Following a series of teasers and the release of a new single, Tyler, the Creator has announced that his new album Call Me If You Get Lost will be released next Friday, June 25 via Columbia. Find the cover artwork below.
Tyler, the Creator dropped a new track called ‘LUMBERJACK’ earlier this week. Prior to that, he shared a teaser video titled ‘SIDE STREET’ that ended with the phrase “Call Me If You Get Lost,” which also appeared in a series of billboards that went up around the world in LA, London, Paris, Berlin, Stockholm, Amsterdam, Sydney, Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver. Call Me If You Get Lost will be his first album since 2019’s Grammy-winning IGOR.
Hailing from Orlando, Florida, 22-year-old Gatlin Thornton, who goes by the stage nameGatlin, decided to pursue songwriting full-time after spending a few years at university in Nashville. Having sung in church choir for several years, Gatlin initially experimented with Christian contemporary and country music before comfortably settling into her current sound. The singer, who is also a member of the three-piece indie bandSadie Hawkins, debuted in 2020 with her EP Sugarcoated, in which she blends mellow, comforting alt-folk sounds with the addicting aura of pop. She spent much of lockdown working on her new four-track EP titled To Remind Me of Home, set for release on June 25. While the new project seems like a natural progression following her past releases, it embraces a richer, more mature sound and hints at Gatlin’s growth over the past few years. Filled with dreamy, upbeat heartbreak anthems, including ‘Whenever He Asks’ and ‘What If I Love You’, the EP also introduces Gatlin’s most vulnerable track to date, ‘Hospital’, an honest account of a hospital visit in the midst of a dark mental health period.
We caught up with Gatlin for this edition of ourArtist Spotlight interview series to talk about her understanding of home, her experience as a band member and solo artist, creating her new EP during a pandemic, and more.
I was hoping we could talk about your background a little. What are some of your favourite things about your birthplace, Orlando?
I had a crazy childhood, I was outdoors all the time. I actually grew up in a suburb of Orlando and my whole family lived 10 minutes from us, so I was really close with all my cousins and we’d drive dirt bikes and play in the mud… I got to have a really adventurous and imaginative spirit because I was always playing. That shaped a lot of who I am. As I got into middle and high school, I had a harder time living there, but my childhood was amazing.
Do you feel like Orlando is home for you, or has your idea of “home” changed over time?
Oh, it’s definitely changed. I guess my family feels like home, but man, those four years of high school I was jonesing to get out of Orlando. I definitely wished away a lot of those years. Nashville felt like home for a while – I was there for four years after leaving Orlando. Now I’m in LA, having moved here in January, so I feel like home is a little misplaced. I guess I don’t have an actual ‘city home’ right now, so I’m having to find home in people. And I feel like I’m at that age now where your friends become family.
You studied at Belmont University for a few years before quitting to pursue music full time. What did you study?
I studied Songwriting. It was amazing, but I think I’m just really bad at multitasking and being in classrooms. I was home-schooled during my high school years since I just couldn’t sit in a classroom anymore, so I did two years of uni and it was wonderful, I loved my professors, but at a certain point I couldn’t do it anymore.
I mean, stopping university to pursue music – that’s brave but quite scary. How did you feel when taking that step?
Well, they have a joke at Belmont: if you drop out, it means you’re doing something right. That’s kind of every musician’s goal there. It was a little scary not knowing whether it was going to work out, but I had people supporting that decision. My parents supported it, some professors of mine supported it, I also met my manager at Belmont and she was really encouraging. So, I think it just felt right for me.
You’re also part of an indie band called Sadie Hawkins.Did you join the band first and then pursue your solo career, or was it an adjacent project?
It happened alongside my solo project – I had all this extra time after dropping out. I’d been writing with the other band members, Tristan Bushman and Daniel Ethridge, since before I moved to Nashville, and they’re definitely like older brothers to me. They decided to start a band because they had written all these songs together and wanted a girl, so I was like, “Sure, I’ll join!” All three of us have individual artist projects, you know, we wanted to follow the boygenius model. We were able to make music whenever we had down time, for fun, without pressure. There’s no stress, no fighting, no conflicts, it’s perfect!
The experience of being in a band and working on your solo career must be quite different. Are there specific things you love about each project?
Gosh, yeah, it’s very different. As much as I love what I do, it does come with a level of self-doubt, anxiety, worrying about money, all that stuff. I think that’s normal for solo artists. I can deal with that cause there’s so many highs; it’s exactly what I want to be making and I’m very proud of it. But Sadie Hawkins allows me to be creative in a specific way, it’s another part of music that I love, the Americana rock stuff. It’s not what I am by myself, but it’s what the three of us are together. It’s a very good balance to have.
