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A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Rocketship. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Rocketship. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

2019. december 7., szombat

PnM.MiX - 33 1st/2nd tracks from bestof 2019 by AllMusic

PnM_MiX - 33 1st/2nd tracks from bestof 2019 by AllMusic


"It's time to celebrate the best music of 2019. We begin with our overall top 100 albums of the year..."



First known as the frontwoman for the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Karen O branched out from the band's incendiary rock soon after their debut album, Fever to Tell, was released in 2003.
One of the early 21st century's most influential musicians and producers, Danger Mouse parlayed his skill at blending and juxtaposing elements of rock, hip-hop, dance, and pop into an unmistakable approach that he likened to being an auteur.
Danger Mouse / Karen O - Lux Prima from Lux Prima
...Together, the pair sets a dramatic, mysterious, and strangely luxurious mood that fits Lux Prima's musings on birth and rebirth. They begin the album with its most ambitious track: A nine-minute, four-part suite, "Lux Prima" swirls eerie synth passages, symphonic grandeur, and slinky R&B together with an unhurried mystique. It's an impressive, somewhat daunting prologue that hints at just how much ground Karen O and Danger Mouse cover on the album, and how well they complement each other...


Electronic indie folk outlet of West Midlands producer and multi-instrumentalist Stephen Wilkinson.
Bibio - The Art of Living from Ribbons
On 2017's excellent Phantom Brickworks, Bibio's Stephen Wilkinson took a deep dive into his music's ambient side that was unexpected, yet made perfect sense within his body of work. This time, Wilkinson spotlights the acoustic elements that have added warmth to his sound since the beginning, and the freshness of Ribbons suggest that his break from song-based music reinvigorated him. In interviews, Wilkinson has mentioned he prefers the simplicity of writing on acoustic guitar, and that purity shines through on the album's numerous instrumentals...

Singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and leader of eclectic traditional folk group the Carolina Chocolate Drops.
Rhiannon Giddens - Gonna Write Me a Letter from There Is No Other
Often, the phrase "there is no other" carries an air of romanticism, but Rhiannon Giddens turns its conventional meaning on its head on her collaboration with Francesco Turrisi. The pair focus directly on "othering," the process of identifying different cultures as alien from a person's own experience -- a phenomenon that the pair refute not only with the title of their 2019 album but the very music it contains. Giddens claims classical music and old-timey folk as her musical heritage; Turrisi is a jazz musician who studied early music -- backgrounds that provide a considerable amount of common ground, something that is evident throughout the restless, haunting There Is No Other.

An established guitarist and solo artist who has worked with everyone from Lambchop to Charlie Louvin... Having established his reputation as a versatile and supremely inventive guitar ace, he then launched a solo career that focused on instrumental, often experimental compositions that pulled from a variety of styles, from sparse American Primitive to pastoral country-driven rock and folk.
William Tyler - Alpine Star from Goes West
Although its title suggests a continuation of the pastoral Americana meditations from 2016's wondrous Modern Country, guitarist William Tyler's fourth solo outing is in fact a brighter, occasionally frolicsome set, rife with sublime melodies and executed with an understated confidence. Its title, Goes West, refers not to the dusty cross-country voyages that inspired its predecessor, but to Tyler's recent relocation from his native Nashville to sunny Los Angeles. As on Modern Country, the all-instrumental Goes West again employs a full band, though its leader sticks solely to acoustic guitar with Meg Duffy joining him on electric guitar, James Anthony Wallace on piano, Griffin Goldsmith on drums, and co-producer Bradley Cook covering bass, synths, and a smattering of other instruments...


Singer/songwriter from New Zealand who deals in minimalist and slightly gothic contemporary folk.
Aldous Harding - Fixture Picture from Designer
The New Zealand singer/songwriter's third studio effort, and her second time working with producer and frequent PJ Harvey collaborator John Parish, Designer eschews the post-last call darkness of 2017's Party for something a bit sunnier, though no less peculiar. Aldous Harding remains an enigma; she's an elusive but captivating presence who can invoke both a nervous giggle and a slack-jawed tear via her careful pairing of abstract lyrics and subtle hooks...

