Home Blog Page 1155

Mal Blum Shares Video for New Single ‘Candy Bars & Men’

Mal Blum has shared a new track, ‘Candy Bars & Men’, alongside a music video directed by Gaby Dunn. It’s taken from Blum’s upcoming Ain’t It Nice EP, which was led by the single ‘Stockpiled Guns & TV Dinners’. Check it out below.

Describing ‘Candy Bars & Men’, Blum said in a press release: “It’s an ode to solo interstate travel, gay cruising, roadside motels, intimacy with strangers, novelty, desire, familiarity, bliss, shame, vending machines, and checking in and out.”

The Ain’t It Nice EP, Mal Blum’s first project since their 2019 debut LP Pity Boy, arrives on April 15.

Artist Spotlight: Kathleen Frances

Kathleen Frances is a singer-songwriter and producer hailing from Bristol, a city whose rich musical heritage and creative energy had an influence on her growing up. Since emerging with her debut single ‘Define’ last April, Frances was named a finalist in Glastonbury’s Emerging Talent competition, earned a spot on the inaugural Pitchfork Paris lineup, and contributed to Secretly Canadian’s 25th-anniversary celebrations with a cover of Electric Youth and College’s ‘A Real Hero’. Last week, she released her debut EP, Through the Blue, a mesmerizing collection of tracks that she created in collaboration with co-producer Ben Baptie (Moses Sumney, Little Simz, Cleo). While her music often zeroes in on themes of uncertainty and existential dread, she grounds her piano-based arrangements in moments of introspection and pure emotion and invites you to sink into them. Frances’ stirring melodies are mostly foregrounded by spare, intimate production, although the electronic flourishes on the percussive closer ‘Baby Blue’ hint at how her sound may evolve in the future. “Like the seasons you’ll be back/ But changed,” she sings.

We caught up with Kathleen Frances for this edition of our Artist Spotlight interview series to talk about her upbringing in Bristol, her first attempts at songwriting, her debut EP, and more.


What sort of memories come to mind when you think about growing up in Bristol?

Bristol was a great place to grow up. I think it was really easy to tap into creativity living in Bristol. I always thought that was the usual thing, like the fact that there’s street art everywhere, or you see lots of art being showcased and independent businesses really thrive. I just thought that was kind of the norm, and then realizing, actually, it’s not, and that’s a really special thing that Bristol has cultivated. Especially the music scene, there’s so many great artists that have come from Bristol, there’s so much going on, and that’s really inspiring. But I guess also on the other side of that, sometimes it’s a bit overwhelming because everybody’s creative and has something to offer.

Do you remember it being more overwhelmed or inspiring early on?

At first, I think it was a combination of both. I was like, this is so cool and I want to be able to do that, but I think I was quite shy as a child. I was always singing but I was quite scared to sing in front of people, so it was good for me in a sense because I could get involved with it and not feel like I had to expose myself. My school had a really strong performing arts department – I remember there was this lovely guy who ran the gospel choir and so I joined the gospel choir. It was so lovely to be a part of it, but I never would want to do a solo or sing in front of people. But just to be able to be engaged with that was really nice, and it also pushed me to come more out of my shell. It’s funny to think, like, if I didn’t grow up here, would I do what I do, and how would I do it?

Have you thought about that quite a bit?

I maybe haven’t thought about it so much in terms of music, but I think I’m just one of those people that’s always constantly overthinking things, like different scenarios. [laughs] And if I was born somewhere on the other side of the world, what kind of person would I be? What would I like, what would I not like? I definitely think your surroundings shape you massively, and I can hear that even when I listen to my music. I can hear the influence of Bristol in there, artists that have gone before, artists like Massive Attack and Portishead. There’s no way I can deny that has influenced my sound.

Do you think the part of your personality that’s prone to overthinking is also what led you to want to write songs?

Yeah, I guess it’s a way of expressing yourself in a way that is so close to how you really feel and think. For me, that’s when I feel like I’ve written my best lyrics, when I’ve genuinely tapped into what I really feel and what I really think. Sometimes you don’t even realize that’s how you were feeling, and that’s quite a nice thing to discover when you’re writing a song. But also, it’s hard to tap into it sometimes when you’re trying to write something that feels genuine and you’re like, “I just sound like an idiot. I need to take a break.” [laughs]

Have you sort of learned to tap into those feelings more easily over time?

Yeah, maybe I can read my mood a bit better now. I went through a period of time of really trying to force it out when I just wasn’t feeling it, I’d just try and listen to stuff to inspire me and then I’d be in a bit of a like circle of like, “Where am I going with this? What do I want to say?” And sometimes you’re just not in the right headspace to access that, and I think I’ve got better at acknowledging that and being like, “It’s OK, you’re not in this place. It’s fine. Just read yourself a little bit better. And don’t worry, tomorrow you’ll probably find something great.” I think it’s just knowing yourself and knowing how you work and what’s the best way for you to create, and I think that’s a really important thing as an artist.

