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The Lemon Twigs Share Video for New Song ‘A Dream Is All I Know’

The Lemon Twigs have shared ‘A Dream Is All I Know’, the latest single from their forthcoming LP A Dream Is All We Know. It follows previous cuts ‘My Golden Years’ and ‘They Don’t Know How to Fall in Place’. Check out its music video below, and scroll down for the band’s upcoming tour dates.

“This song is about impermanence and the dreamlike nature of our day to day lives,” the duo’s Brian D’Addario explained in a statement. “It was written when I was feeling a strong sense of unreality in my kitchen. Unfortunately, ‘Unreality In My Kitchen’ didn’t have much of a ring to it so we had to go with ‘A Dream Is All I Know’ as the title.”

A Dream Is All We Know comes out May 3 on Captured Tracks.

The Lemon Twigs 2024 Tour Dates:

Apr 25 – TV Eye – Queens, NY
May 2 – TV Eye – Queens, NY
May 4 – White Eagle Hall – Jersey City, NJ
May 5 – The Southern Cafe and Music Hall – Charlottesville, VA
May 7 – King – Raleigh, NC
May 9 – The Pour House – Charleston, SC
May 10 – Tuffys Music Box – Sanford, FL
May 11 – Heartwood Soundstage – Gainesville, FL
May 12 – Crowbar – Tampa, FL
May 14 – 40 Watt – Athens, GA
May 15 – Saturn – Birmingham, AL
May 17 – The Burf – Lexington, KY
May 18 – Rumba Cafe – Columbus, OH
May 25 – CCVF – Guimarães, Portugal
May 26 – LAV – Lisbon, Portugal
May 28 – Sala Copérnico – Madrid, Spain (SOLD OUT)
May 29 – Kafe Antzokia – Bilbao, Spain
May 30 – Sala Oasis – Zaragoza, Spain
Jun 1 – Primavera Sound Festival – Barcelona, Spain
Aug 29 – September 1 – End of the Road Festival – Salisbury, UK

From Indian Lakes Announce New Album ‘Head Void’, Releases New Song

From Indian Lakes, the project masterminded by Joe Vann, has announced a new album called Head Void. The follow-up to 2019’s Dimly Lit is set to arrive on May 15. It was recorded at Vann’s home studio in California, and was mastered by Will Yip. Check out the lead single ‘The Flow’ below.

“It is about being stuck in a flow that’s unhealthy, one you need the help of your loved ones to pull you out of,” Vann said of ‘The Flow’ in a press release. He added: “This session began a few years back in NYC as a jam based around the synth riff that is now blended with the guitars in the final mix. At the time I was really into it, but couldn’t really shape and Vox melodies. Once I opened it again and started playing guitar over it, I started working out the Vox and it instantly became one of my favorite songs FIL has ever done. I knew it would have to be the first thing people hear on the new record.”

Head Void Cover Artwork:

Drowse and Lula Asplund Cover Low’s ‘Hey Chicago’

Drowse and Lula Asplund have shared their rendition of Low’s ‘Hey Chicago’, which appears on the Flenser‘s upcoming tribute album to the band, Your Voice Is Not Enough. Check it out below.

‘Hey Chicago’ is taken from Low’s 1997 EP Songs for a Dead Pilot. Drowse’s Kyle Bates shared the following statement about the cover:

Low’s music has had a profound effect on me during many stages of my life. Their final two records still sound decades ahead of our time and have been direct influences on my recent work as Drowse. I first heard Low through their mini-album, Songs for a Dead Pilot, which I picked up as a teenager due to its striking cover art. The music within reflects that desolate cover image, creating a cold atmosphere that I have been chasing ever since. ‘Hey Chicago’ is this short piece of beauty that comes at the end of the album as a balm for the preceding thirty three minutes of sparse, sustained darkness. I thought it fitting to cover the song with Lula Asplund, a Chicago-based sound artist who I play in a duo with. Lula and I saw Low play in Chicago in early 2022, their final year as a band, and it was a performance I will never forget; rest in peace Mimi Parker, you live on in our memories.

Lula Asplund added, “I was excited when Kyle asked me to contribute to this cover because I grew up listening to Low. One of the best shows I’ve ever seen was Low live in Chicago. I was very sad and shocked to hear of Mimi Parker’s passing—weird to realize that that concert in Chicago was the only time I’d ever hear those gorgeous voices together in a room.”

