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Stevie Wonder Launches New Label, Releases Two New Songs

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Stevie Wonder has returned with his first new music in almost four years. His two new songs – ‘Can’t Put it in the Hands of Fate’ (featuring Rapsody, Cordae, Chika, and Busta Rhymes) and ‘Where Is Our Love Song’ (featuring Gary Clark Jr.) – are being released via his new label, So What the Fuss Music, an imprint of Republic Records and Universal Music Group. Listen to both tracks below.

The two new tracks mark the first time Wonder has released music separate from Motown Records in almost 60 years; he first signed with the label as an 11-year-old in 1961. In a press conference, Wonder discussed future plans for his new label – which takes its name from his 2005 Prince-featuring single ‘So What the Fuss’ – including a compilation EP and a new solo album. No further details for either projects have yet been revealed.

Speaking of ‘Where Is Our Love Song’, he explained (via NME): “It is a song that really I started working on when I was 18, not even knowing what the song was going to be about, but I had the melody. Then this year came all the confusion and all the hate and all the east versus west, left versus right. It’s just a heartbreak. And those who say ‘This is what God has said… this is my religion,’ it’s just a lot of confusion… I’m watching all this and say, ‘Hold up, how can you be talking about God and there be hate in your spirit?’.”

Of ‘Can’t Put It In The Hands Of Fate’, he added: “I was thinking about where we are in the world. And I was thinking about how this is most crucial time. Not just Black people or people of colour but young people everywhere are going, ‘This is not acceptable.’ Change is right now. We can’t put it in the hands of fate. Ain’t nobody got time to wait.”

Claud Releases New Song ‘Gold’ via Phoebe Bridgers’ Saddest Factory Records

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21-year-old artist Claud has shared a new song called ‘Gold’. It marks the first release on Phoebe Bridgers’ new label, Saddest Factory Records, an imprint of her current label Dead Oceans. Check it out below, alongside an accompanying music video directed by Christina Xing.

In a press release, Claud Mintz said of the new track: “‘Gold’ is about contradictions; an instructor attempting to teach a class of monsters proper manners so they can assimilate; a relationship getting so tired and so old that even gold starts to rust (which isn’t scientifically possible).”

Mintz previously used to make music under the moniker Toast before going by the mononym Claud. They’ve recently played shows with the likes of Bleachers and Girlpool.

John Frusciante Unveils Video for New Song ‘Brand E’

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John Frusciante has shared a new song from his upcoming album Maya‘Brand E’ serves as the opener for the record and comes with an accompanying abstract sci-fi short filmed in Los Angeles and starring Frusciante and Lee Bootee. The visual was directed by Amalía Irons. Check it out below.

Maya is due out October 23 via Venetian Snares’ Timesig label and includes the previously released single ‘Amethblowl’. Dedicated to Frusciante’s late cat of the same name, it marks his first solo release in six years and the first-ever instrumental electronic full-length under his own name.

Cloud Nothings Announce New Album ‘The Shadow I Remember’, Share First Single

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Cloud Nothings have announced a new album: The Shadow I Remember arrives February 26, 2021 via Carpark. It finds the group reuiniting with producer Steve Albini, who worked on Cloud Nothings’ 2012 LP Attack on Memory. The band have also previewed the album with the lead single ‘Am I Something’, which comes with a Lu Yang–directed music video. Check it out below, and scroll down for the album’s cover artwork and tracklist.

“I became familiar with Lu Yang’s work through her exhibit in Cleveland, Ohio at MOCA Cleveland in 2017,” Cloud Nothings frontman Dylan Baldi said in a statement. “I was really drawn to her approach of tying religion into gender and various gendered bodily functions. The animation style of some of her work is also exactly on my wavelength—like a psychedelic genderless Sims game. Very excited to be able to work with Lu!”

Lu Yang added: “The music video created for Cloud Nothings is a scene from my video game The Great Adventure of Material World which depicts an artistic reality where we are exploring and roaming, in a non-binary way, post-death delusions and the intermediate state of Bardo. Bardo has a particularly special meaning in Buddhism as the connecting point and intermediate state between life and death, past and future lives, waking and sleep, and the space in-between.”

Cloud Nothings are also set to release a 10th anniversary reissue of their debut album Turning On on January 29 (via Carpark). Back in July, they released their quarantine record, The Black Hole Understands.

The Shadow I Remember Cover Artwork:

The Shadow I Remember Tracklist:

1. Oslo
2. Nothing Without You
3. The Spirit Of
4. Only Light
5. Nara
6. Open Rain
7. Sound of Alarm
8. Am I Something
9. It’s Love
10. A Longer Moon
11. The Room It Was

Sharon Van Etten Unveils New Song ‘Let Go’

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Sharon Van Etten has released a new song called ‘Let Go’. The track was written for Arthur Jones’ documentary Feels Good Man, which centers around Matt Furie, the creator of Pepe the Frog, as he struggles to reclaim control of the character from members of the alt-right. Listen to it below.