What were your first attempts at songwriting like?

Oh god. [laughs] Like, just trying to rhyme. I think my really early attempts were probably quite shallow, one-dimensional lyrics. I think I was always trying to think about the melody before thinking about the lyrics. To be honest, I kind of still do that now, the melody will always come first, and sometimes good lyrics will follow quite soon after that. Early songwriting attempts were probably more exterior things that I was writing about, and I wasn’t  truly tapping into what I was really thinking and feeling myself. I was probably projecting stuff onto other people and I’d write about that more. As I’ve grown up into it, it’s definitely more of how I see things and how I feel about it all.

I think that definitely comes through on your debut EP. On the subject of growing up, there’s the song ‘Grown’, where growing up almost brings with it a sense of melancholy. When writing that song, what kind of things did you feel nostalgic about?

One of the thoughts that really popped into my head was, when I was a kid, thinking about all the things I was going to get to do when I was allowed to do them and nobody could tell me what to do. I feel like lots of people probably had that memory from when they were a child, like, “I can’t wait for no one to tell me what to eat or when to go to sleep, it’s going to be so great.” I wanted to capture that feeling, but almost kind of in reverse. When you’re a child, sometimes you don’t see all the freedoms that you do have. And even being that young and how you experience the world, everything is new and you see everything through such an exciting lens that dulls as you get older.

There’s moments that I feel like we can get that back when we’re adults, and I tried to capture that as well – going out, dancing, forgetting about all the responsibilities. I feel like that is when you feel your most free and potentially your most happy. Those moments are really valuable to me, and especially with the whole last couple of years of the pandemic, it just had really halted a lot of those experiences that we get to have as adults and don’t get to happen every day. I think I was kind of yearning for those as well.

Do you think that craving for freedom looks different as a child or as a teenager than as an adult?

Yeah. I think the freedom that you crave as an adult is feeling like you don’t have to have any responsibilities some days. You’re just like, “I just want to be able to not have to pay my rent, not have to pay my bills, not have to answer my emails. I just want to be able to go and do what I want to do.” And I think your perspective as a child is that when you get to be an adult, you don’t even think about those things. You think you can just go and do whatever you want, and you kind of can’t. But also, the things that come with adulthood – you learn so much more about yourself, and within that, feel a sense of freedom.

But then sometimes I think about my child self, as in like five years old, and sometimes I think back to that person and I’m like, “You actually did know what you wanted and how you wanted to express yourself.” And sometimes I find it useful to think about my five-year-old self and what she liked because there’s so many things that you can do that it gets a bit overwhelming. And sometimes the simplicity of being a child – you just make really simple choices and it doesn’t seem overwhelming. I remember that my five-year-old self basically didn’t want to wear anything that was considered girly, hated pink, and I just wanted to wear tracksuit bottoms, play football. I just knew that’s what I wanted to do. And when I went through my teenage years was when I was so confused about what I wanted to be or what was my identity.

Do you find yourself also tapping into that when you’re making music, the simplicity and playfulness of being a child?

Yeah, definitely. Life can be so serious and there’s so many big, crazy things going on that trying to tackle those things is kind of overwhelming – like, what is the meaning of it all? And to me, I think it always gets brought back to the simple moments in life that made you feel a certain way or those things that really connect you to living and connect you to being a person. And I think that’s always what I’m trying to capture in the music that I make. I think that’s what makes music so wonderful for people, is that it’s so easy to listen to music and feel a connection, feel an emotion, feel something. I try and capture that within the lyrics as well, so rather than it being about trying to solve something or trying to say something, it’s more about trying to feel something.

This ties into ‘Shout Love’, which is my favourite song on the EP. I love how it opens the record with this beautifully existential image of lying in the dark and “counting stars to feel how small we really are.” How often do you find yourself having these moments of inspiration that make you feel human?

Yeah, that’s a really interesting question because I think it’s partly something that I want to feel a lot of the time. Sometimes you try and chase those feelings and actually, it’s in more unexpected times that they kind of happen. When I start to feel disconnected from life or feeling low, it’s those moments that really make you feel alive. What I like about ‘Shout Love’ and what you said about the opening line is that it’s like, you feel the scale of the world and the universe and everything, but then you’re also brought right back into a moment and how you feel and it feels so visceral. Those moments are really special, and I really feel like you know when they’re happening. That song was written in a time where it was such a yo-yo because it was the first lockdown, so I just feel like everybody’s emotions was just this up and down, up and down, up and down. And it was a way of navigating that up-and-down feeling, and the only thing we could do was go to the park. [laughs] So that became the setting of the song.

