Japanese Breakfast have shared a cover of Sufjan Stevens’ ‘Romulus’ for SiriusXMU Sessions. Michelle Zauner recorded her rendition of the track, which originally appeared on Stevens’ 2003 album Greetings From Michigan the Great Lake State, at Electric Lady Studios in New York City. The cover features contributions from Gabby’s World and Molly Germer. Listen to it below.
Japanese Breakfast’s most recent album, Jubilee, came out earlier this year. Her soundtrack for the video game Sable is set for release on September 23.
Many book lovers love to share their recommendations for the best things to read, whether through rating sites like Goodreads or on social media like Instagram. YouTube is another popular option for book lovers. If you’re been thinking about starting your own BookTube channel, here are some tips to get you started.
Invest In Equipment
You don’t need any fancy, expensive equipment to start a BookTube channel. When you’re starting out, you can use equipment you already have, such as your phone. Film in a well-lit area, and buy a cheap microphone to improve your audio. You can upgrade to better lighting or a better camera later on.
Create A Backdrop
Your bookshelves could make the perfect backdrop, but don’t worry if you can’t make that work. Just choose a backdrop that is clutter and distraction-free. Test a few locations to find somewhere with good audio and consistent lighting.
Books
Choose the books you’re going to cover. Many BookTubers concentrate on the books that they are currently reading and share reviews. It can help to choose a niche that fits the books you like to read most, such as reviewing new YA releases, or books for parents to read to their children. As well as reviews, you could also create videos on wider book themes, such as comparing the book to the movie adaption or using https://booksloom.com to find books that are often overlooked.
You don’t need lots of disposable income or to keep buying books all the time. There are some websites that over review copies of books, or you can use your local library to get hold of new releases without spending a lot of money. Kindle also has many classics available for free.
New and upcoming books are always popular on BookTube, there is also demand on YouTube for lists of older favourites too. Don’t feel as though you can’t share books that are a few years old.
Think About Your Content
Reviews are a big part of BookTube, but filming a review can be harder than you’d think. You will want to clearly describe the plot, and share your opinions without giving away any spoilers. Get started by writing down a quick summary of the book. Double-check you know how to pronounce the author’s name or any difficult character names. If you do make a mistake, don’t worry. Start your thought again from a point where you can smoothly edit out the mistake.
Make sure you know what you can and can’t share in your videos. Reading the book’s summary can be a good way to clearly explain the plot. If you’re going to give away any spoilers, make sure you state that clearly, and tell people when they are and when to skip ahead to in order to avoid them. As well as your books, make sure you understand the rules about any music or images you use on your channels and don’t accidentally fall foul of a copyright strike.
The landscape of English football has changed dramatically since VAR was introduced in the Premier League in 2019. The system brought in to reduce controversy over refereeing decisions has created plenty of controversy itself, and for the last couple of seasons, it’s felt like VAR has become more of a story than the actual football — with the Premier League odds harder to predict as a result.
As we approach the third season where VAR will be used in the English top flight, the powers that be have outlined a number of changes to the way that the system will be implemented this campaign, in a bid to prevent VAR from getting involved too regularly in decision-making. Let’s run through the changes and assess whether they will make a tangible difference in the Premier League this season.
What’s changed?
One of the main ways VAR will be used more sparingly this season is when it comes to penalty decisions over minor contact in the box. We have seen countless examples of players winning spot-kicks after VAR detects minimal contact on an attacking player from a defender.
“Contact on its own is only part of the what referees should look for,” referees’ chief Mike Riley said. “They should also ask themselves if the contact has a consequence, and then if the player used that contact to try and win a foul or a penalty. It’s not sufficient just to say: ‘Yes, there’s contact.’ I think it moves the dial back towards where we were in a pre-VAR world. We don’t want trivial things penalised.”
Another major change will involve the use of thicker lines when making offside decisions, which will create a clearer distinction between onside and offside in video replays, and help to avoid the kind of ‘armpit offsides’ we have seen so many times in previous seasons.
