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Irene Cara, ‘Fame’ and ‘Flashdance’ Singer, Dead at 63

Irene Cara, the actress and singer best known for her role in the Academy Award-winning film Fame and leading the Flashdance soundtrack, has died. Cara’s publicist, Judith A. Moore, confirmed her death on Twitter, writing that Cara had died in her home in Florida and that the cause of death was “currently unknown.” She was 63 years old.

“She was a beautifully gifted soul whose legacy will live forever through her music and films,” the statement read. “Funeral services are pending and a memorial for her fans will be planned at a future date.”

Irene Cara Escalera was born in 1959 in the Bronx, New York. She began taking dance lessons at the age of five, getting her start on Spanish-language television before making her way on the PBS series The Electric Company as a member of the show’s band, the Short Circus. She went on to perform in several Broadway shows, including Galactica, Maggie Flynn, and Sparkle, the latter of which was adapted into a musical drama film in 1976.

Cara became a household name following her appearance in the 1980 film Fame, where she portrayed Coco Hernandez and sang the original title song and ‘Out Here on My Own’. The film’s success earned Cara Grammy nominations for Best New Artist and Best Female Pop Vocal Performance, winning the latter. She also won an Oscar for Best Original Song at the 1980 Academy Awards for ‘Fame’ as well as a Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture Actress in a Musical.

Following the release of her debut album, Anyone Can See, in 1982, Cara sang the title song for Flashdance, ‘Flashdance… What a Feeling’, which was co-written with Giorgio Moroder and Keith Forsey. The sngle peaked No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and won Cara the Academy Award for Best Original Song and Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance that year.

“Irene’s family has requested privacy as they process their grief,” Moose’s statement continued. “She was a beautifully gifted soul whose legacy will live forever through her music and films.” In a follow-up post, Moose said that she and Cara had been working on “amazing projects that would have made her and her fans incredibly happy,” adding, “Her manager and I will finish them. She’d want that.”

10 Best Serial Killer TV Shows For Binge Watcher

Late-night calls for binge-watching random TV series on your favorite streaming site. The best way to keep yourself cozy and entertained this winter is to pull the blanket over your head and choose your favorite serial killer shows from the list of top shows in New Zealand Netflix to stream through the night.

Since stories based on the lives of serial killers are all the rage this season, we recommend starting with those. The finest serial killer TV series have engaged the audience due to their countless murders, ingenious methods, and gruesome crime scene photos.

Here are a few of the finest serial killer television programs you must see. These shows are accessible easily on a New Zealand-based streaming video website. Therefore, if you are a Kiwi resident, you may watch and enjoy streaming TV shows whenever you choose.

Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story (2022)

An authentic, suspenseful thriller on Netflix, Dahmer is among the most horrific shows you’ll ever see. Curious to know the justification? It’s because the story is based on a true event.

From 1978 through 1991, Jeffery Dahmer tormented the United States with his atrocious actions. He was America’s foremost wanted serial killer, the “Milwaukee Cannibal” or the “Milwaukee Butcher.”

On May 21, 1960, Jeffrey Dahmer was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Over 13 years, he slaughtered 17 men and boys, perpetrated sex crimes, and engaged in cannibalism.

Night Stalker – The Hunt For A Serial Killer

A nocturnal monster accountable for a string of seemingly unrelated killings and sex offenses in 1985 Los Angeles must be halted, and young policeman Gil Carrillo and renowned murder investigator Frank Salerno are in a race against time.

The Serpent (2021)

This sophisticated and flamboyant serial killer in Thailand in the 1970s encroached on tourists who had traversed the “hippie path.” He poisoned them and confiscated their belongings and passports before killing them.

Tahar Rahim portrays Charles in the series. The docudrama chronicles him and his partner Marie-Andrée Leclerc (Jenna Coleman). At the same time, they toured the globe for a year selling gemstones before a Dutch diplomat named Herman Knippenberg began looking into the killing of two Dutch tourists, which led him to the murderer’s wormhole.

All of the purportedly real-life incidents are dramatized in the series.

You (2018)

A quality characteristic, handsome boy opposite the door is Penn Badgley’s, Joe Goldberg. And if it’s unlucky for you, you’ll discover his terrible secret. He is preoccupied with romance, so things might take a dramatic turn if he develops a desire for you.