You didn’t expect to feel that yearning kind of fulfilled in those moments, but you did.

Yeah, exactly. It’s wonderful when those things happen, especially in the mundane of a lockdown.

Can you share a moment like that where you recently felt alive and free that maybe didn’t make it into any of the songs?

Yeah. This moment, I’ve just been writing about it actually. It was just a really simple moment. I was sat on the floor with my boyfriend in his bedroom, and we were cross-legged like you do when you sit on the carpet when you’re at school. And I don’t know how we ended up cross-legged on the floor, I think I just sat down cross-legged and he came and sat opposite me. And we were just chatting. It was such a simple, innocent moment, and I ended up with my head just in his hands like this, the whole weight of my head was in his hands. We were just talking about random stuff, and I just felt that feeling of like, being in the moment with somebody, you’re sat so innocently on the floor, and somebody’s holding you, supporting you. Everything about that moment felt really beautiful, and I felt that feeling again, of this warmth, this aliveness. Also, finding that within human connection – this EP has been so much about my feelings and my own life, all relating to me, and I feel since the EP, I’ve been noticing my connections with other people more and the importance of that.


This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity and length.

Kathleen Frances’ Through the Blue EP is out now.

King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard Announce New Album ‘Omnium Gatherum’, Release 18-Minute Song

King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard have announced their next full-length, a double album titled Omnium Gatherum. The record has no release date yet but will be available to pre-order on March 22 via the band’s label KGLW. Along with the announcement, they’ve previewed the project with a 18-minute single called ‘The Dripping Tap’. Listen to it below.

Omnium Gatherum will follow King Gizzard’s 2021 albums Butterfly 3000 and L.W. “This recording session felt significant,” Stu Mackenzie said in a press release. “Significant because it was the first time all six Gizzards had gotten together after an extraordinarily long time in lockdown. Significant because it produced the longest studio recording we’ve ever released. Significant because (I think) it’s going to change the way we write and record music—at least for a while…. A turning point. A touchstone. I think we’re entering into our ‘jammy period.’ It feels good.”

Omnium Gatherum Cover Artwork:

Listen to Mitski and David Byrne’s New Song ‘This Is a Life’

David Byrne and Mitski have teamed up with Son Lux for a new song called ‘This Is a Life’. The duet is taken from Son Lux’s soundtrack to the upcoming A24 film Everything Everywhere All at Once, which is directed by Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert and premieres at the SXSW Film Festival this week. Listen to ‘This Is a Life’ below.

“Even though we knew from the moment Daniels asked us to score this film that it would push us in new and unexpected directions, we couldn’t have predicted how much we’d learn from the project,” Son Lux said in a statement about their score. “What emerged was our most ambitious undertaking to date, over two years in the making, resulting in two hours of new music. It was an opportunity for us to play, to infuse humor into our work, and to experiment from and beyond our various musical backgrounds.”

The Everything Everywhere All at Once soundtrack, out April 8, features contributions from André 3000, Randy Newman, Moses Sumney, and more. The film hits theaters on March 25.

Pitchfork Festival 2022 Lineup Announced: The National, Mitski, The Roots, and More

Pitchfork Festival has announced the lineup for its 2022 edition. The National, Mitski, and the Roots will headline this year’s festival, which will take place at Chicago’s Union Park on July 15-17. Spiritualized, Japanese Breakfast, Lucy Dacus, Low, Tierra Whack, Amber Mark, Indigo De Souza, Spirit of the Beehive, SPELLLING, Camp Cope, Ethel Cain, Magdalena Bay, Dry Cleaning, Iceage, yeule, Arooj Aftab, The Armed, Chubby & The Gang, Earl Sweatshirt, Noname, Cate Le Bon, Tirzah, Xenia Rubinos, Erika de Casier, Injury Reserve, KAINA, L’Rain, Sofia Kourtesis, Pink Siifu, and more are also set to perform. Check out the full lineup below.

“This year’s lineup is a celebration of the rising indie class, and those who continue to pave the way for innovation,” Pitchfork editor-in-chief Puja Patel said in a statement. “Our goal was to highlight a diverse group of artists who are taking their musical genres to new heights, and I’m proud of how it’s come together.”

Pitchfork Festival 2022 Lineup:

The National
Spiritualized
Parquet Courts
Tierra Whack
Amber Mark
Dawn Richard
Tkay Maidza
Indigo De Souza
SPIRIT OF THE BEEHIVE
SPELLLING
Camp Cope
Wiki
Ethel Cain
CupcakKe
Mitski
Japanese Breakfast
Lucy Dacus
Low
Magdalena Bay
Dry Cleaning
Karate
Iceage
yeule
Arooj Aftab
The Armed
Chubby & the Gang
Hyd
Jeff Parker & the New Breed
The Roots
Toro y Moi
Earl Sweatshirt
Noname
BADBADNOTGOOD
Cate Le Bon
Tirzah
Xenia Rubinos
Erika de Casier
Injury Reserve
KAINA
L’Rain
Sofia Kourtesis
Pink Siifu

Oceanator Releases New Song ‘Stuck’

Oceanator has shared a new track called ‘Stuck’, taken from her upcoming sophomore LP Nothing’s Ever Fine. The song is “about that feeling of all your collective traumas, disappointments, and general sadness just accumulating over the years and weighing you down more and more,” according to the band’s Elise Okusami. Give it a listen below.

