SZA has teamed up with Doja Cat for a new version of ‘Kill Bill’. The remix arrives two years after the duo’s 2021 single ‘Kiss Me More’, which appeared on Doja Cat’s 2019 album Planet Her. Check it out below.
‘Kill Bill’ is taken from SZA’s December 2022 record SOS. Back in January, the singer shared a Christian Breslauer-directed video for the track.
Jorja Smith has returned with a new single called ‘Try Me’. Produced by Dame Dame, the track arrives with an accompanying video directed by Amber Grace Johnson. Check it out below.
‘Try Me’ marks Smith’s first solo music since 2021’s Be Right Back EP. Her debut album, Lost & Found, arrived in 2018.
The Lom Twigs have unveiled another single from their upcoming record Everything Harmony. This one’s called ‘Every Day Is the Worst Day of My Life’, and it follows previous entries ‘In My Head’, ‘Any Time of Day’, and ‘Corner of My Eye’. Hilla Eden shot the song’s accompanying video, which you can check out below.
Everything Harmony is set for release on May 5 via Captured Tracks.
Magdalena Bay have released mini mix vol. 3, which features seven new songs. Previous iterations of the series arrived in 2019 and 2020, before the release of their debut album, Mercurial World. Listen to the new EP below.
“Our mini mixes delve into eclectic sounds, sometimes pastiche,” the dup said in a statement. “We feel less pressure while making them than with a more serious release so they naturally have a fun spirit to them. The mini mix knows no bounds in terms of genre or stylings. The only rule is we try to keep the songs relatively short, but we don’t really enforce that all too much.”
Alison Goldfrapp has released ‘NeverStop’, the latest single from her debut solo album The Love Invention. Check it out below.
“‘NeverStop’ is about always feeling the wonder,” Goldfrapp shared in a statement. “Committing to connect with each other, nature and our surroundings while trying to navigate through the contradictions and complexities of life.”
The Love Invention is due out May 12. It includes the recently released song ‘So Hard So Hot’, as well as solo versions of her collaborative tracks with Claptone (‘Digging Deeper’) and Paul Woolford (‘Fever’).
“On a miserable afternoon during lockdown, James Ford zoomed Shungudzo and Danny Parker in Los Angeles,” Ware said in a statement. “They were just waking up, it was already dark in London. Frustrated yet completely focused, we set about writing in a new – and unnatural – way over the internet. Dreaming of human touch, escapes to Brazil, beach bodies, holiday romances, all of it! I absolutely adore this song and I’m so excited for you to hear it, to hear the beautiful production by James and horns by Kokoroko, it’s the song that I knew I wanted to make as soon as I finished ‘Remember Where You Are’.”
That! Feels Good!, the follow-up to 2020’s What’s Your Pleasure?, will be released April 28 via EMI.
Radiohead/The Smile guitarist Jonny Greenwood and Israeli rock musician Dudu Tassa have teamed up for a new album called Jarak Qaribak. It’s slated for release on June 9 via World Circuit. Today’s announcement comes with the release of the lead single ‘Ashufak Shay’, which features Lebanese vocalist Rashid Al Najjar. Check it out below, and scroll down for the LP’s cover artwork and tracklist.
Greenwood and Tassa co-produced Jarak Qaribak, which was mixed by longtime Radiohead collaborator Nigel Godrich. “When people listen to this music,” Tassa said in a press release, “I really love to imagine them thinking…what is this? It sounds 1970s, but there are drum machines, there are guitars but they’re singing in Arabic…what’s going on?”
“We didn’t want to make out that we’re making any political point, but I do understand that as soon as you do anything in that part of the world it becomes political, even if it’s just artistic,” Greenwood commented. “Actually, possibly especially if it’s artistic.”
Tassa added: “Israel is a small country between all those countries, so we’re very influenced by those cultures and by that music. And a lot of us in Israel—like my family—are descended from people who came here from elsewhere in the Middle East, so everything gets mixed up.”
Jarak Qaribak Cover Artwork:
Jarak Qaribak Tracklist:
1. Djit Nishrab [feat. Ahmed Doma]
2. Ashufak Shay [feat. Rashid Al Najjar]
3. Taq ou-Dub [feat. Nour Freteikh]
4. Leylet Hub [feat. Mohssine Salaheddine]
5. Ya Mughir al-Ghazala [feat. Karrar Alsaadi]
6. Ahibak [feat. Safae Essafi]
7. Ya ‘Anid Ya Yaba [feat. Lynn A.]
8. Lhla Yzid Ikthar
Archy Marshall has announced Space Heavy, his fourth studio album under the King Krule moniker. It’s set to arrive on June 9 via XL Recordings. Lead single ‘Seaforth’ is out today alongside an accompanying video directed by Jocelyn Anquetil. Check it out and find Space Heavy‘s details below.
The follow-up to 2020’s Man Alive! was written by Marshall from 2020 to 2022, between London and Liverpool. It was then developed with frequent collaborator and producer Dilip Harris, as well as longtime bandmates Ignacio Salvadores on saxophone, George Bass on drums, James Wilson on bass, and Jack Towell on guitar.