Today, Drowse has also released Overcasts, a collection of four short stories and an essay Bates wrote between 2019 and 2023. The stories ‘Cloud Light Over Obsidian’ and ‘Second Self’ were originally available only with limited editions of Drowse’s Wane into It and Light Mirror.

Your Voice Is Not Enough is due out later this year. So far, it’s been previewed by Planning For Burial’s take on ‘Murderer’ Allison Lorenzen’s cover of ‘Words’.

Pitchfork Music Festival Announces 2024 Lineup

Pitchfork Music Festival has announced its 2024 lineup. Returning to Chicago’s Union Park on July 19-21, the event will be headlined by Black Pumas, Jai Paul, and 100 gecs on Friday; Jamie xx, Carly Rae Jepsen, and Jessie Ware on Saturday; and Alanis Morissette, Brittany Howard, and MUNA on Sunday. The lineup also features Jeff Rosenstock, Yaeji, Sudan Archives, Amen Dunes, billy woods & Kenny Segal, Tkay Maidza, Rosali, Wednesday, Bratmobile, Water From Your Eyes, Sweeping Promises, feeble little horse, Hotline TNT, Kara Jackson, L’Rain, Jessica Pratt, Mannequin Pussy, Joanna Sternberg, and more.

Tickets for the festival are on sale now, with prices starting at $219 for three-day passes and $109 for single-day passes. New to this year’s festival are VIP tickets offering “premium viewing areas,” unlimited access to backstage lounges, complimentary beverages, daily catered meals, mobile charging stations, tarot readings, massages, and more. The Pitchfork VIP upgrade is available for $699 for a three-day pass and $379 for a single-day pass.

In January, Condé Nast, Pitchfork’s owner, announced its decision to merge the music publication into GQ, resulting in a number of staff layoffs.

Friday July 19:
Black Pumas
Jai Paul
100 gecs
Jeff Rosenstock
Yaeji
Sudan Archives
Amen Dunes
billy woods & Kenny Segal
Tkay Maidza
Doss
ML Buch
Rosali
Angry Blackmen
Black Duck

Saturday July 20:
Jamie xx
Carly Rae Jepsen
Jessie Ware
De La Soul
UNWOUND
Bratmobile
Wednesday
Water From Your Eyes
Sweeping Promises
feeble little horse
Hotline TNT
Kara Jackson
L’Rain
Lifeguard

Sunday July 21:
Alanis Morissette
Brittany Howard
MUNA
Grandmaster Flash
Les Savy Fav
Crumb
Jessica Pratt
Mannequin Pussy
Hailu Mergia
Model/Actriz
Nala Sinephro
Maxo
Joanna Sternberg
Akenya

Hana Vu Shares Video for New Single ‘Hammer’

Hana Vu has unveiled a new single, ‘Hammer’, alongside an accompanying video. It follows last month’s ‘Care’, which led the announcement of the Los Angeles artist’s sophomore LP, Romanticism. Check out the Henry Kaplan-directed clip below.

“I do plead with the world, or the universe, in writing,” Vu shared in a statement. “My writing of songs is where I feel inclined to ask questions and look for answers within myself. ‘Hammer’ is one of the first songs I wrote for this record. It’s one of those songs you write to yourself amidst existential crisis. Maybe that’s what all songs are.”

Romanticism, the follow-up to 2021’s Public Storage, is due May 3 via Ghostly. Read our Artist Spotlight interview with Hana Vu.

Cola Share New Single ‘Bitter Melon’

Cola – the project of former Ought members Tim Darcy and Ben Stidworthy and US Girls drummer Evan Cartwright – have returned with a new single, ‘Bitter Melon’. It follows last year’s ‘Keys Down If You Stay’. Check it out below, along with the band’s upcoming tour dates.

“This one started with a demo brought in by Ben,” Darcy explained in a statement. “The vocals and lyrics came naturally from the backlit, brooding atmosphere of the music. I wrote what was almost a piece of fiction (fleshed out in the accompanying zine we’ve released) where a person is up in the middle of the night studying ‘the gloss’–additional comments written in the margins of a book. In my mind the text was like the rind of a fruit surrounding something, maybe even written at an earlier point by the reader themselves. The motorik drums and chiming guitars are guided by the bass on this song, something not unusual for us but the bass really provides a compelling longform melody on this song. The track has the energy of a full moon or some kind of fertile dark / gaia-facing productive spirit to me.”

Cola’s debut LP, Deep in View, came out in 2022.

