Half Waif, the project of Nandi Rose, has announced a new album titled See You at the Maypole. The follow-up to 2021’s Mythopoetics lands on October 4 via ANTI-. It’s led by the single ‘Figurine’, which comes paired with a video directed by Derrick Belcham and shot at Rose’s upstate New York home, with choreography by Kora Radella. Check it out below and scroll down for the album artwork (by Annika Tucksmith) and tracklist.
‘Figurine’, like much of See You at the Maypole, was written in the wake of a miscarriage. “Not everyone will go through a miscarriage, but this is a song about how to continue on after losing something precious, how to find the light on your face again,” Rose explained. She added, “I was literally carrying death inside me, and then my body was frozen.… This wasn’t just my story, I wanted to say. It was every story of loss – the loss of a life, the loss of a dream, the loss of trust and hope and faith. A story of finding a way back again.”
Rose worked on the new LP, which also follows 2024’s Ephemeral Being EP, with longtime collaborator Zubin Hensler. Other contributors include percussionists Jason Burger and Zack Levine, guitarist Josh Marre, violinists Hannah Epperson and Elena Moon Park, clarinetist Kristina Teuschler, trombonist Willem de Koch, harpist Rebecca El-Saleh, and upright bassist Spencer Zahn.
See You at the Maypole Cover Artwork:
See You at the Maypole Tracklist:
1. Fog Winter Balsam Jade
2. Collect Color
3. I-90
4. Figurine
5. Heartwood
6. Big Dipper
7. Shirtsleeves
8. Sunset Hunting
9. Dust
10. Slow Music
11. Ephemeral Being
12. Violetlight
13. Velvet Coil
14. The Museum
15. King of Tides
16. Mother Tongue
17. March Grass
Throughout the week, we update our Best New Songs playlist with the new releases that caught our attention the most, be it a single leading up to the release of an album or a newly unveiled deep cut. And each Monday, we round up the best new songs released over the past week (the eligibility period begins on Monday and ends Sunday night) in this best new music segment.
This week’s list includes ‘Greyhound’, the cathartic eight-minute single that leads Foxing’s upcoming album; Trace Mountains’ ‘In a Dream’, a driving, existential single that sprawls over seven and a half minutes; Magdalena Bay’s kaleidoscopic ‘Tunnel Vision’, which harks back to the duo’s prog-rock origins; Jane Remover’s fuzzy, mesmerizing new song ‘Dream Sequence’; High Vis’ ‘Mind’s a Lie’, which injects their post-hardcore sound with elements of house music; A$AP Rocky’s infectious and surprisingly effective collaboration with Jessica Pratt, ‘Highjack’; Soccer Mommy’s ‘M’, the gentle, pensive lead single from her forthcoming album Evergreen; MJ Lenderman’s ‘Joker Lips’, which evokes genuine heartache between a series of punchlines; Sex Week’s hypnotically delicate ‘Kid Muscle’; Jamie xx and the Avalanches’ soaring, colourful collaboration ‘All You Children’; and ‘Seed of a Seed’, the gorgeous new song from Portland’s Haley Heynderickx.
Clairo has shared the music video for ‘Juna’, a highlight from her latest album Charm. Marking her first-ever visual for an album track, the Bradley J. Calder-directed clip features Clairo at a wrestling show. Watch it below.
Charm, Clairo’s third album, came out on July 12. A few days later, the singer-songwriter performed ‘Juna’ on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.
Cellophane Memories, David Lynch’s latest musical collaboration with Texas-born singer Chrystabell, drifts by in a haze. Even if you’re not too familiar with Lynch’s work or the entire aesthetic the filmmaker’s surname has been associated with (and often misused), the album title hints at the thinly nostalgic nature of its music, which is preoccupied with dreams, memory, and suggestive scene-setting more than any kind of solvable mystery. Chrystabell – who has frequently collaborated with Lynch since contributing to the Inland Empire soundtrack and played FBI agent Tammy Preston in Twin Peaks:The Return – has likened it to “mood music,” but clarified, “not that it creates mood, but more that it reflects your own.” You come out of it unsure what’s happened but mesmerized nonetheless, and if it serves its purpose, with a keener awareness of your environment and headspace.
