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spill tab Links Up With Tommy Genesis on New Song ‘Indecisive’

spill tab has teamed up with Canadian rapper Tommy Genesis for a new song called ‘Indecisive’. It’s set to appear on the singer-songwriter’s upcoming second EP, set for release this Autumn via Arista Records. Check it out below.

“My producer and I wanted to make something with dummy fast drums and we sort of just went from there,” spill tab explained in a statement. “We had all the sections we wanted but were missing a verse and I just really wanted someone to rap over it and go hard and I also didn’t want it to be me. I think my team sent the song over to Tommy’s camp and she loved it and was down to hop on it, and I’ve been a phat fan of her stuff and her new song too, so it was a divine match made in heaven.”

Since releasing her debut EP Oatmilk last December, spill tab has shared the singles ‘PISTOLWHIP’ and ‘Anybody Else’. Read our Artist Spotlight interview with spill tab.

Album Review: Foxing, ‘Draw Down The Moon’

“It can’t get much worse than this,” Conor Murphy croons on ‘At Least We Found the Floor’, an acoustic highlight off Foxing’s new album, Draw Down the Moon. The record takes its name from Margot Adler’s book about contemporary Paganism, but you don’t need to be interested in spirituality, relate to Murphy’s past reflections on Catholicism, or have played Dungeons & Dragons a single time to enjoy what the band has to offer on their latest LP, whose rollout included encouraging fans to partake in a series of online rituals. You don’t even need to be acquainted with emo’s complicated history or know that much about the band’s unique trajectory to get some of the metacommentary on the album, though digging through Foxing’s discography – from their celebrated 2013 debut The Albatross to their phenomenal 2018 LP Nearer My God – will only enhance the experience. When both the musical arrangements and the lyrical sentiments are as strikingly immediate as they are resonant, it feels like you’ve come across something that simultaneously exists in its own universe yet feels connected to everything that came before it.

For an album featuring 10 variations on the theme of “cosmic significance,” it’s remarkable that Draw Down the Moon never veers into conceptual vagueness or self-indulgence. As a whole, it’s less of a stylistic shift than a refinement of the qualities that arguably made Nearer My God their most accessible effort to date; by toning down some of the chaotic density of that record and delivering one stadium-sized hook after another, they’ve managed to make its populist framing feel convoluted by comparison. But the new album is still a sprawling, ambitious collection of songs, one whose genre-eschewing boldness is always in service to something bigger than artistic validation and whose infectiousness is more than just a bid for mainstream success. Foxing seem all too aware that these metrics have little bearing in today’s music economy for them to care about anything other than their own creative instincts.

And once again, those instincts help them reach thrilling heights. Produced by the band’s guitarist Eric Hudson and completed with John Congleton and Manchester Orchestra’s Andy Hull, the album’s soaring melodies, indie disco grooves, and manic breakdowns come together to provide a vessel for Murphy’s existential concerns. Rather than belying its own complexity, the album’s reliance on the repetition of pop aligns with the inescapable nature of Murphy’s thoughts, addressing, through different lenses, the same desperate need for connection in the face of the vastness of the cosmos. Even the songs that felt baffling as singles shine through in the context of the album: on the danceable ‘Where the Lightning Strikes Twice’, Murphy sings, “With everything we gave it/ It’s hard not to be devastated,” but the track keeps chugging along, propelled by a sense of electrifying ambition. ‘Beacons’ is an equally driving piece of synth-rock that begins by suggesting the other side of that coin (“I was floating there for so long/ King of nothing”) before hitting with the force of a euphoric revelation: “For the first time I felt alive/I thought I couldn’t move my feet/ But I’m running with you now, we’re a stampede.” Murphy’s voice is impassioned and raw, as if energized by the song’s forward momentum.