Cola 2024 Tour Dates:

May 9 – Rotterdam, NL – V11
May 10 – Eindhoven, NL – Alstadt
May 11 – Luxembourg – Out of The Crowd Festival
May 14 – Birkenhead, UK – Future Yard
May 15 – Cardiff, UK – Clwb Ifor Bach
May 17 – London, UK – The George Tavern
May 17 – London, UK – The George Tavern

Album Review: Kacey Musgraves, ‘Deeper Well’

Grammys week 2024 was an interesting time for Kacey Musgraves to start teasing her new album. The same night that Taylor Swift won her fourth Album of the Year and announced her next record, Musgraves shared a promotional spot featuring the opening line from Deeper Well, “My Saturn has returned.” Beyoncé wore a cowboy hat fans took as a clue for Renaissance Act II, which we now know is a country album named Cowboy Carter. Lana Del Rey announced a country album called Lasso, produced by Jack Antonoff, who said that the genre is “about to blow.” Musgraves herself is part of the proof, as her 2023 duet with Zach Bryan, ‘I Remember Everything’ – her first No. 1 hit – is still in the top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100. Recognizing the country craze as a moment, though, doesn’t come naturally for an artist who grew up steeped in the culture. “Country feels like home to me,” she said in a recent interview. “It may come and go trend-wise in other genres, but there’s always something really timeless to me about it, whether it’s popular in pop music or not.”

Musgraves has been steering away from the genre’s traditions for a long time, but Deeper Well doesn’t continue down the path of her pop-leaning, genre-blending last two albums, 2018’s resplendent Golden Hour and its shakier 2021 follow-up star-crossed. Yet it’s also not a step back – more of a hushed singer-songwriter effort than a back-to-basics country record; a conversation with herself rather than the rest of the industry. Reuniting with longtime collaborators Daniel Tashian and Ian Fitchuk, Musgraves isn’t interested in riding a wave or recalibrating her sound so much as finding her footing, safe in the knowledge that her comfort zone is filled with light. On the title track, she sings about leaving behind people and habits that “are real good at wastin’ my time,” and as much as she focuses on the things that matter, she’s also not rushing to get her points across. Though the album lacks big hooks and the songs sometimes blur into each, particularly in its meeker second half, the company she creates across its 42-minute runtime is pleasant, mellow, and affectingly contemplative. If you’re drawn to one of the singles, you’ll probably have a good time listening to the whole record, which wasn’t necessarily the case with star-crossed.

Golden Hour and star-crossed were marked by a real sense of division, a beautiful and quietly ecstatic expression of love giving way to a theatrical and uncomfortably honest divorce album. Deeper Well is less effortful than its predecessor and never quite as euphoric as Golden Hour. Whether she sings about a breakup or new love – mostly the latter – Musgraves sounds grounded, using her personal life as the backdrop for greater existential rumination. “Are you just watching and waiting for spring/ Or do you have some kind of magic to bring?” she wonders after seeing the titular bird in ‘Cardinal’, though the kind of magic she dreams of on ‘Too Good to Be True’ is blissfully domestic: some breakfast, some love. Musgraves isn’t asking for a lot, and even when she sings “I need all your love/ Not just one piece,” confident she’d give all of it herself, she’s not making it sound like a grand exchange. It’s understated and natural, an easy certainty. Towards the end, she offers her definition of heaven – feeling “so safe and warm” – like it’s right there in front of her, something no one can disturb.

Musgraves’ songwriting often gives weight to simple and uncomplicated truths, and without the bombast and narrative framing of star-crossed, it’s an easier sell. On ‘Dinner With Friends’, the titular event is just one of the things the singer is casually grateful for, but the way she ultimately describes them – “Things I would miss/ From the other side” – leaves a sudden air of wistfulness. ‘The Architect’ is a bit hokier – “something as small as an apple” leading her to ponder the universe’s design – while ‘Anime Eyes’ cleverly turns the song’s lovestruck silliness into a playful journey. Deeper Well is an album about acceptance as a form of surrender, whether you’re surrendering to love, heartbreak, or the way the wind blows; it only makes sense that it’s more musically restrained instead of swinging for the fences. But when she sees a tree bending in the wind on ‘Sway’, Musgraves can’t help but wish she could go about life with the same sense of composure and elegance. It’s a metaphor she embodies on one of the album’s richest arrangements, where gentle fingerpicking and light percussion give way to gorgeous vocal harmonies. “Most of the time/ All the thoughts in my mind keep me running/ Show me a place where I can just think of nothing,” she sings. On Deeper Well, that place, more fruitful than barren, sounds a lot like home.