“After watching the documentary, I just followed the feeling of coming to terms with something and tried to evoke peace through my melody and words,” Sharon Van Etten said in a statement about the song.

Van Etten’s last studio album was last year’s Remind Me Tomorrow. She recently collaborated with Deep Sea Diver on ‘Impossible Weight’ and covered Nine Inch Nail’s ‘Hurt’.

Feels Good Man airs on PBS on Monday, October 19.

Kynance by Tom Leighton

Tom Leighton, a talented photographer out of London, U.K, has unveiled an eye-pleasing series named Kynance. In this series, Leighton mixes vibrant colour with the stunning layers of the earth’s crust to create quite the image that combines nature and photo manipulation.

Writing about the series Leighton stated: “Kynance Cove was driven from the earth’s crust hundreds of millions of years ago. Created from a sequence of eruptions, the stacked cliffs and caves and tunnels of Kynance are an unusually dramatic testament to geological power: layer upon layer of once molten crust and magma hurled though moving plates upwards to the surface of the earth. Rare also is some of the rock found in these structures, made up of the minerals thrown from the magma chambers – and exposed in places as a reptilian multi-coloured, scaly sheen which may give it the name Serpentine. The series of colour manipulated works are intended as a tribute to a sense of energy and intense beauty which you can experience in the cove even on the dullest day.”

Kynance by Tom Leighton

Album Review: Touché Amoré, ‘Lament’

Albums like Lament, the fifth outing from L.A. post-hardcore outift Touché Amoré, are supposed to serve a purpose. Four years after Stage Four, a gut-wrenchingly powerful record detailing the passing of vocalist Jeremy Bolm’s mother from cancer while he was “on stage living the dream”, it’d be natural to expect its follow-up to be about the journey of finding some inkling of hope in the midst all the pain and grief. And in the lead-up to its release, it seemed like that’s where the project was heading: when fans were treated to an adorable music video featuring members of My Chemical Romance, Rise Against, Slipknot, Jimmy Eat World, and more playing with their pets, one could easily replace the need portion of the song’s “I need reminders of the love I have” refrain to have. How could Lament possibly be anything but an affirmation of growth?

Bolm’s statement on the video seemed to confirm that narrative: “If we can provide even just three minutes of joy to someone right now that’s enough for us, and who doesn’t love seeing awesome people and their pets?” That song, simply called ‘Reminders’, is one of the most straightforward and anthemic songs Touché Amoré have ever recorded, and even features vocals from none other than Julien Baker. But the track, written around the time of Donald Trump’s impeachment trial, doesn’t deal with personal loss as much it taps into shared feelings of uncertainty arising from today’s fraught political climate. On any other album, ‘Reminders’ could have acted as the uproarious sing-along closer, but here, it feels more like a passing thought, a necessary distraction – one that, as Bolm has revealed, was almost scrapped from the record.

‘Reminders’ stands out because it has a clear purpose, something Bolm struggles to find throughout Lament (after all, he realizes on ‘Exit Row’, “Suffering has no purpose.”) The album is ultimately less about the grieving process than grappling with his own self-prescribed role as a conduit for grief and where that leads him. Bolm has explored the implications of Touché Amoré’s music being associated with emotional catharsis in the past, most prominently on 2013’s Is Survived By, but on ‘I’ll Be Your Host’, he sounds not just conflicted, but fed up: “I don’t want this role, I give it up,” he declares. On the following track, ‘Deflector’, he places the blame on himself for posing as “a sideline voyeur, a conscientious deflector,” “a faulty poet,” and “a personal arsonist”. Though his delivery is always impassioned, he stretches his voice as far as he possibly can on the chorus: “I’ll test the water/ I won’t dive right in/ That’s too personal/ I’m too delicate.”

‘Deflector’ is the penultimate track on Lament, and it brings new light to the album’s thematic progression. If all those pretences are false, then what should he be? “You’d think by now I’d know my place/ But I lose it almost every day/ You’d think by now I’d have a grip/ But again I’ve let it slip,” he confesses on the title track. On ‘Exit Row’, he exposes the problem of trying to excavate meaning for a song as he howls, “I dragged my body to the desert’s end/ To mine for words in this abandoned head/ But all the vultures that surrounded said, Was ‘flesh is flesh whether live or dead’.” As Lament circles around the vaguest expressions of exhaustion, emptiness, and despondency, you can sense that Bolm isn’t uncomfortable with being real, but with the kind of response it might get. “Even with this silence/ My voice can be misheard,” he sings on the spare ‘A Broadcast’.