This virtuoso guitarist, composer, and producer lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.
Steve Gunn - New Moon from The Unseen In Between
Annabel Mehran's black-and-white cover photo for Steve Gunn's The Unseen In Between is a portrait of the guitarist and songwriter seemingly on the move. It evokes those found on early- to mid-'60s recordings by Bob Dylan, Koerner, Ray & Glover, Jackson C. Frank, Bert Jansch, and others. Gunn has shifted his focus considerably. Rather than simply showcase his dazzling guitar playing, he delivers carefully crafted, uncharacteristically tight and well-written songs with guitars, keyboards, strings, reeds -- and percussion -- translating them without artifice or instrumental disguise.... Opener "New Moon" commences with an acoustic guitar and bassline delivering a syncopated psych-folk vamp before a heavily reverbed electric guitar paints over them both...

Violinist, singer, songwriter, and composer known for his eclectic pop-folk style and multi-layered sound.
Andrew Bird - Sisyphus from My Finest Work Yet
Given that he's as well known for his whistling as for his singing, not everyone picks up an Andrew Bird album expecting a cogent lyrical statement. The impressionistic verse that's dominated his work bears this out, but given the cultural tumult of life in America in 2019, it's not surprising that even Bird has something to say about the world at large. My Finest Work Yet (never let it be said Bird is afraid of making a bold statement) isn't the work of an artist mounting a soapbox, but most of the songs do follow a consistent theme that in a time of chaos and upheaval, apathy and cynicism are our worst enemies, and that when we have enemies rather than adversaries, we've given the opposition power rather than blunted it...


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. Nonstop activity is part of Le Bon's brand, and while her collaborative band Drinks and production duties for Deerhunter's Why Hasn't Everything Already Disappeared? took up space on her resumé not long before Reward, three years passed between its release and her last fully solo album, 2016's Crab Day...

Over a long span, the London band have made energetic, heartbreaking indie pop that relies on punk, mod, country rock and incisive lyrics for support.
Comet Gain - We're All Fucking Morons from Fireraisers Forever!
When a band has been around as long Comet Gain have -- over 25 years -- and keep making great records, it's easy to take them for granted. They have a foolproof plan for always getting the full attention of their listeners though: make the angry songs feel like the attack of a swarm of insane bees, make the pop songs pop like giant bubblegum bubbles, make the sad songs cry-a-bucket-of-tears sad. While their previous record Paperback Ghosts had an autumnal, almost pastoral, tinge on many of the tracks, the sound of Fireraisers Forever! is almost the opposite...


The part Dutch, part Turkish combo are dedicated to updating the psychedelic sounds of Turkey in the early '70s, adding deep funk beats and synthesizers to the mix.
Altin GünYolcu from Gece
Altin Gün were formed by former members of Jacco Gardner's band to pay tribute to the Turkish psychedelia of the early '70s that they discovered and fell in love with while on tour in Turkey. Bassist Jasper Verhulst fell under the spell of artists like Baris Manço, Selda Bağcan, and Erkin Koray, who blended traditional Turkish folk sounds with the wild sounds of their day, so Verhulst decided he wanted to do something similar in the 2010s, using modern production techniques and synthesizers along with psych guitars and Turkish instruments...


Texas guitarist who combines blues roots with contemporary soul and hip-hop.
Gary Clark, Jr. - This Land from This Land
"F*ck you, I'm America's son/This is where I come from." Gary Clark, Jr. spits out that line with all the venom he can muster on the opening track of 2019's This Land, and while he's specifically challenging a racist neighbor who doesn't believe he can afford the Texas ranch he calls home, it also sounds like he's shouting down anyone who has dared to question his creative ambitions or tried to pigeonhole him as just another bluesman. Since making his major-label debut with 2012's Blak and Blu, Clark has steadily been widening his boundaries as a musician, and This Land is his toughest and most ambitious work to date, a bold and often ferocious set of songs that serves as a polyglot of African-American musical idioms and sharply articulate thoughts about American life in the midst of the Trump era...


Mississippi-born blues guitarist boasts a full-bodied sound and worked with Buddy Guy and Eric Gales before he could buy beer.
Christone "Kingfish" Ingram - Outside Of  This Town from Kingfish
At the ripe old age of 20, Clarksdale, Mississippi guitar slinger Christone "Kingfish" Ingram has been anointed "the next explosion of the blues," by no less than Buddy Guy. The proclamation is accurate. Ingram is young, but he's spent most of life pursuing the blues across the Delta and Chicago traditions, with nods at '70s hard rock and soul along the way...


