Winter has shared the music video for ‘crimson enclosure’, a track from her latest album What Kind of Blue Are You?. The visual arrives ahead of a headline tour of the East Coast with Peel Dream Magazine that kicks off this weekend. Watch it below.
“Crimson is my favorite song off the record,” Winter said in a press release. “It’s heavy and fucked up. It’s pure saturation and sludge. A play on words with the classic ‘Crimson and Clover’ it’s an anthem to the post-break up longing of an ex.”
Andrew Bird and Phoebe Bridgers have collaborated on a new single reimagining Emily Dickinson’s ‘I felt a Funeral, in my Brain’. Listen to the duet below.
Andrew Bird released his latest album, Inside Problems, earlier this year. “I came across this Emily Dickinson poem and found it to be the most vivid description of an inner world I’ve ever encountered,” he explained in a statement. “It became an inspiration for the songs on Inside Problems. Who better to sing it with than Phoebe Bridgers? I sent her a demo and so, here we are. Thanks to Ms. Dickinson’s publisher at Harvard University Press for allowing us to use this poem. As I understand, her poems weren’t published as she intended them until the 1950s – that is, without the heavy hand of her male editors.”
Algiers have announced their new album: Shook comes out February 24 via Matador. The follow-up to 2020’s There Is No Year will include the previously released single ‘Bite Back’ (with billy woods and Backxwash), as well as the new track ‘Irreversible Damage’, which features Zack de la Rocha. “The end of that song is the sound of joy,” frontman Franklin James Fisher said in a statement. “That’s what hope sounds like in 2022 when everything’s falling apart.” Check it out below and scroll down for the album’s cover artwork and tracklist.
Spanning 17 tracks, the LP also includes collaborations with Big Rube (The Dungeon Family), Samuel T. Herring (Future Islands), Jae Matthews (Boy Harsher), LaToya Kent (Mourning [A] BLKstar), Nadah El Shazly, DeForrest Brown Jr. (Speaker Music), Patrick Shiroishi, Lee Bains III, and Mark Cisneros (Hammered Hulls, The Make-Up, Kid Congo Powers).
“I think this record is us finding home,” bassist Ryan Mahan said. Fisher added: “It was a whole new positive experience — having a renewed relationship with the city we’re from and having a pride in that. I like the idea that this record has taken you on a voyage but it begins and ends in Atlanta.”
Shook Cover Artwork:
Shook Tracklist:
1. Everybody Shatter [feat. Big Rube]
2. Irreversible Damage
3. 73%
4. Cleanse Your Guilt Here
5. As It Resounds [feat. Big Rube]
6. Bite Back [feat. billy woods & Backxwash]
7. Out of Style Tragedy [feat. Mark Cisneros]
8. Comment #2
9. A Good Man
10. I Can’t Stand It! [feat. Samuel T. Herring & Jae Matthews]
11. All You See Is
12. Green Iris
13. Born [feat. LaToya Kent]
14. Cold World [feat. Nadah El Shazly]
15. Something Wrong
16. An Echophonic Soul [feat. DeForrest Brown Jr. & Patrick Shiroishi]
17. Momentary [feat. Lee Bains III]
Algiers 2023 Tour Dates:
Thu Feb 9 – Ireland, Dublin, Workman’s
Wed Feb 15 – Belgium, Brussels, Botanique Rotonde
Thu Feb 16 – Switzerland, Winterthur Salzhaus
Fri Feb 17 – Italy, Ravenna, Bronson
Sat Feb 18 – Italy, Pordenone, Capitol
Mon Feb 20 – Slovenia, Ljubljana, Kino Šiška
Tue Feb 21 – Austria, Vienna, Flex
Wed Feb 22 – Austria, Linz, Posthof
Fri Feb 24 – Czech Republic, Prague, Lucerna Music Bar
Sat Feb 25 – Poland, Warsaw, Niebo
Wed Mar 1 – Germany, Dresden, Beatpol
Thu Mar 2 – Germany, Berlin, Hole44
Fri Mar 3 – Germany, Bielefeld, Forum
Sat Mar 4 – Germany, Schorndorf, Manufaktur
Sun Mar 5 – Germany, Cologne, Club Volta
Tue Mar 7 – France, Paris, Petit Bain
Wed 8 Mar – UK London, The Dome
Berlin-based musician LSDXOXO has released a new single called ‘Freak’. Following recent offerings ‘DRaiN’ and ‘Demons’ (featuring Eartheater), the track comes alongside an accompanying visual made in collaboration with Maurice Andresen. Check it out below.
