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The Lemon Twigs Announce New Album ‘A Dream Is All We Know’, Share New Single

The Lemon Twigs have formally announced their new album A Dream Is All We Know, which arrives May 3 on Captured Tracks. The band revealed the album title and cover during a recent appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, where they performed its first single, ‘My Golden Years’. Check out an Amber Navarro-directed video for the duo’s new song, ‘They Don’t Know How to Fall in Place’, below.

The Lemon Twigs’ last album, Everything Harmony, came out last May.

A Dream Is All We Know Cover Artwork:

A Dream Is All We Know Tracklist:

1. My Golden Years
2. They Don’t Know How To Fall In Place
3. Church Bells
4. A Dream Is All I Know
5. Sweet Vibration
6. In The Eyes Of The Girl
7. If You And I Are Not Wise
8. How Can I Love Her More
9. Ember Days
10. Peppermint Roses
11. I Should’ve Known Right From The Start
12. Rock On (Over and Over)

Iron & Wine Announces New Album ‘Light Verse’, Shares New Single

Iron & Wine has announced his seventh album, Light Verse, which will arrive on April 26 via Sub Pop. Lead single ‘You Never Know’ is out today. Check it out and find the album cover, tracklist, and Iron & Wine’s upcoming tour dates below.

Light Verse marks singer-songwriter Sam Beam’s first Iron & Wine LP in over seven years, following 2017’s Beast Epic and 2018’s Weed Garden EP. Beam produced the record, which was mixed and engineered by Dave Way at Waystation and Silent Zoo Studios in Los Angeles. It includes a duet with Fiona Apple called ‘All In Good Time’, as well as contributions from Tyler Chester (keyboards), Sebastian Steinberg (bass), David Garza (guitar), Griffin Goldsmith, Beth Goodfellow, Kyle Crane (drums/percussion), Paul Cartwright (strings), and a 24-piece orchestra.

Light Verse Cover Artwork:

Light Verse Tracklist:

1. You Never Know
2. Anyone’s Game
3. All in Good Time [feat. Fiona Apple]
4. Cutting It Close
5. Taken by Surprise
6. Yellow Jacket
7. Sweet Talk
8. Tears that Don’t Matter
9. Bag of Cats
10. Angels Go Home

Iron & Wine 2024 Tour Dates:

Fri Jun 14 – Milwaukee, WI – The Pabst Theater
Sat Jun 15 – St Paul, MN – Palace Theatre
Mon Jun 17 – Denver, CO – Mission Ballroom
Tue Jun 18 – Salt Lake City, UT – The Union
Thu Jun 20 – Seattle, WA – Paramount Theatre
Fri Jun 21 – Portland, OR – McMenamins Crystal Ballroom
Sat Jun 22 – Portland, OR – McMenamins Crystal Ballroom
Sun Jun 23 – Vancouver, BC – Commodore Ballroom
Tue Jun 25 – Oakland, CA – Fox Theater
Thur Jun 27 – Monterey, CA – Golden State Theatre
Fri. Jun. 28 – Los Angeles, CA – The Bellweather
Sat Jun 29 – Los Angeles, CA – The Bellweather
Sun Jun 30 – El Cajon, CA – The Magnolia
Tue Jul 2 – Phoenix, AZ – The Van Buren
Wed Jul 3 – Taos, NM – Kit Carson Park * (support for Avett Brothers)
Fri Jul 5 – Tulsa, OK – Cain’s Ballroom
Sat Jul 6 – St Louis, MO – The Pageant
Mon Jul 8 – Chicago, IL – The Salt Shed
Wed Jul 31 – New Orleans, LA – Orpheum Theater
Thu Aug 1 – Houston, TX- White Oak Music Hall
Fri Aug 2 – Austin, TX – ACL Live at the Moody Theater
Sat Aug 3 – Dallas, TX – Majestic Theatre
Mon Aug 5 – Atlanta, GA – The Eastern
Tue Aug 6 – Wilmington, NC – Wilson Center at CFCC
Wed Aug 7 – Raleigh, NC – Meymandi Concert Hall
Fri Aug 9 – Washington, DC – The Anthem
Sat Aug 10 – Philadelphia, PA – The Fillmore Philadelphia
Sun Aug 11 – Boston, MA – Roadrunner
Tue Aug 13 – New Haven, CT – College Street Music Hall
Wed Aug 14 – Brooklyn, NY – Brooklyn Paramount
Fri Aug 16 – Montreal, QC – MTELUS
Sat Aug 17 – Toronto, ON – The Danforth Music Hall
Sun Aug 18 – Detroit, MI – Masonic Cathedral Theatre
Tue Aug 20 – Cleveland, OH – Agora Theatre
Thu Aug 22 – Indianapolis, IN – Egyptian Room at Old National Centre
Fri Aug 23 – Louisville, KY – Old Forester’s Paristown Hall
Sat Aug 24 – Nashville, TN – Ryman Auditorium

