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Nicki Minaj and Lil Baby Team Up on New Song ‘Do We Have a Problem?’

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Nicki Minaj and Lil Baby have teamed up for the new song ‘Do We Have a Problem?’. The single was announced with an advice hotline through which fans could submit any problems they were facing to be solved by Minaj. It comes paired with a music video directed by Benny Boom and co-starring the actors Joseph Sikora and Cory Hardrict. Check it out below.

Nicki Minaj’s last album, Queen, dropped in 2018. Lil Baby released a collaboration with Lil Durk, The Voice of the Heroes, last year.

Red Hot Chili Peppers Announce New Album ‘Unlimited Love’, Release New Song ‘Black Summer’

Red Hot Chili Peppers have announced a new album: Unlimited Love is out April 1 via Warner. It marks their first album with guitarist John Frusciante back in the lineup since 2006 and their first with producer Rick Rubin since 2011. The record is led by the new single ‘Black Summer’, which arrives ahead of the band’s upcoming global stadium tour with the Strokes, Haim, A$AP Rocky, St. Vincent, and more, set to kick off in June 2022. Check it out below.

“Our only goal is to get lost in the music,” the band said of their new album in a press release. “We (John, Anthony, Chad and Flea) spent thousands of hours, collectively and individually, honing our craft and showing up for one another, to make the best album we could. Our antennae attuned to the divine cosmos, we were just so damn grateful for the opportunity to be in a room together, and, once again, try to get better. Days, weeks and months spent listening to each other, composing, jamming freely, and arranging the fruit of those jams with great care and purpose. The sounds, rhythms, vibrations, words and melodies had us enrapt.”

They continued: “We yearn to shine a light in the world, to uplift, connect, and bring people together. Each of the songs on our new album UNLIMITED LOVE, is a facet of us, reflecting our view of the universe. This is our life’s mission. We work, focus, and prepare, so that when the biggest wave comes, we are ready to ride it. The ocean has gifted us a mighty wave and this record is the ride that is the sum of our lives. Thank you for listening, we hope you enjoy it. ROCK OUT MOTHERFUCKERS!”

Frusciante added: “When we got together to start writing material, we began by playing old songs by people like Johnny “Guitar” Watson, The Kinks, The New York Dolls, Richard Barrett and others. Ever so gradually, we started bringing in new ideas, and turning jams into songs, and after a couple of months the new stuff was all we were playing. The feeling of effortless fun we had when we were playing songs by other people, stayed with us the whole time we were writing. For me, this record represents our love for, and faith in each other.”

Red Hot Chili Peppers’ previous album, The Getaway, came out in 2016. Produced by Danger Mouse, it marked their last with Josh Klinghoffer, who began playing with the band in 2007.

Unlimited Love Cover Artwork:

Unlimited Love Tracklist:

1. Black Summer
2. Here Ever After
3. Aquatic Mouth Dance
4. Not The One
5. Poster Child
6. The Great Apes
7. It’s Only Natural
8. She’s A Lover
9. These Are The Ways
10. Whatchu Thinkin’
11. Bastards of Light
12. White Braids & Pillow Chair
13. One Way Traffic
14. Veronica
15. Let ‘Em Cry
16. The Heavy Wing
17. Tangelo

Rosalía Shares Video for New Single ‘SAOKO’

Rosalía has dropped a new single called ‘SAOKO’, taken from her forthcoming album MOTOMAMI. The track arrives with an accompanying video directed by Valentin Petit. Check it out below.

In a statement, Rosalía explained:

Naming my next track “SAOKO” and sampling Yankee and Wisin for me is the most direct homage I can make to classic reggaeton, a genre that I love and that has been a constant and great inspiration throughout the MOTOMAMI project.

I started “SAOKO”‘s beat playing the upright piano at Electric Lady’s Studio B in NY, I remember it like it was yesterday. It was at night and making this beat seemed as fun as driving a Lambo. I then distorted this piano and added some classic reggaeton drums from a library that NaisGai had sent me some time ago, which by the way is something very special to me because this library has been passed from one generation of producers to another for a long time.