Space Heavy Cover Artwork:
Space Heavy Tracklist:
1. Flimsier
2. Pink Shell
3. Seaforth
4. That Is My Life, That Is Yours
5. Tortoise Of Independency
6. Empty Stomach Space Cadet
7. Flimsy
8. Hamburgerphobia
9. From The Swamp
10. Seagirl
11. Our Vacuum
12. Space Heavy
13. When Vanishing
14. If Only It Was Warmth
15. Wednesday Overcast
Songwriting, for people like Kristian Matsson, is the stuff of daydreams. And daydreams, of course, tend to spring from solitude, a state his music has naturally existed in since his earliest releases as the Tallest Man on Earth. But different kinds of isolation breed different daydreams, and movement is often necessary to spark the imagination. In a time of enforced solitude, Matsson struggled to come up with songs that were guided by his own instinct and didn’t indulge in darkness. He turned to his favorite tunes, covering them on YouTube livestreams during lockdown and releasing a covers compilation, Too Late for Edelweiss, late last year. It wasn’t until he was able to tour again towards the end of 2021 that that old inspiration struck again, that old bittersweetness. Except there was something new about it: he didn’t want to create alone. “I write a song and then I daydream about playing it for people somewhere,” he said in a recent interview. On Henry St., his seventh album, it sounds like that playful, collective energy manifested earlier in the process. Maybe some of the bitter parts of it had even worn off.
Matsson enlisted Sylvan Esso’s Nick Sanborn to produce the record, which features contributions from Ryan Gustafson on guitar, lap steel and ukulele, TJ Maiani on drums, Bon Iver’s CJ Camerieri and Rob Moose on trumpet, French horn and strings, Phil Cook on keys, and Adam Schatz on saxophone. The Tallest Man on Earth songs have always flitted between the familiar and the unknowable, but the supporting cast here – more prominent than in records like 2015’s Dark Bird Is Home, an album fixated on heartbreak – and Matsson’s newfound confidence make that space feel more tangible, less out of reach. When he sings “I dance with the wrecking ball/ On this lonesome side of times” on opener ‘Bless You’, Gustafson’s electric guitar flourishes and Maiani’s nimble drumming paint the picture a little outside his mind. The fact that ‘Slowly Rivers Turn’ concludes with a sweeping saxophone solo might seem surprising, but it makes sense in a song about relinquishing control. “Could I ever just lose myself?” Matsson asks on ‘New Religion’. Throughout Henry St., he gives it his best shot.
Foregoing his past work’s DIY approach, Matsson finds ways to relax some of the burdens of insecurity in his voice, its rough edges hewed into a kind of “weariness grown tender.” There’s optimism and hunger in it even when the mood is introspective and sullen, and it frees him from the tangle of metaphors that have inhibited his writing in the past. On ‘Bless You’, small observations invite grand claims: “Life is a little bird in the wind at night,” he sings, losing no wonder as it gets drunken and messy. “Someday I’ll remember how to disappear,” he declares on ‘Looking for Love’, which lands closer to Porter Robinson than anything Bob Dylan ever penned. But the longing for that someday doesn’t feel naïve or impossible, especially in the presence of other musicians and friends. “Can we just sing our song/ Until we sing it right/ You’ll be the rolling cloud/ I’ll be the endless sky,” he offers on ‘Major League’, the hurried rhythm of the banjo matching his anticipation. And then, as Sanborn’s cavernous electronics rise up, he gives himself over to something that once felt innately personal and lonely: “the reckless of your dream.”
Matsson’s voice has always had an effortlessness to it, but it’s never been used to make music quite so outwardly joyful. Yet there’s still conflict and sorrow at the very heart of Henry St.. None of the goodbyes delivered in the album’s second half are easy. Its centerpiece and title track is so earnest and devastating it reminds of me the piano ballad from gang of youths’ last record, and that’s saying something. The singer perceives what hangs over him as a totality of feeling – as if feeling wrong and small is all there is. Maybe it is in the moment, but Henry St. is most refreshing when it moves through it, when Matsson is capable of redirecting his vision, this familiar and deep-seated longing, into something even bigger. “I’m going to see the world through every heart I know,” he sings, which sounds like a new kind of promise.
Another Sky have released a new single, ‘Psychopath’. It comes paired with an acoustic B-side called ‘Watching Basinski’. Take a listen below.
“Most of our upcoming music is pretty influenced by music from the late 90s and early 00s, so releasing an A-Side and B-Side felt like a good way of paying homage to the era we grew up in,” lead singer Catrin Vincent explained in a press release.
Commenting on the new songs, Vincent added: “They reflect a really personal journey. I usually hate writing lyrics about myself, but during lockdown, it was the only thing I had to write about. I was so surprised to find multitudes of grief and sadness disguised as anger. ‘Psychopath’ captures the angriest I’ve ever felt. For years, I felt like that rage could never be voiced. ‘Watching Basinski’ captures the grief that lies underneath that anger. That’s what our new music is trying to convey; the human journey from fear and anger through to love and acceptance.”
Back in 2021, a year after the release of their debut LP I Slept on the Floor, Another Sky shared the Music for Winter Vol. 1 EP. Revisit our Artist Spotlight interview with Another Sky.