“Something I made to step out of the heady process that is finalizing a debut album as a new writer and even newer vocalist,” LSDXOXO said in a statement. “‘Freak’ is the closing summary of a summer spent as a digital diva constantly on the move. Tour life isn’t always sexy, but when it is, it’s something to write home about!”
Philip Selway has announced a new LP, Strange Dance, which will be released on February 24 via Bella Union. It features guest contributions from Hannah Peel, Adrian Utley, Quinta, Marta Salogni, Valentina Magaletti, and Laura Moody. Listen to the lead single ‘Check for Signs of Life’ below.
Strange Dance marks Selway’s first solo album since 2014’s Weatherhouse, though in recent years he has worked on the soundtracks for the films Let Me Go and Carmilla. “The scale of it was very deliberate for me, from the outset,” Selway said of the album in a press release. “I wanted the soundscape to be broad and tall but somehow get it to wrap around this intimate vocal at the heart of it.”
He added: “One of the things I’ve liked about this record is it’s me as a 55-year-old not trying to hide that fact. It feels kind of unguarded rather than seeing that ageing process as something that needs to be hidden.”
Strang Dance Cover Artwork:
Strang Dance Tracklist:
1. Little Things
2. What Keeps You Awake At Night
3. Check For Signs Of Life
4. Picking Up Pieces
5. The Other Side
6. Strange Dance
7. Make It Go Away
8. The Heart Of It All
9. Salt Air
10. There’ll Be Better Days
Feeble Little Horse have announced their signing to Saddle Creek. Today, the label has re-released the Pittsburgh band’s debut album,Hayday, which arrived last year via Julia’s War Recordings. It includes the previously unreleased ‘Dog Song 2’, a full-band version of ‘Dog Song (Wet Jeans)’, as well as a remix of ‘Termites’ by Full Body 2. They’ve also shared an animated video for the album track ‘Chores’, created by Corrinne James. Check it out below.
Feeble Little Horse was formed by Sebastian Kinsler (guitar, production, vocals, bass) and Ryan Walchonski (guitar, vocals) in February 2021, and has since expanded into a four-piece featuring Jake Kelley and Lydia Slocum. Haydya was preceded by the Modern Tourism EP.
Despite what its title would lead you to believe, The Loneliest Time isn’t really an album about pandemic isolation. The Canadian singer did write much of the album during the early stages of lockdown, but loneliness is more of a prevailing condition than consisent subject matter, a wave of feeling that has been creeping into her ecstatic, dancefloor-ready pop at least since 2019’s Dedication. But while that album and the B-sides collection that followed it in May 2020 capitalized on the genre’s potential as a vessel for escapism, The Loneliest Time takes a more grounded and expansive approach. This isn’t an album-length ‘Party for One’ – instead, Jepsen surveys the gamut of emotions that arose during this time through the lens of honest introspection, trying to resist the spark of an old flame while opening up to the possibilities of new love. The record fittingly finds her sticking to her trusted pop formula while flirting with new sounds, with results ranging from uneven to refreshing to rapturous.
Jepsen is known for penning hundreds of songs before whittling them down to an album, and in the process of assembling The Loneliest Time, she seems to have sacrificed pure cohesion for the kind of versatility that would more accurately represent this uncertain period. She hinted as much in the album’s advance singles, from the wistful dreaminess of ‘Western Wind’ to the tite track, a disco-tinged duet with Rufus Wainwright. But the song that feels like the biggest departure, even in the context of the album, is ‘Beach House’, on which Jepsen relays a series of terrible dating app experiences with a sense of corniness that borders on camp. It’s the sound of her cynically logging off and connecting with others over the absurdity of the dating scene, but it’s the only time where she risks losing her voice while bringing new characters into it. Her range is more apparent in the multitude of ways she’s able to channel euphoria: especially for a singer who tends to shoot for the moon, the syrupy and pared-back ‘So Nice’ is a pleasant surprise, while ‘Shooting Star’ is an extravagant peak even by Jepsen’s standards.
The sonic palette of The Loneliest Time is diverse, but Jepsen’s growth as a songwriter shines through even more in her lyrics. The album kicks off with one of its strongest songs, ‘Surrender My Heart’, which sees Jepsen shedding her emotional armor: “I used to soldier through my hardest days/ I used to switch it off, ignore the pain,” she admits, taking her therapist’s advice to soften rather than toughen up. Not only does she wear that vulnerability on her sleeve throughout the record, but it also further bolsters characteristically infectious synthpop bangers like ‘Talking to Yourself’ to ‘Bad Thing Twice’. When she sings about finding not just joy but confidence in a loved one’s presence on the bubbly ‘Sideways’, however, the song sounds all too static as it ambles along in a daze. The production of a song like ‘Western Wind’ is much better at capturing both the sentiment and texture of Jepsen’s songwriting, allowing her starry-eyed romanticism to bloom without becoming superficially theatrical.
