A$AP Ferg has shared a new song featuring Lil Waye and Jay Gwuapo. It’s called ‘No Ceilings’ and it was produced by AXL Beats. It comes with an accompanying music video directed by Eif Rivera, which you can watch below.
The song’s title seems to be a reference to Wayne’s 2009 mixtape of the same name: “Like Wayne I got no ceilings!” Ferg raps just before Wayne jumps in for his verse.
BLACKPINK and Selena Gomez have joined forces for a new collaborative track called ‘Ice Cream’. Co-written by Ariana Grande and Victoria Monét, it marks the second single from the K-pop group’s debut full-length album. Check it out below, alongside a colourful accompanying music video.
Preceded by a series of EPs and a feature on Lady Gaga’s Chromatica, BLACKPINK’s debut LP, titled The Album, comes out October 2 via YG Entertainment/Interscope. It includes the previously released single ‘How You Like That’, which was released back in June.
Selena Gomez put out her most recent album, Rare, in January of this year. A few weeks later, she unveiled a new single called ‘Feel Me’.
The Smashing Pumpkins have released two new songs, ‘Cyr’ and ‘The Colour of Love’, out now via Sumerian. Check them out below, along with a visual for ‘Cyr’ directed by Linda Strawberry.
Along with the new singles, The Smashing Pumpkins have also confirmed that a new album is on the way, featuring the current line-up of Billy Corgan, James Iha, Jimmy Chamberlin, and longtime guitarist Jeff Schroeder.
Marking the band’s first new music in two years, both songs were recorded in Chicago and produced by Corgan himself. “‘Cyr’ is dystopic folly,” Corgan said in a statement. “One soul against the world sort of stuff, set against a backdrop of shifting loyalties and sped up time. To me it stands as both hopeful and dismissive of what is and isn’t possible with faith.”
Speaking about the song’s video, Linda Strawberry commented: “This is a goth fever dream of pent up emotion—an artistic visual release attempting to create a momentary escape from the emotional black cloud hanging over all of us this year. A dark seduction filmed in quarantine at a social distance.”
The Smashing Pumpkins’ last album was 2018’s Shiny and Oh So Bright, Vol. 1, while Corgan released his most recent solo album, Cotillions, last year.
The Weeknd and Calvin Harris have joined forces for a new song called ‘Over Now’. It comes with an accompanying CGI-animated video directed by Emil Nava. Check it out below.
Harris released his most recent studio album, Funk Wav Bounces Vol. 1, in 2017. He followed it up with a series of EPs, including a collaborative project with Normani in 2018. Earlier this year, he put out three EPs under the moniker Love Regenerator.
Ty Dolla $ign and Nicki Minaj have joined forces once again for a new song called ‘Expensive’. It’s presumably taken from Ty’s upcoming album, Dream House. Check it out below.
The two artists have teamed up before, first on Jason Derulo’s 2017 song ‘Swalla’ and later on Megan Thee Stallion’s 2019 hit ‘Hot Girl Summer’, which was followed by a Munachi Osegbu-directed video featuring appearances from Rico Nasty, La La Anthony, Ari Lennox, Summer Walker, and others.
Earlier this year, Ty Dolla $ign released ‘Fair Chance’ with Thundercat and Lil B, ‘Ego Death’ with Kanye West, FKA twigs, Skrillex, and serpentwithfeet, and ‘Doors Unlocked’ with Murda Beatz and Polo G. Nicki Minaj was recently featured on the track ‘Move Ya Hips’ with ASAP Ferg and MadeinTYO.
In this segment, we showcase the most notable albums out each week. Here are the albums out on August 28th, 2020:
Katy Perry,Smile
Katy Perry is back with her sixth studio album, Smile, out now via Capitol Records. Following 2017’s Witness, the pop singer describes her new album as being about the “journey towards the light, with stories of resilience, hope, and love” and “finding the light at the end of the tunnel”. Preceded by the singles ‘Daisies’ and ‘Smile’, it features production credits from Stargate, Charlie Puth, Zedd, Peter Karlsson, and more. “I’m going to put out a record this year, quarantined or not, because we ain’t gonna let no coronavirus stop us from dancing, even if we’re dancing in our homes,” she said in a statement accompanying the release of ‘Daisies’.
Angel Olsen,Whole New Mess
Angel Olsen has returned with a new album called Whole New Mess, out now via Jagjaguwar. The follow-up to last year’s sonically ambitiousAll Mirrors, it includes 11 tracks, nine of which are stripped-back versions of songs that ended up making it on that album. Recorded in October 2018 at The Unknown, Phil Elverum’s church-turned-studio, it marks Olsen’s first new material recorded and released without any bandmates since 2012’s Half Way Home. “I had gone through this breakup, but it was so much bigger than that — I’d lost friendships, too,” Olsen said in a press release. “When you get out of a relationship, you have to examine who you are or were in all the relationships. I wanted to record when I was still processing these feelings. These are the personal takes, encapsulated in a moment.”
