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Artist Spotlight: Haux

Haux’s debut album opens with the tremble of Woodson Black’s voice, straining to make each word travel from the knot in his throat to the vast expanse of wavy, distant synths. “Shiver in your parents bed/ Whisper words left unsaid,” the Massachusetts songwriter sings in a hushed tone. It evokes the early work of Perfume Genius in its stark vulnerability; as the album unfurls, there are echoes of Sufjan Stevens‘s acutely personal storytelling (Thomas Bartlett, who has worked with Stevens, produced the album), or the Antlers’ deeply evocative folktronica. It’s no surprise he caught the attention of none other than Taylor Swift, whose surprise new album carries with it a similar kind of muted, richly textured indie folk quality. Following two EPs, 2016’s All We’ve Known and 2018’s Something to Remember, Violence in a Quiet Mind is a beautifully devastating record, one that sees Black laying his soul bare as he confronts traumatic childhood experiences and unpacks the lasting impact they’ve left on his mental health. Death, addiction, illness: these subjects lay heavy here, leading to the pained declarations of forgiveness on the harrowing ‘Killer’ or the haunting confessions of ‘Accidents’. There’s hope, too, in the gorgeous harmonies of ‘Eight’, a duet with Rosie Carney that highlights intimacy in its purest form. It’s nothing if not a heart-wrenching album, but as soon as it’s over, a feeling of catharsis seeps through, like seeing the light for the first time after hiding in the shadows for as long as you can remember. One can only imagine where this will take him next. 

We caught up with Woodson Black aka Haux for this edition of our Artist Spotlight series, where we showcase up-and-coming artists and give them a chance to talk a bit about their music.

What inspired you to start making music?

My grandma won a raffle for some guitar lessons when I was eleven. I’d never played an instrument before and didn’t have a guitar so I found this classical in her basement that’s the same guitar I wrote this album on actually. So, yeah, the short answer is my grandma. She’s kind of the answer for everything to be honest. 

Who are some artists you look up to?

For this album.. José González, Nick Drake, Without Gravity. I found them all around the same time in my early teens and they made me fall in love with folk music. Crosses by Jose Gonzalez, especially. That was the first song I learned on guitar and will always remind me of the first girl I fell in love with. I actually think I loved the song more than I loved her, whoops.

There are some intensely personal themes on Violence in a Quiet Mind. What was the process of writing it like?

It was so long and drawn out… I wish I hadn’t been so afraid to just write it. I spent so much time thinking about writing it without writing anything. I tell myself that I needed that time to build up the courage to write it but did I really need two years of brooding?

I had all these ideas of what it  should sound like, what it  should be. I wanted to make Pink Moon mixed with Veneer mixed with, I don’t even know, Blood On The Tracks. That’s not really me, though. I write music that I feel in the moment I’m in. It comes naturally and the songs that don’t are very, very bad.

What was it like working with Thomas Bartlett?

I remember walking into his studio and he had the opening ceremony from the 1984 Summer Olympics in LA on one of his monitors. It was such a good ice breaker. There’s nothing like connecting over a sports event that happened before you were alive.

We spent three days in his studio. I don’t know, he just got it. I showed up there like “I think there’s too much hiss in this vocal EQ” and “I wish this harmonium was more in tune.” He took a step back and helped me see the album from a bird’s eye view and believe in it again.

How was the approach you took different from your previous EPs?

I think this time around I just procrastinated more. It’s a bad habit of mine but usually it means there’s something deeper than the task itself that I’m avoiding. And that was definitely the case for this album.

Besides that, the first two EPs were written, recorded and mixed by me at home. And Violence was recorded and produced in Scotland & New York City. I had so much more help on this album and I think it’s way better for it.

How do you feel now that the record is out?

Very much the same. It’s kind of like on your birthday when someone asks you “Do you feel older?” I never know what to say. Most of the time I say “Yeah, I do” to appease them but I know I’m lying, I don’t actually feel older at all.

I guess, mostly, I’m just excited to be writing new songs that aren’t about those angsty teenage years anymore.

Violence in a Quiet Mind is out now via Color Study.