Let’s talk about the release of your upcoming EP. Its title, To Remind Me of Home, is a line from one of the tracks called ‘Hospital’. How did you settle on that specific line for the title?
I had an ongoing list in my notes and I really wanted it to be a lyric from one of the songs. I thought a lot about the period in which I wrote these songs. During the pandemic, I think everyone was craving a feeling of home, and I felt misplaced out here in LA without a real home. This idea of home was just a theme that was coming up a lot in my life. Also, I had just gotten this tattoo, it’s an orange, symbolic for Florida, and the lyric is talking about oranges reminding me of home. I think it all just fit.
I’d really like to delve into ‘Hospital’. I’d say this is the most sincere song you’ve released yet, the lyrics are so emotionally charged. There’s also this element of self-deprecation with the line “I find it kind of funny how much pain I’m in.” I think that’s something many people going through mental health struggles will relate to.
Yeah, I mean, so many people, including myself, have a big problem of using humour as a coping mechanism. In my therapy sessions I’ll joke about pain the whole time, and my therapist keeps telling me to stop, but it’s just so real. I feel like that’s a very natural reaction even though we really… Should stop. [laughs]
The chorus of ‘Hospital’ is such a comforting sound, with the vocals blurring the lines between melody and harmony. Your high voice is very soothing and provides comfort in an otherwise deeply sad song. Was the dreaminess of the chorus intentional?
Well, actually, my producer Nick and I went super back and forth on that. We kind of fought about it for a little bit. I wanted it stripped, I wanted to keep it incredibly sad, but he was like, this track needs this. It needs this break, it needs this to tie the other three songs together. As I listened to it more and more, I realised, “Okay, he’s right, he’s right…” So, it was intentional onhis part. I was a hater for a little bit but he turned me eventually.
And the bit at the end, is that the actual voice message you sent your grandma after this particular hospital visit?
It is! It’s real. Well, I wrote the song maybe two weeks after I was discharged and my grandma was the only person I called. A year and a few months later, I asked her to send me that voicemail cause that’s exactly what the song is about. Again, I’m using humour in the voicemail, even though I’m talking about my mental illness. I’d naturally never want anyone to hear this, therefore I added it in. I really wanted to put it all out there.
I really admire that. What are you hoping people who are struggling right now will receive from the song?
I hope the song makes them feel less alone and normalises talking about these experiences, opening up to those around you. People will, in turn, open up to you. I think if ‘Hospital’ provides people with comfort and the power to speak about their struggles, that’s it. Talking about it strips some of the power from whatever you’re going through.
It’s truly a touching song, I think it’ll definitely accomplish that. I also really love ‘Whenever He Asks’ – it has this nice energising drum beat, but at the core it’s quite a dark song about emotional attachment and heartbreak. Is it difficult to keep hearing or performing songs that are associated with tough times?
There are certain songs, like ‘I Think About You All the Time’ from my first EP, that still make me really emotional. ‘Whenever He Asks’, for some reason, I do feel very removed from, especially cause I originally wrote it as a fully acoustic guitar song in January 2020, but we revisited it and I changed so much of it in June of the same year. When I was doing that, it was coming from a less emotional place, I had gotten most of that out. I was a lot more detached from it. I don’t “feel” it as much anymore, and now I just think to myself, “Gosh, I can’t believe I let myself be treated like that and I really learned my lesson from that experience.” ‘I Think About You All the Time’, though… For some reason, that song is a very emotional one to listen to and play. Maybe that’s also because it’s been out a little longer and I’ve gotten to hear other people’s stories, what it means to them and the sadness in situations like that. And obviously, ‘Hospital’ is also a really hard one to listen to.
Is it cool to hear people attach their own stories to your songs?
Oh my gosh, it’s my favourite thing. It’s my favourite thing! Cause at that point, it’s not my song anymore. That’s such a hippie thing to say, but really, it’s everyone’s song. If people hear it and link their experiences to it, then the song did its job. I sometimes get to hear about it, and that’s the best part.
The creation of your first EP Sugarcoated and your new project To Remind Me of Home must’ve been quite different. Given the pandemic, I can’t imagine it was a very easy time – what was the process like?
Honestly, the creation of the new EP was a much better process, strangely enough. We started in November 2020 when things were opening up, so for a week we got to go to a studio with everyone masked up and tested. After that, it was just me and Nick who were working on it, I came out to LA and we’d do stuff over Zoom. It was really good. In the previous EP, there were a lot of different producers and we were going one track at a time and it was stressful cause there was always a deadline. This time, it was a lot easier to make it work, I felt more creative and less stressed.