In the first series, he sympathizes with a woman he encounters in a bookstore but eventually proceeds to manipulate and dominate every facet of her life. The psychopath serial killer erupts when things don’t go as anticipated. You can also watch Harlan Coben Netflix Shows.

The Raincoat Killer: Chasing A Predator In Korea (2021)

This authentic Netflix show chronicles the brutal murders and the manhunt for the serial killer Yoo who used a hammer to torture and scorched his captives, most of whom were wealthier elderly folks and prostitutes.

The notorious incident, with its detailed depictions of cannibalism, also sparked discussion about the death sentence for the mass murderer.

Beyond Evil

This is the tale of two courageous men who will do all it takes to catch a recurring serial killer. The two are compelled to go deep than what the documentation seems to indicate to identify the murderer. Check out the IMDb rating before watching the show.

Inhumane serial murderers devastated India’s capital city of New Delhi in the 2000s. When the investigators started searching into the incident, additional horrific circumstances surfaced, such as the finding of beheaded and dismembered victims across the city.

In an unexpected development of circumstances, the murderer challenges the police in an open letter.

Hannibal (2013-2015)

An FBI particular detective and criminal analyst approach the renowned forensics psychiatrist Dr. Hannibal Lecter (Mads Mikkelsen) to study more about the mentality of violent mass murder.

But he has no clue that he is speaking directly to a dreadful mass murderer. The two’s relationship serves as the foundation for the program.

Hannibal is a complicated person. He is an outstanding chef and also a cannibal who also happens to be an intelligent psychotherapist.

He can produce elegantly presented meals using the victim’s limbs, but he will occasionally take great measures to control Graham.

Mindhunter (2017- 2019)

A 1995 non-fiction novel Mindhunter: Within the FBI’s Elite Serial Crime Unit, offered as motivation for the tv show, which blended depiction of actual events with meaningful conversations from interviews with mass murderers.

Given the incredible work of the entire cast, Cameron Britton, who portrays notorious mass murderer Edmund Kemper, was nominated for an Emmy. Holden and Bill are based on real-life events that occurred to former FBI agents John E. Douglas and Robert K. Ressler.

Conversations With A Killer – The Ted Bundy Tapes (2019)

Ted Bundy was convicted of multiple murders and rapes in the 1970s or even previously. Nevertheless, he was sentenced to die and put to death in Florida in 1989.

Throughout his trial, a dashing Ted gained national attention and garnered significant media coverage, notably after he escaped detention near Colorado in 1977.

The Netflix docudrama exposes some important interview recordings with the murderer’s family, friends, living victims, law enforcement authorities, and others.

Wrapping up

These suggestions have undoubtedly spared you the hassle of choosing which film to see, which may be challenging given how much substance each offers. Nevertheless, we hope we were able to help you make a decision.

Jennifer Lopez Announces New Album ‘This Is Me… Now’

Jennifer Lope has announced her first new album in nine years. This Is Me… Now is set to arrive sometime in 2023. J. Lo broke the news on the 20th anniversary of her 2002 album This Is Me… Then with a video in which the old album cover transforms into a new photo. She also shared the album’s tracklist, which you can check out below.

Spanning 13 songs, This Is Me… Now will include a track called ‘Dear Ben pt. II’, a sequel to the 2002 song ‘Dear Ben’ about Ben Affleck, who she recently married. Lopez’s most recent album, A.K.A., arrived in 2014.

This Is Me… Now Tracklist:

1. This Is Me… Now
2. To Be Yours
3. Mad in Love
4. Can’t Get Enough
5. Rebound
6. not. going. anywhere.
7. Dear Ben pt. ll
8. Hummingbird
9. Hearts and Flowers
10. Broken Like Me
11. This Time Around
12. Midnight Trip to Vegas
13. Greatest Love Story Never Told

Artist Spotlight: Cornelia Murr

Though born in London and now based in Los Angeles, singer-songwriter Cornelia Murr spent time living in various locations around the United States growing up. On her debut album, 2018’s Lake Tear of the Clouds, she drew inspiration from the landscapes she experienced in upstate New York, mirroring the cyclical journey of water as it moves down from the Adirondack Mountains.  She produced the record with My Morning Jacket frontman Jim James, relying on her evocative vocals, mellotron, Omnichord, pocket piano, guitars, and percussion to create a spectral, meditative soundworld. After releasing the standalone single ‘Hang Yr Hat’ in 2021, Murr has returned with Corridor, a six-track EP out today via Full Time Hobby. Though the process of making it was marked by solitude and uncertainty, the collection is enchanting as much for its delicately intimate portrait of past and fragile relationships as it is for the sonic pathways Murr traverses to explore them. It’s a plea for change as well as an opportunity to refocus, learning how to carry every place you’ve been along with the simple knowledge that growth happens naturally, without fail.