Watch Taylor Swift’s Self-Directed Video for ‘Cardigan’ From Her New Album ‘Folklore’

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Taylor Swift has unveiled a self-directed, self-written video for her new song ‘Cardigan’, from her surprise new album folklore. Filmed during quarantine in compliance with social distancing measures, the fairytale-inspired video sees the pop singer wandering around a fantastical world with her piano, before she returns home and wraps herself in a cardigan. Watch it below.

Speaking about the video, Swift wrote: “A million thank you’s to my brilliant, bad ass video team – cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto, producer Jil Hardin, executive producer Rebecca Skinner, AD Joe ‘Oz’ Osbourne, editor Chancler Haynes, special effects wizards David Lebensfeld & Grant Miller, and set designer Ethan Tobman.” Prieto, the cinemotagrapher who worked on the video, is known for his work with filmmakers such as Martin Scosese and and Alejandro González Iñárritu.

Swift also said that the entire shoot was overseen by a medical inspector, and thanked “on-set medics, COVID-19 compliance personnel and the crew for operating under the strictest guidelines including wearing PPE, practicing through sanitisation and respecting social distancing during the video shoot.”

“I even did my own hair, makeup, and styling,” she added.

folklore was announced yesterday (July 23) and includes 16 tracks, many of which were produced and co-written alongside Aaron Dessner of the National, with additional orchestration from his brother Bryce Dessner, and contributions from Justin Vernon of Bon Iver and previous collaborator Jack Antonoff.

“Before this year I probably would’ve overthought when to release this music at the ‘perfect’ time, but the times we’re living in keep reminding me that nothing is guaranteed,” she said in a statement. “My gut is telling me that if you make something you love, you should just put it out into the world. That’s the side of uncertainty I can get on board with.”

 

Emily Burns Shares New EP ‘I Love You, You’re the Worst’

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Rising UK pop artist Emily Burns has released her new EP, I Love You, You’re the Worst, via Island Records. Stream it below.

Preceded by the singles ‘Terrified’,  ‘Hello’, and the moving ‘Curse’, her latest project follows two EPs released last year, My Town and PDA. To celebrate the release of the new EP, Burns will perform a live-streamed show from Abbey Road Studios on July 30th, with all proceeds from the performance going towards AKT Charity, which helps support young and vulnerable LGBTQ+ people faced with homelessness. Find more information here. 

During lockdown, the singer-songwriter, who has garnered a total of over 44 million streams on Spotify alone, has also been doing weekly livestreams on her Instagram every Wednesday at 6:30pm (BST), performing covers requested by fans followed by a Q&A. Most recently, Burns also collaborated with Playstation on their fastest-selling Sony game for PS4, The Last of Us Part II, releasing her own rendition of the game’s viral song ‘Through the Valley’

Andy Shauf Releases New Songs ‘Judy’ and ‘Jeremy’s Wedding’

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Andy Shauf has put out two new songs, ‘Judy’ and ‘Jeremy’s Wedding’. Both tracks are B-sides from the Canadian singer-songwriter’s most recent album, The Neon Skyline. Check them out below.

“‘Judy’ and ‘Jeremy’s Wedding’ were outliers to the narrative of the album,” Shauf said in a press release. “They fit a little bit outside the timeline, as I was trying to keep everything to a single night. They were also slightly different arrangement wise, so I decided that they might be best released together, apart from the album.”

Back in April, Shauf shared another B-side from the album called ‘You Slipped Away’. The Neon Skyline follows his 2016 LP The Party.

Finding Inspiration As An Artist

One of the major issues that most artists will run into at some point or another is the question of how and where to actually find inspiration on a regular basis. If you are keen to try and produce great work, then you are going to need to think about where you can get inspiration from, so it’s something that you will definitely want to question. As it happens, there are plenty of sources you might want to look to in order to do this. In this article, we are going to take a look at some of the major places you might want to think about looking in order to find inspiration for your own art.

Your Past

Arguably, the number one place where artists look to in order to find inspiration is their own life, specifically their past. If you stop and think about it, it soon becomes clear that your own past is a hugely valuable source of inspiration, and one which you are going to have to put into art in some way or another. It is also a useful source for the very fact that it generally has a lot of personal emotion tied to it, and that means that you are going to be able to use it as a catalyst for art in a very powerful way.

If you start looking to your past to use it for art, there might be times when it becomes a little painful. In truth, those will generally produce the best art, but you should still take care as you delve into that stuff, and make sure that you are always looking after yourself along the way.

