Asheville, North Carolina five-piece Wednesday have announced their signing to Dead Oceans with a new single, ‘Bull Believer’. The track arrives with an accompanying video directed by Josh Finck. Check it out below, along with the band’s upcoming tour dates.
“This song is an excuse for me to scream on stage, an outlet for the anger and sadness that has been collected by the current and past versions of myself,” vocalist/guitarist Karly Hartzman explained in a statement. “An offering to myself of a brief moment of release from being tolerant of the cruelty of life: feels like cutting my hair to let go of the history it holds.”
Sep 21 – Greensboro, NC – The Crown at Carolina Theatre *
Sep 22 – Durham, NC – Motorco *
Sep 23 – Washington, DC – DC9 *
Sep 24 – Philadelphia, PA – Ukie Club *
Sep 25 – Asbury Park, NJ – Bond Street Bar *
Sep 27 – Somerville, MA – Crystal Ballroom *
Sep 29 – Brooklyn, NY – Brooklyn Made *
Oct 1 – Chicago, IL – Sleeping Village *
Oct 2 – Bloomington, IN – The Bishop *
Oct 3 – Lexington, KY – The Burl *
Oct 4 – Knoxville, TN – The Pilot Light *
Oct 6 – Asheville, NC – DIFFERENT WRLD *
Tegan and Sara appeared on Late Night With Seth Meyers last night (September 7), where the duo performed their recent single ‘Yellow’. The sisters also sat down for an interview with Seth Meyers to talk about their upcoming memoir Highschool, the Amazon TV series of the same name, and their new album Crybaby. Watch it below.
Crybaby is due for release on October 21 via Mom + Pop. So far, Tegan and Sara have previewed the LP with the singles ‘Fucking Up What Matters’ and ‘Faded Like a Feeling’. Earlier this week, they put out a cover of Smashing Pumpkins’ ‘Today’ featuring That Dog.’s Anna Waronker as an Amazon exclusive; the song also features in the trailer for Highschool.
Blood Orange, aka Devonté Hynes, has announced a new EP titled Four Songs. Marking his first release for RCA, the EP comes out on September 16 and includes contributions from Ian Isaiah, Eva Tolkin, and Erika de Casier. Check out the project’s first single, ‘Jesus Freak Lighter’, below.
Since releasing his 2019 LP Angel’s Pulse, Hynes has scored Luca Guadagnino’s HBO series We Are Who We Are, Gia Coppola’s 2021 film Mainstream, the Netflix documentary Naomi Osaka, HBO’s In Treatment, and the Rebecca Hall film Passing. Hynes has been opening for Harry Styles’ 15-date residency at New York’s Madison Square Garden.
Four Songs EP Cover Artwork:
Four Songs EP Tracklist:
1. Jesus Freak Lighter
2. Something You Know
3. Wish
4. Relax & Run
Hyd – the project of interdisciplinary artist and PC Music associate Hayden Dunham – has announced the release of their debut LP. It’s called Clearing, and it’s set to drop on November 11 via PC Music. Today, Hyd has shared the new single ‘So Clear’, which was co-written with the late SOPHIE and EASYFUN. Check it out, along with the album’s cover art and tracklist, below.
“The feeling of rejection opened up my own questions about choosing Earth, choosing to make something new here, to be rooted when turbulent winds bend the stems,” Hyd explained in a statement. “Transmuting a feeling of loss into something fortifying – ripples in the water that become still. ‘So Clear’ emerges from a place of total loss, full collision, and the freedom that comes through surrender.”
Clearing, which features the Caroline Polachek-produced single ‘Afar’, will follow Hyd’s self-titled EP. It will also include contributions from A. G. Cook, Jónsi, and Ö.