We caught up with Cornelia Murr for this edition of our Artist Spotlight interview series to talk about her songwriting journey, the making of her Corridor EP, and more.


It’s been four years since the release of your debut album. How do you look back on what it meant for you as a songwriter?

The more time goes by, I just feel so grateful for the way that came together. I’ve definitely learned since making it how hard that is, to get such great people in a room, to get the space. That record was a product of some really good luck and some really good people around me and some amazing timing, and it just was one of those magical moments where things gelled. And I knew it at the time, I knew that we were doing something special, but it’s more clear to me with time that it doesn’t happen all the time like that. The producer, Jim James, was so good for that project, and I’ve encountered some great collaborators since, but that was an especially good kind of crew. I feel like that record has a sound that developed organically in the days we were making it that was a pretty cohesive, somewhat unique sound, or I’d like to think so. And I just can’t wait to make another one and see what that world sounds like.

What was your relationship with songwriting before that record came out?

I’ve had a long relationship with songwriting. I felt a pretty natural inclination towards it since I was really young, I was writing little melodies with words when I was like 6 or 7 years old, just singing to myself all the time. When I was in high school, I did meet sort of a mentor, this woman who was teaching a songwriting workshop at this school that I was going to when I was like 14. We became really close, and we recorded some of my songs as demos. But it took me a while as an adult to feel like I could show people what I was doing. I guess that was in my early 20s, I started opening up to friends a little bit. I made that record when I was 27, so throughout my 20s, I was writing stuff, beginning to share it, but not publicly for the most part, just with friends. But I was also starting to play with other people, mostly as a backup singer, singing harmonies and playing little things like synths and stuff. It was a slow process of getting more comfortable performing; I didn’t actually perform as a solo artist much at all. So it was a huge shift – I didn’t even play under the name Cornelia Murr. I didn’t really know what my music name was going to be, and that just sort of came together because I had to choose a name to print the vinyl.

Did you find yourself having a new level of confidence after making Lake Tear of the Clouds? How did it affect your headspace creatively?

I think around the release of the record and beyond, it still kind of blows me away that anyone responds to my music. I don’t know if I’ll ever get used to that, probably because it was such a private thing for a really long time. It’s hard to believe that it’s out there and people are listening to it. And of course, it gave me some confidence in some ways. But I think it also has made me more critical. Doing music in your private life and then sharing it and it becoming your professional life, that’s certainly a wild shift, because it’s the most intimate thing to me. My songs are the most intimate offering of who I am that I can share, so once that’s open to the public, it can feel a little different sitting down to work on songs with that other side of the coin in my head.

But I try to feel like I’m totally alone when I’m working. I worked for a couple years in New York City in this dress shop that had a buzzer on the door, so you couldn’t get in – I had to let people in. It was very small and expensive, and it was empty most of the time. It wasn’t filled with customers, especially on winter days, maybe nobody would come in all day. It was kind of great in that way. And I started bringing instruments to the shop and hiding them under the desk, and it was a really productive space because I wasn’t supposed to be working on music; there was no pressure on me to work on music, in fact I shouldn’t be, and that just made me want to do it all the time. There’s something about that that I thrive on when writing.

Do you feel like your output slowed down after the release of that record, in terms of the time it took to write and flesh out songs?

I generally am a pretty slow songwriter. It does often take me a long time to finish a song. It goes one way or the other, it either comes out all at once – rarely that happens – or it takes me sometimes years to finish a song. I’ve always kind of been like that, so it’s remained pretty similar. But I’ve spent more time working on music in the last few years than I used to. I’ve definitely devoted myself more to it. And I’ve written lots of stuff, but what happens is, it kind of piles up. A reason why I’m trying to get more into releasing things more fluidly or quickly is because I’ve written tons of stuff in the last few years, but I get sort of tired of things quickly. I feel like there’s been all these batches of songs from different chapters of time, and I don’t know if I relate to them anymore. But that’s okay – I don’t know if that’ll ever change. There’s just so much, and a lot of it doesn’t get finished, which was a huge problem for me. But I’m always working on stuff. If anything, I’ve probably had more output in the last few years, it just hasn’t come out.

