Parquet Courts have shared a new song called ‘Watching Strangers Smile’. Ahead of its release on streaming services, the band gave the track its debut on The Ellen Show yesterday morning (January 11). Check out the performance and listen to the studio version below.
Parquet Courts released their latest album, Sympathy for Life, last October.
String Machine have released a new song called ‘Touring in January’. It’s taken from their upcoming LP Hallelujah Hell Yeah, which includes the previously shared single ‘Gales of Worry’. Check it out below.
Vocalist David Beck wrote ‘Touring in January’ during a last-minute solo trip to the Poconos in Pennsylvania while he was processing the end of a relationship. “I’d write the music early in the morning, and I wouldn’t stop until I had a melody hummed out that was catchy enough for me to write words to while hiking these beautiful mountains in the wintertime,” Beck explained in a press release. “It was cathartic to see a view of 18 miles. These variables helped me put my guard down and be honest with myself.”
String Machine’s Hallelujah Hell Yeah arrives February 25 via Know Hope Records.
Lael Neale has returned with a new single called ‘Hotline’. Along with the release, the Los Angeles-based musician has launched her own hotline at 858-224-3129, which is active today only until 5pm EST. Listen to ‘Hotline’ below.
“I became interested in numerology through John Lennon and his belief in the significance of numbers, specifically the number nine,” Neale explained in a statement. “Because this song imagines a late night call of desperation into a psychic hotline, I thought it’d be fun to act as that ‘psychic’ and connect with people directly, giving them a personalized fortune for this year based on their unique numerology.”
Anxious have shared a new song called ‘Let Me’, the final preview of their upcoming album Little Green House. Featuring vocals from Pat Flynn of Fiddlehead and Have Heart, the track follows previous singles ‘Growing Up Song’, ‘In April’, and ‘Call From You’. Give it a listen below.
“‘Let Me” is a song about coming to terms with my parent’s divorce,” vocalist Grady Allen explained in a statement. “I think I spent much of my time as a young person (both the divorce and during) trying to be a resource to both of my parent’s frustration and anger despite the deep emotional toll it took on me. The song is me grappling with two roads to take: either be deeply invested in both of my parents’ pain and place myself secondary- or remove myself from the situation and leave my parents’ with one less person to talk to.”
Little Green House is set for release on January 21 via Run For Cover.
Drug Church – the Albany and Los Angeles-based five-piece composed of vocalist Patrick Kindlon, guitarists Nick Cogan and Cory Galusha, bassist Pat Wynne, and drummer Chris Villeneuve – have released a new single from their forthcoming album Hygiene. ‘World Impact’ follows previous cuts ‘Million Miles of Fun’ and ‘Detective Lieutenant’, and the full LP drops on March 11 via Pure Noise Records. Check out ‘World Impact’ below.
Hygiene will follow Drug Church’s 2018 album Cheer. In a new interview with Stereogum, Patrick Kindlon explained described it as “a companion record to Cheer in many ways, perhaps a little more melodic but with, to my ear, some ’80s riffs on there.”
‘Take My Breath’, the only advance single from the Weeknd’s new album, could have been a one-off. Even if his appearance on the cover of Billboard magazine marked the dawn of a new era and he spent much of 2021 teasing it, with ‘Blinding Lights’ having just dethroned Chubby Checker’s ‘The Twist’ as the top Billboard 100 single of all time at the end of the year, it seemed like Abel Tesfaye could coast off the success of 2020’s After Hours for about another eternity. “We still celebratin’ Super Bowl,” he boasts on Dawn FM’s ‘Here We Go… Again’ referring to his Emmy-nominated Super Bowl LV halftime show, “Catalog lookin’ legendary.” (Fittingly enough, that happens to be the one song on the LP that echoes the gothic R&B of the Weeknd’s early days.) Two years later, the world was still getting to know the bloodied, red-jacketed character that made the album’s visuals so memorable. In between collaborations with Post Malone, Rosalía, and FKA twigs and news of his own HBO series, ‘Take My Breath’ could have served as just a reminder that only the Weeknd could make a euphoric anthem about erotic asphyxiation.