yeule Shares Cover of Broken Social Scene’s ‘Anthems for a Seventeen Year-Old Girl’ for ‘I Saw the TV Glow’ Soundtrack

A24 Music has detailed the soundtrack for Jane Schoenbrun’s upcoming horror film I Saw the TV Glow. The album is out May 10 and includes new original music by Sloppy Jane (featuring Phoebe Bridgers), Caroline Polachek, Snail Mail, King Woman, yeule, Florist, Bartees Strange, Drab Majesty, Frances Quinlan, Jay Som, L’Rain, Maria BC, Proper, Sadurn, and the Weather Station. yeule’s contribution, a cover of Broken Social Scene’s ‘Anthems for a Seventeen Year-Old Girl’ that was featured in the film’s trailer, is out today. Check it out and see the full tracklist below.

Director Jane Schoenbrun once again enlisted Alex G to provide the score for I Saw the TV Glow, the follow-up to 2021’s We’re All Going To The World’s Fair. After premiering at the Sundance Film Festival in January, the film hits theaters on May 3.

I Saw the TV Glow Cover Artwork:

I Saw the TV Glow Tracklist:

yeule – Anthems for a Seventeen Year-Old Girl
Frances Quinlan – Another Season
Caroline Polachek – Starburned and Unkissed
Florist – Riding Around in the Dark
Bartees Strange – Big Glow
Maria BC – Taper
King Woman – Psychic Wound
Jay Som – If I Could
L’Rain – Green
The Weather Station – Moonlight
Drab Majesty – Photograph
Proper – The 90s
Sadurn – How Can I Get Out?
King Woman – Bury
Sloppy Jane (ft. Phoebe Bridgers) – Claw Machine

Mitski Shares Cover of Pete Seeger’s ‘Coyote, My Little Brother’

Mitski has shared her installment of the Spotify Singles series. Along with a new rendition of ‘Buffalo Replaced’ from last year’s The Land Is Inhospitable And So Are We, it includes a cover of Pete Seeger’s ‘Coyote, My Little Brother’, which she previously performed at an intimate NYC show in September. Mitski recorded her version of the song, originally written by Peter Lafarge, with longtime collaborator Patrick Hyland on acoustic guitars and Jeni Magaña on double bass. Take a listen below.

SXSW Addresses Protest Over U.S. Army Sponsorship

Over the past week, more than 60 artists have pulled out of the 2024 edition of SXSW in protest of the festival’s ties to defense contractors and in support of the Palestinian people. The festival has now addressed protest on social media after Texas governor Greg Abbott tweeted about the situation.

“Bands pull out of SXSW over U.S. Army sponsorship,” Abbott wrote, linking to a news article about the protest. “Bye. Don’t come back. Austin remains the HQ for the Army Futures Command. San Antonio is Military City USA. We are proud of the U.S. military in Texas. If you don’t like it, don’t come here.”

The festival’s representatives wrote back in response: “SXSW does not agree with Governor Abbott. We are an organization that welcomes diverse viewpoints. Music is the soul of SXSW, and it has long been our legacy. We fully respect the decision these artists made to exercise their right to free speech.”

Elaborating on its ties to the U.S. Army and Collins Aerospace, SXSW continued:

Across the globe, we are witnessing unspeakable tragedies, the rise of repressive regimes, and the increasing spread of violent conflict. It’s more crucial than ever that we come together to solve these greater humanitarian issues.

The defense industry has historically been a proving ground for many of the systems we rely on today. These institutions are often leaders in emerging technologies, and we believe it’s better to understand how their approach will impact our lives.

The Army’s sponsorship is part of our commitment to bring forward ideas that shape our world. In regard to Collins Aerospace, they participated this year as a sponsor of two SXSW Pitch categories, giving entrepreneurs visibility and funding for potentially game-changing work.

We have and will continue to support human rights for all. The situation in the Middle East is tragic, and it illuminates the heightened importance of standing together against injustice.

Artists who have dropped off SXSW include Squirrel Flower, Shalom, Scowl, Kneecap, SPRINTS, Tomato Flower, Good Looks, Mamalarky, Lambrini Girls, Lip Critic, Horse Jumper of Love, Eliza McLamb, Strange Joy, Bloomsday, They Are Gutting a Body of Water, This is Lorelei, fantasy of a broken heart, Trauma Ray, Omni, The Armed, Allegra Krieger, Yaya Bey, cumgirl8, and more.