What importance did the idea of a corridor have for you in this stretch of time?

Obviously, there isn’t a song on the EP with that title, and I didn’t feel like I wanted to call it any of the song titles. First of all, I like the word “corridor”, I think it has a nice flow to it. But in a few ways, it seemed as an image to fit the process of making the EP, which was mostly a very lonesome process. It’s not just about the pandemic, but that was part of it, sort of an elongated stretch of time that was not clear when it was going to shift – when there would be a new door. Personally, I didn’t know if I would put this music out, I didn’t know when the next musical chapter would come. I was confused, honestly, over the last few years. The single that I put out in 2021 was made just before the pandemic, and it was essentially what I hoped would be the beginning of a full-length record, but then things shut down. I’d had a lot of what felt like false starts or doors closing – I kept feeling a bit stuck in what felt what feels now in retrospect like a hallway, a little bit of limbo, I guess. I also like to not look back on it simply in a negative way, but that it serves a function, this stretch of time. I feel like such a different person in so many ways after the last few years, and a corridor serves the purpose of bringing you somewhere else. As much as I felt confused and lonely a lot of the time while I was making these recordings that are on the EP, I’ve learned so much from it all.

One of my favourite moments is on ‘Again’, when you sing, “Don’t let me skip the middle for the end.” I love that you’ve put it almost halfway through the EP, because it’s where you present that most intimate version of yourself.

That’s really cool, I didn’t even really realize that. But I think there was something there subconsciously, why that’s there. That song certainly didn’t feel like an end, but it’s about a relationship, worrying that the end is in sight prematurely. It’s about realizing that you can easily accelerate the ending of something after a momentous beginning if you don’t learn how to settle into the next phase of the relationship, which I think takes a lot of humility.

The EP mirrors the cycle of a relationship, and ‘Again’ makes sense after the personal revelation of ‘Hero’. Did you write that song in hindsight?

That song was written in some amount of hindsight, yeah. It was right around the end of something. It was written about looking back on the recent end of a relationship, and how we often walk away from each other with our own narratives completely of what happened. And to some extent, that’s always going to be the case because we all have our own take on things, but if we don’t have enough of a shared narrative, there’s maybe more room for us to see ourselves as either the hero or the victim of the story. It’s a really alienating thing to do that’s maybe comforting, too, because it maybe makes it easier to walk away from something if we just see it the way we want. But we don’t learn as much from each other or connect as much with each other.

It’s funny talking about these two songs, ‘Hero’ and ‘Again’, they’re such different sonic worlds, but it’s probably just a theme in what I’ve been thinking about in the last few years, humility in a relationship. In the early stages, there’s this momentum, this big upswing of joy and the freshness of something new and seeing yourself in a new way, but I’m interested in what the necessary evolution of a relationship is beyond that. Because it does have to change because we’re always changing, and really allowing someone to know you requires showing other facets of yourself than just the initial impression. And I guess I’ve had a hard time with that. [laughs] And found it in other people, that it’s hard for them too. It’s hard for all of us to really let ourselves be seen and to really see another person. I’m kind of obsessed with that because it’s challenging to me.

What did you learn from self-producing Corridor that you’d like to carry forward?

I really love recording, I think that might be the thing that I love most in the various aspects of this work. Being at the controls myself is really empowering, and I also have grown more appreciation for working with a producer – it’s also very challenging not to have feedback and to be in a vacuum, which I, for the most part, was. It takes me a lot longer to figure things out when I’m by myself because I’m more prone to change my mind or just not know what’s working and what’s not. It’s a difficult thing, I don’t think I would choose to be entirely alone in the way I was in the future. It’d be nice to have other players come through, which I did have on this EP a little bit, but not very much. I don’t feel like I’m ready yet, but I would like to work myself up to the point of feeling like I’m ready to fully produce a full-length record. I learned a lot about my taste; I feel like I still am learning.

Do you have a clear sense of how you’d want to work on a second album?

Yeah, I do have the beginnings of a plan together. I’m in the process now of just combing through what songs I think should go on it – a lot of them to consider, and some that I’m trying to finish. I don’t know if I have a sonic palette that I’m going for, I think I’m going to enter it pretty open and see what comes from it. Basically, I’m going through the songs and trying to demo them in a really simple way and be completely open in terms of production this time around.

Is there anything that we didn’t talk about that you’d like to share?

