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

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


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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 3., péntek

033 ALTER.NATION.MiX weekly favtraX 03-05-2019

ALTER.NATION #33

Bleached, Hash Redactor, Hannah Cohen, Claude Fontaine, Big Thief, Empath, Pile, Rhiannon Giddens with Francesco Turrisi, Sebadoh, Cate Le Bon, Porridge Radio, Claude Fontaine

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 03-05-2019






Serving up raffish punk-pop that sounds a little like a cheerier take on their former band Mika Miko, Bleached features sisters Jennifer and Jessica Clavin. After Mika Miko disbanded in 2009, Jennifer took a break from performing music, although she and Jessica continued to write songs together...
Bleached - Hard To Kill
...Don’t You Think You’ve Had Enough is the first album Bleached have recorded since getting sober. The title is a question Jennifer asked herself when she reached a turning point in that struggle. In a statement, she says today’s single “Hard To Kill” is about “staring down the road towards death and realizing I needed to wake up and get out of my selfish patterns of self destruction.” There’s a whistled hook, abundant cowbell, and a chorus that goes like so: “All the cities we burned down/ Turns out I’m very hard to kill.”...

Memphis-based band formed by members of Ex-Cult and NOTS with a dark, nihilistic energy and a caustic garage-meets-post-punk sound. 
Hash Redactor - Good Sense from Drecksound
Though the caustic and sinewy Hash Redactor was formed by established members of the Memphis garage punk scene, their full-length debut, Drecksound, manages to elude all the trappings that can make side projects or would-be super groups fall flat.  While the band shares the entire rhythm section of NOTS and an Ex-Cult member, Hash Redactor is decidedly its own thing. Drecksound bears some similarities to its creators' other projects -- hints of NOTS' jagged grooves that lean towards pop just to scoff at it with dissonance, a more humorous shade of the darkness that surrounds Ex-Cult -- but these songs are set apart by an anxious urgency that keeps the entire album on the brink of collapse. This is immediately evident on "Good Sense," an opening track that pushes a bass-driven post-punk riff to its breaking point, building intensity and volume ever upward until the song ends in a squall of feedback...


Like a wispier Lana Del Rey, dreamy, melancholy indie pop from a vocalist who has backed Glen Hansard, Thomas Bartlett, and Sam Evian. 
Hannah Cohen - Build Me Up from Welcome Home
Expanding on the soft acoustic and electronic textures of 2015's Pleasure Boy, singer and songwriter Hannah Cohen's third album, Welcome Home, is her first to be produced by partner and frequent collaborator Sam Owens, aka Sam Evian. Given the hazy, nostalgic quality shared by their solo output, what sounds like a promising professional partnership in theory proves to be an effective one in practice here...


American singer who channels classic rocksteady reggae and Tropicalia influences on her retrofitted tunes of heartache. 
Claude Fontaine - Strings of Your Guitar from Claude Fontaine
...These are no half-cooked stylistic dalliances or nonspecific nods to a reggae influence. Fontaine took her muse all the way, enlisting players like former Steel Pulse bassist Ronnie McQueen, onetime Astrud Gilberto drummer Airto Moreira, and Tony Chin, a reggae guitarist who worked on classic tracks with Dennis Brown, King Tubby, and Althea & Donna... The album splits into two distinct halves, with the first five songs looking to dub, rocksteady, and other Jamaican styles and the other five sending up bossa nova, mellow Tropicalia, and more Brazilian fare...

Brooklyn indie rock quartet steered by the vulnerable songwriting of singer/guitarist Adrianne Lenker. 
Big Thief - U.F.O.F.
...“UFOF,” the title track from their third album (and first for 4AD), is a fantasy that should be familiar to anyone who grew up somewhere small, dreaming of an outside force—a spaceship, a rock band—to touch down and make you feel different.
From the start, Big Thief have excelled at finding new lenses for familiar scenes, and “UFOF” extends their scope to science fiction. The sweep of fingerpicked acoustic guitars and airtight rhythm forms a new type of groove for the band—their version, maybe, of an arpeggiated synth and a drum loop. “I imagine you taking me out of here,” Adrianne Lenker sings, gazing heavenward as the music tumbles in anticipation. And when nothing comes to save her, she has no choice but to do it herself...

Philadelphia-based punk quartet that incorporates elements of new age theory. 
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.