Clearing Cover Artwork:
Clearing Tracklist:
1. Trust
2. Fallen Angel
3. So Clear
4. Oil + Honey
5. Breaking Ground
6. Chlorophyll
7. Glass
8. The Real You
9. Bright Lights
10. Only Living for You
11. Afar
Bibio, the project of Stephen Wilkinson, has announced a new album called BIB10. It arrives on October 21 via Warp. Along with the announcement, he’s shared the record’s lead single, ‘Off Goes the Light’, which comes paired with a lyric video shot and edited by Wilkinson. Check it out and find the album art and tracklist below.
“My influences for studio production mostly come from the 60s, 70s, and 80s where the craft was very different – getting a more polished sound, without ironing the humanity out of it, was part of the ethos,” Wilkinson said of the new album. “I became more obsessed than ever with guitars in the last few years, particularly vintage guitars. This album is an ode to guitar in a very different way, with the guitars more like building blocks of a larger structure, and the subtle variations and differences with each guitar’s tone and color make the album more nuanced. I don’t think of it as a guitar album per se, but I feel the foundation to all of the tracks is guitar.
Wilkinson continued: “I think as ten is such a milestone album, I wanted it to be more of a party album. It also has its dreamy and melancholy moments, but there’s a lot of fun and playfulness in this album. I hope people get up and dance to some of these songs.”
BIB10 will follow Bibio’s 2020 LP Sleep on the Wing.
BIB10 Cover Artwork:
BIB10 Tracklist:
1. Off Goes The Light
2. Potion
3. Sharratt
4. Rain and Shine
5. S.O.L. feat. Olivier St Louis
6. Cinnamon Cinematic
7. Even More Excuses
8. A Sanctimonious Song
9. Lost Somewhere
10. Phonograph
11. Fools [feat. Olivier St Louis]
God Save the Animals is set to arrive on September 23 via Domino. It will follow Alex G’s 2019 LP House of Sugar, as well as his recent score for Jane Schoenbrun’s horror film We’re All Going to the World’s Fair.
Jordana has shared a new single called ‘Is It Worth It Now?’. It’s her first new music since the release of her latest album Face the Wall back in May. Check it out below.
“’Is It Worth It Now?’ is a song I wrote about taking control of your life mentally and emotionally, about questioning decisions and leaving self-pity and excuses behind,” Jordana explained in a press release.
On I Love You Jennifer B, Jockstrap embrace the chaos of imagination. With the release of their debut EP, 2018’s Love Is the Key to the City, and its impressive follow-up, 2020’s Wicked City, the London duo of Georgia Ellery and Taylor Skye showcased their whimsical, genuinely innovative brand of art-pop, integrating a wide range of influences without coming off as overly referential or shallow. Theirs was deeply evocative music with a penchant for abstract surrealism and unexpected sonic shifts, and the shorter format seemed like the ideal fit for their exhaustive, at times disorienting approach. But on their first full-length, they smartly rein in their chaotic tendencies while still offering a uniquely dynamic experience, igniting a whole different kind of magic. If the Wicked City EP managed to be emotionally resonant while eschewing personal detail, I Love You Jennifer B is rooted in greater vulnerability without quite lifting the veil – if anything, its narrative thread is even more elusive and sheltered.
This time, Jockstrap seem more open to deconstructing not just any given palette, but their own process, building on the earthy, raw origins of a song idea before guiding and adorning its idiosyncratic path. Less than a minute before spreading the album’s hypnotic sound, ‘Neon’ opens with spare guitar chords and Ellery’s precise vocals; the haunted folk of ‘Lancaster Court’ both counteracts and reinforces the record’s operatic qualities; centerpiece ‘Concrete Over Water’ comfortably lingers in an air of nostalgia. When it finally kicks into gear, it’s spiked by ominous vocal manipulations that sound like a beast clawing through its cage. For an album inspired by the dizzying feeling of listening to dubstep for the first time, I Love You Jennifer B is often less kinetic and immediate than some might expect, withholding as much as it lets the songs breathe and run free. After all, those experiences fall under the umbrella of growing up, and the duo is all too conscious of the space between the formative past and the disordered present.