In reality, the album feels more like a downward spiral. “If you should fall, I’ll follow behind/ We’ll go down there together,” Murphy sings on the Passion Pit-esque ‘Go Down Together’, one of many attempts to soften the weight of emptiness by finding strength in unity. Throughout the album, “down” remains an undefined place as well as the only direction, but it doesn’t matter so long as you’re running with someone. ‘Bialystok’ – named after the largest city in Poland and apparently the farthest the band has been from their home of St. Louis – meanders for the first minute or so before Murphy is struck by the realization that “Without you, I feel so homesick everywhere I go,” any hint of melancholy quickly overshadowed by the love that fills the “fiery core of why.” It’s the wonderful detail Murphy includes halfway through that colours the whole song: “I was just thinking about arguing in the kitchen/ Just to be the one that you argue with/ Is a miracle in itself/ Sacred insignificance/ Steeped in cosmic bliss.”

Given all this, one might be slightly taken aback by the cynical tone of ‘At Least We Found the Floor’ – have the band really done everything in their power to capture the lowest of lows, or do they keep swerving away? But even at its most direct and optimistic, Murphy’s unhinged performances are enough to suggest that everything could fall apart at any moment. Besides, there’s something refreshing about the band’s attempt at turning emo’s nihilistic tendencies into a source of not just catharsis, but comfort. ‘At Least We Found the Floor’ calls back to the album’s magnificent opening track, ‘737’, but instead of building to an explosive climax, it retains a quiet composure, even with the acceptance that, yeah, it actually can get a hell of a lot worse. As far as the music goes, at least, it can only get so much better than this – though as always with Foxing, you never really know what might come next.

Julia Shapiro Announces New Solo Album, Releases New Single ‘Come With Me’

Chastity Belts’ Julia Shapiro has announced her sophomore album, Zorked. The follow-up to 2019’s Perfect Version is out October 15 via Suicide Squeeze Records. Today’s announcement comes with the release of the new single, ‘Come With Me’, alongside a music video directed by Ertugrul Yaka. Check it out below and scroll down for the record’s cover art and tracklist.

Shapiro said of the new song in a statement:

Last September I went on a backpacking trip with my cousins, up in the mountains of Colorado, and one of the days we were out there we did mushrooms. I ended up having a pretty insane trip, but I had the worst time when I was coming up on them. I kept seeing evil faces in the mountains. This song was partially inspired by that experience, but it’s really about anytime I’m stuck in a negative headspace and spiraling out of control. It’s about giving in and letting your mind take you to the darkest places. The song itself is really evil sounding, with super dissonant chords, which inspired the darker lyrics. I’ve never written a song that sounds like this. This might be my favorite drumbeat on the album… it just gives the song a nice groove. Melina Duterte (who recorded/mixed the album) had the idea to add some staccato synth throughout the whole track, which adds another dimension to it.

Of the video, Ertugrul Yaka added: “Julia found me on one of the freelancer sites. It came as a surprise to me because I’ve been listening to Chastity Belt since 2016. So I know her from the Chastity Belt. It was a great experience for me. The video is about the war between good trips and bad trips. When you’re looking for joy, two kinds of feelings are always chasing you at the end. When you reach joy, a piece from your inside breaks off; I mean, it’s giving you something and taking another thing from your inside. I made this video based on my own experience.”

Zorked Cover Artwork:

Zorked Tracklist:

1. Death (XIII)
2. Come With Me
3. Wrong Time
4. Someone
5. Reptile! Reptile!
6. Pure Bliss
7. Hellscape
8. Do Nothing About It
9. Zorked
10. Hall of Mirrors

Chromatics Break Up

Three members of Chromatics have announced the band’s breakup. Vocalist Ruth Radelet, guitarist Adam Miller, and drummer Nat Walker have all signed a statement that was shared on Radalet and Miller’s Instagram accounts.

“After a long period of reflection, the three of us have made the difficult decision to end Chromatics,” their joint statement reads. “We would like to thank all of our fans and the friends we have made along the way – we are eternally grateful for your love and support. This has been a truly unforgettable chapter in our lives, and we couldn’t have done it without you. We are very excited for the future, and look forward to sharing our new projects with you soon.”

Johnny Jewel, who has toured with the group, produced several of their recordings, and owns Chromatics’ longtime record label, Italians Do It Better, is notably not mentioned in the announcement. In a statement to Stereogum, a representative for Jewel said, “Johnny is extremely proud of his work with the project over the years and he’ll continue making music and supporting great art and artists through his label Italians Do It Better.”

