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Sun June Share New Single ‘Mixed Bag’

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Sun June have unveiled ‘Mixed Bag,’ a new single from their upcoming album Bad Dream Jaguar – out October 20 via Run for Cover. It follows previous cuts ‘Get Enough’, ‘Easy Violence’, and ‘John Prine’. Check it out below.

“‘Mixed Bag’ is about the comforts and frustrations of well-worn relationships with people and places,” the band said of the new track in a statement. “It focuses on the harsh realities of living in Texas, being in a long distance relationship, and becoming irritable with the people you love.” They added:

In some ways this song allowed us to reflect and become more aware of how dumb our arguments are. ‘You were searching for a reason to be mad,’ and ‘I know every single fight we’ve ever had,’ are accusations and boasts that made us laugh. Each chorus expands on the last, as we acknowledge the ways we’re repeating the past but try to keep score regardless.

We recorded Mixed Bag both in Texas and North Carolina — Dan Duszynski, Alli Rogers, Danny Reisch, Max Lorenson, and Chad Doriocourt all had a hand in trying to shape this into a dusty Petty-esque song. The song is about struggling to stay hopeful about the future, but we hope the bop outweighs the sadness.

For the video, we asked Vanessa Pla to help capture some of the rural outskirts of Austin on Super 8 film. We took inspiration from some old 1940s PSAs and Texas corporate films. She and her crew found themselves in the middle of cow pastures off of brand new highways, face to face with some friendly longhorns.

Armand Hammer Share El-P Produced New Single ‘The Gods Must Be Crazy’

Armand Hammer –  the duo of New York rappers billy woods and ELUCID – have shared a new single, ‘The Gods Must Be Crazy’, which was produced by El-P of Run the Jewels. It’s the latest single from their upcoming album, We Buy Diabetic Test Strips, which is out this Friday (September 29) and includes the previously released singles ‘Woke Up and Asked Siri How I’m Gonna Die’ and ‘Trauma Mic’. Check it out below.

“woods and ELUCID have something special going and I am happy we got together on this jam,” El-P said of the collaboration in a statement. “I think we made a banger.”

Bad Bunny Shares New Single ‘Un Preview’

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Bad Bunny has returned with a new single, ‘Un Preview’. The Puerto Rican rapper co-produced the track with Tainy and La Paciencia. Check out the Stillz-directed video for it below.

‘Un Preview’ follows ‘Where She Goes’, which Bad Bunny dropped back in May with a video featuring Frank Ocean, Lil Uzi Vert, Dominic Fike, and more. He also joined Travis Scott and the Weeknd on ‘K-POP’.

boygenius Announce New EP ‘the rest’

boygenius have announced a new EP called the rest, which arrives October 13 via Interscope. Following their debut album the record, which came out in March, the four-song EP features a song called ‘Black Hole’. Julien Baker, Phoebe Bridgers, and Lucy Dacus gave the track its live debut in Boston on Monday night. The titles of the three remaining songs have yet to be revealed. The trio produced the EP with Tony Berg, Jake Finch, Ethan Gruska, Calvin Lauber, Collin Pastore, and Marshall Vore. Check out its cover art (by photographer Matt Grub) below.

Last week, boygenius shared an animated video for the record track ‘Cool About It’.

 

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the rest EP Cover Artwork:

Gibson Les Paul Vs. SG: A Tale of Two Guitars

Hello, fellow aficionados of the six-string! Today, we shall embark on an exciting journey to compare two remarkable Gibson guitars. Who are these illustrious contenders, you ask? None other than the iconic Gibson Les Paul and the equally renowned Gibson SG. These two instruments have long served as the preferred companions for numerous rock ‘n’ roll legends, blues virtuosos, and jazz maestros.

So, equip your pick, fasten your guitar strap, and let us enthusiastically delve into this thrilling musical face-off!

Round 1: The Weighty Issue

Ever tried a Les Paul? If you have, you’ll know that these babies are the sumo wrestlers of the guitar world. With their solid mahogany bodies and maple tops, they pack a hefty punch. And by punch, we mean weight, lots of it. These are not guitars for the faint-hearted or weak-shouldered.

On the other hand, the Gibson SG is more like a nimble ninja. It’s significantly lighter, thanks to its slimmer all-mahogany body. You can dance around the stage with an SG all night long without needing a chiropractor the next day.

Point to SG for comfort. But remember, with great weight comes great tone!

Round 2: Sound – The Battle of Tones

When it comes to sound, the Les Paul boasts a robust construction that delivers a rich, velvety tone with remarkable sustain. Think of it as a hearty stew on a chilly winter’s evening, enveloping your ears in warmth from the inside out. This quality makes it an ideal companion for blues artists and hard rock enthusiasts.