Les Savy Fav Return With ‘Legendary Tippers’, First New Music in 14 Years

Les Savy Fav are back with their first new music in 14 years. The band’s new song is called ‘Legendary Tippers’, and it comes with an accompanying music video directed by Matthew Conboy. Check it out below.

“The guitars have this offhanded virtuoso thing going,” singer Tim Harrington said in a statement. “Seth had stacked all of these semi-improvised scratch tracks into a demo. When I got them, I was immediately drawn to the manic pile-up of using them all, all at once, with zero edits. It’s like if the solo from ‘Taxman’ wolfed down a bottle of Adderall.”

Les Savy Fav’s last album was 2010’s Root for Ruin. “When we finished our last record, there was a sense that if we were going to do more, we wanted to do something more ambitious,” Harrington said. “I think it took us a while to even get in a space where that was possible.”

“The band was never a job, so we can’t get fired and don’t have to quit,” he added. “We had the time to figure out how to bring the people we’ve become and the people we are as artists together authentically. There’s a chaotic, untethered ecstasy at the center of the band’s universe. Squaring that with the desire to create stability and the need to endure some grind isn’t easy.”

Les Savy Fav teased their comeback last year with a series of live shows. They have a run of dates in the UK and Ireland scheduled for February and May and were recently announced for Barcelona’s Primavera Sound.

Les Savy Fav 2024 Tour Dates:

Feb 23 – Camden, UK – Electric Ballroom
Feb 24 – Bristol, UK – Simple Things Festival
May 24 – Dublin, IRE – Whelans
May 25 – Leeds, UK – Brudenell Social Club
May 28 – Barcelona, ESP – Primavera Festival

The Knife’s Olof Dreijer Announces New EP ‘Coral’

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The Knife’s Olof Freijer has announced a new solo EP called Coral. The three-track collection is out March 6 via AD93, and it was inspired by the steel-drum experiments featured in his 2023 record with Mt. Sims, Souvenir.

Last year, Dreijer released his debut solo EP, Rosa Rugosa. He also co-produced several tracks on Fever Ray’s latest LP Radical Romantics.

Coral EP Cover Artwork:

Weyes Blood Joins Caroline Polachek on New Version of ‘Butterfly Net’

Caroline Polachek has teamed up with Weyes Blood for a new version of her Desire, I Want to Turn Into You track ‘Butterfly Net’. The two artists performed the song live together several times last year, including at Glastonbury and Fuji Rock. Listen to the remix below.

In October, Polachek shared the new song ‘Dang’, which she also performed on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. Along with the new rendition of ‘Butterfly Net’, Desire, it’s set to appear on the just-announced deluxe version of the record, I Want to Turn Into You: Everasking Edition.

The 1975 Share Cover of ‘Now Is the Hour’

The 1975 have shared their cover of ‘Now Is the Hour’, a song that was popularized by Bing Crosby in 1948. It appears on Jack Antonoff’s soundtrack for the new Apple TV+ series The New Look, which follows the real-life events of Christian Dior and Coco Chanel during World War II. Listen below.

‘Now Is the Hour’ is the second single from the soundtrack, following Florence and the Machine’s rendition of ‘White Cliffs of Dover’. The album also features Lana Del Rey, beabadoobee, Nick Cave, Perfume Genius, and more.

