This is the Kit, the folk-rock project of Kate Stables, has shared a new song called ‘Was Magician’. It’s taken from their upcoming album Off Off On, which is out October 23 via Rough Trade Records. Check it out below, alongside an accompanying live video.
According to a press release, ‘Was Magician’ was partially inspired by the works of the beloved sci-fi/fantasy author Ursula K. Le Guin. “Often it’s children who have underestimated powers,” Stables said in a statement. “They have an understanding and wisdom about things that we think beyond their abilities. People like Greta Thunberg — the young people who we have borrowed the earth from and who we have to give it back to.”
The follow-up to 2017’s Moonshine Freeze, Off Off On was recorded with Josh Kaufman of Bonny Light Horseman and Muzz. It includes the previously release singles ‘This Is What You Did’ and ‘Coming To Get You Nowhere’.
Phoebe Bridgers, Hayley Williams, Michael Stipe, Kathleen Hanna, Margo Price, Kesha, and more are set to take part in a virtual event honouring the late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who died last month at 87. The event, titled ‘Honor Her Wish’, will serve as a tribute to RBG’s legacy, as well as a rally against President Donald Trump’s attempt to fill her Supreme Court seat before the election.
‘Honor Her Wish’, whose title refers to RBG’s dying wish that her seat be filled after the Presidential inauguration in January, is set to take place on October 12 at 8:00 p.m. ET. The date of the event will coincide with the first scheduled day of the SCOTUS confirmation hearings. Nancy Pelosi, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton, Elizabeth Warren, Kirsten Gillibrand, Gloria Steinem, and more are also set to appear. Those interested in the event can RSVP in advance here.
21 Savage and Metro Boomin have unveiled a new music video for their Savage Mode II track ‘My Dawg’. The clip was directed by Joe Weil and largely takes place in a mansion. At one point, British soldiers surround 21 in the woods as he raps, “N***a keep talkin’ that U.K. shit like I don’t got AKs/Like ’cause I was born overseas, these motherfuckers ain’t gon’ spray-spray.” Watch the video below.
21 Savage and Metro Boomin dropped Savage Mode II, the sequel to 2016’s Savage Mode, last week. The 15-track offering includes guest appearances from Drake, Young Thug, Young Nudy, as well as Morgan Freeman.
Billie Eilish has announced a livestream concert set to take on Saturday, October 24. The show, titled WHERE DO WE GO? THE LIVESTREAM, will be available to stream via the singer’s website.
“miss doing shows so muuuuuch,” Eilish wrote on Instagram. “soo I’m doing a livestream october 24th and i can’t wait to be performing agaaaain. get your tickets now!” Fans can purchase an e-ticket for $30 (£23), which also provides access to the concert video on demand for 24 hours after the show, as well as exclusive merchandise at a discounted price until show day. Proceeds from select items will be directed towards Crew Nation, which helps support crew members affected by the COVID-19 crisis.
HAIM have shared a new music video for their Women in Music Pt. IIItrack ‘Man From the Magazine’. The clip was directed by filmmaker and frequent collaborator Paul Thomas Anderson at Canter’s Deli in Los Angeles and stars Danielle Haim. Watch it below.
“This video was filmed the day we shot the cover for WIMPIII at Canter’s Deli in Hollywood,” the sister group explained in a statement. “Paul came up with the idea after hearing the whole record and we both felt strongly that this song in particular needed a visual, so Danielle put on a mic and sang it live in the middle of the deli.”
Wild Pink – the New York outfit consisting of frontman John Ross, bassist T.C. Brownell, and drummer Dan Keegan – have announced their studio album. Called A Billion Little Lights, it arrives on February 19, 2021 via Royal Mountain Records. The band have previewed the album with the first single ‘The Shining But Tropical’ along with an accompanying music video starring Annie Murphy (who recently won an Emmy for her role in Schitt’s Creek). Check out the Justin Singer-directed clip below, and scroll down for the album’s cover artwork and tracklist.
“It was inspired by Carl Sagan’s ‘Cosmos’ as well as ‘If I Needed You’ by Townes Van Zandt, this song is named for a grim retirement home in Florida,” band leader John Ross explained in a press release. “It’s about somebody who was born sheltered realizing how large the world is and how unimportant they are. Julia Steiner’s vocal contributions brought the song to fruition, and it was a lot of fun to make. We spent a lot of time focusing on the drums and percussion, using a phone recording of some cicadas in a quieter part towards the end of the song, and I really like all the stuff Dan came up with like the Agogo bells and Rototoms.”
Produced, mixed, and co-engineered by David Greenbaum, A Billion Little Lights follows Wild Pink’s 2018 album Yolk in the Fur.
A Billion Little Lights Cover Artwork:
A Billion Little Lights Tracklist:
1. The Wind Was Like a Train
2. Bigger Than Christmas
3. The Shining But Tropical
4. Amalif
5. Oversharers Anonymous
6. You Can Have It Back
7. Family Friends
8. Track Mud
9. Pacific City
10. Die Outside
Kevin Morby has shared a new song called ‘Sundowner’. It’s title track from his upcoming album, which is out October 16 via Dead Oceans. Listen to it below.