Acclaimed Mississippi bluesman and member of the Bentonia blues school who also operates America's oldest surviving juke joint.
Jimmy "Duck" Holmes - Cypress Grove from Cypress Grove
Jimmy "Duck" Holmes is one of the last practitioners of old-fashioned Mississippi blues, playing a variation that belongs to the Yazoo county town of Bentonia. Holmes kept that sound alive at his own juke joint and on a series of records in the 2000s, but the 2019 album Cypress Grove is designed as a vehicle to introduce the bluesman to a wider audience. Dan Auerbach, the lead singer of the Black Keys and head of the Easy Eye Sound studio and label, shepherded the project, bringing Holmes up to Nashville to record with a bunch of his cohorts, including guitarist Marcus King...


Los Angeles-based roots music diva who records old-school, purist rockabilly.
Kim Lenz - Bogeyman from Slowly Speeding
On her fifth album, Kim Lenz delivers her most stylistically broad production to date with twangy songs dusted with themes of pain, desire, and the supernatural. Lenz, who first emerged in the '90s with her trademark backing group the Jaguars, is largely known as a queen of traditional rockabilly, a torchbearer of the swaggering, wickedly sexy style of '50s female rock icons like Barbara Pittman, Wanda Jackson, and Janis Martin. With Slowly Speeding, she expands upon this approach, exploring ever more nuanced aspects of the Americana tradition...

A Midwestern-based blues band that keeps the sound of Chess and Sun Records alive.
The Cash Box Kings - Ain't No Fun (When the Rabbit Got the Gun) from Hail to the Kings!
It's hard not to see the title of Hail to the Kings! as the Cash Box Kings celebrating themselves, but this 2019 album -- the group's second for Alligator -- makes it plain that the quintet can occasionally plant their tongues firmly in cheek... It's funny and it's smart, revealing that all of the Cash Box Kings are not only in on the joke, but that their hearts belong to Chicago. Certainly, Hail to the Kings! is an enthusiastic celebration of Chicago blues in all of its electric forms...



Kentucky-based singer/songwriter mixing both '60s folk and old-time country.
Joan Shelley - Coming Down For You from Like the River Loves the Sea
Joan Shelley hails from Kentucky, and her best music reflects the placid, Sunday evening sound of life in the rural American South. So why did she travel to Reykjavik, Iceland to record her fifth solo album, 2019's Like The River Loves The Sea? That's anyone's guess, but the results show it was an experiment that worked, and worked well for her. The sweet, smokey sadness of Shelley's voice has rarely been better served than it is on these sessions, blending a folkie clarity and quaver with a natural soulfulness that gives her performances a strength that betrays the subtlety of the presentation...

Vocalist who makes atmospheric orchestral pop showcasing her torchy image and sensuously husky singing style.
Lana Del Rey - Mariners Apartment Complex from Norman Fucking Rockwell!
With the creation of her Lana Del Rey persona, singer/songwriter Lizzy Grant stitched together the iconography of a fading American dream with soaring but melancholic pop songwriting, becoming an icon unto herself in the process. Her distinctive approach blurred sadness and longing just as it did past and present, drawing on the influence of classic American pop while integrating modernized touches like trap beats and millennial cultural references. With sixth album Norman Fucking Rockwell!, Lana Del Rey expands her vision with the most daring and vulnerable work of her catalog...

Indie folk artist and singer/songwriter with releases on Drag City and Jagjaguwar.
Sharon Van Etten - No One's Easy to Love from Remind Me Tomorrow
...Van Etten maintains that sense of drama on Remind Me Tomorrow, her fifth full-length album, but she's radically shifted her presentation. Working with producer John Congleton, she's expanded her sonic palette, incorporating vintage synthesizers and drum loops while occasionally cranking up her amplifiers. Some of the sounds are conscious throwbacks, but they don't play like retro nostalgia, not in the context of Remind Me Tomorrow, which juxtaposes fearless aural adventure with keenly observed observations of easing into a satisfied life...


Brash, bold power pop-inspired trio fronted by Wild Flag and Helium's Mary Timony and featuring members of the Aquarium and the Fire Tapes.
Ex Hex - Tough Enough from It's Real
On Rips, Ex Hex reimagined the instant gratification of rock & roll with thrilling results. On their second album, Mary Timony, Betsy Wright, and Laura Harris take a deeper dive into rock's transporting powers. At once tighter and more complex than Rips, It's Real reflects the two years Ex Hex spent touring in support of their debut, as well as the year it took to craft the album in the studio (one key piece of gear was the Rockman, an amp that Boston's Tom Scholz developed in 1982). In much the same way that some power pop and new wave bands expanded their music to arena-sized proportions as the '80s unfolded, It's Real is bigger and more deliberate than its predecessor...