Lastly, handball has been revamped so that there will be no punishment for accidental offences in the build-up the goal. Handball will only punish an attacker if they score directly as a result of a handball, or immediately after.
What effects will the changes have?
For penalty decisions, we should see a decrease in the number of ‘soft’ penalties awarded for minimal contact. It will be interesting to see how referees enforce these changes. As always, much will hinge on the individual referee who is assigned to be the VAR for a particular match. What constitutes minimal contact for one referee will constitute significant contact for another, and it’s simply a fact that in a sport of subjective refereeing decisions, there will always be some kind of controversy.
The ridiculously tight offside decisions have been the bugbear of every player, coach and fan throughout the last couple of seasons. We have seen goals that appear perfectly good to the naked eye be ruled out for the most miniscule of offside margins. That should change this season thanks to the thicker lines being used to judge offside decisions. According to Riley, 20 goals were chalked off last season that wouldn’t have been under the new guidelines, so we should get to see more goals as a result!
The handball law was the most sensible to change, as goals were being ruled out for the most ludicrous of reasons – like a player accidentally handling the ball some 20 seconds before a goal was scored.
In the end, none of these changes should pose too much threat to those leading the Premier League winner odds list, but everyone wants a more free-flowing game, so let’s hope VAR will fade into the background slightly in the upcoming season.
Are you looking for a wonderful gift idea for your wife? Do you want to topple your record of gifting the best gift on her birthday last year?
We understand it is often a struggle to find something for your wife or girlfriend or fiance that she will love. But we are here to help.
Whenever you are stuck on choosing what to buy for your wife, follow your gut. Think about what she likes and the things she values- you know it, concentrate your mind a little! ( you have the answers)
You can either go sentimental way or practical way. If you want to give something sentimental -choose a gift that you know has a meaning or thought behind it, and your wife will love it.
Consider what time of year it is if you want to go with a practical gift. Is it summer yet? Why not get her some beautiful bikini sets or floral summer dresses? It’ll be a hit with your wife.
And if you’re still stumped about what to get her, you’ve come to the right place because we’ve got some suggestions that will make her say, “Wow, that’s so awesome, I love it.”
Let’s get started
Elegant Lounge Wear
A pair of plush silk pajamas are both comfortable and attractive, and now that everyone is staying at home in their pajamas, it would be ideal if the pajamas are elegant and comfy.
Luxury Watch
The best way to show the love of your life that you cherish your time together is to get her a watch you know she’ll adore. You can get your wife a luxury watch like a Richard Mille wrist watch if you have a budget and want to go the extra mile. Roses and chocolates don’t last lifetimes, but watches do.
A Massager
Your wife’s neck and back may be screaming for help if she’s crammed behind the desk! You might hear her complaining about how much sitting in a chair hurts her muscles.
While you can’t help her with the workload, you can get her a massager. There are many compact massagers on the market today that are effective at releasing knots.
This is a functional gift, and believe us when we say that even if they are a little pricey, your wife will keep coming back to them, so the cost is justified.
A Pair Of Sneakers
Sneakers are necessary because if your wife is going for a long commute to her office, working out, or just strolling around the neighborhood, she should have comfortable shoes.
Good shoes are set to take people to good places, and there are plenty of options available today from various brands. Shoes that are both comfortable and very stylish.
If you feel extra special, you can get her two shoes- one lifestyle shoe and one workout shoe! (we bet she won’t have any complaints)
Bobblehead Figurine
This is another sentimental gift that will undoubtedly be treasured.
It’s very easy to get customized bobbleheadsin the style you want; all you have to do is send your photos to the bubblehead company, and they’ll customize them for you.
Isn’t it adorable to have bobbleheads that look like you and your wife? If she’s the type who appreciates emotional and thoughtful gifts, we’re sure she’ll adore this one.
Preserved Roses
We all know that most people adore flowers, but the sad reality is that they only last two days. What you can do better is get her a beautiful bouquet of preserved roses—they last for over a year- yes, you read that correctly.
Various companies sell these. You can check them out, and if your wife loves flowers, you know what to get her this time around.