Samia,The Baby
New York-based singer-songwriter Samia has come through with her debut studio album, The Baby, via Grand Jury Music. Hippo Campus’ Jake Luppen and Nathan Stocker helped produced the record, along with Caleb Hindz and Lars Stalfors (Foster the People, Soccer Mommy). It includes the previously released singles ‘Is There Something In The Movies?’, ‘Fit N Full’, ‘Big Wheel’, ‘Stellate’, and ‘Trpitych’. Speaking about how the first two singles relate to the album as a whole, Samia said in our Artist Spotlight interview: “They’re kinda representative of either end of the emotional spectrum of the album. Fit N Full is written from the perspective of the most falsely confident version of myself and Movies is probably the most honestly vulnerable and pleading.”
Kelly Lee Owens, Inner Song
Kelly Lee Owens has released her sophomore effort, Inner Song, via Smalltown Supersound. According to a statement by Owens, the album is a result of “the hardest three years of my life, my creative life, and everything I’d worked for up to that point was deeply impacted. I wasn’t sure if I could make anything anymore, and it took quite a lot of courage to get to a point where I could create again.” Speaking about the title and inspiration for the album, which borrows from an album by the free-jazz artist Alan Silva, she added that it “really reflects what it felt like to make this record. I did a lot of inner work in the past few years, and this is a true reflection of that.”
Disclosure,ENERGY
Disclosure, the duo of brothers Guy and Howard Lawrence, have served up their third studio album, ENERGY, via Capitol Records. Featuring Kehlani, Syd, Common, Kelis, slowthai, Mick Jenkins, Channel Tres, Aminé, Fatoumata Diawara, and Cameroon’s Blick Bassy, the LP includes the previously released singles ‘My High’, ‘Douha (Mali Mali)’, and ‘Birthday’. The release of the follow-up to 2015’s Caracal will notably include environmentally friendly physical editions, with the group using “vegetable and water-based inks and varnishes, and opt for a mixture of recycled and FSC approved cardboard” in place of plastic hard-cases for both the CD and cassette formats.
Brutalist, a talented Melbourne-based duo composed of Lucianblomkamp and John Hassell, have published their latest creation Movements. The track follows Brutalist’s last track South Street, which was an introduction for their upcoming EP Michael J Fox. The EP is due to be released on the 18th of September.
Chatting about the new song Hassell stated “Movements came about after a very harsh English winter, where there was an overwhelming sense of claustrophobia. That desperate need to move despite everything telling you not to. It doesn’t aim to provide hope or comfort, but rather an erratic desire to feel somewhat free.”
Barcelona indie rock outfit Mourn have announced a new album: Self-Worth comes out October 30 via Captured Tracks. The band, now a trio following the departure of their drummer Antonio Postius last year, have also unveiled a new song titled ‘This Feeling is Disgusting’. Check it out below, and scroll down for the album’s cover artwork and tracklist.
“This album gave us what we needed: self-worth, the desire to go forward, to love ourselves, with everything, with the good and bad,” the group wrote in a press release. “This album empowers us.”
About the new single in particular, they explain: “The song is really about fear of the future, being anxious about what’s going to happen, not knowing if you’re going to be able to earn a living or not. It’s a really happy song, but one that represents being stressed out. The idea of “I don’t know if I’ll be able to afford an apartment any time soon, but hey, let’s dance and have fun!” That’s the concept behind it, and that’s what I was thinking about while writing the lyrics.”
They add: “I also thought about my parents, and everyone’s parents. They often have high expectations for you, or they want a certain lifestyle for you, and you don’t always agree with that. So you try so hard to do life your own way, but you’re super stressed out and you’re scared, and every now and then you think “Is it worth it?” In the end, I think it’s worth it.”
Mourn previously previewed the LP with the single ‘Call You Back’. Their last album was 2018’s Sopresa Familia.
Self Worth Cover Artwork:
Self Worth Tracklist:
1. This Feeling Is Disgusting
2. Call You Back I
3. I’m In Trouble
4. Men
5. Gather, Really
6. The Tree
7. Stay There
8. House Hold
9. It’s A Frog’s World
10. Worthy Mushroom
11. Apathy
12. The Family’s Broke
A new, career-spanning Pylon box set has been announced, featuring previously unreleased material from the legendary Athens, Georgia art rock band. Titled Pylon Box, it comes out November 6 via New West. The 4xLP box set will include remastered versions of their two studio albums —1980’s Gyrate and 1983’s Chomp — as well as a newly unveiled recording, Razz Tape, a 13-track session that predates their 1979 debut single. Below, check out ‘The Human Body’ from Razz Tape as well as a live version of ‘3 x 3’, and scroll down for a teaser trailer for the box set.
Of the set’s 47 tracks, 18 have never been previously released. This also marks the first time in almost 35 years that Gyrate and Chomp, now also available to stream in their entirety on Bandcamp, have been pressed to vinyl.
