With boredom setting in during quarantine, it’s hard to keep doing work. If you’re getting bored and need to break out of the same ritual but don’t have any consoles, or you a merely tired of the games you have, you can play browser games.
We have compiled a shortlist of fun games below for you to try. They are free to play, have fun and stay safe. All you need to start is a black or white wireless mouse and to start one of the following games. You can also play Solitaire Masters in this link.
Agar.io
If you haven’t yet played the addicting Agar.io, then you must get on it. The game itself is straightforward, you begin as a small cell and your goal is to gain as much mass as possible without being absorbed by another cell. After you’ve gained a lot of mass, you can split and control more than one cell but, in the end, your most important mission is to survive. The game also includes features like custom skins; these will give you a standout look against other players and make the game just that more fun.
This game is one of the internet’s beloved games, Linerider, a game in which you draw lines so that the character of the game (Bosh) can slide. Boštjan Čadež, the author of the game, went on to describe Linerider as more of a toy, than a game as it does not include goals or any score. However, in my opinion, it is still highly fun and exciting to play around with different scenarios.
If you ever loved playing the classic game of Pong, then you’ll love Cube Slam, a 3D redefined version of the original. The game itself was part of experiments with Google, and which you can play against a ‘bear’ or your friends by directly sending them a link to join. It includes WebRTC, which means you can video chat in your web browser without any additional plugins required.
If you’re looking for something more entertaining and well designed, this one will be for you.
Do you ever think about your drawing skills, and if you are well-skilled in drawing? Well, time to find out. Quick, Draw! is a game in which you draw and a neutral network guesses and decides what you have drawn. It’s a wonderfully simple yet very engaging game that will have you hooked from the get-go.
Another browser game which showcases the splendid creativity of people around us is Teachable Snake. In this light, yet enjoyable game, you use a piece of paper with an arrow as your controller, your choices will be detected by your webcam and will give the instructions to the snake in which direction to move. Sounds simple? Have a go yourself!
Street Skater
Street Skater could be another classic browser game. In this game, your goal is not to die while facing breathtaking obstacles and doing brilliant skating tricks. It is straightforward and easy to play. If at some point you get bored with this game, Kumospace offers 14 virtual games that can be played at any time.
You’re in quarantine, and you’re wondering, what if my internet goes down? Well, if you use Google Chrome, no worries for you. If you have ever lost internet while browsing on Google Chrome, you might have got a little screen with a dinosaur popping up; in fact, this is a game by Google Chrome which you can play called Dino. Moreover, even if you have internet you can still play it by simply typing in chrome://dino/ into your Google Chrome search bar. Have fun!
Hailing from the Netherlands, Lewin is the moniker of singer-songwriter Jara Holdert. In the second half of 2019, she released two intensely personal companion EPs – For the Leaving and For the Left Behind – which not only chronicle the falling out of a relationship that played a big part in Holdert’s creative process, but also reveal a transitional period for the artist herself – from a passive observer to an active participant. ‘Don’t You Dare’ is a stunning folk opener where Lewin’s dynamic voice echoes that of Joanna Newsom, as does the latest single from For the Left Behind, the slow-burning ‘Sorrow’, whose songwriting is also reminiscent of Laura Marling. But moments like the bluesy, more upbeat ‘Leather Jackets’ offer a new perspective, hinting at a more empowered self emerging out of the ashes of a broken heart. It’s that kind of acceptance that the heartfelt closer ‘Goodbye Lover’ beautifully embodies: “As snow covers our tracks and traces/ I’ll swallow my last plea/ Whatever was, whatever be/I’m tired making a fool of me.”
We caught up with Lewin for this edition of our Artist Spotlight series, where we showcase up-and-coming artists and give them a chance to talk a bit about their music.
How and when did you become interested in making music?
Music was part of my life from a very young age. I remember singing along to the Beatles without understanding any of the words, my parents had cassette tapes of Rubber Soul and Help that we would listen to in the car. My father played guitar and wrote my sister and me songs for our birthdays. And when I turned seven I asked for a ‘ghettoblaster’ to be able to play CD’s and tapes for myself – the first albums I owned were Sam Cooke and Stevie Wonder. And I was always singing – humming to myself, singing while playing, biking, doing chores – something I still do, sometimes annoying the people around me. But I’m not aware of even doing it.
