Kae Tempest has enlisted Fontaines D.C. frontman Grian Chatten for the new track ‘I Saw Light’. It’s taken from Tempest’s forthcoming album The Line Is a Curve, which is out on April 8 via Fiction Records. Listen below.
The Line Is a Curve, Tempest’s fourth album, was produced by longtime collaborator Dan Carey. It includes the previously released singles ‘No Prizes’ featuring Lianne La Havas, ‘More Pressure’ with BROCKHAMPTON’s Kevin Abstract, and ‘Salt Coast’.
Philadelphia’s Mannequin Pussy have announced a run of UK and Ireland dates for the summer. The tour kicks off on June 22 at London’s EartH and will conclude with a performance at Two Thousand Trees Festival in Cheltenham, with more festival appearances to be announced. Check out the band’s itinerary below.
Last year, Mannequin Pussy released their Perfect EP, which landed on our list of the best EPs of 2021. Their last album was 2019’s Patience.
Mannequin Pussy 2022 UK Tour Dates:
Jun 22 – London – EartH
Jun 25 – Manchester, Outbreak Festival
Jun 26 – Broadcast, Glasgow
Jun 27 – Brudenell Social Club, Leeds
Jun 28 – Bodega, Nottingham
Jun 30 – Elsewhere, Margate
Jul 1 – Green Door Store, Brighton
Jul 2 – Clwb Ifor Bach, Cardiff
Jul 5 – Future Yard, Birkenhead
Jul 6 – Dolans, Limerick
Jul 7 – Workman’s Club, Dublin
Jul 9 – Two Thousand Trees Festival, Cheltenham
Japanese Breakfast has shared a cover of Bon Iver’s ‘Skinny Love’. The rendition arrives as part of a special edition of the Spotify Singles series celebrating the Best New Artist category at this year’s Grammys. Listen to it below, along with a re-recorded version of ‘Be Sweet’.
“We decided to record Bon Iver’s ‘Skinny Love’ because it felt like a very surprising cover for Japanese Breakfast,” Michelle Zauner said in a statement. “It’s so moving and sparse. We felt we could add some interesting instrumentation to the track and celebrate our fellow label mate Bon Iver.”
Fellow BNA nominee FINNEAS also covered a Bon Iver song for the series, offering his take on ‘Flume’. Earlier this week, Arlo Parks shared her version of KAYTRANADA and Syd’s ‘You’re the One’. The 64th annual Grammy Awards take place this Sunday, April 3.
Last year, Japanese Breakfast collaborated with Spotify for their Live at Electric Lady EP series.
sadie, the moniker of Brooklyn producer and songwriter Anna Schwab, has announced her debut EP. Nowhere, which was co-produced by Joe Valle (Wet) and Maya Laner (True Blue & Porches), is out June 21. To mark the announcement, sadie has shared a video for the EP’s title track, which follows last month’s lead single ‘4am’. Check out the Matt Hixon-directed visual below.
“‘Nowhere’ is sort of about listlessness, and about the slippery quality of emotions—it’s about feeling a sense of purpose and joie de vivre for a moment, and losing it the minute you feel it,” saide explained in a press release. “I usually find the minute I name, or recognize, a feeling—it’s gone. And then the memory of the feeling, and the desire to feel it again, makes its absence more acute. I wrote the song in early spring. I find the world takes on a sort of manic happiness and electric hum at the first signs of spring, and it’s always the time of year when I feel the most low. “April is the cruelest month,” as TS Eliot says. So I wanted to juxtapose those feelings with bubblegum melodies and the sort of ice-cream truck inspired synths you hear in the background, to help capture that sense of dissonance.”
Hater have shared a new song, ‘Far From a Mind’, the latest single from their upcoming full-length Sincere. The track follows previous offerings ‘Something’ and ‘Hopes High’. Check out a music video for it below.
Sincere, the follow-up to 2018’s Siesta, is slated for release on May 6 via Fire Records.
Foo Fighters have canceled all of their upcoming tour dates following the death of drummer Taylor Hawkins. “It is with great sadness that Foo Fighters confirm the cancellation of all upcoming tour dates in light of the staggering loss of our brother Taylor Hawkins,” the band wrote. “We’re sorry for and share in the disappointment that we won’t be seeing one another as planned. Instead, let’s take this time to grieve, to heal, to pull our loved ones close, and to appreciate all the music and memories we’ve made together.”
Foo Fighters had scheduled dates for the rest of 2022, and were also set to perform at the Grammys ceremony this Sunday. Taylor Hawkins died in Bogotá, Colombia on March 25, a day after the Grammys performance was announced, with his last show taking place March 20 at Lollapalooza Argentina in Buenos Aires.