Review: Lisa Frankenstein

In some circles the ‘80s never ended. The endearing kitsch, neon aesthetic of that immortal pop culture decade continues to burn bright, infiltrating the zeitgeist of our post-internet world with pure, reckless abandon. Nostalgia has all but become a currency, one whose lustre is all-too easy to embrace. Often empowering work that heavily relies on familiarity as a thematic and narrative crutch.

Unlike most of its contemporaries, Zelda Williams’ Lisa Frankenstein is one such nostalgia-baiting film that pulsates with authenticity and heart. Manifesting as the kind of extremely satisfying moviegoing experience that celebrates the tropes and motifs of its clear late-80s influences, while evolving them in some devilishly clever ways. Yet, at times, Lisa Frankenstein falls prey to the same shortcomings of its spiritual predecessors, relying on the very cliches and staples it vibrantly works to subvert.

Set in 1989, the story penned by Diablo Dody, centres on the woefully unpopular Lisa (Kathryn Newton), a troubled highschooler haunted by the death of her mother and her needlessly cruel stepmother (Carla Gugino). Her kind Stepsister, Taffy (Liza Soberano), and clueless father (Joe Chrest, adding to his resume of 80s dads) offer little respite. Lisa discovers that solace in a handsome Victorian corpse (Cole Sprouse) she unintentionally re-animates during a stormy night. The two quickly join arms to make him the man of her dreams, with the help of a faulty tanning bed and many a limb-lopping kill—each of which brims with oddball hilarity.

Lisa Frankenstein operates as a hearty cross between the glossy violence of Heathers and the Gothic aura of Edward Scissorhands. Tim Burton’s influence is immediately felt, with its Elfman-esque, animated title sequence vividly setting the tone for the peculiar journey to come. Cody’s script then gives way to a bloody, impassioned, and wonderfully vulgar teen rom com that is as weird as it is loveable.

It’s in its commitment to utter oddity where Lisa Frankenstein is at its most memorable, both subverting and expanding upon that cliches of its influences to reanimate a seemingly dead genre with great flair. Both its bombastic bouts of violence and its tender character moments are tinged with a loveable kookiness, lending it a personality all its own—even as it traverses moments that are overly familiar.

With each chop of the axe, coarsely attached limb, and electric needle drop, Lisa Frankenstein discovers a groove that is infectious, cultivating an identity that revels in the confines of its 80s genre exercise while luxuriating in its deconstruction. It’s a dynamic hodgepodge of styles, melding the intimate, coming-of-age sheen of a John Hughes production with the schlocky, bizzarro lens of John Carpenter. It results in a wholly dynamic experience that isn’t afraid to transition from a monochrome Lynchian dream sequence to a comically bloody slow-motion murder, to a virile organ being delicately reattached. Lisa Frankenstein is less interested in emulating its influences and more concerned with being perceived as a direct entry in the 80s teen movie canon. In looking back at a bygone era, it finds a way of being a part of it.

Yet, in some instances, it embodies that mindset too literally as it succumbs to the same tired and dated failings of its predecessors, namely in its handling of key characters. Taffy is defined by her preppy demeanour, as are her girly gaggle of friends, while Gugino’s callousness as Lisa’s stepmother labours to evolve past its inherent corniness. Cody’s script relies on each of them being one-note to drive the plot forward, resulting in an experience that becomes uncharacteristically mundane and predictable when its not pushing the envelope with its eccentricity. In being populated by dull caricatures outside of its two protagonists, the film begins to lack a pulse, with its attempts at humour struggling to keep pace like the bumbling corpse at the heart of it.

The two central performances help to dampen these narrative shortcomings. Newton is dynamic as Lisa, vibrantly capturing someone made emotionally dizzy by their sadness and longing for connection. At once, Newton taps into her detached cunning as well as her budding humanity. Sprouse injects life and charm into his loveable cadaver, crafting an unlikely romantic hero out of strained movement and rotting flesh. It’s a turn that could have easily been overdone but Sprouse knows when to shed the limelight, playing off Newton’s kinetic energy in a way that exudes chemistry.

Lisa Frankenstein does a (mostly) stellar job in treading the line between cinematic homage and pastiche, carving out an identity that is emboldened by its influences rather than being defined by them. While its weakest moments lean a tad too heavily on the narrative conventions of its 80s predecessors, Williams and Cody carve a bloody teen romance to die for—or in this case, to come back to life for.