Brooklyn indie rock quartet steered by the vulnerable songwriting of singer/guitarist Adrianne Lenker.
Big Thief - Contact from U.F.O.F.
By the arrival of Big Thief's third album, U.F.O.F. ("UFO friend" per lyrics in the title track), songwriter Adrianne Lenker had established herself as a singular force in indie music, both through two acclaimed albums with her band and with more delicate solo material including 2018's Abysskiss. In the meantime, Big Thief had toured almost constantly between preparing their 2016 debut, Masterpiece, and recording U.F.O.F., all the while becoming more and more tight-knit as a group...



L.A. quartet whose spiky yet vulnerable mix of punk, chamber pop, and singer/songwriter confessions influenced decades of artists that followed.
that dog. - Just The Way from Old LP
"I haven't felt like this since 1995," Anna Waronker snarls at one point on Old LP, the first album from that dog. in 22 years. During that time -- nearly half of Waronker, Rachel Haden, and Tony Maxwell's lives -- the band's spiky yet vulnerable mix of punk, chamber pop, and singer/songwriter confessions shaped later generations of indie rock and pop artists. It's all the sweeter, then, that Old LP is a near-flawless blend of experience and exuberance... The band's fiery side also sounds better than ever on "Just the Way You Like It" and "Down Without a Fight," both of which hone their deadpan punk-pop to an even sharper point...


West Coast indie group helmed by Dusty Reske featuring elements of space age pop, shoegaze haze, and dream pop sweetness in their layered sound.
Rocketship - Under Streetlights Shadows from Thanks to You
Cue the record scratch sound effect because 2019's Thanks to You is exactly that. Working mainly with vocalist Ellen Osborn, Reske concocted a record that nearly measures up to their debut in every way, and it's clear that while time has passed and there are new elements added to Rocketship's sound, Reske's gifts as a writer and producer haven't faded at all. Whether dipping back into the space-age shoegaze sound (complete with vintage organ chords) on the opening "Under Streetlights Shadows"...


Former Golden Grrrls members who went on to form Sacred Paws, producing sunny, polyrhythmic pop.
Sacred Paws - The Conversation from Run Around the Sun
Sacred Paws' second album doesn't deviate from the winning formula the duo perfected on 2017's Strike a Match: twanging Afro-pop guitars, pulsing drums, giddy vocal interplay, and songs catchy enough to latch on like a deer tick and never let go. Rachel Aggs (vocals, guitar, bass) and Eilidh Rodgers (vocals, drums) apply the same high standards to Run Around the Sun, working with much the same team to create a joyous indie pop listening experience...





Los Angeles-based singer/songwriter who blends ethereal indie electro-pop with dark thematic tones.
Billie Eilish - bad guy from WHEN WE ALL FALL ASLEEP, WHERE DO WE GO?
On her big-league debut, Billie Eilish makes a bold entrance into the mainstream, leaving the fringes behind to embrace her role as an anti-pop star for the disaffected Gen Z masses. With a youthful, hybrid blend that incorporates elements of indie electronic, pop, and hip-hop (assisted by brother Finneas O'Connell), When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? captures the late-2010s zeitgeist by throwing conventional boundaries to the wind and fully committing to its genre-blurring self...


A tough-rhyming rapper whose approach is equally effective over jagged and smooth productions, Little Simz (originally Lil Simz) is also known as an actor for her recurring roles on the BBC's Spirit Warriors and E4's Youngers.
Little Simz - Offence from Grey Area
...On her third full-length album, Grey Area, Simz has reached a new peak, with an honest record that isn't afraid to take shots at the world at large. It's also incredibly concise -- an aspect that many of her peers often miss the mark on -- with no filler despite the broad variation the record boasts.
Simz comes out swinging on opening track "Offence," which acts as a declaration of intent for everything that follows, as she bellows "I said it with my chest and I don't care who I offend." It acts in part as a battle cry but also as a primer for truths, both personal and social, that she is capable of exploring...


Australian singer/songwriter whose seamless meld of dreamy indie pop and confessional alt-country evokes names like Angel Olsen and Sharon Van Etten.
Julia Jacklin -  Body from Crushing
... Jacklin's lyrics and vulnerable yet jaded vocal delivery are the primary focus, however, on a set of breakup songs that is, importantly, as much about reclaiming one's sense of self as it is about loss.
Crushing is riveting right from the spare, noir-tinged opening track, "Body," which remembers the moment Jacklin decided to leave the relationship after her partner got them thrown off a flight. The humiliating scene is punctuated by her wondering if he might use a nude photograph he once took of her against her; she describes the aftermath as "heading to the city to get my body back."...


