitars and intimate lyrics as the album oscillates between hushed rumination and lyric-driven outbursts...


Scuzzy rock & roll-inspired post punk with a socialist edge from south London recalling the likes of the Fall, Butthole Surfers, and the Birthday Party. 
Fat White Family 
Whitest Boy on the Beach 4:53
We Must Learn to Rise 7:10
from Songs For Our Mothers 2016
On their first album, Fat White Family sounded like they could be a group of bitter, homeless alcoholics who took to making music on battered gear found in a house where they were squatting. Three years later, the group made something of a creative shift; on 2016's Songs for Our Mothers, those winos have purchased a cheap but reliable rhythm machine and started dabbling in club music...


2019. január 13., vasárnap

016 ALTER.NATiON: weekly favtraX / 13-01-2019

ALTER.NATiON
Radiohead, Old Sea Brigade, Lorelle Meets the Obsolete, Ultramarine feat. Anna Domino, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Noname, Ibibio Sound Machine, Sharon Van Etten, Priests, Bill MacKay, Tørsö, Cherry Glazerr

weekly favtraX
13-01-2019




RadioheadIll Wind 4:14
Radiohead Rarity “Ill Wind” Is Now Streaming / The Moon Shaped Pool B-side is finally available
Radiohead have finally made “Ill Wind” available on streaming services. A B-side from A Moon Shaped Pool, the track originally appeared on a CD with the vinyl edition, alongside their would-be Bond theme “Spectre.”




Old Sea Brigade - Feel You 3:54
Old Sea Brigade will release his debut full-length album, Ode To A Friend, on January 4, 2019.  With this news, the Nashville-based, Atlanta-born singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalist shares a new album track, “Feel You,” with an accompanying music video.
Produced by Jeremy Griffith, the 11 tracks on Ode To A Friend blur and break barriers. While the songs remain rooted in Americana, indie, rock, and ambient soundscapes, they also toss and turn between analog cinematic flourishes and provocative lyricism.



Lorelle Meets the Obsolete - Unificado 9:11
After recording three murkily psychedelic albums heavily influenced by living in the swirl of Mexico City, Lorelle Meets the Obsolete's sound changed when the duo moved out of the bustling metropolis to the more relaxed locale of Ensenada in Baja, California. Their music became more expansive on 2016's Balance, and shifted again when they built their own studio and had more time to experiment. When recording 2018's De Facto, they were joined by members of their live band -- synthesizer wiz José Orozco, drummer Andrea Davi, and bassist Fernando Nuti -- and the five musicians recorded much of the album together in one room, constructing songs from loops and fragments before masterfully patching them together....  "Unificado" is a desert-baked psych ballad that turns into a fuzzfest halfway through, with Obsolete wringing all sorts of nasty noise out of his guitar with the rest of the band locking into a sturdy late-'60s groove...


Ultramarine feat. Anna Domino - Arithmetic 6:47
Nearly 30 years after Folk, their debut long-player, Essex duo Ultramarine return to Les Disques du Crépuscule for Signals Into Space, their seventh album... Signals Into Space is what you'd expect from Ultramarine: it's airy, spacy, and pillowy, and its textures frame unassuming loops colored with synthetic and organic rhythms, carefully arranged reeds, winds, stacked keyboards, and samplers. The American singer/songwriter Anna Domino -- whose recordings on Les Disques du Crepuscule and Factory inspired the lads early on -- co-wrote and sings on four tunes...  Domino and Ballamy come together on "Arithmetic," where dubby club jazz, angular Prince-esque pop, and spindly Anglo funk collide with psychedelic effects, trippy echoes, and multivalently layered percussion, with organs and electronic pianos exchanging pulses amid the loops and beats in the foreground. That dubwise quotient meets Ballamy's improvising as tenor sax and jagged synth chords introduce Domino, who relates a nearly perverse tale of technology and intimacy. Sampled handclaps, bass loops, and chunky guitars expand the striated cadence into a nocturnal drift of sonic inquiry.
Anna Domino

Charlotte Gainsbourg - Bombs Away 3:47
Serge Gainsbourg had an old trick that he loved to pull, using his lascivious baritone to intone dark, fucked-up things over gorgeous, frothing pop music. On “Bombs Away,” Serge’s daughter and “Lemon Incest” duet partner does a sort of updated version. The track — from Charlotte’s Rest collaborator SebastiAn — is slick, itchy club music, its needling synth-pop arpeggios offset by lush lounge-singer piano. In her lithe whisper, Charlotte lays out apocalyptic scenarios: “The city’s quiet and awaiting the Blitz/ A candle’s lit where old Victoria sits/ Babylon’s burning, and a dynasty ends/ Enemies, enemies will never be friends.”