I played the violin when I was young, and switched to guitar in my teens – first teaching myself from Beatles songbooks, then getting lessons for a few years from an amazing teacher. Playing guitar I was able to accompany myself singing, which felt like such an amazing freedom – singing ánd playing my favorite songs. Later, I got into jazz – applied for higher music education with the goal of becoming a jazz-singer. I learned a lot at the conservatory, but halfway through I started writing my own songs, and they didn’t feel jazzy at all. They were more guitar-based and folky.
What are some of your influences?
Early influences were The Beatles, Aretha Franklin and Stevie Wonder. In my teens I became an avid Neil Young fan. I also listened to Bob Dylan and Joni Mitchell. During my jazz-years I kept listening to Joni, as she seemed to bridge that gap between folk and jazz in her very own way – that was very inspiring to me.
Can you describe the concept behind your two latest projects, ‘For the Leaving’ and ‘For the Left Behind’?
Originally, I recorded a full album, but circumstances made me decide to release the songs of the album in a few steps. It had to do with the heaviness that album embodied for me; it’s history made it very hard to release. I had written all the songs while I was in a relationship with an amazing musician and producer, who had always encouraged me to keep writing and helped me record my songs. But the songs were often about us, about our relationship, and they voiced all the doubts and fears I had; I felt we weren’t going to last, he was at some point going to leave me. We decided to record all the songs together, for my debut album. Only when we were done recording, producing and mixing it, the sword fell; we broke up. All these songs in which I saw it coming now felt prophetic, and it was hard to listen to them myself. So I had a collection of very emotional tunes, and they felt too heavy to release. I took some time, started fresh with a new name, Lewin, and decided to release the full album in a few steps.
My two EP’s ‘For The Leaving’ and ‘For The Left Behind’ are those first two steps; they both contain four songs off the album. But both EP’s have a slightly different perspective on the same situation; just as in the relationship, I was slowly shifting from feeling like a victim, being afraid to be left behind, to taking more responsibility and considering leaving myself, or at least being conscious of continuing something that would have to end sometime soon.
The full album is going to be called ‘For The Leaving and The Left Behind’, and will contain another five songs that were not on any of the EP’s.
What was the writing and recording process like?
I wrote the songs over the course of a few years, that’s why thematically, there is a slow shift – some of them feel younger, others more mature, empowered. We recorded with my band at the time, one week in Haarlems Studio Helmbreker. After we put all the band parts down it was up to me and my boyfriend/producer Aaron to finish the songs together. He was living in Berlin at the time (one of the reasons for our relationship troubles) and so I took the train from Amsterdam to Berlin once or twice a month to join him there and record my vocals, backings, to add more synths and produce and mix the tracks together. It was a beautiful but very intense process – I learned a lot about producing, felt free to be creative and involved in not only the writing and arranging, but also the producing and mixing aspect, which was very new to me at the time. But also, our love was falling apart, and to be sat in a little studio room for hours on end when you’re not feeling comfortable together – well, you have to love your art very much to make up for that.
What are your plans for the rest of the year?
I’m planning to release one or two more singles before the full album comes out – though times are weird, it feels kind of ‘wrong’ to talk about my work and my music with a pandemic going on. I hold on to the thought that it might be a nice distraction for people, or it might be a consolation in rough times. In my songs, I’m allowing for grief, making space for it. In my case it was grieving a relationship, but I hope there is space to see it can be a broader grief or sorrow – that we can allow it in, for just a moment, let it take over, and see that this sadness also needs a place to live, and is part of life.
I have many, many more new songs that aren’t recorded yet – maybe I’ll find the time to put them to tape this year. There could be another album-and-a-half in there.
I’m also releasing singles and an EP with my project The Coo (@thecoomusic) – those songs, I write together with a British songwriter I met at an open mic in Amsterdam, where I live. We heard something in each other music that we really strongly related to. Now, we’re both in isolation on different sides of the sea, but in ‘normal’ times we would be traveling to tour together and play some duo-shows. Let’s just hope that we, working together globally, can keep the spread of this virus under control and come out stronger and more together afterwards.
Entering with a rebellious, self-deprecating tone and energy are All My Friends Hate Me with Not In This Economy. If you’re looking for something fresh and raw, Not In This Economy will be for you, a genuinely joyous ride that delivers on numerous levels. The song is part of their nine-song album Metal Butterflies, which was released back in 2019.