Elise Okusami co-produced Nothing’s Ever Fine with Bartees Strange and her brother and longtime bandmate Mike Okusami. “I wrote this song the very first day I got my new baritone guitar,” she said of ‘Stuck’ in a press release. “Bartees and Mike really helped me bring out the heaviness I was looking for with it in the studio, really helping me dial in a great guitar tone. We borrowed a double kick pedal for this song and Andrew Whitehurst nailed the drums. Eva Lawitts did the bass remote and I think the bass line is perfect.”

Nothing’s Ever Fine will be released on April 8 via Big Scary Monsters/Polyvinyl. It was led by the single ‘Bad Brain Daze’, which made our Best New Songs list.

Sondre Lerche Enlists CHAI for New Song ‘Summer in Reverse’

Sondre Lerche has enlisted CHAI for a new song called ‘Summer in Reverse’, the latest preview of his forthcoming double album Avatars of Love. Check out its music video below.

“This song was written January 1, 2021, so it’s a bit of a hangover song really. A hangover jam about trying to unhook and ready yourself for a new year through facing some brutal truths,” Lerche explained in a statement. “I wanted someone else to sing the pre-choruses, kind of like a soft Greek chorus and I had just heard and loved ‘Donuts Mind If I Do’ by CHAI, so I reached out. I’ve been immensely inspired by Japanese city pop and ambient New Age, and I love how the two go hand in hand somehow. I was thrilled to have some company on the song, so it didn’t feel so pathetic and sad!”

Avatars of Love is due out on April 1 via PLZ/InGrooves. So far, Lerche has unveiled the singles ‘Dead of the Night’, ‘Cut’, ‘Turns Out I’m Sentimental After All’.

Aldous Harding Releases Video for New Song ‘Fever’

Aldous Harding has released ‘Fever’, the second offering from her upcoming album Warm Chris. The track arrives with an accompanying video, which Harding co-directed with Martin Sagadin. Check it out below.

Warm Chris is set to land on March 25 via 4AD. The follow-up to 2019’s Designer includes the previously unveiled single ‘Lawn’.

Sufjan Stevens, the Shins, and Josh Ottum Join Rosie Thomas for Cover of Mariah Carey’s ‘Always Be My Baby’

Rosie Thomas has shared a cover of Mariah Carey’s hit song ‘Always Be My Baby’. The track is a collaboration with Sufjan Stevens, the Shins, and Josh Ottum, and you can listen to it below.

Thomas’ rendition of ‘Always Be My Baby’ will appear on her upcoming project Lullabies for Parents, Vol. 1, which is out on April 4. It includes her previously shared cover of Björk’s ‘All Is Full of Love’, which featured Stevens, the Shins, and Ottum, as well as Iron & Wine, the Head and the Heart’s Charity Rose Thielen, the Lone Bellow’s Kanene Pipkin, and more.

Mandy Moore Announces New Album ‘In Real Life’, Shares New Single

Mandy Moore has announced her next studio album, In Real Life, which is set for release on May 13 via Verve Forecast. It will follow Silver Landings, Moore’s first full body of work in over a decade, which came out in March 2020. Today’s announcement comes with the release of the record’s opening title track. Check it out below.

In Real Life was produced by Mike Viola (Andrew Bird, Ondara, Lori McKenna). Moore’s collaborators on the LP include her husband Taylor Goldsmith (of Dawes) and his brother/bandmate Griffin Goldsmith, Lucius’ Jess Wolfe and Holly Laessig, keyboardist Lee Pardini, and bassist Sebastian Steinberg.

“So much of this record came from future-tripping on the next chapter of my life and what it might look like: what parenthood would feel like, how it would change everything, and all the excitement and trepidation that comes with that,” Moore said in a press release. “At the same time it was about celebrating and acknowledging where we were at the moment and really trying to be completely present in the everyday—which is maybe the hardest part of the human condition.”

In Real Life Cover Artwork:

In Real Life Tracklist:

1. In Real Life
2. Heartlands
3. Little Dreams
4. Just Maybe
5. Living In The In Between
6. In Other Words
7. Four Moons
8. Little Victories
9. Heavy Lifting
10. Brand New Nowhere
11. Every Light