Conclusion
The most important thing you can give your wife is love, and gifts are just icing on the cake for spoiling her on this wonderful journey.
After two separate events at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta earlier this summer, Kanye West has announced a third listening session for his long-delayed album Donda. It’s set to take place in his hometown of Chicago, at Soldier Field, on August 26, according to a post on the rapper’s Instagram.
The follow-up to 2019’s Jesus Is King was originally slated for release after the first livestream event at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta on July 23, but the album never materialized. West reportedly ended up staying in the venue to finish the album and launched a second livestream event at the stadium on August 5 that revealed features from the Weeknd, Jay Electronica, and the Lox. The record has yet to be officially released.
Remi Wolf has announced that her debut album Juno will arrive on October 15. Today, Wolf has previewed the record with two new tracks, ‘Quiet On Set’ and ‘Grumpy Old Man’, both of which come with their own visuals. Check them out below and scroll down for the LP’s cover artwork.
In a press release, Wolf describes ‘Quiet On Set’ as “full on psycho,” adding that “as much as the song is silly and fun, it really does reflect my life and feelings at the time…overworked, manic, reckless, and childish.” Of ‘Grumpy Old Man’, she comments that “some of the most benign things [that] can make me irritated and defensive,which makes me feel old, fragile, and careless.”
Talking about the creation of Juno, Wolf explained:
Creating my debut album ‘Juno’ was like a fever dream. So many changes were happening in my life while I was creating these songs and I think my album really reflects the feelings of tension and release that these changes provoked in me. Every song on this record is a vivid snapshot into what was going on in my life and mindset the day I wrote each one. I hope my Remjobs can hear my honesty and passion come through and, if not, I just hope they think each song is a banger! The album is named ‘Juno’ after my beautiful dog I adopted during lockdown. He ended up being in every single writing session for this album and I consider him my partner, witness, and support in the making of this record.
Earlier this year, Remi Wolf unveiled the We Love Dogs! remix EP, featuring reworkings of songs from her June 2020 EP I’m Allergic to Dogs! from the likes of Beck, Hot Chip, Little Dragon, Sylvan Esso, and more. Last month, she released the new single ‘Liquor Store’.
Parquet Courts have announced their next album: Sympathy for Life comes out October 22 via Rough Trade. It’s led by the new single ‘Walking at a Downtown Pace’, which arrives alongside a music video directed by Daniel Arnold. Check it out and find the album’s cover art and tracklist below.
Sympathy For Life was built from a series of improvised jams and was produced with Rodaidh McDonald and John Parish. “Wide Awake! was a record you could put on at a party,” Austin Brown said in a statement. “Sympathy For Life is influenced by the party itself. Historically, some amazing rock records have been made from mingling in dance music culture — from Talking Heads to Screamadelica. Our goal was to bring that into our own music. Each of us, in our personal lives, has been going to more dance parties. Or rather, we were pre-pandemic, which is when this record was made.”
Of the new song’s accompanying visual, Savage explained: “We see New York City from the vantage point of someone busily hurrying through it. That’s what life can be like here; a world of constant motion surrounds you while you’re just walking toward where you need to be. There’s a lot of beauty that can be missed, and it wasn’t until the streets were virtually empty that I did miss it.”
Sympathy for Life Cover Artwork:
Sympathy for Life Tracklist:
1. Walking At A Downtown Pace
2. Black Widow Spider
3. Marathon of Anger
4. Just Shadows
5. Plant Life
6. Application Apparatus
7. Homo Sapien
8. Sympathy for Life
9. Zoom Out
10. Trullo
11. Pulcinella
Los Angeles-based artist Hana Vu has announced a new album and her first for Ghostly International. It’s called Public Storage, and it arrives on November 5. Today’s announcement comes with the release of the new single ‘Everybody’s Birthday’, which follows the previously released track ‘Maker’ (one of our songs of the week). Check it out below.
Vu co-produced Public Storage with Jackson Phillips. “I am not religious, but when writing these songs I imagined a sort of desolate character crying out to an ultimately punitive force for something more,” she said of the LP in a press release.