And so despite talks of an After Hours sequel, when the 31-year-old Toronto native released Dawn FM the same week he revealed its cover art – featuring an aged-up Tesfaye looking straight at the camera – and tracklist – featuring a mysterious appearance from his real-life neighbor Jim Carrey – it almost seemed too early for the next blockbuster. But as hinted by the thrilling extended version of ‘Take My Breath’, which remains indebted to ‘80s nostalgia, this is all part of the same universe. It’s not only the sonic signifiers that are familiar – with more than a hint of self-awareness, the singer returns to many of the lyrical motifs that have haunted his entire discography: ‘Gasoline’ contains enough of them in a single track (“I wrap my hands around your throat you love it when I always squeeze,” “I know you won’t let me OD,” “It’s 5 AM, I’m nihilist”) to almost undercut Tesfaye’s jarringly low vocals and unconventional production.
But the framing of Dawn FM is ambitious and conceptual in a way that presents those moments of debauchery and nihilism as part of a coherent and cathartically revealing journey. After Hours was gratifying in how it blurred the line between different sides of the Weeknd, but its dramatic vision came at the expense of a transcendent narrative – something Dawn FM sincerely attempts to grasp at by recreating a descent into oblivion rather than merely gesturing at it. Carrey serves as our guide in this journey towards the afterlife, playing a radio DJ in the imaginary radio station 103.5 Dawn-FM, which comes with its own cheesy commercial jingles. Right out of the gate, he promises a “painless transition” into the light, which is mirrored in the album’s own streamlined, brilliantly executed vision.
The fact that the Weeknd manages to retain this ultra-polished, glossy façade renders Dawn FM possibly his most accessible full-length to date. But he doesn’t so much hide beneath or fight against the shadows of this concept – or his own alter-ego – as he uses it to both escape and evoke the isolation that clearly pervades it. As much as it embraces easy listening tropes and a retro aesthetic you can mindlessly slip into, the album pulls off a tight balancing act between the opposing tendencies of its two executive producers, pop powerhouse Max Martin and experimental electronic producer Oneohtrix Point Never, resulting in an album that’s as grand and direct as it is absurd and layered. While none of the hooks here are nearly as gigantic as ‘Blinding Lights’ (few are), the Weeknd commits even more to creating an immersive experience, and despite his cryptic Twitter presence, he does so less enigmatically than on After Hours, filling the album with subtle surprises along the way. It’s how we get Tyler, the Creator rapping over the vocal harmonies of a Beach Boys member on ‘Here We Go… Again’ or a sample of Japanese city pop icon Tomoko Aran on ‘Out of Time’.
Tesfaye himself switches up characters a few times, although he’s more candid than ever – Dawn FM once again houses feelings of love and despair, but they seem to be born from a place of greater maturity and introspection. Making an appearance between two of the album’s most obvious Off the Wall-era Michael Jackson-indebted tracks, Quincy Jones examines how childhood trauma has affected his relationships with women in an interlude that segues into the record’s more reflective second half. There’s an eerie tension burbling underneath midtempo tracks like ‘Is There Someone Else?’ and ‘Don’t Break My Heart’, the same way Carrey’s soothing voice anything but conceals the dark absurdity of the whole premise. Although the journey is far from over by the end – the Weeknd has teased this might be part of a trilogy – he makes the project feel complete by resolving that tension with the triumphant ‘Less Than Zero’ and a wonderful spoken-word epilogue by Carrey that feels unexpected but somehow earned. “You gotta be heaven to see heaven,” he concludes, raising the question of whether Dawn FM has really captured the difference – still, it’s the closest the Weeknd has come to transcendence.