Boston indie rock quartet known for their D.I.Y. work ethic and constantly evolving post-rock sound. 
Pile - Lord of Calendars from Green and Gray
Midway through Pile’s new album comes one of the best and most unusual protest songs of the Trump era... It’s as close to an anthem as Pile has written, though it remains staunchly unhummable. Even this band’s protest tunes are circuitous tangles of aggression and flailing limbs. Pile, the noise-rock darlings of the Boston DIY scene, achieved their cult-like measure of indie fame by touring mercilessly and doing nothing the easy way: The band has never written fist-pumping platitudes, never optioned a song for a major television show, never covered Toto... And, perhaps to match the stench of sociopolitical revulsion, Maguire summons some utterly sickening riffs: “Lord of Calendars”... ferocious.

Singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and leader of eclectic traditional folk group the Carolina Chocolate Drops. 
Rhiannon Giddens with Francesco Turrisi - Ten Thousand Voices from there is no Other
Folk music shouldn’t have stars, but Rhiannon Giddens’ illuminating charge is hard to ignore. This February, she led the brilliant Our Native Daughters project, collaborating with US musicians Allison Russell, Amythyst Kiah and Leyla McCalla to recover and reinstate some of the African American histories buried in folk music. Three months later comes another album of far-reaching curiosity with a solid purpose: exploring how sounds and rhythms from Africa and the Arabic world connect with the traditional music of Europe and America. Francesco Turrisi is Giddens’ collaborator this time, a Dublin-based Italian multi-instrumentalist usually working in jazz, improvisation and early music... What There Is No Other resembles is a 21st-century version of Shirley Collins and Davy Graham’s Folk Roots, New Routes, the landmark 60s folk-rock record that showed how unusual musical connections on paper could sound utterly natural in the service of song. Giddens’ instruments are the minstrel banjo, octave violin, viola and her wide-open, rangy, contralto voice...

The quintessential lo-fi band of the '90s, centered around the neurotic observational genius of depressive-obsessive Lou Barlow. 
Sebadoh - Sunshine
Sebadoh are nearing the release of their first album in six years, Act Surprised. The indie greats have been promoting it with a run of singles... a fourth preview in the form of “Sunshine”... According to Lou Barlow, the song is “about going inside. Giving up, for the moment, on finding answers in nature or social rituals. Going inside, where I feel safe, and finding strength in intimacy.”...

Welsh indie singer/songwriter who produced for Deerhunter and other peers in addition to crafting her own intricate solo albums. 
Cate Le Bon - The Light
Is Cate Le Bon at the top of her game right now? I think Cate Le Bon is at the top of her game. Every single we’ve gotten from her upcoming new album, Reward, has been absolute perfection — a masterful blending of the Welsh musician’s avant-weirdness and pop precision... It’s a spinning sigh of a track that finds Le Bon dropping cutting lines like “Holding the door to my own tragedy/ Take blame for the hurt but the hurt belongs to me” with heartbreaking casualness. The song is an elastic band of horns and ricocheting piano keys.

Porridge Radio is a sad loser who badly records music in her bedroom. She plays live shows with her band, Porridge Radio.
Porridge Radio - Don’t Ask Me Twice
“Don’t Ask Me Twice” is completely off-the-wall bonkers, and it’s great. The UK band clanks and clangs together, blasting and bursting at the seams with a psychedelic twist. Dana Margolin embraces the unknowability of life with a raucous joy, a constant refrain of “I don’t know”s that sounds like being ripped apart.
Here’s Margolin’s quote about it: For me, ‘Don’t Ask Me Twice’ is a song about suddenly noticing where you are and being surprised to find yourself in your own body in that place. When we play it live it feels like it’s all going to fall apart at any moment, but then it kind of pulls back and falls into place again, and then suddenly the chaos comes back and everything feels so intense...


American singer who channels classic rocksteady reggae and Tropicalia influences on her retrofitted tunes of heartache. 
Claude Fontaine - Play by Play from Claude Fontaine
As the story goes, Los Angeles-based singer Claude Fontaine had never listened to reggae when she stumbled into a London record shop and was flooded with inspiration from the sounds of '60s rocksteady that the staff was spinning. Caught up in a storm of what felt like an instant personal connection with the music, Fontaine spun her fixation into an obsession and turned that into the driving force behind her self-titled album, penning songs in the style of classic Jamaican music. These are no half-cooked stylistic dalliances or nonspecific nods to a reggae influence...