Of the new single, she added: “It’s about the collective misery and depressive introspection one experiences on their birthday, which in this era of being alone, can feel infinite.”
Public Storage Cover Artwork:
Public Storage Tracklist:
1. April Fool
2. Public Storage
3. Aubade
4. Heaven
5. Keeper
6. Gutter
7. My House
8. World’s Worst
9. Anything Striking
10. Everybody’s Birthday
11. I Got
12. Maker
Hovvdy have unveiled two new songs, ‘Junior Day League’ and ‘Around Again’, taken from their forthcoming album True Love. Both tracks were written by the band’s Will Taylor and come paired with music videos directed by Hayden Hubner and Adam Alonzo respectively. Check them out below.
“‘Around Again’ lyrically shifts between big reflections and small memories,” Taylor explained in a press statement. “The simplicity of the music and words really helped define this song for me. I’m thankful to have had help from Charlie and Andrew expanding and finishing it.”
“‘Junior Day League’ is about being in a daze on a fast day in a new town,” he added. “Falling enamored with the people you’re with and the setting you’re in. Letting things move around you, rather than trying to control them.”
Orla Gartland has come a long way since she first started uploading original songs on YouTube in 2014. When Hudson Taylor, the folk duo she played with as a teenager, moved to London to find a manager, the Dublin-born singer decided to follow them and found herself part of a community of fellow musicians, including dodie, for whom she plays guitar in her touring band. After a string of singles and EPs, including 2019’s Why Am I Like This and 2020’s Freckle Season, she began working on her debut full-length album, Woman on the Internet, which is out this Friday. While her previous EP focused on the dissolution of a long-term relationship, here Gartland widens her scope to examine the effects of growing up online and “the chaos of my 20s,” as she puts it. Sonically, Woman on the Internet is a culmination of her earlier influences, including pop-punk artists like Avril Lavigne, and the singer-songwriters she cites as inspirations now, such as Phoebe Bridgers, Laura Marling, and Fiona Apple. The result is a varied and emotionally direct collection of alt-pop that mirrors the ups and downs of her journey, alluding to personal events without dissecting them to the point where they lose their wider resonance.
We caught up with Orla Gartland for this edition of our Artist Spotlight interview series to talk about her musical journey, the making of Woman on the Internet, and more.
When you think back on yourself as a teenager, discovering your passion for music and uploading your first tracks online, what are some of the things that come to mind? How do you reflect on that time in your life?
My relationship with music was such a pure thing. I think when your hobby becomes your job, it does change your relationship with it. There’s a little bit more pressure when you’re expecting the thing that you love to also pay your rent and keep you alive, like it can shift the wholesomeness of that relationship. Whereas when I was a teenager and I was picking up guitar and I was busking a lot in Dublin and doing gigs here and there, it was so new and it was so exciting and so terrifying. I was just surprised by how much I liked it – I don’t really have any formal musical training, I don’t really have a musical family, it wasn’t in the stars for me to want to do something like this. I don’t think it was until I was 18 or 19 that I thought that I would do it for a job. When I started doing YouTube, the relationship was so pure, because the internet was so different back then. No one had really made a job of it at that point.
There’s a band at home called Hudson Taylor that I used to do a lot of stuff with, and they got me into YouTube as well because we were all just busking on the streets in Dublin. That was just something that we did for our pocket money and how I started doing any kind of performing. And then when it came to YouTube, they just thought about it in such a – they had this clarity where they were like, we’re busking on the street corner and singing at people that don’t want to hear. YouTube just feels like that but it’s international. Like, it is just busking, you are just singing for your supper and still being like, “Hey, look at me, want to come and linger on this video for a little bit longer?” When I think of that time, I just think of being really bright-eyed and sort of curious about the whole thing. I had no idea how the music industry worked, but I was probably better off for it. It was way more like, “Oh my god, this is so sick!”
Do you ever find yourself clinging back to that purity and innocence, or trying to reconnect with that way of thinking when you’re making music now?