Lynch and Chrystabell’s first album together, 2011’s This Train, was a rather conventional yet transfixing offering in a subgenre that Lynch – with his and frequent collaborator Angelo Badalamenti’s production in Julee Cruise’s 1989 album Floating Into the Night – helped establish. By contrast, the dreampop of Cellophane Memories is sparser, largely beatless, and more experimental – more dream, less pop, essentially – as if expansed by the passage of time. Still, the intimate dance between Lynch’s airy synths and Chrystabell’s angelic vocals remains intriguing; the production has a way of beautifully diffusing the bluesy, confessional element of Chrystabell’s prior work without overshadowing its power. Floating atop the overlapping, stitched-up, and reversed layers of her voice, fragments become the focus, boundaries are blurred, and the mundane bleeds into the otherworldly. If only there was a word for that.
At times, the arrangements are a little too amorphous to keep you hooked in the swirl of it all. But they are tender, vulnerable, and, if nothing else, cinematically paced. In ‘The Sky Falls’, Lynch’s synths soften the frail resignation of Chrystabell’s words, barely decipherable except when they mention death, into something ethereal rather than downcast. When he switches to a twangy, reverb-drenched guitar, it has a strangely grounding effect, shedding light on the expository details of ‘You Know the Rest’ and rendering the sensuality of ‘Two Lovers Kiss’ all the more palpable. But the record is at its most sweeping when it includes contributions from the late Badalamenti, whose epic synths heighten the wondrous (and decidedly unerotic) romanticism of ‘So Much Love’, as well as composer Dean Hurley, whose bass and drums turn ‘The Answers to the Questions’ into not only an ominously lurching standout but the undeniable centerpiece.
Cellophane Memories supposedly came to Lynch in a vision during a nighttime walk in a forest, where a bright light became visible over the tops of tall trees. That vision manifests in the brooding highlight ‘Reflections in a Blade’, driving the climax of the action, which you can just about decipher if you look hard enough: “Darkness would not hide her for long/ She took a breath and ran/ She ran as fast as she could to the back of the house/ The light of the flashlight dancing like a shiny knife blade.” It should be no spoiler that it turns out to be a dream, though one vivid and violent enough to leave you questioning the reality around it. “She thought they had a bond/ An unshakable bond/ But was it too good to be true?” Chrystabell wonders, in a wave of profound lucidity, on ‘The Answers to the Questions’. But once she wakes from that dream, she is floored by a connection that transcends two human beings; the final track is called ‘Sublime Eternal Love’. Whether you could call the conclusion Lynchian is up for debate. But it’s the gentle beauty, not the ambiguity or weirdness, that animates this collaborative album, echoing through the silence left in its wake.
The Romantic Disorder: Ruiyan Sun Solo Exhibition, took place at the Blanc Gallery in midtown Manhattan from from July 25th to 27th, 2024. The exhibition presented a subtle interplay of light and shadow, conjuring a world suspended between memory and reality. Here, amidst the hazy tones and gentle whispers of the sea, lies a profound exploration of the delicate fabric of human emotion and remembrance.
The exhibition explores the shared human experience that reverberates with love, loss, and the unspoken poetry of existence. Ruiyan Sun’s artistry blends technological sophistication and emotional depth. Programming within p5.js and ml5.js, she creates dynamic visuals that adapt and evolve, mirroring the unpredictable, chaotic, and beautiful flow of life itself.
Nostalgic Glimpses, merges the charm of vintage comic aesthetics with the spontaneity of modern generative algorithms. The artist’s approach celebrates the unpredictability and uniqueness of each moment and evokes a poignant sense of nostalgia reminiscent of the cherished, flickering frames of old animations. Ruiyan Sun’s artistry masterfully combines technological sophistication with profound emotional depth, creating a vibrant intersection between modern programming and the fluid unpredictability of human experiences.
Exhibition View, Photography by BluBlu, 2024
The short film series, characterized by its serene yet poignant storytelling, captures the quiet moments of existence against the ceaseless hum of the world. Each frame is a testament to the enduring allure of Romanticism. Through subtle hues, the deliberate gestures of characters, and the carefully crafted ambiance, the artist has invited viewers to linger within the spaces between spoken words, to feel the resonance of silence and the weight of the unspoken.
Exhibition View, Photography by BluBlu, 2024
Whispers of the Departed: A Memorial Reflection Experience, encapsulates Sun’s profound dialogue with the themes of memory and loss. This installation transforms remembrance into an interactive ritual; each QR code, discreetly placed upon tombstone-like doors, offers a unique gateway to the life of a person once vibrant and now remembered.