Hauser & Wirth to Present ‘DRIVE’ by Jason Rhoades

Hauser & Wirth Los Angeles will be exploring the art of explores the art of Jason Rhoades through the lens of cars and car culture. The exhibition, DRIVE, will run from the 27th of February until the 14th of January 2024. The exhibition will evolve over the year, featuring thematic iterations and an evolving display of Rhoades’ sculptures, drawings, videos, and multiples, complemented by archival materials, public programs, and contemporary perspectives.

This unfolding exhibition will include several stages:

  • Opening Exhibit – Exploration of cars as symbols of art history, class identifiers, and environments of control.
  • April Exhibit – Highlights Rhoades’ strategic transactions involving symbolic value, such as trading the Caprice for a Ferrari.
  • Summer Exhibit – Shifts focus to The Racetrack, showcasing half-scale NASCAR-style cars, custom jackets, and painted tyre barriers from ‘The Snowball.’
  • September Exhibit – Covers the final stretch of ‘DRIVE’ with framed works on paper and a central sculptural installation.

claire rousay Announces New Album, Unveils New Song ‘head’

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claire rousay has announced a new album titled sentiment. Marking the artist’s first full-length release for Thrill Jockey, the record features contributions from Hand Habits and Lala Lala. Listen to the lead single ‘head’ below, and scroll down for sentiment‘s cover art and tracklist.

“I have been on a quest to communicate my feelings and ideas as clearly as possible lately,” rousay said in a statement. “Pop seemed like the way to do that this time.”

Back in November, rousay shared the charity single ‘i no longer have that glowing thing inside of me’.

sentiment Cover Artwork:

sentiment Tracklist:

1. 4pm
2. head
3. it could be anything
4. asking for it
5. iii
6. lover’s spit plays in the background
7. sycamore skylight
8. please 5 more minutes [feat. Lala Lala]
9. w sunset blvd
10. ily2 [feat. Hand Habits]

Cadence Weapon Announces New Album ‘ROLLERCOASTER’, Shares New Song ‘Press Eject’

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Rollie Pemberton – the Canadian rapper, producer, and author who records as Cadence Weapon – has announced his sixth album, ROLLERCOASTER. The follow-up to 2021’s Polaris Prize-winning Parallel World lands April 19 via MNRK Music. Check out the lead single ‘Press Eject’, produced by Grandtheft, below.

“I wanted to write an anthem for people who are fed up with the way the Internet has become,” Pemberton explained in a statement about the new song. “I want to remind people that there are platforms that have come and gone, because they’re vulnerable if we aren’t on them. I’m encouraging everyone to be more empowered and thoughtful about how we engage with social media. Maybe we can create a better situation for ourselves.”

Rollercoaster includes contributions from Bartees Strange, Jacques Greene, Machinedrum, Cecile Believe, Martyn Bootyspoon, Loraine James, Taydex, Wesley Singerman, myst milano, and Harrison. “I was observing parallels between the fraudulence of certain institutions and the fake news of the internet,” Pemberton said. “With bots and people being willfully false for profit, the internet has led to a total obfuscation of reality.”

ROLLERCOASTER Cover Artwork:

ROLLERCOASTER Tracklist:

1. Cadence £∞™.mp3 (prod. by Bartees Strange)
2. Press Eject (prod. by Grandtheft)
3. Exceptional (prod. by Jacques Greene)
4. My Computer (prod. by Machinedrum)
5. Blue Screen (prod. by Cecile Believe)
6. Lexicon (prod. by Martyn Bootyspoon)
7. YASTM.m4a (prod. by Bartees Strange)
8. EFT (prod. by Loraine James)
9. Bots (prod. by Taydex and Wesley Singerman)
10. Sting (prod. by Jacques Greene)
11. Shadowbanned (feat. myst milano) (prod. by Taydex and Wesley Singerman)
12. You Are Special To Me (feat. Bartees Strange) (prod. by Bartees Strange)
13. Alarms (feat. Austra) (prod. by Casey MQ)
14. tl;dr (prod. by Harrison)