Yeah, I think trying to recapture that playfulness and almost childlike curiosity is something I’ve been trying to do more so with writing the last couple years, where it’s like, I want to start with a drum loop, I want to start with an instrument that I don’t really play, I want to start with something out of my comfort zone so that I can go back into just being playful about it and capture some of that innocence with it. Because I think it’s so important. I think if you don’t make time and space to be playful like that, that’s how you just become sort of cynical and weathered with it, and I don’t want to become like that.
I know with this album, it was important for you to be involved in every part of the process. What do you feel you learned about yourself as a musician and as a producer by working this way?
I mean, I learned that I’m a complete control freak. [laughs] And getting better at the other processes that I wasn’t confident in before allows me to become that ultimate control freak. Because I can get obsessed with playing and every instrument myself, I can get obsessed with “This is my production and no one’s allowed to come in and do it,” I can be like that – and I was like that for sort of 80% of the process – I was like, down in my little writing room down the road from where I live and it was a very solitary process. But right at the end of the album making I went to the studio in Devon, which is where I brought the band, and that was the fun bit really, but it was also the point at which I had to kind of let go. And that is so in conflict with my control freak nature, so I think what I learned about myself is, just because you can do everything doesn’t mean that you should do everything. Surrounding yourself with people you trust and who really care about your project, delegating those roles and just doing a good job of your bit, is the sweet spot that I tried to learn to find.
You mentioned before that this isn’t exactly a concept album, but I’m very intrigued by the idea of the woman on the internet, and I’m wondering how you imagine or experience your relationship to that character. It feels to me like something that’s both external to yourself but also a part of you.
Yeah, 100%. And the narrative of a lot of the songs, it jumps between songs I’m singing about someone else and songs I’m singing to myself. There’s a lot of that self-awareness and self-reflection. In my head, the woman on the internet, she’s sort of – I mean, she’s no one in particular, but she’s almost this like Wizard of Oz, a faceless, nameless figure who has all the answers, and is much more exciting for the fact that you have no real access to her. And yeah, it was just a lyric that appeared in two of the songs kind of accidentally, I didn’t really realise until I picked all the songs that the lyric was in both. In one song, she’s someone I turn to for a makeup tutorial, in the next she’s more of like a seedy, self-help type, giving very unsolicited advice. So yeah, I think of her as some kind of fairy godmother, but kind of seedy; it’s like you’re turning to her when you feel vulnerable and lost and no one in your real life can help you, but she’s also not really giving you the answers either.
So, I liked the idea of her as the title, and then I also knew that there’s a duality in it, and that it would sound like I was talking about myself, which is also totally fine because the internet has been a huge part of my journey, really. It’s been the centre in some ways of a lot of things that I’ve done. So I kind of liked the duality of, it sounds like it’s about me but in my head it’s about this character.
Do you feel like that also made you more comfortable talking about the experience of being a woman on the internet in a way that was more universal but also personal at the same time?
Yeah, there’s a separation that it creates that I do like. But I think it’s like, in my head she’s no one in particular, I turn to her for help, but then also maybe to someone else, like, I’m their woman on the internet. It sounds silly, but to me, you know, there’s loads of people that I watch on all sorts of platforms, I know so much about their lives, I’m obsessed with the idea of them, I would buy everything that they told me to. The obsession is so real. But then, although it’s strange to think about, there’s a lot of people that have messaged me and said, “Hey, I listen to your songs every day, I’ve looked at your videos, they got me through a hard time.” So it’s like, I think whoever that is is a different person to everyone, and maybe it isn’t even a woman at all. It’s just someone. But yeah, I liked the idea of it being a little bit more open like that.
I wanted to touch on two specific things that you mentioned – one is self-awareness, and then there’s vulnerability. I feel that those two are obviously connected, but there’s also a distinction between them, especially in the way they’re expressed on the album. When you’re in the writing process, are you conscious of which side you’re leaning more into?