Sara Jackson-Holman Nuclear War
Sara Jackson-Holman’s Nuclear War is another brilliant addition to our Sound Selection. Jackson-Holman delivers a euphonious song that showcases her maturity as an artist lyrically and vocally. The song also carries a retro haze that emanates elegantly throughout the progression of the song. Nuclear War is one of the four tracks part of her Candy EP, which was released today.
KC Lights Luna
If you were to define an addicting track, Luna by KC Lights might fill that definition. Mesmerising synths, crisp drums, and subtle vocal loops make this track majestic. KC Lights delivers on a future classic that hits the right mood with the club-lovers. Luna is worthy of any top-level playlist.
RAMES She’s Gold
A warming sunshine-like vibe opens up She’s Gold, the second single by the four-piece band RAMES. There is a sense of youthfulness and enthusiasm in the sound of RAMES, present throughout each component they explore with their sound. With this song released, we are keen to see what is next for this impressive band.
Bicep Atlas
Lastly, on our Sound Selection, we have Atlas by the critically-acclaimed Bicep, a duo out of Belfast, Northern Ireland. In their newest track, Bicep explores themes of melancholy and nostalgia through ear-warming bass and prominent melody. Atlas marks the most significant release since the duo’s 2017 album Bicep and once again remind us just why they are so appealing.
In this segment, we showcase the most notable albums out each week. Here are the albums out on April 3rd, 2020:
Thundercat, It Is What It Is
Stephen Lee Bruner aka Thundercat has come through with a new studio album, It Is What It Is, via Brainfeeder. Co-produced alongside Flying Lotus, the much-anticipated follow-up to 2017’s critically acclaimed Drunk features contributions from Childish Gambino, Lil B, Kamasi Washington, Ty Dolla $ign, BADBADNOTGOOD, Louis Cole, and comedian/rapper Zack Fox. “This album is about love, loss, life and the ups and downs that come with that,” Thundercat said in a statement. “It’s a bit tongue-in-cheek, but at different points in life you come across places that you don’t necessarily understand… some things just aren’t meant to be understood.”
Purity Ring,WOMB
Canadian indie pop duo Purity Ring are back with their first record in five years, titled WOMB, out now via 4AD. The follow-up to 2015’s Another Eternity was written, recorded, produced, and mixed in its entirety by Megan James and Corin Roddick, who, during their absence as Purity Ring, also contributed to Katy Perry’s 2017 album Witness. A press release describes the album as chronicling “a quest for comfort and the search for a resting place in a world where so much is beyond our control”. It features the previously released song ‘Pink Lighting’, which was revealed through a cryptic puzzle website, while lead single ‘Stardew’ is a reference to the video game Stardew Valley.
Yves Tumor,Heaven to a Tortured Mind
Experimental artist Yves Tumor has released his new full-length record, Heaven to a Tortured Mind, via Warp. Following his 2018 album Safe in the Hands of Love, the album was co-produced alongside Justin Raisen and features the single ‘Gospel For A New Century’, which came with a video directed by Isamaya Ffrench. In a press release, the director said: “Nobody has ever inspired or moved me like Yves Tumor. It’s hard to do justice and communicate the devotional feeling of adoration and love I feel for him and what he represents as an artist. In short, he’s the shit and i’m so honoured to have made my directorial debut with him as my muse.”
Peach Pit,You and Your Friends
Vancouver’s Peach Pit have put out their sophomore album, You and Your Friends, via Columbia Records. Following 2017’s Being So Normal, the record “is a collection of songs about me, people that the band and I care about, and some of the old friends we’ve had over the years,” in the words of vocalist Neil Smith. “All the songs are written from true stories, some have been exaggerated more than others. We can’t wait to finally let go of it and start playing these songs for you out on the road!” The album includes the previously released songs ‘Feelin’ Low (Fuckboy Blues)’, ‘Shampoo Bottles’, and ‘Black Licorice’.
Other albums out today:
Empress Of, I’m Your Empress Of; All Time Low, Wake Up, Sunshine; Mystery Jets, A Billion Heartbeats; Steve Aoki; Neon Future IV.
KOKO, a highly-exciting project that turns up the level on Pop music, revealed their music video for their song Freak. The song drives on dark elements, catchy lyrics, and a majestic vibe; this song will have you hooked from the get-go.
Talking about their music, KOKO said “Sometimes you’re up, sometimes you’re down. With every track, we always try to imagine hearing it at 4am in a field with a load of people. We want to take over the world, basically.”