Other Artists

Without ever looking at other artists, you are essentially going to be working in a vacuum, and that is not a good place for your artwork to grow and develop as it should. You need to spend some time looking at other artists as much as you possibly can, and it’s something that you are going to need to think about as much as possible. There are so many artists that you can look to, and it is important to bear in mind that you should always try to take on board some of the ideas, conceits and techniques of artists from other traditions or working with a different medium. So if you are a photographer, maybe take a look at the work of Dan Mintz from DMG Entertainment to see if you can glean anything you can use in your photos. If you are a writer, watch the movies of Hitchcock and see what there is to learn.

Current Events

Whether or not you tend to produce political works, you are still going to find that looking to current events will always help you to get your art off the ground and get some ideas going. This might be in part because you feel very strongly about a particular issue, perhaps one that makes you angry, or it might just be that you can see clearly where we need to go as a society, and you want to use your art to make your point. This is one of the natural occurrences that art is very good for, so it’s something that you will want to think about. You don’t have to think of it as political if you have a particular allergy to that word. Instead, just think of it as art that is trying to help the world become a better place. Looking at current events should certainly give you the necessary inspiration for that kind of artwork.

Dreams

Without the world of dreams, many artists would frankly have much less to say and much less to produce. If you tend to remember your dreams, you might want to start looking towards them as a means to try and understand what kind of motifs might be lurking around in your art unconsciously already, and then working to draw those things out in a more conscious way. Than it itself can be a transformative thing to do for your art. If you struggle to remember dreams, keeping a dream diary will ensure that your brain starts to remember them more as you awaken. Once you do that, you might start to find that you have opened up a whole new world of inspiration that you can start to use.

Any and all of these are going to be worthy inspiration, so take a look at each in turn.

Bandcamp is Extending its Fee-Waive Days For the Rest of 2020

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Bandcamp has announced it will be extending its monthly fee-waive days for the rest of 2020. The online platform started the initiative on Friday, March 20, when it waived its usual 15% cut of download sales and 10% cut of physical and merch sales in order to help artists struggling due to the COVID-19 crisis. Bandcamp Fridays will continue to take place on the first Friday of each month, with the next one scheduled for August 7.

In addition, the platform revealed that the last four Bandcamp Fridays have led to more than $20 million going directly to artists. Since the pandemic hit, fans have paid a total of $75 million worth of music and merch directly from musicians and labels.

“We started Bandcamp Fridays back in March to support artists impacted by the pandemic, and in the past few months the music community has come together in a huge way,” Bandcamp said in a press release. “Because the pandemic is far from over, we’ll continue to hold Bandcamp Fridays on the first Friday of every month until the end of the year.”

On Juneteenth, the platform also donated 100% of its share of proceeds to the NAACP Legal Defense Fund in response to the killings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, and others.

 

Albums Out Today: Taylor Swift, Logic, Courtney Marie Andrews, Neck Deep

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In this segment, we showcase the most notable albums out each week. Here are the albums out on July 24th, 2020:

Taylor Swift, folklore

Taylor Swift is back with a surprise new album titled folklore. Announced just yesterday, the follow-up to 2019’s Lover features 16 tracks and no previously released singles. Most of the tracks were produced and co-written alongside Aaron Dessner of the National, with additional orchestration from his brother Bryce Dessner, while mixing was handled by Serban Ghenea & Jon Low. The album features a guest appearance from Justin Vernon of Bon Iver and contributions from megaproducer Jack Antonoff, who also co-produced much of Lover, and a mysterious person called William Bowery (who does not exist on any streaming services). “Before this year I probably would’ve overthought when to release this music at the ‘perfect’ time, but the times we’re living in keep reminding me that nothing is guaranteed,” Swift wrote in a statement. “My gut is telling me that if you make something you love, you should just put it out into the world. That’s the side of uncertainty I can get on board with.”