Speaking of the inspiration behind the song, Morby said in a press release: “When I first moved back home to Kansas after having lived on both coasts for over a decade, I found myself—for the first time—dreading the sun going down. This was a foreign feeling for me. In both Los Angeles and New York, I resisted the day light and thrived in the night—something I have sung about many times, most notably on my album City Music. But suddenly there I was, isolated in the Midwest in late autumn—the days growing increasingly shorter—chasing the sun as best I could.”
Fleet Foxes have shared a new music video for their Shore track ‘Can I Believe You’. It was directed by frontman Robin Pecknold’s brother Sean Pecknold, with art direction and production design by Adi Goodrich. The visual stars Jade-Lorna Sullivan and Jean Charles . Watch it below.
“With this film, I created an interpretation of what trust (or the uncertainty of it) feels like as two characters journey towards one another through a pulsating world,” Sean Pecknold explained in a press release. “This film also reflects the frustration and lack of human connection brought to all of us during the pandemic of 2020. Our dedicated film crew worked hard to bring this to life and we hope you find metaphors in it you can relate to as you listen to the music and watch the film. As always, Adi Goodrich and I loved bringing Robin’s songs to life with mesmerising visuals. This is the third part of a three-video FF trilogy starring Jade-Lorna Sullivan and Jean Charles.”
Shore, which marks Fleet Foxes’ fourth studio album, was released last month. It follows 2017’s Crack-Up.
BLACKPINK waste no time. After all, why should they? Barely half a decade into their career, the South-Korean pop group – Jisoo, Jennie, Rosé, and Lisa – have managed to become an international phenomenon, amassing millions of followers and getting featured on a Lady Gaga album before their debut full-length even arrived. To put things things into perspective, 27-year-old Ariana Griande, who also collaborated with Gaga on Chromatica‘s big single, has more albums out than BLACKPINK has members. Now that it’s finally here, the follow-up to the group’s 2019 KILL THIS LOVE EP, simply titled THE ALBUM, delivers everything fans could have possibly wished for, though sadly not enough of it. Clocking in at just 25 minutes – that’s one third the length of the latest BTS album – this short-but-sweet project bombards you with one outrageously fun, maximalist pop banger after another but makes sure it leaves you wanting more.
Armed with plenty of confidence and effortless charm, BLACKPINK kick things off with a bang: the titanic ‘How You Like That’ bursts with infectiously rowdy energy as it showcases each member’s unique strengths, from Rosé singing to Lisa’s raps. The track utilizes a classic BLACKPINK formula, affording the group enough space to explore different musical avenues throughout the rest of the album, pulling from rap, EDM, and even a hint of country. Undeniably a high-budget affair, THE ALBUM harkens back to a time where pop music was loud and shamelessly over-the-top, and anyone immune to that kind of thing should probably stay at least ten feet away. But as manufactured as it all inevitably sounds, BLACKPINK inject their glossy, precision-engineered brand of pop with enough joy and charisma to make it stand out.
They’re also backed by an impressive list of writers and producers, including Ryan Tedder and the team behind much of Ariana Grande’s Sweetener, whose fingerprints are all over the album. Grande even shares a co-writing credit along with Victoria Monét on the predictably sugary ‘Ice Dream’, which, on top of everything, features a mostly unnecessary guest spot from Selena Gomez. And yet the track is a treat all the same, a supremely catchy tune that’s guaranteed to get stuck into your head in spite of its obnoxious and nonsensical sexual metaphors are (“Catch me in the fridge, right where the ice be” reaches peak levels of absurdity). The writing is by far the weakest part of the album; besides having a few questionable moments, it also lacks any real sense of personality or heart to match what BLACKPINK bring to the table – which isn’t helped by the fact that only one track here includes writing credits from any of the group’s members (Jisoo and Jennie contribute to the gleefully anthemic ‘Lovesick Girls’).
What THE ALBUM lacks in substance and lyrical depth, though, it makes up for with the sheer intensity and bombast of the group’s performances. ‘Pretty Savage’ is as assertive as its title suggests, packed with an insanely addictive arena-ready hook and that quintessential BLACKPINK edge, while ‘Crazy Over You’ boasts the album’s most wildly adventurous instrumental. It doesn’t quite gel with some of the record’s more saccharine cuts, like the Cardi B-assisted ‘Bet You Wanna’, but that hard-hitting attitude is the best thing the record has to offer. Unfortunately, too much of it is missing on its two final tracks, though the closer, ‘You Never Know’, does bring some much-needed humanity to the K-pop machine: “It’s easier to judge me than to believe,” Jisoo sings. Hopefully BLACKPINK serve more of that vulnerability on their follow-up project. For now, though, they trade in tried and true formulas and skip right to dessert. By all accounts, a pleasant way to start a meal – though it does make you wonder what could possibly be next on the menu.
John Cale has released a new song called ‘Lazy Day’. It comes with an accompanying music video directed by Abby Portner. Check it out below.
“I was so ready to finally get my new album out; fits and starts and then damn 2020 happened! A lot to say in these times,” Cale said in a statement. “Context is everything and 140 characters isn’t going to cut it! As a songwriter my truth is all tied-up in and through those songs that must wait a while longer. And then it occurred to me that I do have something for the moment, a song I’d recently completed…. With the world careening out of its orbit I wanted to stop the lurch and enjoy a period where we can take our time and breathe our way back into a calmer world.”
Cale released his last studio album M:FANS in 2016. Earlier this year, he collaborated with Kelly Lee Owens for her Inner Song track ‘Corner of My Sky’, which recently got a music video.