Without a doubt, KOKO are the name to watch out for. Here is the official video for Freak.
Fran Silvestre Arquitectos, the beloved studio based out of Valencia, Spain, presented a beautiful project which thet named House on the Cliff, among many other projects they present a stunning minimal design that is purely pleasing to the eye.
Find more work by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos here.
After a successful release of Doctor, the band known as Little Thief released their latest single All Our Sins just a few days ago. Little Thief’s release presents dazzling energy that has put them on the radar to many curators from the get-go. With this song released, we are eager to see what is next for them.
When you think of men’s shoe trends, there are a few common styles that come to mind, and many men stick to these trends rather than breaking free and exploring the many exciting trends available to them. If you are looking for a new style or want to update your wardrobe before spring 2020, these 8 shoes have you covered. No matter what your style preference, there is a shoe here for you. Just be sure to get the shoe sizing right first!
Desert Boots
Bored of the same old shoes? While many men choose boots such as Timberlands (see below), desert boots are another fantastic option for a semi-casual look. These boots can be dressed up or down and provide a real versatile and retro look. Teamed with a great shirt and a pair of skinny jeans, these boots will make you a trend setter. Bergdorf Goodman was one of the first stores to start the desert boot fashion trend, and so they’re a good place to start when looking for the perfect pair.
Penny Loafers
A timeless look that goes well with workwear and regular wear, penny loafers will add class to any outfit you choose. These never go out of fashion, so invest in a good pair that will last for years to come. As penny loafers often come in a black leather look, they make a great pair of work shoes, especially if you are looking to impress in your new job.
Chelsea Boots
Another boot style that is making waves in male fashion magazines are Chelsea boots. These shoes are incredibly versatile and make a great addition to any man’s wardrobe. You dress them with tailored trousers or jeans if you want to break away from your usual sneaker style and add a bit more elegance to your outfits. Investing in a designer pair will ensure your boots last and still look brand-new months down the line, as long as you take good care of them.
Sneakers
You can never go wrong with a pair of sneakers and with so many new sneaker trends out there, the world is your oyster when it comes to men’s designer sneakers. Whether you enjoy two-tone sneakers, white sneakers, or like to go all out with your clothing and wear bright and funky sneakers, Fendi is a good designer choice. Fendi sneakers boast a unique and quirky style, perfect for the man who likes to stand out. You can find Fendi sneakers on SSENSE – a high-end fashion retailer that offers both an online store and physical outlets.
Sliders
Whether you are lounging around the house with the kids or hitting the beach, sliders are a fashionable and practical choice for any man. If you don’t like wearing covered shoes in the warmer months and sandals aren’t your thing, sliders are your new best friend. Many of the leading sports brands have their own range of sliders, including Adidas and Nike.
Runners
For any exercise fanatic out there that enjoys a good run, investing in a pair of runners will get you out and about this spring while remaining comfortable and trendy. Sneakers aren’t made for running and won’t offer the same support as a pair of runners, meaning you aren’t doing the best by your bones and muscles by choosing to run in sneakers. Many leading fashion designers have their own selection of runners, so you can run with panache wearing brands such as Prada and Balenciaga.
Boat Shoe
The boat shoe style is a classic and ageless look for the fashionable man. These make the perfect pair of shoes for dinner dates or a trip down the supermarket, meaning you can wear them every day and look sophisticated while doing so. For an easy slip on shoe that looks great without trying, boat shoes are an affordable style. Gucci have a range of quirky boat shoe styles, or if you want a more typical look, try Sperry. Sperry also give you the option of total customization of your boat shoe, meaning you can make the shoes unique to your style and color preference.
High-Top Boots
If you want a more standard pair of boots, Timberland offers their own unique style that most men love. These are a snug classic that can be found in a range of color styles, making them another versatile shoe that can be easily dressed up or down depending on the occasion. Many Timberland shoes are also waterproof, so you can look trendy even when walking the dog in the park on a wet spring morning. Made to keep up with those who have an active lifestyle, these make a great addition to any man’s shoe rack.
If you want to look great in spring 2020, look no further than these 8 stylish men’s shoe styles. No matter what your fashion style, these shoes will add flair and sophistication to your wardrobe.