On its opening track, Famously Alive invokes the sense of dissociation that has marked much of Guerilla Toss’ output: “Wealth of happiness stolen/ No one else feels ever this broken,” frontperson Kassie Carlson sings on ‘Cannibal Capital’. If there’s a band that’s capable of translating the feeling of restless paranoia that pervades online interactions into sound – which might as well be what the song alludes to with lines like “I’m social with enemies and it takes the best of me” – it’s Guerilla Toss, who earned a reputation for their raucous, dizzying concoctions since they first started making waves as a Boston five-piece. Now the New York trio of Kassie Carlson, Peter Negroponte, and Arian Shafiee, the band’s perspective has evidently shifted on their fifth full-length and first for Sub Pop, which finds them injecting their wild unpredictability with a newfound sense of purpose. The result is their most urgent, vibrant, and deliriously infectious effort to date.
Regardless of whether the enemies on ‘Cannibal Capital’ refer to some kind of internet trolls – when the music is propelled by some of their catchiest melodies yet, that’s not really what drags you in – Famously Alive actively veers away from social commentary, which is something the band has pulled off in the past, particularly on 2018’s Twisted Crystal. The group wrote and recorded the new album at home in the Catskills during the isolation of the pandemic, and it’s all about how, really, the hardest enemy to face is yourself. At the time, Carlson had just entered recovery after struggling with opiate addiction, a battle that was documented on 2019’s What Would the Odd Do? EP. A different kind of pervasive anxiety still creeps up here and there, but it never overshadows the album’s commitment to a new life bursting with confidence and positivity – it feels like the protagonist has crossed over to the other side and is taking in the glorious mess with relentless exuberance.
Guerilla Toss’ brand of psych-pop is still noisy and frenetic, but the sugary swirl of glossy synths, crunchy guitars, and thumping grooves tell a different story. Famously Alive is their most approachable record to date, but it’s vibrant in a way that recalls the unbridled giddiness of hyperpop rather than watering down the band’s idiosyncratic sound. You could say they were already heading in this direction with Twisted Crystal, which definitely had its poppy and motivational moments – but it’s genuinely refreshing to hear a band like Guerilla Toss making music that’s inspiring without having to make some point about the absurdities of the universe, and music that feels like a rush without necessarily being trippy. The magic of Famously Alive is that it’s entirely unpretentious without losing its character; there’s still a lot going on in these songs, but just because they’re heavily saturated doesn’t mean they’re overly heady or conceptual. “Each day a celebration/ I am a radiant sun/ All things a fascination/ Happy me, happy me, happy me, happy me,” goes the inescapable hook of ‘Happy Me’.
After fixating on things that are alien and mystical, it’s captivating to hear Guerilla Toss channeling the joy of reconnecting with one’s own body, and making that journey feel like just as much of an adventure – even while sticking to a roughly 30-minute runtime. “I’m feeling godly/ But just for me,” Carlson proclaims on ‘Live Exponential’, a song that turns loneliness into a cause for celebration against beaming, effervescent production. Drawing its lyrics from a poem written by a close friend of the band, Jonny Tatelman, the title track is an anthem of self-resilience that proves getting better doesn’t mean you have to be any less strange. The trio embraces this mindset by never staying in one lane for too long, dipping into otherwordly territory on the sparkling ‘Wild Fantasy’ before splashing your face with the squelchy ‘Pyramid Humm’. “Tell fantasy dreamer/ Who pulled at your sleeve/ The illusion that took you out and the phantoms you spoke to/ That when you woke up/ No angel was there,” Carlson sings on the latter. Still, for all the uncertainties that come with it, Guerilla Toss make being alive sound like a heavenly deal.
King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard have shared a new track from their upcoming album Omnium Gatherum, which now has a release date of April 22. The band has also revealed the LP’s tracklist. Check it out along with the John Angus Stewart-directed video for ‘Magenta Mountain’ below.
‘Magenta Mountain’ follows the 18-minute lead single ‘The Dripping Tap’. The band’s Ambrose Kenny-Smith said of the track in a statement: “You know when you have a really weird vivid dream and it sticks with you like glue? One day I came into the studio and Stu was trying to write one of them down. He kept banging on about this paradise called Magenta Mountain that he had seen but none of us believed him. Every day since then he’s been still trying to convince us all that it’s real and one day he will.”