Evoking trip-hop as well as the xx's spare electronic pop, FKA twigs' songs are haunting and vulnerable.
FKA twigs - thousand eyes from Magdalene
On her early EPs and LP1, FKA twigs' Tahliah Barnett expressed the intersections of love, pain, fragility and strength with remarkable eloquence. While making Magdalene, she embodied them. Not only did she endure the end of a long-term relationship, she had surgery to remove six large uterine fibroids (colorfully described by her as a "fruit bowl of pain"). These events became the heart of her second album, which uses the duality of Mary Magdalene as a lens for its wounded yet resilient feminine energy...

Singer, songwriter, and producer who debuted with pop-oriented R&B and grew into one of the more adventurous, expectation-defying artists of her era.
Solange - Down With the Clique from When I Get Home
Unfazed by having to follow a landmark album that crowned the Billboard 200, went gold, and yielded a hit that took a Grammy, Solange leisurely detours with When I Get Home. Made in spots as remote as Los Angeles and Jamaica, the follow-up to A Seat at the Table was also recorded in New Orleans and Solange's native Houston. Most pertinent is the last location, referenced repeatedly in expressions of nostalgia, pride, and tranquility, as well as in titular geographic markers..


Witty, confident singer/rapper who blends hip-hop and soul as she tackles issues of race, sexuality, and body positivity.
Lizzo - Cuz I Love You from Cuz I Love You
Since her indie days, Lizzo has been a distinctive and multi-talented artist capable of blending rap, soul, pop, and her classical training with positive messages and a sharp sense of humor. On her major-label debut Cuz I Love You, she takes all of these strengths to the next level, and the results are her most consistent, and consistently joyous, set of songs yet. Working with a creative team that includes producer Ricky Reed -- with whom Lizzo connected shortly after releasing her second album, Big Grrrl Small World -- she continues to embrace her gospel roots and the full power of her voice...



Singer and songwriter, as well as a poet and activist, who naturally applies the latter two outlets to her modern, soul-rooted R&B.
Jamila Woods - ZORA from LEGACY! LEGACY!
Jamila Woods conceptualized her second solo album after an exercise she presented to her poetry class at Young Chicago Authors. The students were assigned to choose a poem and "cover" it, as Woods terms it, by putting their individual spin on it...


Grammy-nominated American rapper traversing soul, R&B, and hip-hop.
Rapsody - Nina from Eve
When L. Lamar Wilson interviewed Rapsody for Oxford American in 2018, the writer and filmmaker asked the rapper -- coming off two Grammy nominations, her profile still on the rise -- if she felt part of the same cultural lineage as Nina Simone and Roberta Flack. The exchange fired Rap's imagination to conceptualize the follow-up to the celebrated Laila's Wisdom.. For the album's title, Rapsody refers to the Book of Genesis, thereby uniting and honoring black womanhood, herself included...

London-based IDM producer signed to Kode9's Hyperdub label.
Loraine James - Glitch Bitch from For You and I
Loraine James' first Hyperdub release is an homage to her London upbringing, as well as an exploration of her own identity, specifically as a queer black woman residing in the city. The cover art shows her standing in front of her childhood flat while holding up an old Polaroid photo of the same building. Reflecting the multiculturalism of the city, her music is influenced by numerous genres and styles, but it rarely feels like she's dipping into any of them for train spotters' sake. Her music is the sound of spontaneous expression beyond any perceived limitations. Opener "Glitch Bitch" is a motivational club track frayed with skips and stutters, nearly crashing into itself by the end...


Eclectic and powerful post-punk band that's steadily evolved under the leadership of one of rock's most celebrated songwriters.
Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Spinning Song from  Ghosteen
Plenty of artists have built careers out of writing about death, but only a tiny handful have shown the capacity to honestly and eloquently write about grief. Nick Cave knows more than a bit about grief, and he's been willing to stare into that particular abyss, doing so with a particularly keen focus on 2013's Push the Sky Away and 2016's Skeleton Tree, the latter partially informed by the death of his teenage son in 2015. Grief is hardly the only emotion that Cave and his ensemble the Bad Seeds explores on 2019's Ghosteen, but a sense of loss and a heavy heart permeates these songs like a thick fog, as well as the bonds of family and how they can bring us together and keep us apart...