In this monthly segment, we showcase the best albums of each month. Here are our picks for March, 2020:
Album of the Month: Porridge Radio, Every Bad
For a band that hails from the seaside town of Brighton, it’s fitting that Porridge Radio’s sophomore album feels like it’s been dredged right out of a stormy sea. Following their relatively unimposing debut Rice, Pasta and Other Fillers, the post-punk four-piece’s latest feels like an unstoppable torrent of emotion that showcases both each member’s unique strengths and the electric dynamism of the band as a whole. Though the album dives into a few disparate musical territories, from dream pop to alt-rock, the force of singer Dana Margolin’s vocal prowess pulls it all together, each one of her outbursts etching itself into your brain until her personal demons become your own. Throughout Every Bad, Margolin repeats phrases to the point where they take on a new meaning or lose their meaning entirely: “Thank you for leaving,” she hollers on opener ‘Born Confused’, while on the explosive, grungy ‘Sweet’, “I am charming/ I am sweet” feels less like an affirmation and more like a ritualistic attempt to bite off her neuroses. It all culminates with ‘Lilac’, an absolute knock-out of a song that slowly builds into an earth-shatteringly transcendent crescendo – the lyrics go from a genuine proclamation of hopelessness to a glimmer of hope that, unlike on ‘Sweet’, doesn’t feel forced or half-ironic, but cathartic: “I don’t want to get bitter/ I want us to get better/ I want us to be kinder/ To ourselves and to each other.” It all hits too close to home, but alas, we’re not allowed to enjoy any kind of hopeful resolution – like other tracks here, the song abruptly cuts to the next, as if negating a spell that’s too good for its own good. And rather than offering closure with the final track, ‘Homecoming Song’, what we get instead is an honest but depressing confession of feeling like “a sinking ship” with “nothing inside”. Perhaps all that mental magic, all that trying to mess with the sea, is too much for one person to carry; perhaps, rather than trying to control the tides, all we can really do is allow ourselves to be swept by them.
Following 2018’s critically acclaimed, genre-bending In a Poem Unlimited, Meghan Remy’s project has grown ever larger, recruiting more backing vocalists and musicians; a fitting move considering the multiplicity of perspectives that surround her new album. Grounding Heavy Light are three sound collages featuring overlapping voices that intimate memories from their youth – ‘Advice to a Teenage Self’, ‘The Most Hurtful Thing’, and ‘The Colour of Your Bedroom’ – indicating that Remy is interested in exploring not only our shared collective past but also how our individual pasts connect and define us. And what defines us, it seems, is our utter cluelessness about life – in the deeply existential ‘IOU’, Remy restles with the idea that we are all born with no plan or manual for how to live, and the only thing that changes as we grow up is the fact that we learn from those around us. Unfortunately, much of what makes up the systems that are passed down to us is fundamentally problematic, from capitalism (‘4 American Dollars’) to patriarchy (‘State House (It’s A Man’s World)’). While not filled with the same societal anger as her previous outings, these moments act as a reminder that the personal is always political. And while Heavy Light may not be fuelled by the same fervent musical energy as In a Poem Unlimited, it still has that same emotional immediacy and plenty of exciting highlights that carry it through, like the groovy disco-latin fusion of ‘And Yet it Moves/ Y Se Mueve’. But it’s the album’s reflective, subdued tone that makes it stand out, like a light guiding the way into the deepest corners of the soul.
Highlights: ‘4 American Dollars’, ‘Overtime’, ‘IOU’, ‘And Yet it Moves/ Y Se Mueve’, ‘Denise, Don’t Wait’
The Weeknd, After Hours
Ever since his commercial breakthrough with 2013’s Kiss Land, Abel Tesfaye has struggled to combine the transfixing quality of his early mixtapes with the massive success of his chart-topping singles. But the R&B crooner’s follow-up to the 2018 EP My Dear Melancholy, marks his most successful reinvention yet, revealing a softer, more vulnerable side while remaining as elusive as ever. The crimson-jacket-wearing, bloody-faced Tesfaye that appears on the cover might be a carefully crafted persona that owes a lot to the horror films that’ve always influenced his music, but there’s more to the record than just style over substance (speaking of substances, yeah… they make a few cameos). The opening cut, ‘Alone Again’, is coated in mesmeric layers of synths, with Tesfaye’s washed-out voice barely coming through: “Take off my disguise/I’m living someone else’s life/ Suppressing who I was inside,” he sings, as if drowning not in water, but in pools of blood. While the Weeknd’s signature lines about drugs and sex still make the cut, After Hours is the artist’s most introspective, emotionally resonant record to date, from the reflective ‘Snowchild’ to the heartfelt ballad ‘Scared to Live’. Co-producer Daniel Lopatin aka Oneohtrix Point Never – who scored Uncut Gems, in which Tesfaye made an appearance – provides some much needed texture and depth to the sonic makeup of the album, while megaproducer Max Martin contributes to the record’s most infectiously catchy singles, most memorably on the excellent 80s-inspired synth jam ‘Blinding Lights’ and the more modern ‘In Your Eyes’. On paper, After Hours shouldn’t work – there are too many musical worlds colliding, too many sides of the Weeknd unveiling themselves – which makes the album’s surprising cohesiveness an even greater achievement. Its greatest, though, is pushing forth The Weeknd’s most assured, multifaceted incarnation yet – and this, it seems, is only the beginning.