Before starting this track I kept thinking that I wanted to see some jazz touches in a reggaeton track and sampling Wisin and Yankee’s iconic track seemed like the best way for me to open the song. I also thank Noah, David, Dylan and Uzi for sharing this creative process with me.

If you notice, the lyrics revolve around the same concept: transformation. Each and every phrase is an image of transformation. Celebrating transformation, celebrating change. Celebrating that you are always yourself even though you are in constant transformation or even that you are you more than ever at the very moment you are changing.

Rosalía revealed the artwork for MOTOMAMI, the follow-up to 2018’s El Mal Querer, last month. She previously shared a video for her collaboration with the Weeknd, ‘LA FAMA’. The LP is out March 18 via Columbia.

Album Review: Mitski, ‘Laurel Hell’

When you listen to Mitski, a single line can feel so wrenching in its intensity that it’s a wonder there’s a whole song wrapped around it. Although she has been mostly inactive over the past few years, her music has exploded in popularity, breaking out on platforms like TikTok, where songs can only be heard for a few seconds and the lyrics displayed on-screen. Even reduced to another social media trend or an endless stream of memes, just a moment from a Mitski song can offer a glimpse into her complicated universe of feeling: Few songwriters are as adept at expressing the all-consuming yet fleeting nature of outsized emotions, how the constant push-and-pull between fear and desire can feel both isolating and enthralling. It’s also a gateway to experiencing the full richness and complexity her music acquires once you put it in context, which is as true of revisiting her earlier work as it is when delving into her latest album, Laurel Hell.

More than obsessive identification or analysis, Mitski’s music strives towards immersion. She’s always had a knack for evocative album openers, and Laurel Hell’s ‘Valentine, Texas’ is no exception, following in the footsteps of Be the Cowboy’s ‘Geyser’. Despite the ambivalence of its narrator – a trick Mitski pulls off throughout the album – the song’s invitation to step into the dark feels as tender as it is disarming, her voice drifting through a fog of droning organ before being lifted into the sky. Her lyrics lean more than ever towards abstract imagery, but the way she employs it is as vivid and potent as ever. Over the course of the album, she navigates her relationship with the dark, later opening her arms to it, until it eventually ceases to be a metaphor. The mere mention of the word “fire” is enough shift the energy of a song, clearing the path halfway through ‘Valentine, Texas’ and invoking a world of passion on ‘There’s Nothing Left for You’. She introduces her most resonant metaphor on lead single ‘Working for the Knife’, in which she laments the suffocating reality of working life, but the next track turns it from a cold object of systemic oppression to a fiery, violent part of the self.

If Be the Cowboy twisted pop structures into something forlorn and introspective, Laurel Hell’s biggest, most straightforward moments aren’t so much an attempt to break through the mainstream as they are to make it out of a self-perpetuating cycle. In other words, they seem genuinely brighter and more extroverted, even as the narrator wrestles with her own identity. “Who will I be tonight? Who will I become tonight?” Mitski sings on the opening track, and the rest of the album alternates between upbeat, danceable synthpop and slow, ethereal ballads – a clear dichotomy compared to her previous albums’ distinctly dynamic fusion of styles. Knowing these songs went through several iterations over the years, including country and punk versions, might make you long for a more varied collection than Laurel Hell, which does feel somewhat slight by comparison. But not only does the album’s divided focus align with its conflicting moods of disaffection and longing, it also sets the stage for some of Mitski’s most strikingly cinematic offerings on either end of the spectrum – from the defiant ‘The Only Heartbreaker’, co-written with Adele and Taylor Swift collaborator Dan Wilson, to the sublime ‘Heat Lightning’.