I don’t know if this is worth including, but I like this little story that I had these recordings sitting around and I was kind of ready to move on, just writing other stuff and thinking about other music. But it was annoying me that they were pretty close to being finished recordings and I had put them down for a while in the last year. But then at a certain point, roughly six months ago, out of nowhere I was like, “I have to finish these recordings, come hell or high water, whether that means just finish them and never listen to them again or finish them and put them out. I just need to wrap up this batch of recordings.” I got really obsessed with this process of breathing a little bit of new life into them, and it was right in that time that Full Time Hobby reached out out of the ether. They just emailed me and they’re like, “Do you have any music?” And I was like, “You know, I do.” The timing really felt a little magical.

And it also felt right because I went on tour in the UK in Septemberwith one of their other artists, Dana Gavanski. I was born in the UK and I’ve spent quite a lot of time out there, and I had been missing it. I hadn’t been quite a few years, and I used to go almost every year. I have some cousins out there and some friends and I was really pining for London, so it’s been really cool to have this relationship more with the UK again. That was my first time playing out there, and I think maybe there are more people listening now in the UK. I’m just really grateful to have made that connection with the place that I’m from – I can’t say I’m from there, but I was born there anyway.

Do you have any early memories of London or the UK?

Yeah, I definitely have memories from living there as a kid, both in London and in Hertfordshire a little bit. I started going to visit my cousins out there pretty much every summer for pretty long stretches of time, so I spent a lot of pretty formative time as a young person there, rambling around the city. It’s a very special place to me.

We were talking about things coming together kind of magically for the first record, but it feels like it’s happening with this EP as well in terms of the release, despite the process being more isolating.

Yeah, there’s definitely something that came together in a similar way. Hopefully every record will have that quality of things coming together, but I’m sure it’ll be really different every time. I guess I’m just starting to learn that.


This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity and length.

Cornelia Murr’s Corridor EP is out now via Full Time Hobby.

MIKE, Wiki, and the Alchemist Release 3 New Songs

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MIKE and Wiki have teamed up with the Alchemist for three new tracks: ‘One More’, ‘Be Realistic’, and ‘Odd Ways’. The EP arrives in conjunction with a new campaign from Patta and Tommy Hilfiger, and the title track is accompanied by a video from director Nicholas Stafford Briggs. Check it out below.

“The 1st time i ever heard the word Girbaud or Hilfiger was from a Grand Puba verse,” Alchemist wrote in an Instagram post. “They said they wanted to do something with @wikset , & asked me if there were any other dope new artists from NY I thought would be dope to add to the mix. I showed them one video of @mikelikesrap and they were instantly sold. I had been working with Mike & had been wanted to work with Wik , & they already rocked with each other , so it was perfect.”

“We all linked in Amsterdam, ate some fire Surinam food, listened to beats, and put the play in motion,” he added. “They said do whatever we want and gave us full creative control with the music. We ended up making a full plate, but the first course is a 3 song 12” featuring Mike & Wiki , produced by The Alchemist, brought to you by Patta & Tommy Hilfiger.”

The Patta x Tommy collection lands on Friday, December 2. MIKE has a new album coming out on December 21 called Beware of the Monkey.

How to Buy a Property that Suits Your Style

Personal style is usually put to one side when buying a property; things like price and practicality often take center stage. However, personal style is also an important consideration, especially if you want a home to present the right image to friends, family, and coworkers. This is a big factor when it comes to choosing the correct property, and even choosing the right property experts.

Property Styles 

Whether it is the clothes you wear, the company you keep, or the restaurants you frequent, there is a range of styles to choose from that can fit with your personal tastes or juxtapose them. Property styles are no different. Property can be traditional, modern, rustic, or something else. 

Make sure the place you live also fits your personal styles and expectations. If you have a modern style in your wardrobe, why not live in a modern property as well? Identify your primary style, and it helps to narrow down the property styles you have to choose from when buying.   

The Front Door 

The front door is the first this you will encounter when you travel to view a property, but don’t make it a deal breaker. If the property ticks a lot of boxes for you, but it doesn’t look nice from the outside, you can always view it as a work in progress and upgrade it with personal style. 

If the front door fits with your expectations, you’re in luck; there is little you need to do; otherwise, you will have to invest in an upgrade. The front door is the first thing people see when they come to your property, and you want it to complement your personal style.  