Bleached, Hash Redactor, Hannah Cohen, Claude Fontaine, Big Thief, Empath, Pile, Rhiannon Giddens with Francesco Turrisi, Sebadoh, Cate Le Bon, Porridge Radio, Claude Fontaine

2019. március 30., szombat

028 ALTER.NATiON: weekly favtraX 30-03-2019

ALTER.NATiON #28
Control Top, Perry Farrell, Ty Segall, White Denim, Sebadoh, Garcia Peoples, Joshua Redman Quartet, Sarah Tandy, Facs, Ela Orleans, Christelle Bofale, Billie Eilish
 
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30-03-2019




Control Top - Covert Contracts
“Everything looks like a commercial/ It’s a brand to be controversial!” is Carter’s rallying cry on the album’s rampaging title track. From there she traces the oblivious steps toward fascism: “First step is to give up your attention/ Next step is to give up your intention/ Then one day you’re locked up for dissension/ It was all built into the invention.” Paired with surging pogo bass, an intense 4/4 backbeat, and a flurry of violent guitar stabs, it’ll raise your pulse...




Alt-rock godfather who wears many hats: promoter, provocateur, and indelible frontman (Jane's Addiction, Porno for Pyros, Satellite Party). 
Perry Farrell - Pirate Punk Politician
...Considering that the latest Jane’s Addiction album was released in 2011, and Farrell has not released solo material since 2001, “Pirate Punk Politician” should be a return to form. It’s more Porno For Pyros with its spiraling riffs and almost experimental nature, but if the title was any indication, this song is bizarre from start to finish. While a fast tempo, scratchy guitar and thrusting bass line are present, weirdly melodic synths cut in during the second verse. This only creates uneasy tension that’s alleviated by the sheer ruckus of the chorus...



California-based garage rock revivalist known for his prolific discography and his accurate recreations of '60s lo-fi. 
Ty Segall - Cherry Red from Deforming Lobes
...2019's Deforming Lobes was recorded during two January 2018 shows in Los Angeles, and the song list curiously omits any tunes from Freedom's Goblin. What it does deliver is Segall and his band laying into their music as if their lives depended on it. Deforming Lobes documents a tight, heavyweight rock & roll band turning up the amps and wailing hard for the fans, and if it doesn't have a subtle bone in its body, it proves beyond a doubt that Segall and his bandmates are still committed to the sweaty, passionate glory of The Rock Show. On Deforming Lobes, Segall is backed by the Freedom Band, the same core of musicians who helped him make Freedom's Goblin, and they sound like a force to be reckoned with. Emmett Kelly is a great guitar foil for Segall, matching and complementing the noisy majesty of Segall's soloing, Ben Boye's fuzzy keyboards lend force and color to the arrangements, and bassist Mikal Cronin and drummer Charles Moothart hit with the impact of a runaway cement truck...


Freewheeling indie rock combo from Austin, Texas whose exuberant, hard-hitting sound has charted in the U.S. and U.K. 
White Denim - Reversed Mirror from Side Effects
Though they are from Austin, and started out as a punk power trio, much of White Denim's ninth studio album, 2019's Side Effects, sounds like it could have been recorded by a psychedelic rock band in Los Angeles in 1969. That fuzz-tone, reverb, and echo-pedal sound is pretty much the aesthetic bandleaders James Petralli (vocals, guitars) and Steve Terebecki (bass) have been aiming for since at least 2011's D. While the lineup has gone through changes over the years (there are even at least three different drummers credited here), White Denim have remained remarkably consistent...


The quintessential lo-fi band of the '90s, centered around the neurotic observational genius of depressive-obsessive Lou Barlow. 
At the top of the month, Sebadoh announced their first new album in six years, Act Surprised, which sees Lou Barlow reconnecting with Jason Loewenstein and Bob D’Amico after a move back to Northampton, MA... This one builds on their panicked energy. “The incessant bombardment of the senses with media and advertising can lead to a kind of self-defensive paralysis,” the band’s Loewenstein said about the song in a press release. “I am completely stunned at this point.”