But the contradictions that have defined Mitski’s music so far – whether big or small, direct or subtle – are still ever-present. The album’s title refers to a term used to describe laurel bushes that grow in thickets so dense and wide they create a maze that’s beautiful and hormonious in appearance yet poisonous and impossible to pass through. As Laurel Hell oscillates between futility and hope, the singer restlessly contemplating which path to take, the two roads start to look eerily similar. “Sometimes I think I am free/ Until I find I’m back in line again,” she sings over the steady pulse of ‘Everyone’, caught in the same loop that runs through 2018’s ‘A Horse Named Cold Air’ (“I thought I’d traveled a long way/ But I had circled/ The same old sin.”) ‘Working for the Knife’ was written in late 2019, when Mitski had privately decided to quit the music industry but was reminded of her contractual obligation to make another album. The song’s narrative most closely resembles her own, but its attitude towards the future is still ambiguous: “Maybe at 30 I’ll see a way to change.”

Soon enough, Mitski falls back into hopelessness, this time surrendering herself. “Not much I can change/ I give it up to you,” she sings on ‘Heat Lightning’, though the song’s placement frames it less as a moment of finality than what she later calls “strange serenity.” From then on, she struggles to commit to a single role, and each version of herself, real or imagined, seems inevitably tied to her relationships. In ‘Should’ve Been Me’, the narrator empathizes with a partner who seeks love from someone who looks just like her because she herself is emotionally unreachable – a passive state she then describes in her own internal terms, comparing it to a hand lifting and dropping her inside a labyrinth: “When I saw the girl looked just like me, I thought/ Must be lonely loving someone/ Trying to find their way out of a maze.”

Whenever Mitski sings of desire on the album, she’s either recognizing someone else’s or begging them to spell it out. It’s why ‘Love Me More’ is at once the most magnetic and conflicted song on the album, full of yearning mirrored – or maybe answered – in the dazzling production, which has the deliberate effect of drowning her out. Even then, it’s a need, not a want – the same way she’s presented the shift to a more ‘80s-inspired sound (“I needed to dance.”) There’s no freedom of choice in such a declaration, not much room for change; only weariness, only more. “I’ll have to learn/ To be somebody else,” she concedes on ‘I Guess’, less an ending than a resignation. She could be singing to anybody when she says, “It’s been you and me/ Since before I was me/ Without you I don’t yet know/ Quite how to live.” But as she trails through Laurel Hell, it’s clear that no one can know or trace the movement of her own feelings like she does. No one can make the same dance. And when that strange calm washes over these mountains, naturally, she holds it.

Deer Scout Announces Debut Album ‘Woodpecker’, Shares New Song ‘Cowboy’

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Dena Miller, who records under the moniker Deer Scout, has announced her debut album. Woodpecker is set for release on April 8 via Carpark Records, and it includes the new single ‘Cowboy’. Check it out below.

Woodpecker was recorded and mixed primarily by Heather Jones at So Big Auditory in Philly. It features contributions from Ko Takasugi-Czernowin on bass, cello from Zuzia Weyman, drums from Madel Rafter, and guitar from Miller’s father Mark. According to a press release, many of the album’s tracks were written during periods of grief or change. “I used to sing myself to sleep as a baby and I think music still plays the same role in my life – it’s a way of self-soothing or seeking comfort,” Miller explained. “But there’s also part of it that comes from wanting to connect with people.”

Woodpecker Cover Artwork:

Woodpecker Tracklist:

1. Cup
2. Cowboy
3. Synesthesia
4. Kat and Nina
5. Peace with the Damage
6. Dream
7. Break the Rock
8. Afterthought

BENEE Announces ‘LYCHEE’ EP, Drops New Song ‘Beach Boy’

BENEE has announced her LYCHEE EP with a new single called ‘Beach Boy’. Check it out below, along with the EP tracklist and BENEE’s upcoming tour dates.

“‘Beach Boy’ is pure fantasy, set in LA,” the New Zealand alt-pop artist explained in a statement. “It’s about being happy alone, but still wanting some love; wanting the thrill without the pain. It was the first time I’d worked with Greg Kurstin, and it was so sick…we got on super well, and I love this track…I think it is perfect for cruising down the freeway with the top down :).”

BENEE’s new EP is set to arrive on March 4. It will follow her 2020 debut full-length, Hey u x.