2019. október 13., vasárnap

059 ALTER.NATION weekly favtraX 13-10-2019

ALTER.NATION #59
Big Thief, Danny Brown, Kim Gordon, Comet Gain, Starcrawler, Allah-Las, The Hecks, Rocketship, Julien Chang, Fabienne Delsol, 808 State, Carla dal Forno

weekly favtraX 
1 3 - 1 0 - 2 0 1 9

"Forgotten Eyes"




ALTER.NATION #59 on DEEZER


Brooklyn indie rock quartet steered by the vulnerable songwriting of singer/guitarist Adrianne Lenker.
Big Thief - Forgotten Eyes from Two Hands
Following quickly on the heels of the spacey, artful U.F.O.F. -- by five months, to be exact -- Big Thief's fourth long-player, Two Hands, was recorded just days after its contrasting sister album. However, while U.F.O.F. was tracked at a wooded facility outside of Seattle, the band deliberately moved to the 100-plus-degree environs of a desert studio west of El Paso for Two Hands... Though less improvised-sounding on the whole than its predecessor, the loose Two Hands was recorded live with few overdubs by the same crew (producer Andrew Sarlo and engineer/mixer Dom Monks, though drummer James Krivchenia helped mix this time around)... It's followed by catchier album highlight "Forgotten Eyes," which settles into the visceral, full-band folk-rock of Big Thief's earlier albums but with a distinctly immediate recording quality. (Though any such descriptions are relative in the case of this band.)... While it's hard to talk about Two Hands in 2019 without the context of the stunning U.F.O.F., the album's quality stands on its own, offering its own grade of intimacy, sound, and feel for alternate moods.

Unique Detroit rapper whose hood/hipster personality, embrace of social media, and prolific mixtape output fostered an underground phenomenon.
Danny Brown - Change Up from uknowhatimsayin¿
Danny Brown took his grotesquerie to its highest level yet with Atrocity Exhibition. Concurrent with his divergent pursuits and evolving public image -- he's now done a sitcom theme, dipped into acting, hosted a talk show, and has spoken about living less recklessly -- the rapper dials back a bit with his follow-up and second Warp LP, executive produced by Q-Tip. Paul White is still one of Brown's preferred co-pilots, producing or co-producing four of the cuts. The uptick in serious matters is signaled with the slow-churning rhythm undergirding the weary but resolute opener "Change Up," as in "Never change up," "clench my teeth, knuckle up."...

Iconic indie rock musician and feminist, best known for her work with Sonic Youth and several solo projects. A major figure on the American indie rock scene of the '80s and onward, Kim Gordon is best known for her work with the influential group Sonic Youth. However, in many respects Gordon was as well regarded for her writings and interviews as for her music; she was willing to discuss feminism in a way that was as thoughtful but direct as Sonic Youth's music. Gordon was also willing to explore the outer limits of experimental rock music, both with Sonic Youth and her various side projects, and her most advanced work helped to link indie rock with the true musical avant-garde.
Kim Gordon - Hungry Baby from No Home Record
With every year that passes after Sonic Youth's breakup, Kim Gordon's art becomes more liberated and more revealing. As she focused on the visual art career she sidelined for decades, her music shattered her limiting persona as an aloof, cooler-than-cool alt-rock icon while holding onto her most essential strengths. This is especially true of No Home Record, her fearless, witty and sensual solo debut. It feels like equal parts fresh start and homecoming for good reason: Gordon began making the album soon after she returned to her hometown of Los Angeles in late 2015. Frequently, it feels like she challenges Californian stereotypes as much as she dispels the received wisdom about her music... Conversely, she cuts loose on "Hungry Baby," a nervy, sexy rave-up that's far wilder than the deadpan affect she often cultivated in the past. Elsewhere, No Home Record proves just as challenging as Body/Head's music... With its raw edges and open ends, No Home Record exposes the deepest levels of Gordon's art, and they're more thought-provoking and bracing than ever.

British indie band plays timeless, reverb-drenched indie pop that never quite sounds new but never gets old. Led by guitarist and vocalist David Feck (aka David Bower and David Christian), Comet Gain are a British indie pop band whose music is a freewheeling, literate fusion of folk-rock, twee pop, garage rock, R&B, punk, and any number of points in between.
Comet Gain - We're All Fucking Morons from Fireraisers Forever
When a band has been around as long Comet Gain have -- over 25 years -- and keep making great records, it's easy to take them for granted. They have a foolproof plan for always getting the full attention of their listeners: make the angry songs feel like the attack of a swarm of insane bees, make the pop songs pop like giant bubblegum bubbles, make the sad songs cry a bucket of tears sad... Everything clicks into place right from the start and the emotion, the songcraft and the power hooks never let up. Comet Gain may have been around a long, lomng time but they have never felt as alive or as vital as they do on this amazing and important album.