Fontaines D.C. have announced the follow-up to A Hero’s Death. The band’s third album, Skinty Fia, is due for release on April 22 via Partisan Records. They once again worked with producer Dan Carey on the LP, whose title translates to English as “the damnation of the deer.” To accompany the announcement, Fontaines D.C. have shared a new song called ‘Jackie Down the Line’, alongside a video directed by Hugh Mulhern and starring multidisciplinary artist Blackhaine. Check it out below and scroll down for the album’s cover art and tracklist.
Skinty Fia Cover Artwork:
Skinty Fia Tracklist:
1. In ár gCroíthe go deo
2. Big Shot
3. How Cold Love Is
4. Jackie Down The Line
5. Bloomsday
6. Roman Holiday
7. The Couple Across The Way
9. Skinty Fia
9. I Love You
10. Nabokov
Online dating can be a deadly game in the world of modern love, and not all that glitters is gold. The Tinder Swindler is a notorious conman who has seduced and swindled women out of millions of dollars and is a fugitive from justice in several countries. One swipe may change everything. This is the ultimate fairytale gone wrong. In this Netflix show, we follow three women who decided it was time for payback.
What is Tinder?
Tinder is a dating app and geosocial network that’s used by users around the globe. Users anonymously “swipe right” to like or “swipe left” to dislike other users’ profiles, which include their photo, a short bio, and a list of their interests. The platform is regarded as one of the most prominent for online dating and is known for its hook-up culture. Since 2020, Tinder had 6.2 million subscribers and 75 million monthly active users.
What Is Hookup culture?
Hookup culture accepts and encourages casual sexual encounters, including one-night stands and other related activities, without including emotional familiarity, bonding or a committed relationship. Typically, it has also been named nonrelationship sex, or sex without dating.
The Tinder Swindler will be available on Netflix from the 2nd of February, 2022.
Neymar is a football star from Brazil and one of the highest-paid athletes in the world. His legacy is cemented as one of the greats of the beautiful team sport, and in this three-part docuseries named Neymar: The Perfect Chaos, we get close and personal with the superstar himself. Netflix’s series features interviews with Beckham, Messi, Mbappé and many other legends — as they weigh in on Neymar’s place in sports history.
Who is Neymar?
Neymar is a well-known Brazilian footballer who started his career in Brazil with Santos. In 2013, he made a significant move to the Spanish side of Barcelona, one of the most dominant clubs in the world of football. However, this move wasn’t all for the big-name star. He moved from Barcelona in 2017 to PSG and currently plays alongside Lionel Messi and Kylian Mbappé. For Neymar, his legacy reached the highest heights in 2016 when he took Brazil to their first Olympic gold medal in men’s football at the 2016 Summer Olympics. Whilst Neymar’s career certainly isn’t over; the documentary will hopefully enlighten us on what may be next for him.
The docuseries will be available on Netflix from the 25th of January, 2022.
Watch the trailer for Neymar: The Perfect Chaos below.
One of the most distinctive aspects of Wes Anderson’s work is the vibrant visual world he creates for each film. His latest release, The FrenchDispatch, is no different. Along with production designer Adam Stockhausen, cinematographer and frequent Wes Anderson collaborator Robert Yeoman brings the vibrant three-part anthology to life with bright color, playful photography, and incredible attention to detail.
The film follows several journalists who write for The French Dispatch, an outpost of an American paper based in the fictional French town of Ennui-sur-Blasé. Each segment of the anthology dives into a new section of the newspaper’s topics, taking viewers on a new adventure, each more ridiculous than the last. The extensive motley of characters (and big-name stars) is just as captivating as the rich, visually pleasing element of the film. Comedy is the vehicle for this seemingly random assortment of stories, making for some memorable dialogue. However, it’s the visual wonderland of Ennui that audiences will recognize as a particular trademark of Wes Anderson’s.
Here are sixteen stills that showcase the level of detail paid to the sets, production design, and composition of each frame in The French Dispatch.