LYCHEE EP Tracklist:

1. Beach Boy
2. Soft Side
3. Hurt You Gus
4. Never Ending
5. Marry Myself
6. Doesn’t Matter
7. Make You Sick

BENEE 2022 Tour Dates:

May 31 — Montreal, QC – Corona Theatre
Jun 1 — Toronto, ON – Phoenix Concert Theatre
Jun 3 — Minneapolis, MN -First Avenue
Jun 4 — Chicago, IL – Vic Theatre
Jun 6 — Detroit, MI – St. Andrew’s Hall
Jun 7 — Columbus, OH – Newport Music Hall
Jun 8 — Washington, DC – 9:30 Club
Jun 11 — New York, NY – The Governors Ball
Jun 14 — Boston, MA – House of Blues
Jun 15 — Philadelphia, PA – Theatre of Living Arts
Jun 17 — Atlanta, GA – Variety Playhouse
Jun 18 — Manchester, TN – Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival
Jun 21 — Englewood, CO – Gothic Theatre
Jun 22 — Salt Lake City, UT – The Depot
Jun 24 — Seattle, WA – The Showbox
Jun 25 — Portland, OR – Crystal Ballroom
Jun 26 — Vancouver, BC – Vogue Theatre
Jun 28 — San Francisco, CA – The Warfield Theatre
Jun 30 — Los Angeles, CA – The Novo

Obongjayar Announces Debut Album, Shares Video for New Single ‘Try’

Obongjayar has announced his debut album, Some Nights I Dream of Doors, which lands on May 13 via September Recordings. Today’s announcement comes with the release of the new single ‘Try’, which the Nigerian-British singer co-wrote with producer Barney Lister. Check out its accompanying Spencer Young-directed video below, along with the LP’s cover art and tracklist.

“You can be a pilot or an astronaut, it’s all so possible,” Obongjayar said of the new song in a statement. “By the time you turn twenty, you realise you’re probably not going to become a brain surgeon; reality starts to set in. That’s what the song and this record is about; where do those feelings go? At what point do we lose our innocence, our wide-eyed approach to the world?”

“This album dives into the idea of opportunity and tries to explore what that means, what lies behind those doors, and asks if we’re ready for it,” he added of the LP. “The pursuit of success, what happens when you achieve it, and what happens if you don’t? What does success mean? The head, the body, and the end of a dream. Opportunity is looking forward, and in that lies the question of time. What is your place in it? To know the future, or to fully be aware of your present, you need to analyse and understand your past. It’s an endless loop that continuously piles on itself.”

Some Nights I Dream of Doors will follow Obongjayar’s 2021 EP with Afrobeats producer Sarz, Sweetness. It features London jazz musician Nubya Garcia as well as the previously released single ‘Message in a Hammer’.

Some Nights I Dream of Doors Cover Artwork:

Some Nights I Dream of Doors Tracklist:

1. Try
2. Message In A Hammer
3. Parasite
4. Some Night I Dream Of Doors
5. Wrong For It [feat. Nubya Garcia]
6. Sugar
7. My Life Can Change Today (interlude)
8. New Man
9. All The Difference
10. Tinko Tinko (Don’t Play Me For A Fool)
11. I Wish It Was Me
12. Wind Sailor

Circuit des Yeux Shares Video for New Song ‘The Manatee’

Circuit des Yeux has released a new song, ‘The Manatee’, which was recorded during the sessions for last year’s -io. The track arrives with an accompanying video directed by Rudy Rubio. Watch and listen below.

“At 4:30 A.M. on February 4th, 2020 a manatee popped out of the sea and stared directly at me,” Circuit des Yeux’s Haley Fohr said in a statement about the new song. “It was a charged 10 seconds. The experience stuck with me so much that I wrote a song about it.”

“The music video (directed by Rudy Rubio) is a depiction of my own kind of manatee,” she added. “I play a wet sea creature trying to make it work in a dry-land society. It is inspired by the scientific understanding that the manatee crawled into the ocean 50,000,000 years ago. The manatee is my reminder that intuition and two legs might be all a person needs to find a more hospitable world – perhaps an undiscovered place to call home.”