The Kitchen 

The kitchen is the heart of the home, and it says a lot about your personality and lifestyle as well. A new kitchen can be an expensive installation, so it makes sense to consider the space carefully when searching for a new home. It’s sometimes worth some additional investment. 

When a property has a nice kitchen, you can expect to pay more for it, so makes sure the kitchen you buy fits your personal style and expectations. The last thing you want is to buy a property with a pricey kitchen and have to refit it; it’s better to buy one that needs a refurb.  

The Floor Space 

Are you the type of person who likes open spaces, or do you prefer neat spaces where everything is organised and stored away? Again, you will pay more for a home that has additional floor space, like bedrooms upstairs and outdoor patio areas with social spaces. 

Choosing luxury real estate options to suit your style means thinking about your lifestyle and how you intend to entertain guests when they come to visit. Are you going to spend more time in the kitchen, the games room, or the patio outdoors? Find a property that aligns with your social requirements.  

Final Thoughts 

There’s a lot to think about when you are buying a property, such as the overall price, the quality of the building, and what the property offers in terms of floor space, kitchen quality, and bonus rooms. It’s also important to consider your personal style to ensure the property feels like home.

Daisy Harris Unveils New Song ‘Known’

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Daisy Harris has shared a new song called ‘Known’. It’s the latest preview of her upcoming EP Forest Girl Rock, which is out on December 9. Check it out below.

Harris recorded and produced ‘Known’ with her cousin DAVOLI. “Being able to make this song with Davoli in his beautiful studio was an absolute dream,” she commented in a statement. “I love it and I hope its warm, sweet vibe brings listeners peace and joy.”

Forest Girls Rock will follow Harris’ debut record, Tornado Dreams, which arrived earlier this year. “I really do believe this is my best work yet,” she said. “It’s been a blast to make this EP with my dad and cousin also, whose talent and openness I’m so grateful for.”

Sunny War Releases New Song ‘Higher’ Featuring David Rawlings

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Sunny War has released a new track, ‘Higher’, which features David Rawlings. It’s taken from the Nashville-based singer-songwriter’s upcoming album Anarchist Gospel, which also includes contributions from Jim James, Allison Russell, the Raconteurs’ Jack Lawrence, and more. Listen to ‘Higher’ below.

“I wrote ‘Higher’ around this time last year, just a few days after my ex collected the last of his belongings from our apartment,” War explained in a press release. “The break up was fresh and I was thinking about all the years we spent together. I was also thinking about how much stronger I was before our relationship. I remember feeling really weak at the end… I knew it was over when I didn’t even have the energy to fight anymore. The ‘I am out of remedies, at least I’m not a liar’ lyric sums up how I felt when I knew it was really over and time to be honest about it. All I could do at that point was let go and try to figure out how to get back to whoever I was back when I respected myself. It was the same person my ex was attracted to in the first place that he unknowingly destroyed.”

Anarchist Gospel is set to land on February 3 via New West Records. It was led by the single ‘No Reason’.

Kele Announces New Album ‘The Flames pt. 2’, Shares New Single ‘Vandal’

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Kele Okereke has announced a new album, The Flames pt. 2. The Bloc Party frontman’s sixth solo LP is slated for release March 24 via KOLA Records/!K7. To accompany the news, Kele has shared a new single called ‘Vandal’, which you can check out below, along with the cover artwork and tracklist.

‘Vandal’ finds Kele channeling his frustration with what Britain stands for and what it means to be British, according to a press release. “As a British born Nigerian, that debate has made me angry,” Kele said. “It has felt like for these last few years I have been carrying around a lot of that anger, so with ‘Vandal’ I felt I needed to put it somewhere useful.”

“There haven’t been many things that have made me feel proud to be British recently but watching those people in Bristol pulling down the Colston statue made me feel immensely proud,” he continued. “It was ordinary people saying ‘no, this slaver does not represent my Britain’. It was an act of defiance that I understood and I suddenly got a glimpse of a Britain I could believe in.”

The Flames pt. 2 will follow 2021’s The Waves pt. 1, which Kele wrote and recorded during lockdown while feeling “lost at sea.” He explained:

I always knew that I would find a way out of that feeling, and I always knew I was going to make a response to The Waves.

Fire is powerful, it is both creation and destruction and I wanted that tension to somehow be reflected in the music, the sound of being consumed by our desires, of feelings burning so intensely that they literally burn out.