Chromatics formed in Portland, Oregon in 2001, releasing their debut album Chrome Rats vs Basement Rutz in 2003. Their most recent album, Closer To Grey, came out in 2019. Though the band shared a few new singles last year, their much-anticipated record Dear Tommy, which was first announced in 2014, has yet to be released.

 

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A post shared by Ruth Radelet (@ruthradelet)

Julien Baker Announces ‘Little Oblivions’ Remix EP Featuring Half Waif, Gordi, Jesu, and More

Julien Baker has announced a new EP called Little Oblivions Remixes. Out on September 1 via Matador, it features reworkings of songs from her most recent album Little Oblivions from artists like Half Waif, Gordi, Jesu, and Thao. Below, check out the full tracklist and listen to Helios’ remix of ‘Bloodshot’.

Of his remix, Helios said in a statement:

I was excited when Julien Baker reached out about doing a remix, because I respect her work and it was an interesting challenge to do a remix of singer/songwriter material in the context of my approach which is more in the electronic/ambient world. I wanted to keep the integrity of the original composition, which was great, but also wanted to create enough of a spin to give it a distinctly new quality. My approach to remixes is to use as much of the original material as possible, but to use those elements as a base to create a variety of new textures. So I took a lot of the guitar and percussion elements and ran them through some old tape recorders to give it a rough “handmade” quality, reversed them, chopped them up or manipulated them with reverbs and delays to create ambient soundscapes. I treated Julien’s vocals to match the rougher, more lo-fi quality I used with the instrumental elements. Harmonically, I changed up the chord changes to give the vocal melody a slightly new framework and arrangement on which to sit and create some new twists and turns and builds in the composition. It was one of the most fun remixes I’ve done to date, with such strong original material it gave me a lot to play around with.

Little Oblivions Remixes Tracklist:

1. Faith Healer (Half Waif Remix)
2. Bloodshot (Helios Remix)
3. Ringside (Gordi Remix)
4. Favor (Jesu Remix)
5. Ziptie (Thao Remix)

Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine Share New Songs ‘Back to Oz’ and ‘Fictional California’

Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine have previewed their upcoming collaborative LP A Beginner’s Guide with new two new songs. ‘Back to Oz’, which arrives with a video directed by Alex Horan of Straight To Tell and animated by Clara Murray, was inspired by the 1985 film Return To Oz, while ‘Fictional California’ was inspired by Bring It On Again. Check them out below.

“This was a song that I had written mostly at home in California,” De Augustine said of ‘Back to Oz’ in a press release. “We finished its lyrics after watching Return to Oz. The words reference an erosion of a central character’s internal reality. A loss of innocence is the impetus for a journey to find inner truth. In the film, Dorothy returns to the world of Oz to find its landscape in ruins and its citizens frozen in stone. Only she can find the ruby slippers and return peace to Oz. Only we can save ourselves, but we first have to remember who we truly are.”

“Angelo is mostly known for his intimate home recordings; his music is quiet and confessional,” Stevens added. “So for ‘Back To Oz’ we decided to go for something flashier. The song has a fun guitar groove, so we gave it some bass and drums, and Angelo even recorded his first electric guitar solo. It’s a sad song—being mostly about disillusionment—but it has a great party vibe too.”

The new tracks follow last month’s ‘Reach Out’ and ‘Olympus’A Beginner’s Mind is out September 24 via Asthmatic Kitty Records.

Big Thief Release New Songs ‘Little Things’ and ‘Sparrow’

Big Thief have shared two new tracks, ‘Little Things’ and ‘Sparrow’. The songs mark the band’s first new material since 2019’s Two Hands. Both tracks were produced by Big Thief drummer James Krivchenia; ‘Little Things’ was recorded with Shawn Everrett at Five Star Studios in Topanga, California, in October 2020, while ‘Sparrow’ was recorded in the Catskills last summer. Check them out below.