Now, shifting gears to the SG, we encounter a brighter, more assertive sonic character. Picture a spicy taco with an extra kick of hot sauce. Its sound slices through any musical mix with the precision of a samurai sword through soft butter. This sharp-edged tonality has endeared it to the hearts of rock and metal performers.

So, who emerges victorious in the tonal skirmish? The answer is simple: they both do. The outcome depends solely on the flavour of sound that captivates your auditory senses.

Round 3: Playability – The Fretboard Experience

Comparing the Les Paul and SG in terms of playability is akin to navigating distinct terrains. The Les Paul’s neck resembles a rugged mountain trail—robust, substantial, and potentially challenging for those with smaller hands. Yet, once you acclimate, it offers a rewarding journey.

Conversely, the SG features a sleeker, swifter neck, akin to a Formula 1 racetrack. With effortless access to all 22 frets, it caters to those who relish playing in the upper reaches of the neck. Shredders and high-note aficionados, take note!

Round 4: Aesthetics – The Visual Showcase

Both these guitars are undeniably captivating, yet they exude distinct styles. The Les Paul personifies the classic beauty queen, boasting a curvaceous form and sunburst finish—a true Marilyn Monroe of the guitar world.

On the flip side, the SG embodies an edgier, alternative persona. With its devilish double cutaway horns and fiery cherry red finish, it emanates an unmistakable “rock ‘n’ roll” attitude.

So, when it comes to aesthetics, the judgement call is yours to make!

Conclusion: The Ultimate Guitar Showdown

Here’s the bottom line, dear readers. The Gibson Les Paul and Gibson SG both stand as exceptional instruments, firmly securing their spots among the legends of the guitar realm. If you find yourself deliberating between the two, ponder this:

The Les Paul is akin to a sumo wrestler serving up a hearty mountain stew. In contrast, the SG embodies the nimbleness of a ninja offering spicy tacos on a racetrack. Which adventure beckons to you?

Ultimately, the choice boils down to personal preference. Put your fingers and ears to the test, explore both, and let your musical instincts guide you.

Now, if you’ll pardon me, this talk of sumo wrestlers, ninjas, stews, and tacos has ignited my appetite (and a craving to play some guitar!). Until our next encounter, may the spirit of rock guide your way.

Empress Of and Rina Sawayama Team Up for New Single ‘Kiss Me’

Empress Of has enlisted Rina Sawayama for a new single, ‘Kiss Me’. Marking Empress Of’s first new music since last year’s Save Me EP, it’s the first taste of a forthcoming studio album. The track arrives with an accompanying video directed by India Harris and shot in the English countryside. Watch and listen below.

Ty Segall Releases New Song ‘Eggman’

Ty Segall  has released a new single called ‘Eggman’. Following last month’s ‘Void’, the track was written with his wife and the C.I.A. bandmate Denée. Check it out via the accompanying video below.

Back in January, the C.I.A. dropped their latest album, Surgery Channel. Ty Segall released “Hello, Hi” last year.

Album Review: yeule, ‘softscars’

It’s one thing to expose yourself, and another to be seen. One thing to be immortalized and another to be remembered. As much as yeule’s music tears into the vast space between the human and the artificial, it also magnifies those imperceptibly different shades of experience, the kinds that can make or break a body, making them feel infinite. “Feels like shit/ When you read me/ Like you all know,” yeule sang on ‘Eyes’, a track from their phenomenal 2022 album Glitch Princess that twisted its gentleness into something ominous and self-erasing. On some of the most memorable moments of their thrilling new LP softscars, though, they preserve not only its beauty, but the warmth and intimacy of an honest gaze that’s capable of piercing through the deepest depression: “Only eyes like yours can see ghosts/ Ghosts like me”; “I’m staring at you from the cliff/ I’m looking down, I feel the bliss/ I wanna jump, but I see your eyes.” Starting from their 2019 debut Serotonin II, yeule’s output used to scan like a portal to a fractured, digitized interior world, but it’s sounding more and more like a vehicle for looking through and holding out for each other.