Like The Waves it was important that all the sounds of the record were made by my electric guitar. Writing and recording a record within these parameters has forced me to become more creative as a musician, from the looped ambient textures to the brittle drum machine rhythms. it’s all made by my guitar and my loop pedals, and that’s how it will be performed.

The Flames pt. 2 Cover Artwork:

The Flames pt. 2 Tracklist:

1. Never Have I Ever
2. Reckless
3. And He Never Was The Same Again
4. True Love Knows No Death
5. Vandal
6. Her Darkest Hour
7. No Risk No Reward
8. Someone To Make Me Laugh
9. I’m In Love With An Outline
10. Acting On A Hunch
11. Kerosene
12. The Colour Of Dying Flame

Albums Out Today: Stormzy, Fievel Is Glaque, SpiritWorld, Elder

In this segment, we showcase the most notable albums out each week. Here are the albums out on November 25, 2022:


Stormzy, This Is What I Mean

Stormzy is back with his third album, This Is What I Mean. The follow-up to 2019’s Heavy Is the Head was executive produced by British producer PRGRSHN and features guest appearances from Sampha, Jacob Collier, Debbie, and more. “When you hear about music camps they always sound intense and sombre,” Stormzy said in a statement. “People saying: ‘We need to make an album.’ ‘We need to make some hit records.’ But this felt beautifully free. We’re all musicians but we weren’t always doing music. Some days we played football or walked around taking pictures. And the bi-product to that was very beautiful music. Because when you marry that ethos with world class musicians and the best producers, writers and artists in the world, and we’re in one space, that’s a recipe for something that no one can really imagine. You can’t even calculate what that’s going to come up with. And it came up with a big chunk of this album.”


Fievel Is Glaque, Flaming Swords

Fievel Is Glauque, the rotating international ensemble helmed by New York-based pianist Zach Phillips and French-Belgian singer Ma Clément, have released their studio debut. While last year’s compilation God’s Trashmen Sent to Right the Mess was primarily composed by Phillips, Flamings Swords sees him and Clément working together as a composing duo. “Musically, Ma directed melodic impetus and I directed harmonic and rhythmic framing,” Phillips explained in a statement. “Lyrically, we fought and embraced our initial impulses alternatingly; above all, we tried to trust and document the psychodynamics of the process itself rather than attempting to express concrete, prefab emotional or intellectual messaging. This approach to writing is intended to promote poetry while avoiding alibis and the hall-of-mirrors reproduction of excessive self-identification.”


SpiritWorld, Deathwestern

SpiritWorld have released their sophomore album, Deathwestern, via Century Media Records. Following their 2020 debut Pagan Rhythms, the new LP sees the Las Vegas metallic hardcore outfit reuniting with producer Sam Pura. “I started writing our new album right when I finished Pagan Rhythms,” bandleader Stu Folsom said in press materials. “At that point, I had been playing guitar everyday for about a year and it was – no joke – the highlight of my days. Just banger riff after banger riff jumping out of the Viper Blood Tele. It took six months to get four songs together that I thought could stand up to Pagan. Then I knew I had another full length.”


Elder, Innate Passage

Elder have dropped their latest album, Innate Passage, via Stickman Records. The progressive/heavy rock quartet, which is now mostly based in Berlin, recorded the follow-up to 2020’s Omens at Cloud Hill Studios in Hamburg. “This record channels the surreal world we live in from a fantastical point of view, not super-literally, and how we as humans processed that; everyone on their own passage through time and space and whatever version of reality they chose for themselves,” founder Nick DiSalvio explained in a statement. “The phrase ‘Innate Passage’ appeared to me when writing the record. Passage and transition are necessary in the human condition, and this process is intrinsic to us. All the growth and introspection we underwent in the past few years totally made this apparent to me more so than any other experiences in life so far.”


Other albums out today:

Ingredient, Ingredient; Marcus Paquin, Our Love; Nightshift, Made of the Earth; Andrew Wasylyk, Hearing the Water Before Seeing the Falls; High Command, Eclipse of the Dual Moons; s ​t ​a ​r ​g ​a ​z ​e, One; Waajeed, Memoirs of Hi-Tech Jazz; Lykotonon, Promethean Pathology; Noémi Büchi, Matter; Jamie Beale, Hello Nimbus; George Issadikis, Navigating the Kali Yuga vol 1; Roy Montgomery, Camera Melancholia; Mike Gangloff, Evening Measures; Property, Water Temple; Flight Coda, a window at night the 27th.