Ducks Ltd. have released a new single called ‘Grim Symmetry’. Recorded during the sessions for their latest album Harm’s Way, the track features backing vocals from Ratboys’ Julia Steiner and Moontype’s Margaret McCarthy. Listen to it below.
“This is actually one of our older songs,” singer/guitarist Tom McGreevy said of the song in a statement. “We wrote it early on in the Modern Fiction writing process, and the demo was a favorite among the people we shared those with, but we didn’t quite get it right when we tried to record it for that album. We always liked it though, so we kept it around and tried it again when we were tracking Harm’s Way. It didn’t end up quite fitting the vibe of the album, but we did manage to get it to where we wanted it to be, so it’s exciting to finally share it.”
Haley Heynderickx has put out a new single, ‘Gemini’, from her forthcoming album Seed of a Seed. It follows the previously unveiled title track and ‘Foxglove’. Listen to it below.
Seed of a Seed, the Portland-based singer-songwriter’s first new album in six years, is out digitally November 1, with a physical release to follow on December 6 via Mama Bird Recording Co..
London-based artist Clara Mann has returned with a new single, ‘Stadiums’. Check out a video for it below.
“‘Stadiums’ is about running towards someone who’s running towards something else,” Mann explained in a statement. “Loving someone whose passion, whose driving force, is creative (in this case music) is like having a third person in the relationship. Someone’s creative brilliance is a beautiful, powerful, mysterious thing in them, often the thing that is most magical and attractive about them, and the thing that, in the end, is always pulling them just out of reach.”
She added, “It’s ‘I want you, you want This’, and in writing it I was forced to ask myself ‘what does it mean if I’m a person who wants that, like you are – is it hard to love me, too?'”
Canadian DJ and producer Marie Davidson is back with a new single, ‘Contrarian’, made in collaboration with Pierre Guerineau and Soulwax via their Deewee imprint. Earlier this year, Davidson made her debut on the label with the single ‘Y.A.A.M. (Your Asses Are Mine)’. Listen to the new track below.
Lambrini Girls, the Brighton-based duo of vocalist/guitarist Phoebe Lunny and bassist Lilly Macieira, have announced their debut LP, Who Let the Dogs Out. It lands on January 10 via City Slang. The first single is called ‘Big Dick Energy’, and you can check it out below.
“Man comes in many forms, from world leaders to tech CEOs and humble softboys,” the band said of the new single in a press release. “But what unites them? Society has celebrated their supposed massive figurative and literal dicks, which they constantly flaunt. Why? Toxic masculinity.”
They continued, “Fuelling their sense of entitlement and insecurities leads to harmful behaviours. Which when left unchecked, means we have to deal with the fallout. The definition of ‘Big Dick Energy’ is a confidence that doesn’t need proving. Which begs the question, how big is that dick in reality? If you haven’t figured this out by now, it’s not that big.”
Lambrini Girls recorded Who Let the Dogs Out with Gilla Band’s Daniel Fox, with mixing by Seth Manchester. “You know how Fleetwood Mac almost dedicated Rumours to their cocaine dealer?” the band remarked. “I think we should dedicate this album to all the booze we bought at Tesco.”
Who Let the Dogs Out Cover Artwork:
Who Let the Dogs Out Tracklist:
1. Bad Apple
2. Company Culture
3. Big Dick Energy
4. No Homo
5. Nothing Tastes As Good As It Feels
6. You’re Not From Around Here
7. Scarcity Is Fake (Communist Propaganda)
8. Filthy Rich Nepo Baby
9. Special, Different
10. Love
11. Cuntology 101
section1 has announced a compilation of solo piano music, piano1, which features new original compositions from Hand Habits, Youth Lagoon, Mark William Lewis, Kelly Moran, Ichiko Aoba, and more. Today, we get to hear ML Buch, Laraaji, and Alice Boman’s contributions, which are titled ‘getting to know each other’, ‘Waltz Life’, and ’17’, respectively. Take a listen below, and scroll down for the full tracklist and album artwork.
“My piece is a dialogue between different piano elements with their different timbres,” ML Bucg explained in a statement. “It deals with both the euphoric and confusing awkwardness of getting to know someone new. The piece starts with a call n response between a very simple riff played on a grand piano and a melody answering both in pitch and completely out of tune. It’s been fun playing a very expensive newly tuned grand piano and also layering 5 upright pianos each in its own very bad shape. The riff transitions into an ostinato and another piano enters and tries to learn that ostinato – sines played with an EBow on the piano strings flow on top. Looking back I guess I treated the piano more like a guitar and tried to mess a little with that clean and precise sounding instrument.”
Laraaji shared: “The piano has been my major instrument of joyful expression since the age of 10. My dear mother honored my interest in piano and violin at a very early age by having a piano in the house and allowing me to take piano lessons. With piano I go into many various worlds of the imagination, dancing images, space images, mysterious images, unfamiliar tonal worlds.”