Omnium Gatherum Tracklist:
1. The Dripping Tap
2. Magenta Mountain
3. Kepler-22b
4. Gaia
5. Ambergris
6. Sadie Sorceress
7. Evilest Man
8. The Garden Goblin
9. Blame It On The Weather
10. Persistence
11. The Grim Reaper
12. Presumptuous
13. Predator X
14. Red Smoke
15. Candles
16. The Funeral
Angel Olsen has announced her next album: Big Time is out June 3 via Jagjaguwar. Today, Olsen has shared a video for the album’s opener and lead single ‘All the Good Times’. The clip, starring Olsen and her partner, was directed by Kimberly Stuckwisch, who also helmed last year’s ‘Like I Used To’ video. “Angel’s story is a gift,” Stuckwisch said in a statement. “It allowed me to visually explore the universal themes of love, loss, and most importantly what holds us back from realising our true selves.” Check it out below, and scroll down for the album artwork and tracklist.
According to a press release, Big Time was written while Olsen was coming to terms with her queerness and having her first experience of queer love, which was accompanied by a profound sense of loss. Of the time she came out to her parents, she writes: “Some experiences just make you feel as though you’re five years old, no matter how wise or adult you think you are. Finally, at the ripe age of 34, I was free to be me.” Three days later, however, her father died, and it was at his funeral that Olsen would introduce her partner to her family. Two weeks later, Olsen’s mother passed away. Less than a month after her mother’s funeral, Olsen got in the studio to make her new album.
Following 2019’s All Mirrors, Big Time was recorded and mixed with co-producer Jonathan Wilson at his Fivestar Studios in Topanga, California. The album features piano, organ, and string arrangements by Drew Erickson, while Olsen’s longtime bandmate Emily Elhaj played bass on the record.
In addition to the album news, Olsen has announced a run of European dates kicking off in late September. Find those dates below. In the summer, Olsen is set to embark on the Wild Hearts tour of the US with Sharon Van Etten, Julien Baker, and Spencer.
Last year, Angel Olsen shared a covers EP titled Aisles.
Big Time Cover Artwork:
Big Time Tracklist:
1. All The Good Times
2. Big Time
3. Dream Thing
4. Ghost On
5. All The Flowers
6. Right Now
7. This Is How It Works
8. Go Home
9. Through The Fires
10. Chasing The Sun
Angel Olsen EU 2022 Tour Dates:
Sep 26 – Lisbon, PT – Capitólio
Sep 27 – Lisbon, PT – Capitólio
Sep 29 – Madrid, ES – La Riviera
Sep 30 – Barcelona, ES – Sala Apolo
Oct 1 – Lyon, FR – L’ Epicerie Moderne
Oct 2 – Zurich, CH – Kaufleuten
Oct 4 – Munich, DE – Freiheitshalle
Oct 5 – Vienna, AT – WUK
Oct 6 – Warsaw, PL – Palladium
Oct 7 – Berlin, DE – Huxleys
Oct 9 – Stockholm, SE – Berns
Oct 10 – Oslo, NO – Rockefeller
Oct 11 – Copenhagen, DK – VEGA
Oct 13 – Cologne, DE – Gloria
Oct 14 – Paris, FR – Bataclan
Oct 15 – Leuven, BE – Het Depot
Oct 16 – Amsterdam, NL – Paradiso
Oct 18 – London – O2 Academy Brixton
Oct 19 – Bath – The Forum
Oct 20 – Edinburgh – Usher Hall
Oct 21 – Manchester – Albert Hall
Oct 24 – Dublin – Vicar Street
Beach Bunny have announced their sophomore album, Emotional Creature, which arrives on July 22 via Mom+Pop. Along with the announcement, the Chicago-based quartet has shared the album’s lead single, ‘Fire Escape’. Check it out below.
“We are always changing, growing, and adapting – it’s a deeply ingrained part of the human experience,” Beach Bunny’s Lili Trifilio remarked in a press release. “We strive to be stronger, trust we’ll grow smarter, and spend most of our lives reaching for comfort and happiness. Sometimes, life is stagnant, sometimes, life is difficult – but the wonderful part of being human is that we evolve and make the bleak moments beautiful – we find new ways to survive. Humans are emotional creatures and I wanted to capture that with this album in order to show how complex, sometimes tragic, and mostly wonderful the human experience can be.”
Written immediately before and during the COVID-19 pandemic, Emotional Creature was produced by Sean O’Keefe (Fall Out Boy, Motion City Soundtrack) at Chicago’s Shirk Studios. Beach Bunny’s debut LP, Honeymoon, came out in 2020.
Emotional Creature Cover Artwork:
Emotional Creature Tracklist:
1. Entropy
2. Oxygen
3. Deadweight
4. Gone
5. Eventually
6. Fire Escape
7. Weeds
8. Gravity
9. Scream
10. Infinity Room
11. Karaoke
12. Love Song