Along with the track, Circuit des Yeux has also announced European and North American tour dates for 2022, including a special performance at the Barbican Centre’s Milton Court Concert Hall on April 6. Find the list of dates below.

Last week, Steve Gunn shared a new collaborative EP titled Nakama, which featured Circuit des Yeux’s reinterpretation of ‘Ever Feel That Way’.

Circuit des Yeux 2022 Tour Dates: 

Feb 24 – Vancouver, BC – St. James Hall
Feb 25 – Seattle, WA – Fremont Abbey
Feb 26 – Astoria, OR – Anita (solo)
Feb 27 – Portland, OR – The Old Church
Mar 1 – San Francisco, CA – Rickshaw Stop
Mar 2 – Los Angeles, CA – Pico Union Project
Mar 17 – Austin, TX – SXSW
Mar 25-26 Knoxville, TN – Big Ears Festival
Apr 2 – Bern, Switzerland – Dampfzentrale
Apr 4 – Berlin, Germany – HAU 1
Apr 6 – London, England – Barbican Centre, Milton Court Concert Hall
Apr 8 – The Hague, Netherlands – Rewire Festival
Apr 9 – Brussels, Belgium – BRDCST Festival
Apr 11 – Paris, France – Centre Pompidou
Apr 13 – Lille, France – L’Auditorium du Conservatoire
Apr 15 – Dublin, Ireland – National Concert Hall Studio
May 3 – Minneapolis, MN – 7th St. Entry
May 4 – Milwaukee, WI – Cactus Club
May 6 – Iowa City, IA – Englert Theatre
May 7 – Columbia, MO – Stephen’s Lake Amphitheatre
May 8 – St. Louis, MO – William A. Kerr Foundation
May 9 – Rock Island, IL – Rozz Tox
Jun 2 – Louisville, KY – Decca
Jun 3 – Memphis, TN – Crosstown Arts
Jun 4 – Atlanta, GA – The Earl
Jun 5 – Asheville, NC – The Grey Eagle
Jun 6 ­- Philadelphia, PA – PhilaMOCA
Jun 7 – Brooklyn, NY – Green-Wood Cemetery (Pioneer Works Graveyard Shift)
Jun 9 – Brattleboro, VT – Epsilon Series
Jun 10 – Montreal, Quebec – Centre PHI
Jun 11 – Ottawa, Ontario – Arts Court
Jun 13 – Toronto, Ontario ­- 918 Bathurst – Wavelength Festival
Jun 14 – Detroit, MI – Trinosophes
Jun 16 – Chicago, IL – Constellation
Jun 17 – Chicago, IL – Constellation
Sep 1-4 – Larmer Tree Gardens, UK – End of the Road

Lady Dan Unveils New Song ‘Not In Love’

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Lady Dan, the project of Tyler Dozier, has released a new song called ‘Not In Love’. The track is a B-side from the sessions of her debut album I Am the Prophet. Listen to it below, and scroll down for Dozier’s upcoming tour dates.

“I wrote this song a few years ago, when I was going through a really difficult time with my mental health,” Dozier explained in a statement. “I was experiencing some of the worst anxiety and depression that I’ve experienced to this day. When I would listen to music I would take note of all the sweet and endearing love songs people could write about a person, and I thought that was something I would never be able to do in a way I actually enjoyed. I still feel that way about it. But also, not being in love in the first place doesn’t help.”

Check out our Artist Spotlight interview with Lady Dan.

SASAMI Releases New Single ‘Call Me Home’

SASAMI has released another single from her forthcoming album Squeeze‘Call Me Home’ follows previous entries ‘The Greatest’, ‘Skin a Rat’, and ‘Say It’. Give it a listen below.

“’Call Me Home’ is dedicated to anyone who has blown up their life just to remember what it’s like to feel something,” Sasami said in a press release. “It’s about the darkness of feeling nothing and the creeping ache of apathy that can swallow you whole if you let it. It’s about skipping town, driving all night and knowing you’ll always have a home to come back to.”

Squeeze is due for release on February 25 via Domino.