Highlights: ‘Alone Again’, ‘Hardest to Love’, ‘Scared to Live’, ‘Blinding Lights’, ‘In Your Eyes’
Dua Lipa, Future Nostalgia
Dua Lipa has been building up momentum for years, but it’s not until now that it feels like she’s fully claimed her place in the pop landscape. If you’d disregarded her as another run-of-the-mill pop star, think again – where her long-in-the-works 2017 debut felt overstuffed and, ironically for a self-titled effort, lacking in personality, Future Nostalgia is a tight, confident sophomore outing that’s packed with one banger after another. “You want a timeless song, I wanna change the game,” she proclaims on the opening track, and with an effortless mix of 80s pop and modern production, she doesn’t fall short. From the slick bass line of ‘Don’t Start Now’ to the retro synth-pop of lead single ‘Physical’ to the INXS-sampling disco of ‘Break My Heart’, Lipa is not just in love, but in total command, showcasing her natural ability to carry an infectious groove that seems to span across multiple decades. The album peaks with three mid-album highlights – ‘Levitating’, an irresistibly catchy, Daft Punk-esque dance tune, ‘Pretty Please’, which sounds a bit like Billie Eilish singing a sultry funk banger (and nailing it), and ‘Hallucinating’, a carefree club throwback. Unfortunately, the record falters slightly towards the end: ‘Good in Bed’ features another great hook, but its rhymes are painfully stale, while closer ‘Boys Will Be Boys’ hits the right notes but feels entirely out of place. That aside, Future Nostalgia is a bold, defining statement from a pop star who’s definitely here to stay, a collection of tracks that can be as sophisticated as they are pure fun.
From its very first notes, Waxahatchee’s fifth studio album feels like the calm after the storm. Gone is the grungy, distorted indie rock of 2017’s Out in the Storm, and in its place has bloomed an altogether different flower, its roots planted firmly at the core of American folk music. With the skies having opened up, seemingly by the sheer force of human will, a newly sober Katie Crutchfield approaches the familiar subjects of love and heartache with a sense of clarity and self-acceptance: “I’m a bird in the trees/ I can learn to see with a partial view/I can learn to be easy as I move in close to you,” she sings on ‘Fire’. That effortless ease is part of what defines Saint Cloud, thanks in part to Brad Cook’s warm, spare production that perfectly accommodates Crutchfield’s songwriting, which, while as poetic and evocative as ever, feels simpler, more natural. “I want it all,” she repeatedly laments on the opening track – there’s still a fire burning inside her, but it’s entangled in the kind of longing that comes with finally being free. ‘The Eye’ is a highlight that showcases Crutchfield’s ability as an engaging storyteller; she allows the song to take its full shape with subtle touches in her vocal delivery, so that when she sings about lovers levitating or a “a scientific cryptogram lit up behind the sunbeam”, the image is projected in front of you. But the album only unveils its full beauty at the very end, with its two final tracks: ‘Ruby Falls’ finds Crutchfield sharing her wisest and most profound learnings, like how “real love don’t follow a straight line”, while the closing title track confronts death with soul-crushing immediacy: “And when I go, when I go/ Look back at me, embers aglow,” she pleads. With Saint Cloud, Waxahatchee has crafted a modern folk classic we won’t soon forget.
Zac Henderson, a photographer and videographer out of Boulder, USA, revealed an eye-pleasing series named Strange Beauty in which Henderson explores the beauty of geothermal activity in Yellowstone Natural Park, USA.