New Jersey band who took notes from a canon of classic psychedelic searchers to develop their jammy, cosmic rock sound. 
Garcia Peoples - High Noon Violence from Natural Facts
Arriving a scant eight months after their debut, Natural Facts already presents a distinct evolution in Garcia Peoples' exploratory guitar rock. With a name that references the late Jerry Garcia, the New Jersey combo honored -- to a certain degree -- the immutable jam band spirit of their forebears on 2018's sunny Cosmic Cash, which introduced audiences not already in the know to the crafty twin-guitar stylings of Tom Malach and Danny Arakaki. Rather than retreading the tired tropes so diligently trotted out each summer by countless noodling festival bands, Garcia Peoples filtered their more obvious influences (Grateful Dead, NRBQ, Little Feat, Phish) through a contemporary indie rock aesthetic that celebrated the present over the past. They accomplish this to an even greater extent on their 2019 follow-up, Natural Facts... The earthy, Dead-like harmonies of standout "High Noon Violence" are paired with a snaky riff that could have come straight from Television's Marquee Moon. 


An adventurous, highly lauded jazz tenor saxophonist who initially rose to prominence after winning the 1991 Thelonious Monk International Jazz Competition. 
Joshua Redman Quartet - Stagger Bear from Come What May
The band at the core of saxophonist Joshua Redman's warmly engaging 2019 album, Come What May, has played together in various configurations for almost twenty years. Featured are pianist Aaron Goldberg, bassist Reuben Rogers, and drummer Gregory Hutchinson... "Stagger Bear" with its bluesy piano brings to mind the cabaret swagger of Bob Fosse.

“The music developed gradually through many years playing on London’s underground music scene, and immersing myself in the myriad musical languages surrounding me. In the album I’m seeking to find a continuum between the jazz music which I grew up listening to, and the multi-faceted, genre-melting sounds of present day London”, she says.
...Tandy makes her solo debut here, with a concise (six tracks, 34 minutes) album featuring Sheila Maurice Grey of Neríja and Kokoroko on trumpet, Binker Golding of Binker & Moses on saxophone, Mutale Chashi of Kokoroko on bass, and Femi Koleoso of Ezra Collective (and a fellow member of Camilla George’s band) on drums. The music lays hard bop-inspired horn interplay over shuffling, soulful rhythms, occasionally settling down for an introspective ballad. On the album’s second half, Tandy switches from acoustic to electric piano. The closing “Snake In The Grass” is a thick funk groove with Tandy laying down dense organ as Grey takes a fierce, barbed solo.

Dark, propulsive post-punk trio formed from the ashes of Chicago's Disappears. 
Facs - Anti-Body from Lifelike
...we get FACS – a Chicago based post-punk band in the same vein as Disappears. Their 2018 debut album Negative Houses was well-received, and they’ve returned with its proper follow-up Lifelike almost exactly a year later... Despite the influences, they aren’t as derivative like Preoccupations, a good band for sure, but one that continuously struggles with the direction they want to go. FACS lean more experimental, there are so little pop attributes on Lifelike... 


Dreamy, sample-based experimental indie pop with ghostly echoes of '50s and '60s pop. 
Ela Orleans - In the Night from Movies for Ears
Polish-born musician Ela Orleans has released over a dozen LPs and EPs of haunting, exotic lo-fi pop since the late 2000s. For the most part, these recordings were put out by tiny labels in scant editions, and received nowhere as near as much attention as they deserved. Movies for Ears (itself originally a limited CD-R, later remastered by James Plotkin and given a wide release by Night School in 2019)... All of these songs are fascinating, wonderful, and unique, and they're just a small selection of Orleans' extensive catalog. Very much a collection of lost gems, Movies for Ears is an excellent introduction to a sorely underrated artist.

Christelle Bofale has a voice that could move mountains, that could change the tides. But the music that the Austin-based artist makes isn’t necessarily interested in such drastic overtures. It moves slow and circular, content to unfold incrementally... It glides along, guided by watery guitars and a pitter-patter of drums that sound like rain on a windowpane. It shifts from sunshine to twilight and back again. Bofale’s voice lilts into the backdrop, twisting up in it like a spell. It’s impressionistic and warm but steadfastly firm. She sings about figments of imagination and fears that glow and tightroping acrobats. It conjures up a world that feels at once peaceful and strained, at ease but at odds

Los Angeles-based singer/songwriter who blends ethereal indie electro-pop with dark thematic tones. 
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. Like Lorde's devilish little sister, Eilish delivers her confessional lyrics in hushed bursts of breath, at times dirge-like in their sedateness and otherwise intensely threatening in their creepiness.
Control Top, Perry Farrell, Ty Segall, White Denim, Sebadoh, Garcia Peoples, Joshua Redman Quartet, Sarah Tandy, Facs, Ela Orleans, Christelle Bofale, Billie Eilish