L.A. punk rockers known for their wild, theatrical shows and glam-metal overtones. Punk rockers Starcrawler formed in 2015 in Los Angeles, California and quickly formed a sound and attitude that placed them somewhere between the punk/hard rock of fellow L.A. natives the Runaways and the shock tactics of legendary metal influencers Black Sabbath.
Starcrawler - Bet My Brains from Devour You
... On their second long-player, 2019's Devour You, they've eased back on the lyrical decadence just a bit (no songs about oral sex this time, though there is one about masturbation) but have pumped up the guitars and drums, and thanks to producer and engineer Nick Launay, they've managed to sound glossier and dirtier at the same time... Starcrawler blend the snot of pop punk, the swagger of glam rock, and the eager darkness of vintage metal with the arrogantly blank vocal sneer of Arrow de Wilde, who sounds like the love child of Cherie Currie and Aubrey Plaza. That said, if de Wilde often sounds like she hates you (or someone else nearby) despite the fact she doesn't actually care, the band sound tougher and more locked in on their second effort. Henri Cash's guitar has gained some welcome muscle and flexibility, barking with a new degree of authority, while bassist Tim Franco and drummer Austin Smith are tight enough to hold these songs together and loose enough to put both groove and attitude behind the music...

Los Angeles combo Allah-Las play a reverb-drenched, moody version of garage rock. Created by record store employees with a love for laid-back 60s sounds that verged on somnambulant psychedelia, the LA band Allah-Lahs documented the sounds and moods of sunny West Coast days with nothing to do but strum guitars and gently harmonise. 
Allah-Las - Roco Ono from Lahs
After three records spent digging deep into the super chill fantasy version of LA, complete with surf guitars, Allah-Las do things a little differently on Lahs. The band still play with the relaxed style of four guys with nowhere to go and all the time in the world to not get there, but this time around they are looking outside of their comfort zone and trying some new things. Not only that but they've given their well-established sound a makeover; stripping back a least three layers of reverb, bringing the vocals closer to the front and allowing the drums to snap a little bit here and there... not just sticking to gauzy psych and sleepy surf music. There's a little bit of slow motion, last call disco ("Roco Ono,")... There may be moments that give fans expecting another laidback psych record pause, but on the whole the band succeed in refurbing their template and coming up with something that's both extremely chill and interesting at the same time.

Chicago-based group whose sound has evolved from clanging, dissonant noise rock to mutated new wave. Chicago-based group the Hecks started out making a clanging, dissonant brand of experimental art rock reminiscent of Sonic Youth and Wire. However, by the release of their second album, 2019's My Star, they had drastically reconstructed their sound into a mutant blend of jittery new wave and synth-heavy funk.
The Hecks - Heat Wave from My Star
On their early releases, the Hecks (initially the duo of Andy Mosiman and Zach Hebert) played a tense, angular form of deconstructed post-punk that seemed to focus on certain elements of rock music songcraft rather than build them into one solid, sturdy package. This included tracks made up primarily of clanging, throbbing guitars or scorched noise drones. After the band released their self-titled debut album in 2016, engineer Dave Vettraino joined the group full-time, and keyboard player Jeff Graupner soon became their fourth member. This added an entirely new dimension to the Hecks' music, causing them to scrap the initial sessions for their second album and completely rework the material. With My Star, they've reinvented themselves as a twisted new wave act, injecting Day-Glo synths into their jittery tunes and channeling the repetition of their earlier work into something more driving and hypnotic...

Sacramento trio whose 1990s hat tip to 60s pop earned them indie legend status. Sacramento, CA-based indie-pop favorite Rocketship was the brainchild of singer/guitarist Dustin Reske, who formed the group in 1993 with bassist Verna Brock, keyboardist Heidi Barney and drummer Jim Rivas.
Rocketship - Under Streetlights Shadows from Thanks to You
Following up a classic album is never easy. Roughly 99.9% of bands or artists lucky enough to make something that stands out as a paragon of their genre never get within range of it ever again. That seemed to be the case with Rocketship. Their 1996 album A Certain Smile, A Certain Sadness is a brilliant distillation of indie pop sweetness, chamber pop skill, shoegaze softness and dream pop hooks played on space age keyboards and perfectly jangled guitars and sung by a chorus of voices dialed in on the special frequency between lovelorn and melancholy... Cue the record scratch sound effect because 2019's Thanks to You is exactly that. Working mainly with vocalist Ellen Osborn, Reske concocted a record that nearly measures up to their debut in every way and it's clear that while time has passed and there are new elements added to Rocketship's sound, Reske's gifts as a writer and producer haven't faded at all. Whether dipping back into the space age shoegaze sound (complete with vintage organ chords) on the opening "Under Streetlights Shadows,"...