Exhibition View, Photography by BluBlu, 2024
The act of choosing a door and engaging with a lost narrative is a solitary reflection on the impermanence of life and the importance of memory. Visitors are encouraged to take a flower after engaging with the stories—a symbolic gesture of fleeting beauty and the ephemeral nature of human existence.
Exhibition View, Photography by BluBlu, 2024
The Romantic Disorder transcends conventional romance, navigating beyond the clichéd symbols to touch upon an irresistible longing rooted deeply in the collective unconscious. The color palette, a testament to subtlety, melds with the backdrop of a fog-laden seascape, suggesting the blurred boundaries between the seen and the unseen, the said and the silent.
The 1975 drummer George Daniel has dropped his debut single, ‘Screen Cleaner’. The track was co-written by Tove Lo and Tim Nelson. Check it out below.
‘Screen Cleaner’ is out via Daniel’s new Dirty Hit imprint, dh2, which will release Kelly Lee Owens’ new album Dreamstate in October. Reacting to the song’s announcement on Instagram, Daniel’s fiancée Charli XCX wrote in the comments section: “Sexy, hot, 1 of a kind, legendary, talented, tall.”
Thank You Thank You – the project of Tyler Bussey, who has played with artists including the World Is a Beautiful Place & I Am No Longer Afraid to Die, Greg Mendez, and Strange Ranger – has shared a new single. Listen to ‘Watching the Cyclones’ below.
The track features Bussey on guitars, Wurlitzer, and vocals; Kevin Basko on bass VI, 12-string electric guitar, and percussion; Jem Seidel on drums; Emily Moales on vocals and whistling; Andrew Stevens on baritone electric guitar; and Nick Levine on pedal steel. “I finished writing this song in 2022 or 2023,” Bussey wrote. “It’s sort of about a fictional Coney Island that exists only in my head. Thanks to all the beautiful musicians who helped bring it to life.”
The Offspring have put out ‘Light It Up’, the second single from their upcoming album SUPERCHARGED. It follows lead cut ‘Make It All Right’. Listen to it below.
“This song is a full speed ahead juggernaut,” bandleader Dexter Holland said in a statement. “This character in the song is fed up, he’s had enough, and he’s gonna light it up. He’s ready for a fight. And I definitely sense a lot of that around me. Growing up, some of my favorite songs were by punk bands that were just like, ‘I’m sick of your shit.’ And that was ok! It wasn’t like a negative thing to have those feelings and express that. And I think that’s kind of the vibe of where ‘Light It Up’ is: You’re fed up, you’ve had it and you want to do something about it. That’s one of things I’ve always loved about punk rock. It’s always been about letting out your aggressions, and I think that’s still true. I still love writing songs like that.”
SUPERCHARGED arrives on October 11 through Concord Records.
A$AP Rocky is back with a new single, ‘Highjack’, which features Jessica Pratt. (You read that right.) Greg Kurstin, Hitkidd, Jordan Patrick, and Zach Fogarty co-produced the track, which also has background vocals from Creed B Good and Jon Batiste. Check it out below.
“I just love alternative,” the rapper said in an interview with Zane Lowe on Apple Music 1. “I love just different sounds and whatnot. [Jessica Pratt] kind of gave me this kind of Portishead meets Stevie Nicks vibe a little bit. Right. So I always fucked with her as a artist, and so I figured it was necessary to get her, Jon Batiste on this one and kind of make it feel soulful to bring it on home in the outro.”
A$AP Rocky is gearing up for the release of his long-teased album Don’t Be Dumb, which is out August 30. Jessica Pratt released Here in the Pitch, her first album since 2019’s Quiet Signs, earlier this year.
Jack Antonoff’s Bleachers have announced a reimagined version of their debut album, A Strange Desire, to celebrate its tenth anniversary. Titled A Stranger Desired, the recorded will be out September 6 via Dirty Hit. Listen to the new version of ‘Wild Heart’ below.
Speaking about the release, Antonoff said in a press release: “on this anniversary that feels so sacred i have realised something: it wasn’t only a strange desire to write these songs, there was something unknown to me happening. i was looking for you: my people. i hadn’t been honest enough in my life and as result i let the wrong ones in. the only path was to tell the story comically unfiltered. my great loss, transcendent anxiety, and an unearned hope that would remain the thread in my writing to this day. it was more than a strange desire to make this album, it was a stranger desired.”