Touché Amoré manage to counteract some of that lyrical ambiguity by delivering their most accessible collection of songs yet, one that feels like a natural culmination of what the band have been honing for more than a decade now. To capture the intensity of their bracingly melodic post-hardcore, they enlisted famed heavy metal producer Ross Robinson, who essentially helped birth the nu-metal sound by producing Korn’s self-titled 1994 debut, and later worked with the likes of Slipknot, Limp Bizkit, and At the Drive-In. More than just distilling their approach, Robinson allows the band to go ever so slightly beyond what they’ve already proven themselves to be capable of. Bouncing through one solid arrangement after the other, the album is peppered with plenty of subtly inventive flourishes, like the pedal steel that closes off the dynamic ‘Limelight’, which features a fitting vocal appearance from Manchester Orchetra’s Andy Hull.

It’s only at the very end, after the deep introspection of ‘Deflector’, that Bolm finally decides to “dive right in.” The closing track, ‘A Forecast’, finds him laying out all his troubled thoughts with a newfound clarity and, more surprisingly, humour. Its earnest vulnerability feels like a genuine revelation as he sings of broken relationships, jazz, and the GOP. “So here’s the record closer/ I’m still working out its intent/ I’m not sure what I’m after/ But it couldn’t go left unsaid,” he intones over a twinkling piano. For a record so riveting and even palatable, what makes it so successful is that the huge gap at its emotional center ultimately only enhances its impact. The process of healing, it seems, is less about finding answers than simply searching for them – for something. Whether Touché Amoré’s reach continues to expand – and chances are Lament will have that effect – the band leaves us with the reassurance that their music won’t stop tracing that journey.

The Mountain Goats Preview Upcoming Album with New Single ‘Picture of My Dress’

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The Mountain Goats have shared a new single called ‘Picture of My Dress’. It’s taken from their upcoming album Getting Into Knives, out October 23rd via Merge. Check it out below.

According to a press release, the new song was inspired by tweet posted in 2019 by ‘Good Bones’ poet Maggie Smith, which reads: “Photo essays that won’t happen: Divorced woman drives her rumpled c. 2005 wedding dress across the country and takes photos of it in various locations. It’s a metaphorical ‘Weekend at Bernie’s’ sans stapled-on toupee and sunglasses, because the dead thing is the marriage.” Frontman John Darnielle saw the tweet and responded: “this would be a song called “Picture of My Dress” imo.” Check out the full story behind the song, in tweet form, below.

‘Picture of My Dress’ follows the previously released singles ‘Get Famous’ and ‘As Many Candles as Possible’. Getting into Knives will mark the Mountain Goats’ 19th studio album and their second this year, following April’s Songs for Pierre Chuvin. 

Squirrel Flower Shares Cover of Liz Phair’s ‘Explain It To Me’, Unveils New Version of ‘Chicago’

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Squirrel Flower, the moniker of singer-songwriter Ella Williams, has released a cover of Liz Phair’s ‘Explain It To Me’, as well as a new version of her song ‘Chicago’. Listen to both tracks below.

“‘Explain It To Me’ has been one of my favourite songs since I first heard it when I was 14,” Williams said in a statement. “I made this recording in my basement while experimenting with self harmonising for the first time in a while.”

‘Chicago’ first appeared as the closing bonus track on Squirrel Flower’s Contact Sports EP. “This version of ‘Chicago’ is from a studio session a while back and that never got used, so my brother and I put some extra guitar on it during quarantine and voilà,” Williams explained. “I originally wrote this in 2015 when I lived in the Midwest. It’s for when you’re lost or moving, or arriving.”

Earlier this year, Squirrel Flower released her debut studio album, I Was Born Swimming. Since then, she’s also shared a cover of Caroline Polachek’s ‘So Hot You’re Hurting My Feelings’ as well as ‘Take It or Leave It’.

James Blake Reveals Details of New EP ‘Before’

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James Blake has revealed the full details of his forthcoming EP, Before. Check out the project’s artwork and tracklist below.

Blake first teased new material on his Instagram story, which included two phone numbers, one for the UK and another for the US. When called, an automated voice directs the caller to the website beforeep.com, which displays a timer counting down to Wednesday, October 14.

Along with sharing details on the EP, Blake also announced a live-stream DJ set for Boiler Room, which will be broadcast live from his homeon Friday, October 16 at 10pm BST (2pm PT, 5pm ET). The exclusive set marks Blake’s first Boiler Room appearance in seven years and will feature material from Before.

Earlier this year, James Blake shared the singles ‘Are You Even Real?’ and ‘You’re Too Precious’. He’s also performed a series of covers including Nirvana’s ‘Come As You Are’, Joni Mitchell’s ‘A Case of You’, and Frank Ocean’s ‘Godspeed’. His last album was 2019’s Assume Form.