The Singaporean singer-songwriter, also known as Nat Ćmiel, could have sulked in the distorted blur of growing up Gen Z instead of affording their project the grueling process of becoming. Yet the person behind it feels more and more present. While Glitch Princess flicked through ambient and (occasionally) strangely euphoric pop, expressing vulnerability while still embracing themselves as a cyborg identity, the new record digs into some of those old scars and makes them feel not just traceable, but palpable. Ćmiel achieves this partly by channeling some of their earliest musical inspirations, from Smashing Pumpkins to Avril Lavigne. “I was listening to a lot of music that made me feel like I was a teenager again because I was so afraid of growing up,” they said in an interview. “I was losing people from my childhood. I wanted to write music that sounded like everything was simple.” That simpicity is evident on ‘dazies’, exemplifies the record’s soft/heavy dynamic and makes wears those formative influences on its sleeve. But yeule’s AutoTuned voice introduces a layer of emotional complexity, sounding like they’re drifting through past trauma with a kind of shaky disaffection.

On opener ‘x w x’, yeule lets out a tortured, full-bodied scream, providing the sort of catharsis that allows them to glide through gentler, more electronic textures throughout the rest of the album. But genuine as it may be, it’s a kind of sweetness that often sounds bristly and brightly overexposed. “You stabbed me right in the chest/ And made me bleed, and made me wet/ With my own blood, drained with love,” yeule sings on the title track. But while the pain cuts deep, as in any of yeule’s albums, this time the love cuts deeper, especially as they are the ones directing it outward. On Glitch Princess standout ‘Bites on My Neck’, walking through the fire served a symbolic act of defiance in the personal process of healing, but this album’s more muted ‘inferno’, which meditates on the rusty memory of someone who’s faded away, uses similarly potent metaphors to evoke an eternal connection: “I would still bleed out/ Just for you/ I would still love you/ 10,000 years from now.”

On Glitch Princess, yeule’s interest in post-humanism offered a conceptual framework through which to validate a deep resentment for their own body. “How can I burn out of my own real body?” they asked directly on ‘Eyes’, and that same yearning echoes through softscars‘ ‘bloodbunny’: “Don’t you feel so pure/ When you don’t have a body anymore?” But there is a delicateness to the track that’s grounded in pure love, driven not so much by the need to grapple with personal demons but to not be alone in them. yeule uses the phrase “love you” on multiple tracks here; sometimes it feels overwhelming, oblivious, damaged, or fragmented by the technologies that mediate it. But even if the you remains ambivalent, their delivery renders it as real and present as the – it’s a bond that reaches through, not a means of escaping, the physical realm. yeule just wants us to see it.

Avalon Emerson Remixes Fever Ray’s ‘Carbon Dioxide’

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Fever Ray has shared Avalon Emerson’s remix of ‘Carbon Dioxide’, a single from their latest album Radical Romantics, released earlier this year on Mute. It follows previous reworkings of Radical Romantics tracks by Nifra, DJ HARAM, Equiknoxx, God Colony, Ivory, Logic1000, and LSDXOXO. Check it out below, along with Fever Ray’s upcoming tour dates.

“I’m very happy for this one!” Karin Dreijer commented of the remix in a statement. “It has fruitiness, a bit of extra everything, exactly what the song wanted. We started sending stuff back and forth early on and some of my first vocal recordings ended up in there as well. Hope you’ll enjoy it!”

Fever Ray 2023-204 Tour Dates: 

Sun Nov 5 – Austin, TX – Emo’s *
Tue Nov 7 – Los Angeles, CA – The Wiltern *
Wed Nov 8 – Los Angeles, CA – The Wiltern *
Fri Nov 10 – Denver, CO – Fillmore Auditorium *
Sun Nov 12 – Portland, OR – Roseland Theater *
Tue Nov 14 – Seattle, WA – Showbox SoDo *
Sat Nov 18 – Mexico City, MX – Corona Capital
Fri Feb 23 – Aarhus, DK – Train
Sat Feb 24 – Copenhagen, DK – Vega
Mon Feb 26 – Hamburg, DE – Kampnagel
Tue Feb 27 – Amsterdam, NL – Gashouder
Thu Feb 29 – Bristol, UK – Colton
Fri Mar 1 – Manchester, UK – Albert Hall
Sat Mar 2 – London, UK – Hammersmith Apollo
Mon Mar 4 – Paris, FR – L’Olympia
Wed Mar 6 – Berlin, DE – Theater Des Westens

* with CHRISTEENE

Hinako Omori Unveils New Single ’ember’

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Hinako Omori has released a new single, ’ember’, lifted from her upcoming album stillness, softness…. It follows previous offerings  ‘foundation’, ‘in full bloom’, and ‘cyanotype memories’. Check it out below.

“The idea behind ’ember’ is noticing that our attachment to the past can cloud our perception of situations, and the importance of breaking through these barriers we place on ourselves to build a healthier, compassionate relationship with ourselves and others,” Omori explained in a press release.

stillness, softness…, the follow-up to 2022’s a journey…, is set to arrive on October 27 through Houndstooth.