Logic, No Pressure

Logic has put out his sixth and reportedly final full-length release, No Pressure. The album contains 15 tracks and serves as a sequel to his 2014 debut studio album, Under Pressure, delivering a “classic sound,” according to a Reddit post by the rapper. “I love you all and am excited for No Pressure,” Logic, who welcomed a baby boy in 2019, said in a statement. “Bars on bars on bars. This new perspective of life has been amazing”. He added: “It’s just so fun experimenting and having fun with all music. But this next one is back to the roots for sure and I can’t wait for you to hear it when the time is right.” The rapper also recently signed a seven-figure deal with streaming platform Twitch, where he will be streaming a set amount of hours on a weekly basis.

Courtney Marie Andrews, Old Flowers

Singer-songwriter Courtney Marie Andrews has released her seventh studio album, Old Flowers, via Fat Possum/ Loose Records. Delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Andrews’ 10-track LP follows 2018’s transcendent May Your Kindness Remain and was recorded at Sound Space Studio with producer Andrew Sarlo (Big Thief, Bon Iver). Compared to the expansive instrumentation on Kindness, Old Flowers features just Andrews and two other musicians -multi-instrumentalist Matthew Davidson and Big Thief’s James Krivchenia on drums. Old Flowers is about heartbreak,” the Arizona artist said in a statement. “There are a million records and songs about that, but I did not lie when writing these songs. This album is about loving and caring for the person you know you can’t be with. It’s about being afraid to be vulnerable after you’ve been hurt. It’s about a woman who is alone, but okay with that, if it means truth.”

Neck Deep, All Distortions Are Intentional

Neck Deep have released their new album, All Distortions Are Intentional, via Hopeless Records. Following 2017’s The Peace and the Panic, the 11-track LP was produced by Matt Squire (Panic! At The Disco, Ariana Grande, One Direction), and recorded in Monnow Valley, Wales. It revolves around the fictional characters Jett and Alice, with the former living in a place named Sonderland. “Modern music is so much based around ‘the single’ and writing a record isn’t held in nearly the same regard as it used to be,” explained frontman Ben Barlow in a statement. “All Distortions Are Intentional presents a whole story, where there is meaning from every angle of it. All of our records have their themes, but I wanted to create characters, scenes, a world, and have it mean something in the real world, too.”

Other albums out today: 

Thomas Bartlett, Shelter; Neon Trees, I Can Feel You Forgetting Me.

15 Captivating Stills From Arrival (2016)

Arrival is a 2016 film directed by Denis Villeneuve and starring Amy Adams and Jeremy Renner. Adams portrays Dr. Louise Banks, a linguistics expert tasked with interpreting the strange language of aliens who have arrived on Earth without warning. These aliens do not mean any harm, which makes them all the more confusing to authorities. Their means of communicating, like everything else about their existence, don’t follow the rules humans have becomes accustomed to on Earth.

The film won an Academy Award for Best Sound Editing, but the cinematography is enthralling as well. Here are fifteen captivating stills from Arrival.

Davy Boi Releases New Single ‘Do Myself Better’

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Davy Boi, a Los Angeles based artist, has released his new single Do Myself Better. The single comes after his 2019 EP errything so far, which includes all of his previous songs including Foundation, Dirty Mind, and what u like. errything so far has currently over 1.7 million streams.

Do Myself Better is a superb track with euphonious production by MKBLV & Shiftee which help showcase the stunning vocals of Davy Boi.

Talking about the song Davy Boi stated “Do Myself Better is a pledge to take self-care more seriously. It’s about looking at Imposter Syndrome in the face and confronting daily anxiety in a tongue & cheek manner. I know other people are experiencing feelings of not being the best versions of themselves, so I wanted to give a voice to that and say, ‘Hey, you’re not alone. Same here.‘”

Kylie Minogue Announces New Album, Shares New Single ‘Say Something’

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Kylie Minogue has announced a new album called DISCO, to be released on November 6th. The singer has also shared the first taste from the new album, ‘Say Something’. Check it out below, and scroll for the album’s cover artwork.

The 16-track LP will be the follow-up to 2018’s Golden. The lead single was produced by longtime collaborator Biff Stannard, while all the visuals for the album were handled by Minogue with help from creative director and graphic designer Kate Moross (Jessie Ware, Simian Mobile Disco) and music video director Sophie Muller (Radiohead, Beyoncé). More details about DISCO will be revealed soon.

Last year, the singer put out a greatest hits collection called Step Back in Time: The Definitive Collection and headlined Glastonbury 2019.

DISCO Artwork: