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The Van Pelt Announce New Album ‘Artisans & Merchants’, Share Video for New Song

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The Van Pelt have announced a new album called Artisans & Merchants. It marks the New York City band’s first new LP in 26 years, and it arrives March 17 via Spartan Records/La Castanya/Gringo. Lead single ‘Punk House’ is out today alongside an accompanying video, which you can check out below.

“When a bunch of old VHS tapes were unearthed, the band had them digitized and they turned out to be from US tours of the mid-90s,” frontman Chris Leo said in a statement. “The footage is mainly of daily banalities: random purchases at rest stops, packing and unpacking the van, highway views that could be on the outskirts of Any Town USA. Yet there is a nostalgia to it that’s compelling. The song mirrors the mood in both sound and text. Lines like ‘The floor is filled with resin on the place where you’re to sleep/ if you have enough to drink you can pretend that it’s a sheet bring any musician back to the rougher side of days on the road – yet again, the subtext here is that the spirit of it all is to be longed for.”

Artisans & Merchants Cover Artwork:

Artisans & Merchants Tracklist:

1. We Gotta Leave
2. Image of Health
3. Artisans & Merchants
4. Punk House
5. Old Souls from Different Epochs
6. Grid
7. Cold Coconuts
8. Did We Hear The Same Song
9. Love Is Brutal

Kali Uchis Shares Video for New Song ‘I Wish You Roses’

Kali Uchis has shared her first single of 2023. Produced by Dylan Wiggins and Josh Crocker, ‘I Wish You Roses’ arrives with a video directed by Cho Gi-Seok. Check it out below.

“This song is about being able to release people with love,” Uchis explained in a statement. “It could be a friend, a lover, or someone else, but the point is to celebrate releasing people from your life without being resentful or bitter.”

‘I Wish You Roses’ follows Uchis’ recently released songs ‘La Única’ and ‘No Hay Ley’. Her most recent album was 2020’s Sin Miedo (del Amor y Otros Demonios) ∞.

Alison Goldfrapp and Claptone Team Up for New Song ‘Digging Deeper’

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Alison Goldfrapp and German producer Claptone have teamed up for the new single ‘Digging Deeper’. Listen to it below.

“In ‘Digging Deeper,” I’m effortlessly gliding through air, on a gloriously hot breezy night arriving at a blissed-out dancefloor on the island of my dreams,” Goldfrapp remarked in a press release. Claptone added: “When Alison Goldfrapp asked me to collaborate, it was a no brainer for me. I’ve always been enchanted by the magic world she created and her stunning voice, so I was really happy that we could merge our trickery to create ‘Digging Deeper’.”

Last year, Alison Goldfrapp joined Röyksopp on the track ‘Impossible’.

Artist Spotlight: Billy Nomates

Billy Nomates is the project of Bristol-based singer-songwriter Tor Maries. Her father was a music teacher who played in rock bands all his life, and though she learned to play the fiddle growing up, also lying around the house were guitar, drums, and an always-slightly-detuned piano. After being involved in various bands throughout her early 20s, Maries was ready to give up a career in music until a Sleaford Mods concert she attended by herself in 2019 reignited her passion for songwriting; she took her stage name from an insult someone threw at her during the gig. Billy Nomates’ eponymous debut album, recorded with Portishead’s Geoff Barrow and released in 2020 through his label Invada, felt relentlessly forceful and pertinent upon release, and Maries understandably had to shift her focus for its follow-up. Co-produced by James Trevascus, CACTI still has songs that bristle with fierce intensity, but Maries allows herself to take a softer and more nuanced approach to emotional honesty, not least because the biggest enemy she’s facing down is apathy itself. “When I felt everything so sincerely/ Why’ve I gotta tear it into little pieces?” she wonders on ‘saboteur forcefield’, yet still manages to find peace – and herself – in all the brokenness.

We caught up with Billy Nomates for this edition of our Artist Spotlight interview series to talk about the ideas behind CACTI, being an introverted animal, new beginnings, and more.


CACTI has been out for a few days now. How are you finding the response so far?

I’m trying not to read anything, is the truth. I’m sort of glancing at things when I need to, but because this is my second album, my third record, I’m learning every time something comes out that what anyone thinks of it changes nothing. It’s done. I feel about it how I felt about it. I’m really trying to stick to my guns on that and not be too swayed by how many stars out of 20 someone gives it. It’s all totally irrelevant, it’s just a piece of work. That feels like a growth thing, because two years ago, I wasn’t that way at all. I was really like, “What are people saying? Have I done something good, do people like it?” And it’s so bad for you creatively to start thinking that way, it’s really destructive. So, one ear to the ground, but mainly sort of looking the other way.

On a personal level, do you feel as close to the songs as you did while making them?

I think I’ll always feel close to these songs because it feels like a real internal manifestation, CACTI. It’s very much inwards-looking, and it’s only a year ago, so it feels fairly fresh. To go out with it this year feels like the right thing to do. If you asked me at the end of the summer, I’d probably say, “Yeah, I’m done with it, that’s all exhausted and I feel very different.” But it feels about right at the minute. And that’s a privilege, because you can very easily feel very out of sync with – I know that with COVID and my first album, I couldn’t tour it for the two years that it was out, and then I toured bits of it and I was so out of sync with it. So to be in some sort of alignment with it is really nice.

On the surface, the title of the album might seem to represent the spikiness that a lot of people associate with your music, but it really cuts deeper than that – not only is there less of that sonically on the new record, but CACTI becomes more a symbol of survival. Does it hold different meanings for you?

It’s nice that you derive that, because that’s very much how it feels. It’s why there’s no desert or plants everywhere, the imagery isn’t really around that, because it is more the symbolic nature of what that feels like and looks like, and it’s CACTI as an idea. Sonically, it was interesting to experiment and just play with things. That first album that I made was made at home in my sister’s kitchen, it was made with primitive tools and I hadn’t made an album before. With CACTI, I had the opportunity to use the studio and to use things in it and that was a new experience. It felt like the right time to experiment with what I could do with that and still maintain a Billy Nomates kind of sound and feel. It’s interesting because I feel like it could have gone either way; it could have gone way more spiky, and that could happen still, but it just didn’t feel that way, the last few years. I wasn’t left feeling like I wanted to make a particularly angry album. It felt very different to that, and I feel like all you’ve really got as artist is how you truly feel. So CACTI was born out of that.

I’ve had moments since it’s out where I sort of cringe a bit, I’m like, “I can’t believe people are hearing this.” But then I’m really glad I made it because it’s hard to put that sort of stuff out there, especially when you’re an artist that’s been called fierce and bold and fearless. CACTI’s a little bit terrified of itself, you know. I’m glad that me and my co-producers pushed that through. It could have gone either way, and it opted for a slightly gentler approach. I really enjoyed thinking gently about music, rather than thinking, “How can I make a banger?” It was like, “How can I make something that fits with where I’m at?

Do you feel like that gentler side came out of necessity?

I think so, because like I said, I didn’t really feel angry about the last years. I felt a mix of overwhelmed and still making sense of it, the sort of grey apathy that it left us all with. Especially with songs like ‘Apathy’ where I talk about things like that, people are like, “Oh my god, that’s a real thing!” It’s been nice to have conversations with people about it because I thought it was just me feeling like that. I thought I just lost the plot and I couldn’t do anything anymore.

With a lot of post-COVID albums, we tend to think it represents the trauma of the past few years, but what I feel with this album is that you’re looking further back to see where those feelings are actually coming from and why they were brought up.

My most vivid is moving from – I was staying at my dad’s house through COVID on the Isle of Wight. It was nice to spend time with him. It was very isolating, because I was putting my album out in the world literally on an island where I didn’t know anyone and couldn’t see anyone and nothing was open. At the end of COVID, I moved to Bristol to start this album. I met people, you could go to the pub with people, you could say hello to people – it was still a bit precarious, but it was like having to relearn socializing and all of that again, relearn making connections. For me, it was interesting because it really brought out – I struggle with that anyway, and COVID  just set it back like 10 years.

To this day, I find it really hard. Even though it was release day on Friday, I went and signed some records, and then people were like, “Should we go out for drinks and celebrate?” And I was like, “Uhh, I’m just gonna put a DVD on, it’s been a really hectic day.” And that’s me all over. COVID didn’t instigate these things, insecurity or social anxiety or anything – what it actually did was kind of feed them. Because it was like, all of these things that you have, they’re actually gonna come in really handy over the next 2 years, because you like being by yourself and you like making excuses so you don’t have to do things or go places. I was so lucky in the fact that I was working but never had to leave the house, there’s a real introverted animal in me that loved it. And that’s primal, isn’t it? If you’re quite a natural introvert, that’s in us. It doesn’t take much for that to really come out.

I think the juxtaposition of the songs ‘spite’ and ‘fawner’ is interesting, because they sound like the most self-defiant and introspective songs on the album, respectively. But even though they take different approaches, it feels like they come from a similar place of learning to be comfortable with truths about yourself, especially when it comes to expressing love.

It’s really nice to hear you say that – you’re an introvert, right? You’re an introverted animal, you’ve understood this. It absolutely comes from the same place, and it’s absolutely driven by the same emotion. I find care and love and all these emotions very difficult, and as a socially anxious person, the lines are always blurred. I would love to have black-and-white love and there not be this grey area of also a bit of hate, also a bit of resentment, and also “fuck you” – this grey place. ‘fawner’ takes on different meanings for me every time I play it, and it’s definitely an introvert sort of love song.

You make a lot of bold choices musically, but ‘fawner’ feels to me like the most raw and scary thing that you’ve put on the album.

I remember doing it and it was one that I said to my co-producer, “Put that in the bin. That can never see the light a day.” And it wasn’t on the album tracklist for the whole four or five months that we were living with it. And then, towards the end of sequencing, they were like, “Why don’t you just put that on there?” And I was really scared to put that on there. It’s played live as well, the recording of that is me and my guitar and it’s done in one take. Everything about it is supposed to feel like a vulnerable moment, and it is because there’s really not much armor around it. It’s an interesting thing to do, to understand vulnerability as kind of the ultimate, terrifying, defying act. Took me a minute to get my head around that, but you can put something sonically and emotionally and physically powerful out there, and then you could put something like ‘fawner’ next to it, and actually, sometimes ‘fawner’ can outrun it.

People may have pointed out to you the line “Death don’t turn me out like it used to” from ‘blue bones (death wish)’, but I think of the hopeful sentiment that follows it: “The end don’t get me high like the start to.” What kind of beginning do you envision at the end of the record, after what you describe as “the death of everything real”? is it hard to imagine any hope left after that?

When I played around with ‘blackout signal’ as an ending, I had a few people say, “Oh, it doesn’t leave me particularly hopeful.” [laughs] And I get that. I never want to like offer too much of a resolution for people, because I don’t think life does that, is the honest truth. But one of my favorite writers died recently, Raymond Briggs, he did The Snowman and When the Wind Blows. There’s an amazing quote by him that says, “I don’t believe in happy endings. I don’t write happy endings because my parents died and my pets died, and that’s life.” And it doesn’t make it less of a beautiful story because of it. It always resonated with me; there’s something about reality and not offering a solution that’s an interesting thing. But I think there is hope on CACTI. The very nature of it is hopeful in its own weird way. The fact that it exists and the fact that it’s talking about its own survival is hopefully a triumph.

What is the beginning that I’m talking about? Well, I don’t know. Maybe it’s the beginning of something in you. My whole existence as Billy Nomates, everything around me has been total chaos. Something in you is always going, is always ignited, something in you keeps the thing alive. “The end don’t get me high like the start do” – the start is always within us. We’re always starting again, regardless of everything.


This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity and length.

Billy Nomates’ CACTI is out now via Invada.

Algiers Enlist Future Islands’ Samuel T. Herring and Boy Harsher’s Jae Matthews for New Song ‘I Can’t Stand It!’

Algiers have shared the new single ‘I Can’t Stand It!’, which features Future Islands’ Samuel T. Herring and Boy Harsher’s Jae Matthews. The track, lifted from their upcoming album SHOOK, also samples Lee Moses’ 1971 song ‘What You Don’t Want Me To Be’. Check it out below.

‘I Can’t Stand It!’ was written and produced by frontman Franklin James Fisher, who explained in a statement: “It’s a very personal song about a devastating loss of someone I believed to be the love of my life which nearly ended in my suicide. I think the song’s narrative arc reflects the sense of dread and the path that led me to that moment. She put on ‘What You Don’t Want Me To Be’ the first time I heard it and I knew immediately that I was going to sample it—I just couldn’t have known the result would be a song about our own end. But every time I sing that song now it feels like I heal a little bit more.”

Jae Matthews added: “I wanted to give Algiers not so much a narrative, but a recollection of a feeling. That abstract evocation that comes when you think about someone who broke yr heart and how that pain still tethers you.”

SHOOK is slated for release on February 24 via Matador. It includes the previously shared songs ‘Bite Back’ featuring billy woods and Backxwash and ‘Irreversible Damage’ with Zack de la Rocha.

Caroline Rose Announces New Album ‘The Art of Forgetting’, Shares Video for New Song ‘Miami’

Caroline Rose has announced a new album: The Art of Forgetting will be out March 24 on New West Records. Today, the singer-songwriter has shared the new single ‘Miami’, which arrives with a Sam Bennett-directed video in which Rose plays a version of themself alongside Massima Bel. Check it out and see the album cover and tracklist below.

Speaking about the track in a press release, Rose commented: “I’m not one to shy away from drama, and so this was a perfect opportunity to really bring out every ounce of desperation and anger and all those confusing emotions that happen after a big heartbreak.”

“For the ʻMiamiʼ video, I was mainly focused on what would be the most effective way to move people in regards to the two characters and how they interact,” Rose added. “Because this is a sort of loose recreation of some things in my life it was important to me to interpret the feeling of that time as accurately as we could within 4 minutesʼ time. Sam, who is a dear friend of mine and brilliant director, thought a great way to capture that fever-dream-like quality was to create a lot of movement with a continuous shot. He showed me different lenses and cameras to use and we ultimately went with an anamorphic, Old Hollywood-esque feel, which gives it that nostalgia thinking back on a time past.”

Threaded throughout the album are voicemails from Rose’s grandmother, “who was clearly losing her mind,” the artist said. “It got me thinking about all the different ways memory shows up throughout our lives. It can feel like a curse or be wielded as a tool.”

“Every time I make an album Iʼll come out of it learning a lot about myself,” Rose concluded. “Now I look back and see the healing of a wound. I feel like a new version of myself. I think one for the better.”

The Art of Forgetting Cover Artwork:

The Art of Forgetting Tracklist:

1. Love / Lover / Friend
2. Rebirth
3. Miami
4. Better Than Gold
5. Everywhere I Go I Bring the Rain
6. The Doldrums
7. The Kiss
8. Cornbread
9. Stockholm Syndrome
10. Tell Me What You Want
11. Florida Room
12. Love Song For Myself
13. Jill Says
14. Where Do I Go From Here?

Nubya Garcia, Shabaka Hutchings, Tom Skinner, and More Announce New Album Inspired by Miles Davis’ ‘Bitches Brew’

Concord Jazz has announced a new album inspired by Miles Davis’ Bitches Brew. The record, titled London Brew, features contributions from Nubya Garcia, Shabaka Hutchings, Dave Okumu, Tom Skinner, Benji B, Theon Cross, and more, and was recorded in December 2020 at Paul Epworth’s Church Studios in London. It will be available on 2xLP, 2xCD, and digitally on March 31. Check out a trailer and listen to its first single, ‘Miles Chases New Voodoo in the Church’, below.

Garcia said of the new single in a press release: “This single is our interpretation of Miles Davis’ ode to Jimi Hendrix (‘Miles Runs the Voodoo Down’). I’ve always been very inspired by the creative minds of both Miles and Jimi…. Both were innovators who carved their own lanes, which is something I’ve aspired to in my own career. For a while now I’ve been experimenting and using pedals and effects with my instrument, so to be able to do that on this track, while paying tribute to their legacies, was a joy both creatively and personally.”

The musicians on London Brew were brought together by guitarist Martin Terefe and executive producer Bruce Lampcov for a live performance celebrating the 50th anniversary of Bitches Brew that was ultimately canceled due to the pandemic. “For me, that’s what Bitches Brew is,” Hutchings said in a statement. “It’s a bunch of musicians making music because of the love of making music, as a social force and as a social construct. They are creating something that expresses unity and motion. That’s what it is to be alive… you know, you have unity, you have motion, and you have vibration. You don’t get any more alive than that. That’s Bitches Brew.”

London Brew Cover Artwork:

London Brew Tracklist:

1. London Brew
2. London Brew Pt.2 – Trainlines
3. Miles Chases New Voodoo in the Church
4. Nu Sha Ni Sha Nu Oss Ra
5. It’s One of These
6. Bassics
7. Mor Ning Prayers
8. Raven Flies Low

The WAEVE Release New Song ‘Over and Over’

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The WAEVE, the project of Graham Coxon and Rose Elinor Dougall, have released a new track called ‘Over and Over’. It will appear on their upcoming debut full-length – out February 3 via Transgressive Records – alongside the previously shared songs ‘Kill Me Again’, ‘Can I Call You’, and ‘Drowning’. Check it out below.

Films to watch if you like Molly’s Game

With so many exciting films being released every moment, it can be hard to know which is perfect for that Friday night chilling on the sofa. Molly’s Game is an exciting casino-based story filled with thrill, gangsters, Hollywood stars, and crime. All the ingredients for some of the top casino movie moments on the big screen. 

If Molly’s game is the kind of film you love, we have compiled a list of screenings you NEED to watch. Here are our top ten in no particular order.

The Commuter

Michael, an insurance salesman, was on his usual route home, which quickly turned into something less than ordinary. Michael is forced to determine the identity of a hidden passenger after being contacted by a mysterious stranger just before his last stop on the train. As he works tirelessly to figure out this puzzle, Michael begins to realize the deadly plan that’s about to unfold. Michael has got himself unwittingly caught up in a criminal conspiracy that determines the life and death of every passenger on the train.

Miss Sloane

Willing to do whatever she can for her clients, Elizabeth Sloane is one of the most desired lobbyists in all of Washington, DC. In a moment of protest, she joins a small boutique firm that represents backers of the law when asked to oppose a bill that directly affects the regulation of firearms. With this new passion and determination to come out on top, Sloane becomes a target to a host of powerful enemies with threats to the people she cares most about and the career she has worked so hard to get.

Den of Thieves

Nick O’Brien, a hard-drinking leader of the Regulators, controlled an elite section of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. Recently coming off parole, as leader of a gang of outlaws consisting of ex-military men using all of their skills and knowledge to evade the law, is Ray Merrimen. The two groups soon find themselves on a collision course as the criminals hatch a plan that seemingly feels a little out of reach. The heist of the Federal Reserve Bank is the biggest job yet.

Battle of the Sexes 

The most watched televised sporting event of all time was the 1973 tennis match between Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs. Trapped under the glare of the media, King and Riggs were on either side of the ring to a binary argument, but away from the court, each player was fighting a battle of their own with much more complexity. King was a very private person but was feeling pressure from her husband urging her to join the fight for equal pay between genders, but she had her own battles in a struggle with her sexuality. On the other hand, Riggs was taking major risks jeopardizing his reputation to bring his glory years back to life.

The Post

The first female publisher of the Washington Post (a major American newspaper), Katharine Graham, gets a little help from editor friend Ben Bradlee in a race of grand exposure. One of the biggest cover-ups of all time by the US government surrounding four US presidents holding secrets that have spanned for over three decades. Together this team of journalists needs to forget their differences and risk their professional careers to help bring the truth to light.

Game Night

A weekly game night hosted by Max and Annie gets taken to the extreme when Max’s brother decides to arrange a murder mystery party to the full, with fake thugs and convincing federal agents. When Brooks (Max’s brother) gets kidnapped, it all seems to be in keeping with the spirit of the game, but they later find out that Brooks and the game are not what they seem to be. The friends playing the game soon find that they are in a situation much bigger than they bargained for, with twists and turns yet to happen through the night.

Thoroughbreds

After years of growing apart, childhood friends Amanda and Lily reconcile in a suburban area of Connecticut. The two characters have diversified into alternate personalities, with Amanda developing a more than witty mind and a particularly special attitude, resulting in her becoming a social outcast. Lily is a polished, upper-class teenager with a fancy boarding school education and a coveted internship on her resume. Although they begin to seem like an opposing pair, they find a way to bond and become closer, helping to solve both of their problems.

Victoria and Abdul

The story of Abdul Karim’s venture from India to the UK to participate in Queen Victoria’s golden jubilee. The young clerk is surprised to find that he becomes favored by the queen herself. The two create a surprisingly devoted alliance as the queen begins to question the constraints due to her long-held position. Victoria’s inner circle and household enter a bid to destroy this bond. Still, as their friendship deepens, the queen begins to change her perspective of the world through the emotion of new eyes, helping to joyfully reclaim her humanity.

Gold

In the uncharted jungle of Indonesia, Kenny Wells teams up with a similarly eager geologist in search of gold. It was hard to get the gold, but keeping it was even harder, launching an adventure through Wall Street’s most powerful boardrooms.

Red Sparrow

The injury that ended the career of ballerina Dominika Egorova leaves her with an uncertain future. Eventually, she attends Sparrow School, where exceptional young people are trained to use their minds and bodies as weapons. When Egorova completes the sadistic training process, she becomes the most dangerous Sparrow. Trying to cope with her new abilities, Dominika meets a CIA agent who provides her with convincing evidence that he can be trusted.

J. Cole Releases New Song ‘Procrastination (Broke)’

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J. Cole has released the new song ‘Procrastination (Broke)’, a collaboration with producer Bvtman. The song was unveiled on YouTube along with a text message, presumably written by Cole, explaining its origins. Find it below.

“It’s a million artists out there right now just like me, hungry and searching every day for something to spark a word, a melody, a hook, a verse, a punchline, a way to vent, or a way to cut through,” the message reads. “On a day when I couldn’t find much motivation, I was looking for anything to inspire me. Out of curiosity, I typed in ‘J. Cole type beat’ into YouTube. Yours was the first I saw. I pressed play, focused, and wrote this.”

It continued: “This is some shit that would normally stay in the vault, but I don’t want to hold onto the music like that no more. This is for you and whoever else need to hear it. God bless bro and keep doing what you do!”

Cole’s last project was the Gangsta Grillz mixtape, which came out in April 2022. Since releasing his 2021 LP The Off-Season, the rapper has guested on singles including Smino’s ’90 Proof’, BIA’s ‘LONDON’, YG and Moneybagg Yo’s ‘Scared Money’, and Benny the Butcher’s ‘Johnny P’s Caddy’.