Despite its surprising restraint, I Love You Jennifer B is filled to the brim with wild and fantastical moments. ‘Greatest Hits’ is the closest it comes to pure escapism, an immaculately produced dance track that has no issue channeling Madonna while adhering to the album’s theatrical presentation. Yet even at its most eccentric and playful, Ellery’s songwriting doesn’t shy away from genuine and even existential concerns, only slyly disguising them. ‘Debra’, which is sung from the perspective of an Animal Crossing character, swells with dark synths before transforming into a quirky party jam, as if in an effort to sweep away the weighty realization that “grief is just love with nowhere to go.” The extended techno closer ’50/50′ barely conceals its yearning for intimacy, sliding it under a glitchy delirium: “How do I get close to you? How do I address you?”
As much as the music presents a gateway to a different world, it also mirrors the singer’s introspection in strikingly vivid fashion. Backed by lightly plucked harp, Ellery uses a poignant pregnancy metaphor to describe an anxious breakdown on ‘Angst’: “My organs bob about in the dark/In a mustard mist/ In my stomach-vase,” she sings, a warm bed of synths letting in the tiniest bit of light yet ultimately accentuating the despair. When all that’s left is her bare voice, the pace quickens like a heart and her words get all jumbled up, leaving the listener discombobulated and equally exposed. Jockstrap’s process usually involves bringing the orchestra to the bedroom and weaving a bizarre, intricate dance, but here they know exactly when to pull back the curtain.
‘Glasgow’ is the album’s most straightforward track, foregrounding the radiant sincerity of Ellery’s lyrics and rendering it an undeniable standout. Even if the journey ends with a poignant admission of loneliness, the music sits right there beside her, in perfect understanding: hear how it lets the crushing echo of that final “baby” ring through. Throughout these ten songs, it’s there to offer support, to bring fading memories to life, indulging in strange detours and entertaining every mad possibility. “Don’t mind saying the things you feel/ Don’t show the world who you really are,” a voice whispers on ‘Lancaster Court’, but Ellery soldiers through its ghostly contradictions: “Just keep moving.” Jockstrap’s truest identity may remain obscured, but rather than plunging further into the abyss, they’re more than adept at using their tricks to swim closer to the surface.
Dry Cleaning have shared ‘Gary Ashby’, the latest single from their upcoming album Stumpwork. They’ve also announced a world tour in support of the LP. Check out the new song as well as the list of dates below.
‘Gary Ashby’ is “a lament about a pet tortoise, escaped as a result of family chaos,” according to the band, who added: “We wrote it in December 2020, one of the first new songs after the New Long Leg session.”
Phoenix have announced Alpha Zulu, their first new album in five years. The follow-up to 2017’s Ti Amo arrives on November 4 via Loyaute/Glassnote. It was self-produced by the and recorded in Paris’ Musée des Arts Décoratifs, which sits in the Palais du Louvre. To accompany the announcement, they’ve shared a new song called ‘Tonight’, which features Vampire Weekend’s Ezra Koenig. Check out its Oscar Boyson-directed video below, along with the album artwork and tracklist.
“We felt it would be a fantastic adventure to create something out of nothing in a museum,” the band’s Laurent “Branco” Brancowitz said of the recording process in a statement. “And so with the pandemic, we could live exactly this scene, to be alone in an empty museum.”
“I was a bit afraid, when there was too much beauty around us, that to create something could be a bit hard,” guitarist Christian Mazzalai added. “But it was the opposite: We couldn’t stop producing music. In these first 10 days, we wrote almost all of the album.”
Earlier this year, Phoenix released Alpha Zulu’s title track.
Alpha Zulu Tracklist:
Alpha Zulu Tracklist:
1. Alpha Zulu
2. Tonight [feat. Ezra Koenig]
3. The Only One
4. After Midnight
5. Winter Solstice
6. Season 2
7. Artefact
8. All Eyes on Me
9. My Elixir
10. Identical