Do you have a favourite single from To Remind Me of Home?
I’m gonna have to say ‘What If I Love You’ and ‘Hospital’. I can’t pick one, it’s like comparing apples and oranges. ‘What If I Love You’ was just so much fun to write, my co-writer Michelle Buzz has become one of my best friends and whenever I write with her it’s just so easy. Writing, recording and promoting that song and making that video… It was all so much fun. I have a lot of sweet memories attached to that process. As for ‘Hospital’, it’s the rawest thing I’ve ever created about one of the darkest times of my life, so it’s really meaningful. So, the front of the EP and the back of the EP.
You’ve filmed quite a lot of music videos over the past few years. Which one was the most fun to shoot?
Oh, ‘What If I Love You’. We were in Joshua Tree and I rented this old 80s Mercedes, put the top down, drove around, and thought: This is the life!
This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity and length.
Diana Ross has announced Thank You, her first new solo album in 15 years. Set for release on September 10 via Decca, it’s also her first new album of original material since 1999’s Every Day Is a New Day. Listen to the newly unveiled title track and find the tracklist below.
Written during lockdown and recorded in Ross’ home studio, Thank You will feature collaborations with Jack Antonoff, Jimmy Napes, Tayla Parx, Spike Stent, and more. “This collection of songs is my gift to you with appreciation and love,” Ross said in a statement. “I am eternally grateful that I had the opportunity to record this glorious music at this time. I dedicate this songbook of love to all of you, the listeners. As you hear my voice you hear my heart.”
Thank You Tracklist:
1. Thank You
2. If the World Just Danced
3. All Is Well
4. In Your Heart
5. Just In Case
6. The Answers Always Love
7. Let’s Do It
8. I Still Believe
9. Count On Me
10. Tomorrow
11. Beautiful Love
12. Time To Call
13. Come Together
Elusive UK collective SAULT have announced a new record titled NINE. The project, which will follow last year’s UNTITLED (Black Is) and UNTITLED (Rise), will be available on streaming services for a total of 99 days and will also be pressed to vinyl. The group’s website currently reads “107 Days Left of NINE,” seemingly indicating that it will be released next Friday, June 25. Check out the announcement below.
In 2019, SAULT issued the albums 5 and 7. UNTITLED (Black Is) and UNTITLED (Rise) arrived on Juneteenth amid Black Lives Matter protests following the killing of George Floyd.
Fresh off the release of her new single ‘Solar Power’, Lorde has shared a new teaser video on her website. The silent clip, titled ‘Every Perfect Summer’s Gotta Take Its Flight’, features crop circles and sand writing that spell out ‘SP’. The title could be a reference to the ‘Liability’ lyric, “Every perfect summer’s eating me alive,” from 2017’s Melodrama. Watch it here.
‘Solar Power’, which features backing vocals from Clairo and Phoebe Bridgers, is the title track to the New Zealand pop star’s upcoming third album. “The album is a celebration of the natural world, an attempt at immortalising the deep, transcendent feelings I have when I’m outdoors,” she wrote in her newsletter. “In times of heartache, grief, deep love, or confusion, I look to the natural world for answers. I’ve learnt to breathe out, and tune in. This is what came through.”
“I want this album to be your summer companion, the one you pump on the drive to the beach,” she added. “The one that lingers on your skin like a tan as the months get cooler again.”
A teaser video Tyler shared titled ‘SIDE STREET’ ended with the phrase “Call Me If You Get Lost,” which also appeared in a series of billboards that went up in select cities in the US last week. On Tuesday, Tyler tweeted out a phone number that was also included in the billboards. Those teasers also appear at the end of the ‘LUMBERJACK’ visual.
Since the release of his 2019 album IGOR, Tyler, the Creator has shared the singles ‘BEST INTEREST’ and ‘GROUP B’, as well as the Coca-Cola jingle ‘Tell Me How’. He also teamed up with Channel Tres on ‘Fuego’ and Brent Faiyaz on ‘Gravity’.
Jessie Ware appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon last night (June 15) to deliver a performance of her single ‘Remember Where You Are’ from an empty London Coliseum. Watch it below.
Ware’s most recent full-length album What’s Your Pleasure? arrived last year. Earlier this month, the singer released the deluxe version of the LP, which features five additional tracks, including Best New Songs‘Please’ and ‘Hot N Heavy’.