“It’s in this sort of evolving free time signature where the beat is always changing, so Max [Oleartchik] and I were just flowing with it and guessing where the downbeats were — which gives the groove a really cool light feeling,” Krivchenia said of ‘Little Things’ in a statement.

Of ‘Sparrow’, he added, “We all just scattered about the room without headphones, focused and in the music — you could feel that something special was happening. It was a funny instrumentation that had a really cool natural arrangement chemistry — Max on piano, Buck [Meek] providing this dark ambience, me on floor tom and snare and Adrianne in the middle of it with the acoustic and singing.”

Album Review: Isaiah Rashad, ‘The House Is Burning’

The vanishing man of rap returns: after impressing with his 2016 debut album The Sun’s Tirade, Southern rapper Isaiah Rashad has finally delivered its follow-up, The House Is Burning, five years later. These intervening years have been a tumultuous time for Rashad, taking in rehab stints, almost going broke, and nearly being dropped by his label Top Dawg Entertainment several times; if this album is a victory lap, the light at the end of a long tunnel, perhaps it’s surprising that it’s not grander or louder.

Instead, The House Is Burning is a lowkey and subtle affair, but this suits the casual style of Rashad better than anything ostentatious. His sound has always valued tone and vibes above all else and this new album is better experienced as a mood piece. Mostly, the songs are like timidly unfurling waves, rolling into one another effortlessly and hazily. After the atmospheric woozy opener ‘Darkseid’, two outliers threaten to overcome the conscientious construction of the whole album though: ‘From The Garden’ feels like it’s reaching for commercial viability, including featuring Lil Uzi Vert for good measure in a grating chorus, while ‘Lay Wit Ya’ is too manic in its presentation to fit. 

Individual songs are not Rashad’s forte, and so it’s a relief that these are the only two real outliers. The smooth and airy ‘Claymore’ follows with a nice guest spot from Smino. Indeed, Rashad is a gracious host, letting the likes of YGTUT in the confident ‘Chad’ and SZA in the cool R&B track ‘Score’ melt into his own spots sweetly. Rashad’s delivery emphasises the languorousness of the record. He mutters his words, sounding distracted by something in his periphery; other times he sounds dazed and withdrawn, his mind elsewhere. It’s why these seem to capture so strongly late nights and early mornings, driving nowhere in particular with friends, waking up slowly the next day. 

Rashad has been unafraid to speak of his problems with addiction to xanax and alcohol in the past, but he has a curious relationship with his crutches within his music. He flirts around the subjects, hinting at them in lines but never confronting them fiercely; that just wouldn’t suit the laid-back vibe. “Who’s that creeping in my window?… Who’s that fucking with my conscience?” he says in ‘THIB’, elusively touching on the state of his mental health. After everything he’s gone through, then, it’s nice to note his confidence in ‘Chad’ when he insists, “If I wasn’t rapping baby, I would still be ridin’ Mercedes.”

Rashad turned 30 in May; The House Is Burning has just earned him his first Billboard 200 Top 10 spot. Older and wiser, the subtle contemplation of this album feels like it encapsulates where he’s been in his life recently. The time for a statement-making record – not that he needs one – will come when Rashad is ready. For the unfazed and relatable Rashad, everything is done at his own pace. 

Sam Evian Announces New Album ‘Time to Melt’, Shares Video for New Single ‘Knock Knock’

Sam Evian has announced his new album, Time to Melt, which is out October 29 via Fat Possum. The record features contributions from the likes of Spencer Tweedy, Chris Bear, and the War On Drugs’ Jon Natchez. Along with the announcement, Evian has shared a new single, ‘Knock Knock’, alongside an accompanying video directed by Josh Goleman. Check it out and find the album’s cover art and tracklist below.

“’Knock Knock’ is a song of commiseration,” Evian said in a press release. “It’s a conversation with my sibling, and really anyone else with a conscience. We talk a lot about the small town in Eastern North Carolina where we grew up, and why we left. Growing up we saw a lot of racism, violence, poverty, disparity, ignorance…all of it not so hidden under a veil of southern hospitality and dogmatic beliefs. A year later after George Floyd’s murder, I hope we can keep the conversation going. The veil is lifted for all to see. Knock knock – who’s there? A broken America.”