In addition, Pylon Box comes with a 200-page hardbound, full-colour book with archival images, featuring testimonials from the B-52’s’ Fred Schneider and Kate Pierson, members of Gang of Four, Sleater-Kinney’s Corin Tucker and Carrie Brownstein, Steve Albini, and more. Each copy of the set will be autographed by the band’s surviving members: Vanessa Briscoe Hay, Michael Lachowski, and Curtis Crowe.
Formed in 1979 at the University of Georgia, Pylon were largely influential in the punk and new wave scene of the early 1980s and were contemporaries of Athens bands R.E.M. and the B-52’s.
For over a decade, Canadian singer-songwriter Jordan Klassen has been diligently creating his whimsical, contemplative music; crafting delicate songs which land somewhere in the sonic stratosphere between indie-rock, avant-garde folk and baroque pop. He has earned favourable comparisons to fellow multi-instrumentalist and lo-fi folk artist Sufjan Stevens, yet he has never been able to crack the mainstream and blow-up in quite the same way. This is surprising, given his superb musical ability, his wise, emotionally perceptive song writing and his skill at making such soul-searching music sound so pleasant and accessible. Even the songs of his which plunge headfirst into feelings of loneliness, ambiguity and melancholy have a romantic, life-affirming quality to them. Listening to Klassen’s music feels like stepping into the warm, golden sun on a frosty winter’s morning; there’s a stillness and quiet in the air, but hope, tinged with a sense of new beginnings, lies just beyond the horizon. His latest record, Tell Me What To Do, is a lyrically rich and instrumentally diverse meditation on the particular anxieties of adulthood faced by the millennial generation. In hushed tones and with a considerable amount of grace, Klassen explores the relatable and contradictory desire to be both in control of one’s life and utterly free from responsibility.
We spoke with Jordan Klassen for this edition of our Artist Spotlight series, where we showcase intriguing artists and give them a chance to talk about their music.
How and when did your interest in music start?
As a kid I was always really interested in making things. Drawing, writing plays, making movies on my parents’ camcorder. In high school I was playing trombone in band class and I begged my mom to let me quit. She herself was a musician and it was important for her that I learned an instrument, so she told me I could if I learned to play something else. I started guitar lessons and as soon as I did, I was writing songs.
What do you want people to feel when they hear your music?
Probably the same way I feel when I listen to my favourite records or read my favourite poems. Present, inspired, known in some way. That sounds really serious! I guess there’s also a playful aspect to a lot of my songs as well, so I think the emotional landscape of my tunes errs on the positive / hopeful side.
Your beautifully introspective album Tell Me What To Do came out in May. What was the inspiration behind it?
There were a few lines of thought. One of them was that I wanted to really lean into what I think I’m good at as a songwriter. Every record I’ve done has explored some new sonic and literary territory but this time I just wanted to try to settle into something that felt like ‘me’. I’ve always felt at home with quiet music so we made that a sonic theme. Everything on the record is played very quietly, I sang just barely audibly. Then when we compressed the audio it kind of came alive, all the little details burst out of it.
The record came from a place of inner exhaustion. I think about identity a lot, where I fit, what I think, the kind of person that I want to be. Western culture is filled with all kinds of images and voices inviting you to craft yourself into something great. I sometimes feel like I’m making a Dungeons and Dragons character or something. But at this point in my life, I’ve become less interested in self-expression and am more interested in listening to outside voices. I want to be told who I am. I want to be a cog in a machine I guess, as weird as that sounds. This is the overarching theme of the album.
What’s your process for writing lyrics?
Hmmm…. pace around anxiously? Haha. Melodies are almost always first and then I’ll spend a few weeks just singing what feels natural, mostly because I’m procrastinating. But by that time some words and sounds will have popped up that really suit the mood or fit into a concept that I’ve been thinking about, and I’ll finally put the puzzle pieces together.
I love T.S. Eliot, his poems feel like pulling heaven down to earth. They leave you not with a traditional story but with an impression, I think. That’s the kind of lyric I always aspire to write – like an abstract painting.
You’re a prolific musician, having worked as an artist for a number of years with several successful LPs under your belt – what have been the highs and lows of navigating the music industry?
Sometimes I joke to my friends that it’s the only industry in the world where experience is not an asset. Freshness and youth are idolized, and this can make it really tough for people who are in it for the long haul. At times it can feel like all of your investment might not pay off. So those can be lows. But I have had so many high points, I’ve got to travel the world, I’ve made art I’m proud of, I’ve been supported by so many amazing people and organizations. I also never watch the clock when I’m working, which is honestly probably the best thing about getting to do this.
We’ve all needed our guilty-pleasure songs to get through those dark days in lockdown, what are yours?
I’ve been listening to a lot of Selena Gomez lately. Some of her songs are just so great and catchy – really interesting and fun production too.
What are your hopes and plans for the not so distant future?
All of mine are probably the same as most musicians during Covid. I want to get back out on the road again, especially in Europe. I want to play these ‘Tell Me What To Do’ songs live. But realistically I think that I’m going to start working on new music. I have the advantage of having my own studio where I work every day, so I figure I might as well just spend all my time doing what I love anyway – writing songs.