And Boman shared: “I have been playing the piano since I was a child and I remember moving from playing sheet music when I was younger, to playing more freely and exploratively — just for the joy of it. That was a big change in what the piano meant to me. Making this tune I was going back to that — just playing around, letting the fingers lead the way.”
piano1 Cover Artwork:
piano1 Tracklist:
1. Kelly Moran – Heart Thread *
2. Brad Oberhofer – I Hugged A Clown In My Dream
3. Alan Wyffels – Intermezzo
4. Laraaji – Waltz Life
5. Alice Boman – 17
6. ML Buch – Getting To Know Each Other
7. The Kimba Unit – Three Sundays
8. Mark William Lewis – Josh, this is Lin, I accidentally left my documents in your car yesterday
9. Matthew Tavares – COOL PIANO VIBE
10. Hand Habits – Not Worth The Lie
11. Youth Lagoon – The Harvest
12. Ichiko Aoba – 2024-06-13
* Kelly Moran’s track only appears on the vinyl version of piano1
Deb Never has shared a new single, ‘Not in Love’, marking her debut on Giant Music. Co-written and co-produced with Jennifer Decilveo (Miley Cyrus, Bat for Lashes, Angelique Kidjo), the track arrives with a music video directed by UNCANNY. Watch and listen below.
Lifted – the ambient ensemble led by the core duo of Max D and Matt Papic – have announced a new album. Trellis is slated for release on November 22 via Peak Oil. Listen to the new singles ‘Special’ and ‘The Latecomer’ below.
Half of Trellis emerged from a 2021 session at Tempo House with Dustin Wong, Mezey, and Jeremy Hyman. The record also features contributions from Jordan GCZ, Tim Kinsella, Motion Graphics, and Jacob Long (Earthen Sea).
Trellis Cover Artwork:
Trellis Tracklist:
1. All Right
2. Open Door
3. Specials
4. Warmer Cooler
5. Pasters
6. The Latecomer
7. Gris Pink
070 Shake has shared the details of her next album, Petrichor. The follow-up to 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me is set to drop on November 15. The new single ‘Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues’ was produced by Dave Hamelin (Beyoncé, King Princess), Tyler Johnson (Harry Styles, Miley Cyrus), and Patrick Krief (The Dears). It arrives with a music video directed by Bennett Watanabe and starring 070 Shake and Lily-Rose Depp. Check it out below.
A Chinese artist now living in London, Tong Wu explores the nuanced relationship between people and modern societal trends. Drawing on his dual heritage of Eastern and Western thought, he weaves together pop culture, social media, and postmodern philosophy into his art. His paintings are often based on this cultural blend, and they challenge viewers to dig a little deeper than surface interpretations.
From ancient Greek and Chinese mythology to cartoons and video game characters, his art is a striking fusion of imagery. A playful display hides a deeper message about life today. Wu uses familiar symbols to engage us in a broader discussion about identity in the postmodern world.
A key aspect of Wu’s work is his exploration of postmodern subjectivity, particularly how digital images and diverse cultural influences shape our perceptions of ourselves. In creating his layered worlds where the past meets the present, and reality blurs with fiction, he draws inspiration from Renaissance art, ancient myths, films, and literature. Throughout his paintings, he explores modern identity and the increasingly blurred line between what’s real and what’s simulated in today’s society.
Medusa’s Refutation 100x80cm Oil on canvas 2023
Medusa’s Refutation, a standout painting, shows Wu’s ability to combine seemingly unrelated symbols into a unified narrative. While a Maneki-neko (the waving fortune cat) watches nearby, a figure in a Gundam suit holds Medusa’s head. A photographer appears off to the side of the scene, suggesting it might be staged or digitally altered, despite the scene’s combination of cuteness and unease against a backdrop of flames or lava, hinting at looming danger. This idea is furthered by an angel in a VR headset, highlighting Wu’s fascination with the way technology shapes our perceptions of the world.
Many of Wu’s pieces are influenced by Jean Baudrillard, a postmodern theorist who writes about simulation and hyperreality. According to Baudrillard, simulations often replace the real in postmodern society, so the fake feels like it’s more real than the real. Using this idea, Wu creates scenes where simulation and reality don’t really exist.
Model One 40x50cm Oil on canvas 2023
In another work, Model One, Wu paints not a real cat but an anatomical toy model of one. The flowers in the painting are vivid but unnervingly shiny, hinting that they, too, might be fake—perhaps made of plastic. Yet, Wu’s detailed brushwork gives these synthetic objects a sense of authenticity, prompting viewers to think about how consumerism packages nature itself as a commodity. This piece touches on Wu’s larger critique of materialism and how consumer culture influences our perception of what’s real.
In an interview, Wu said his work draws viewers in by creating a tension between what’s familiar and something just a bit off. The tension sparks curiosity, which makes people think about everyday symbols from a different perspective. Wu makes surreal, dreamlike visuals by blending pop culture with classical mythology and digital-age elements.
It’s not just flowers, trees, and organic forms in Wu’s paintings, though they’re often exaggerated or used symbolically. These natural elements anchor the viewer in something recognizable, even as Wu twists them to make us think twice. They hold a deep cultural meaning across many traditions.
Wu plans to keep exploring virtual reality and mixed media as a way to explore postmodernism and pop culture in the future. Through his work, he continues to explore the intersection between reality and simulation in the digital age, moving beyond conventional art forms.