Chubby and the Gang have announced a new album titled The Mutt’s Nuts. The UK band’s first LP for Partisan Records was produced by Fucked Up’s Jonah Falco and is due out August 27. Along with the announcement, the band has also shared a video for the new single ‘Coming Up Tough’. Check it out and find the album’s cover art and tracklist below.
“‘Coming Up Tough’ is about a family member of mine who ended up going to prison at very young age for over 20 years,” frontman Charlie Manning Walker (aka Chubby Charles’) explained in a statement. “He went in as a kid and spent most of his life in the system. Where’s the justice in that? You come out and have to prove yourself to a world that shut you away—what chance do you have? There’s no attempt at actual rehabilitation, no empathy, just a cage to be forgotten about. I wanted the song to feel like a snowball effect. The character gets thrown out of his house at first and it feels almost juvenile, but then as it progresses you realize the real trouble he’s in. And too often once you’re in trouble you can’t get out.”
1. The Mutt’s Nuts
2. It’s Me Who’ll Pay
3. Coming Up Tough
4. On the Meter
5. Beat That Drum
6. Pressure
7. Take Me Home to London
8. Life on the Bayou
9. White Rags
10. Overachiever
11. Someone’s Gunna Die
12. Getting Beat Again (Eppu Normaali)
13. Life’s Lemons
14. Lightning Don’t Strike Twice
15. I Hate the Radio
The Killers and Bruce Springsteen have teamed up for a new song called ‘Dustland’. It’s a new version of the band’s 2008 single ‘A Dustland Fairytale’, from the album Day & Age. Check it out below.
Frontman Brandon Flowers told Rolling Stone that the original plan was to play the song together live. “But the idea to record it remotely was initially about giving people something during quarantine,” he said. “‘Dustland’’s lineage leads straight to Bruce. When we finished it back in 2008, I sent him a copy and a note expressing my gratitude for his contribution to my life.”
He added: “I attribute my discovery and absorption of his music with helping me become a more authentic writer. He helped me to see the extraordinary in everyday people and their lives. And in this case, it was my parents who were under the microscope. Their faith and doubts, their search for salvation in the desert. It sounds Biblical. It also sounds Springsteenian.”
The Polaris Music Prize has announced its 2021 long list. The Weather Station, Yves Jarvis, CFCF, Helena Deland, Daniel Lanois, Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, Yu Su, Mustafa, the Besnard Lakes, Bernice, Cadence Weapon, Thanya Iyer, Klô Pelgag, TOBi, and more are up for the award, which is annually given to the best full-length Canadian album of the year, determined by an independent jury of nearly 200 music journalists, broadcasters and bloggers from across Canada. Check out the full list below.
Of the 40 Canadian artists announced on the Long List, only 10 will move on to the Short List, which will be revealed on July 15. Last year’s Polaris Prize was awarded to Backxwash.
2021 Polaris Music Prize Long List:
Art Bergmann – Late Stage Empire Dementia
Bernice – Eau De Bonjourno
The Besnard Lakes – The Besnard Lakes Are the Last of the Great Thunderstorm Warnings
Leanne Betasamosake Simpson – Theory of Ice
Big Brave – Vital
Cadence Weapon – Parallel World
Charlotte Cardin – Phoenix
CFCF – memoryland
Clairmont The Second – It’s Not How It Sounds
Helena Deland – Someone New
DijahSB – Head Above the Waters
Kathleen Edwards – Total Freedom
Dominique Fils-Aimé – Three Little Words
Fiver with the Atlantic School of Spontaneous Composition – Fiver with the Atlantic School of Spontaneous Composition
Thanya Iyer – KIND
Yves Jarvis – Sundry Rock Song Stock
Rochelle Jordan – Play with the Changes
LAL – Meteors Could Come Down
Daniel Lanois – Heavy Sun
Thierry Larose – Cantalou
Russell Louder – Humor
Elliot Maginot – Easy Morning
Mustafa – When Smoke Rises
Laura Niquay – Waska Matisiwin
Nyssa – Girls Like Me
The OBGMs – The Ends
Dorothea Paas – Anything Can’t Happen
Klô Pelgag – Notre-Dame-des-Sept-Douleurs
Savannah Ré – Opia
Allison Russell – Outside Child
Julien Sagot – Sagot
Sargeant X Comrade – Magic Radio
Shabason, Krgovich & Harris – Philadelphia
Yu Su – Yellow River Blue
Julian Taylor – The Ridge
TEKE::TEKE – Shirushi
TOBi – Elements Vol. 1
Vagina Witchcraft – Vagina Witchcraft
The Weather Station – Ignorance
Zoon – Bleached Wavves