Noname - Song 31 (Feat. Phoelix)
“Song 31″ is a victory lap. Noname released it as a celebration for selling out three end-of-year shows in her Chicago hometown, all on the heels of her excellent Room 25, which solidified her as a critical darling. It’s also, at least partially, a rebuff against those who say that maybe Noname is a little too much vibe, and too few bars. Noname jumps all over “Song 31,” her silky voice shadowboxing with a gorgeous beat that’s part-and-parcel with the stuff that was on Room 25. On it, Noname grapples with the idea of “pain for profit,” using her art as both a tool for personal transformation and capitalist gain. “Everything is for everything, rhymin’ with casualty, ain’t no labels that’s backing me but my tickets be sellin’ out,” she raps...

Ibibio Sound Machine - Tell Me (Doko Mien) 3:44
We all know the longstanding, well-earned pop-music cliché about stiff and mannered white boys, from Paul Simon to James Murphy, looking to Africa for some hint of funky liberation. And so it feels especially liberating when an African woman comes along and swipes the stiff and mannered funk back from them.
On “Tell Me (Doko Mien),” Eno Williams, born in Nigeria and based in London, leads her band Ibibio Sound Machine toward nervous, jittery ecstasy. Williams’ voice is graceful and liquid when she’s singing in English and euphorically disruptive when she’s singing in Ibibio. In both languages, she expertly surfs over her band’s brittle synths and burbling bass, a disco-techno-funk hybrid that spans decades.

Sharon Van Etten - Seventeen 4:25
Pop music and youthfulness are always bound up in each other: a new artist cataloguing the travails of their teens or early 20s in real time, or the songs a young person chooses to soundtrack formative life experiences, or an older artist looking back on the time lost, the time spent, the paths taken or not, the summers gone. Aging, obviously, is universal — so you can find countless songs through pop history that try to reckon with the passage of the years, the old haunts disappearing, the person you become looking back on the person you were. In “Seventeen,” Sharon Van Etten is as meditative as ever, but sings over a song that’s more surging and hook-driven than her past work... I’ve heard a couple people compare “Seventeen” to Bruce Springsteen, one of the main influences Van Etten has cited for Remind Me Tomorrow and a patron saint for a Jersey-raised songwriter like herself...


Priests - The Seduction Of Kansas 3:35
...It’s striking how they mold their political vigor into a glossier finish. The band’s lyrics have long been fixated on an old-school Americana mythology that’s fallen out of favor for glitzy skyscrapers, a “drawn-out parody of what a country thought it used to be.” “The Seduction Of Kansas”‘s sonic framework writhes in that disconnect. It takes the geographical and purported ideological center of the country and presents to it a devil’s bargain of recognition. Katie Alice Greer’s sneering chorus echoes the litany of politicians and corporations that pander to middle America voters, turning them away from progressive values to embrace bad actors who don’t have their best intentions at heart...
Priests

Bill MacKay - Pre-California 2:57
Chicago composer Bill MacKay has announced a new album, Fountain Fire, that will be out in March. It’s his first solo work since 2017’s Esker... "Pre-California is a brief meditation on transitioning states. Lines are introduced as a catalyst for biological action and movement is improvised through a telescoping of perspectives. In the window we see california before California, before Califerne or Calida Fornax, the hot furnace in which matter and thought are free to unravel."



Tørsö - Grab A Shovel 1:59
...After some insane bass and drums combustion and a ceremonial pick slide, Tørsö are off to the D-beat races, violently flailing at dangerous velocity as vocalist Mae howls about futility and self-loathing: “I don’t need more time to self-reflect/ All I do is lose self-respect/ And in the end, it’s all the fucking same/ I fight myself every single day.” Halfway through the two-minute runtime, the band switches to a more primitive chug — proving they’re as adept at heavy lifting as cardio — while Mae instructs us to bury her alive. It’s hard to follow through on her command, though, when you’re being whipped around so savagely.


Cherry Glazerr  - Wasted Nun 3:18
The new Cherry Glazerr album, Stuffed & Ready, is incredible. Clementine Creevy has mastered the art of writing gleaming, glamorous alt-rock songs with ugliness at their core...
In a press release, Creevy explains: “Wasted Nun” is about a woman trying to come to grips with her life. She’s a tragic woman. She hates herself and is trying to move through the world but gets deflated by extreme self-loathing. She wants to harness the power of the universe but instead she turns to self-destruction. The song is aggressive and intense because I’m letting out my anger, I’m enraged. People want girls to be strong, I want to be strong, but I just feel angry, and those are two very different things. There’s a stubbornness there, I know."


Radiohead, Old Sea Brigade, Lorelle Meets the Obsolete, Ultramarine feat. Anna Domino, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Noname, Ibibio Sound Machine, Sharon Van Etten, Priests, Bill MacKay, Tørsö, Cherry Glazerr