Time to Melt Cover Artwork:

Time to Melt Tracklist:

1. Freezee Pops
2. Dream Free [feat. Hannah Cohen]
3. Time To Melt
4. Knock Knock
5. Arnolds Place
6. Sunshine
7. Never Know
8. Lonely Days
9. Easy To Love
10. 999 Free
11. Around It Goes

How to get started with NFL fantasy football

Fantasy football is like a culture of its own. You’ve most likely heard it being talked about around the office as colleagues make their bets, or with family and friends who are drafting their own fantasy football teams. Or you may have simply decided that owning your one NFL team is a little unrealistic…

Whatever it is that brought you here to learn about getting started with fantasy football, learning the ins and outs of drafting your own team before you get started is a good way to start on a successful foot.

Ready to get your dose of daily fantasy football? Whether you’re joining your colleagues in hasty bets or plan on shocking your friends with your new fantasy football wins, let’s dive in with everything you need to know about NFL fantasy football.

Creating your NFL fantasy football team

First of all, you need to decide if you’re going to be creating a team with people you know, or whether you’re going to join a public team. Both are good options but if you’re creating a team of your own then you should have around 8-10 teams (one player is one team).

Tip: It’s easier not to have an odd number of teams as this will make scheduling difficult.

If you opt to join a public team then you will join an NFL fantasy football site where random players can join your league. If you’d like to be more in control of your team, it’s better to try to join a team with people you know.

Create your team names

Now for the fun part. Every player must submit the name of their team. While you can be creative here, remember that you’ll be stuck with this name for the entire season so it’s a good idea to think about it. Some top things to consider when naming your NFL fantasy football team include:

Play on words

When choosing your team name, remember that it directly represents your team and hints at your seriousness/ abilities in the fantasy football world. If you choose something ridiculous, every time there’s a victory, your teammates will only be focused on sniggering at your name.

However, if you have a killer team name then your opponent is already going to feel intimidated before you even have a victory. It’s pretty sound logic to us.

Use a nickname… but effectively

The rules for this one are that the nickname cannot be self-imposed. That wouldn’t be fair right? Again, you can use your creativity here and decide on the nickname people use the most.

By doing this, it also makes it easier for everyone in the group to know who you are. Ever had one of those group chats where everyone’s using ridiculous nicknames and you never know who is replying? That’s why a common nickname is a great idea!

 Innuendos

Innuendos can be fun, but make sure to keep them a little PG. Innuendos that come across as overly sexual or offensive could be a problem and won’t help your reputation in the fantasy football team very much.

Drafting your team

Now it’s time to do one of the most important things in the game, drafting your team! The way it works is that each week, you will begin by drafting players to start filling your lineup. Once the drafted NFL player begins a game, they are stuck in your lineup – so it’s important to get the decision right.

It’s up to you to remember if your player has a game or to get them off the bench, but if you forget then again, you’re stuck. You will only get points for starting the game every week, rather than getting paid every time you draft a new player.

The action

Your team will get a point for every stat played in the game. Before you kick-off, you will need to pay an entry fee. This can be split between all the players by taking it out of the pot (the winner’s money in the middle of the table).

Bear in mind that you can also lose points as well as gaining them. This is also something to keep a note of when re-drafting your team so you can make a more calculated decision.

Top tips for drafting your NFL fantasy football team

  • Do your research before you get started. There’s nothing worse than drafting a team of players that don’t perform – only realising you can’t change them yet.
  • Stay on top of the latest news. As well as following the NFL on the news and on social media platforms, it’s worth checking daily fantasy football sites for up to date predictions on games and players.
  • Look for trends. Many sites offer insights and statistics on what is happening, allowing you to make more accurate predictions and decisions on who you should draft to your team. And this means more success.
  • Don’t draft injury-prone players. Remember that whatever happens out there will directly affect your fantasy football team. So no matter how much you like them, just don’t do it.

Now that you know the ins and outs of creating your very own NFL fantasy football team, it’s time to find a team and start drafting your players!