Yeah, I agree, I think the two are totally linked. And I think self-awareness, for me anyway, when I write is just totally inevitable. I think it’s often, with these songs or other songs in the past, writing is the thing that makes me aware of what I’m feeling. Because I’m actually not very communicative in real life, and I hate conflict, and I am so bad at telling someone if I have a problem with them. But I have no problem with going and writing a song about it, so sometimes the self-awareness thing is interesting because if I write a song about self-comparison, it doesn’t mean that I have all the answers about how to eliminate self-comparison. None of the songs are really a solution, but what it is is making myself aware of something that I’m feeling.
So, I think self-awareness for anyone that writes songs about themselves in the first person is almost inevitable, but I think that it can be counterproductive as well, because you can write a feeling into existence. You can be mildly sad about a breakup, for example, but writing a song or five or 10 songs about the breakup, can really drive things out of you that are potentially not even there, because there’s always a little bit of embellishment, there’s always a little bit of exaggeration. That’s just kind of how writing is, and you can then be singing those songs on tour for years of your life. [laughs] So the feeling that you had that really was quite small is milked and dragged out and suddenly is a big thing. I’m grateful to writing as a way of processing the things that I’m feeling and the self-awareness comes from that, but it can be counterproductive in terms of ruminating because you’re actually taking a feeling and making something external from it, and then living with that and producing that and finishing the writing on that.
I think one of the ways in which the album is successful is that you always seem to be aware of when you’re being true to yourself and when it’s more like you’re playing a role. But there’s always an emotional honesty to it. Is there a moment on the album that stands out to you as the most honest, or were you were surprised by what you discovered while writing it?
I think the last song on the album is probably that – there’s one called ‘Bloodline’ and there’s a little other track at the end called ‘Difficult Things’, and that’s a song about my family. I’ve wanted to write songs about my family for years, but I’ve never really known the right way to do it. It started with a musical thing rather than a lyrical thing. A lot of the samples in that song and in another one called ‘Do You Mind?’ are just field recorded drum samples; having way too much time during lockdown I just made a percussion pack of things down in my studio – the kind of thing that you’d never have time for in real life. So I was just making little drum loops from that pack, and then started mumbling some verse stuff and kind of realised after a while, like, “Oh, this is about my family.” That was probably one where I was surprised at how stream-of-consciousness it was.
I’m glad that you mentioned the final track in particular, because it does feel like you’re kind of coming full circle. You go back to singing about your childhood and how we turn into our parents, and there’s that universal sentiment in the end, that “we never talk about the difficult things.” Do you feel like that’s kind of the driving force in your songwriting, to talk about the difficult things and to share that vulnerability?
100%. I have such an amazing family and that’s kind of why I never wrote about them before, because it’s not like I have some awful dad to sing about – my family are the best. But the only thing I feel I didn’t have growing up was a kind of free-flowing honesty, open conversation-type environment. And I knew that when I left home at 18-19, I didn’t even know what I wanted for my future, but I just remember making a point of being like, I really want when I have family for it to be like – I want to be open, I want to tell my kids I love them all the time, I want difficult things to be discussed, because that’s how you make them less difficult, rather than like brush things under the rug. That’s more what I’m used to, and it was just a very classic Catholic upbringing where no one spoke about being depressed, no one spoke about being anxious even though a lot of people around me were, it was just all brushed under the carpet. And so, for me, writing is like the antidote to how I was brought up. It’s the way of channelling the things that I will just naturally struggle to talk about in real life.
And most of the songs on the album are that in some way. Like, ‘Zombies!’ is obviously quite a raucous, fun track, but it kind of touches on this toxic masculinity thing and it touches on being with someone who can’t express themselves, and you’re seeing it right there and you’re so frustrated. And again, it’s easy to sing about that situation after the fact, but in the moment, I totally struggle to have a conversation with that person about how it was affecting me. So, the criticism of “we never talk about the difficult things” is on me as well. I’m terrible at that. I’m better at singing about things, but that’s why writing is such a powerful thing for me in that it makes me aware of what I’m thinking and it makes me process what I’m thinking. And if that pushes me to then talk to that person in real life and sort it out, then even better. I don’t think writing songs about situations is always the way to solve them, but it certainly helps you work through them in your head.
This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity and length.