Singer/songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and producer whose shape-shifting songs reflect his classical training and omnivorous musical taste. Singer/songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and producer Julien Chang combines his classical training and encyclopedic knowledge of pop music into shape-shifting songs that balance experience and wonder. Though he was just 19 when his debut album, Jules, was released in 2019, its kaleidoscopic mix of jazz, folk, R&B, and pop boasted a sophistication beyond his years.
Julien Chang - Moving Parts from Jules
In some ways, it's hard to believe Julien Chang made Jules while he was a high school senior. His classical training, skills as a multi-instrumentalist, and encyclopedic knowledge of pop music all suggest the experience of a significantly older artist. However, in other, more important ways, Jules could have only been made by someone so young... As he jumps from one sound to the next over the course of each song, the detours he takes are just as engaging as his main ideas... That Jules is so hard to pin down is a big part of its appeal; wondering where he'll go next is almost as exciting as the music he's already made. One thing is for sure: This album is an introduction to a first-rate musical mind.


Born in Limoges, France, Fabienne Delsol combines French pop with classic British beat. French-born vocalist Fabienne Delsol started her career as lead singer of the beat group-obsessed Bristols, then branched out on her own with a sound that started off in similar fashion only with some psychedelia and French pop added to the mix.
Fabienne Delsol - J’ai Fait De Lui Un Reve from Four
After taking a long break from recording, Fabienne Delsol returns with another light-hearted and snappy album that combines the hookiness of the beat group boom, the drama of vintage French pop, and the murky swirl of psychedelia. Her previous solo albums were helmed by Liam Watson at his famed Toerag studio; this time around Delsol takes half the wheel, with the studio's engineer Luke Oldfield also steering. They get a sound that's a little less reverb coated and a bit snappier, bringing Delsol's sound a little closer to the modern era. Not close enough to be be bland or slick; just enough to make the album sound less like a long-lost curio. As before, the songs are split between newly written tracks and covers of decades-old obscurities, both sung by Delsol in her sophisticated style... Delsol also covers a classic Françoise Hardy song from 1968, "J’ai Fait De Lui Un Rêve," capturing the song's stately charms while adding some buzzing guitars and soaring Mellotron. This song and the rest of the covers are done exactly right, with respect to the original but played and sung with unique style and personality. Delsol and her crew have plenty of each, and they make the covers sounds as much hers as the songs skillfully written for her by Gardiner. Four is another special record from an artist who can do no wrong, except for not making albums more regularly.


Manchester techno band with immense impact on world of electronica. A pioneer of the acid house sound, 808 State formed in Manchester, England in 1988 when Martin Price, the owner of the city's legendary record store Eastern Bloc and the founder of the independent label Creed, first joined forces with local musician and producer Graham Massey.
808 State - Skylon from Transmission Suite
The acid house pioneers return with an album inspired by Manchester’s electronic music scene, past and present.
808 State are back with Transmission Suite, their first album in nearly two decades.
Drawing on the rich history of Manchester’s electronic music scene, as well as certain members of the city’s new guard, the album is described as an immersion in “their home city of Manchester, and the ghosts that swirl around it.”


Australian singer/multi-instrumentalist who writes sparse, haunting tunes as part of trio F ingers in addition to solo work... Carla dal Forno writes haunting, downcast tunes influenced by post-punk, dub, and ambient pop.
Carla dal Forno - Hype Sleep from Look Up Sharp
Breaking away from the dubby abstractions of her group F ingers, Australian singer/songwriter Carla dal Forno made her solo debut in 2016 with You Know What It's Like, a magnificent album of ambient pop tunes that prompted comparisons to obscure names like Kendra Smith and In Gowan Ring... dal Forno's second album contains some of her most direct compositions, with clearer vocals and more upfront melodies. While still sparse and haunting, this album doesn't feel as detached, and dal Forno's sentiments aren't as ambiguous as they were before.
Big Thief, Danny Brown, Kim Gordon, Comet Gain, Starcrawler, Allah-Las, The Hecks, Rocketship, Julien Chang, Fabienne Delsol, 808 State, Carla dal Forno