It’s no coincidence that, like ‘Western Wind’, the second best song on The Loneliest Time was also produced by ex-Vampire Weekend member Rostam Batmanglij. That it’s a ballad shouldn’t be a surprise for anyone who can name one of the best tracks off Dedicated Side B, but Jepsen hasn’t really pulled off a guitar-led folk tune like this before: for a breakup song titled ‘Go Find Yourself or Whatever’, it’s neither biting nor overly moody, striking a delicate middle ground without overcomplicating things. The album might have benefited from a sharper focus, but it’s clear that making it has helped Jepsen discover new tools for homing in on the subtleties of simple yet overwhelming emotions. It’s not a transformation – at its best, The Loneliest Time instead reflects how we notice and respond to the changes happening around us, how we retreat into the past and hope desperately for the future. As it’s currently presented, the album keeps wavering between those two poles, but Jepsen makes sure to remind us we’re all in it together.
Quasi, the duo of Sam Coomes and Janet Weiss, have announced their first album in a decade. Breaking the Balls of History is set to arrive on February 10 via Sub Pop. The new single ‘Queen of Ears’ comes with a video directed by Patrick Stanton, and you can check it out below.
Quasi, whose last LP was 2013’s Mole City, announced their signing with Sub Pop back in March. Co-produced with John Goodmanson, the new album marks Weiss’ first new project since leaving Sleater-Kinney in 2019.
“When you’re younger and in a band, you make records because that’s what you do,” Coomes said in a statement. “But this time, the whole thing felt purposeful in a way that was unique to the circumstances.” Weiss added: “There’s no investing in the future anyore. The future is now. Do it now if you want to do it. Don’t put it off. All those things you only realize when it’s almost too late. It could be gone in a second.”
Breaking the Balls of History Cover Artwork:
Breaking the Balls of History Tracklist:
1. Last Long Laugh
2. Back in Your Tree
3. Queen of Ears
4. Gravity
5. Shitty Is Pretty
6. Riots & Jokes
7. Breaking the Balls of History
8. Doomscrollers
9. Inbetweenness
10. Nowheresville
11. Rotten Wrock
12. The Losers Win
Neil Gaiman and Australia’s FourPlay String Quartet have announced their first collaborative album, Signs of Life. Featuring lyrics, music, and backup vocals by Gaiman, the record is due for release on April 28, 2023, via Instrumental Recordings. Two songs from the album, ‘Bloody Sunrise’ and ‘Credo’, are out today. Lara Goodridge takes on lead vocals on ‘Bloody Sunrise’, which is accompanied by a video from Australian director James Chappell. Check it out below.
Neil Gaiman and FourPlay String Quartet’s first collaboration came in 2010, when Sydney Opera House’s Graphic Festival commissioned the quartet to write a soundtrack to Neil’s novella The Truth is a Cave in the Black Mountains. In a press release, Gaiman said:
I’m not entirely certain when I fell in love with a string quartet. I remember our first date, though. It was a day spent in a tiny room somewhere in the backstage maze of Sydney Opera House. We played the next night on the stage of the Sydney Opera House. It was remarkable. It was so much fun we did it again. We did a tour together, but when we reached Carnegie Hall, we decided we needed something better than me reading a poem as our encore, so we stole some time from soundcheck and rehearsed a song. And then we performed our song on the stage of the Carnegie Hall, and that felt a lot like something special. We started to build a repertoire, and when I was in Australia we would make music together. These are some of the things we’ve made together. It’s been a long fallow winter, the last two and a half years. Here are signs of life.
FourPlay added: “Neil’s mastery of storytelling, and his crafting of words, is second to none. Among the members of FourPlay, we have been fans of Neil’s for many years, and t was a golden opportunity to work with him. Nevertheless, we could never have expected to find him to also be such a master of pacing, such a musical performer and wordsmith. We’re joyful to count him as a friend as well as a collaborator, someone we spend pleasurable time with and someone we never fail to create beautiful, glittering things with.”
Signs of Life Cover Artwork:
Signs of Life Tracklist:
1. Clock
2. Möbius Strip
3. Bloody Sunrise
4. The Wreckers
5. Song of the Song
6. Credo
7. Neverwhere
8. Poem First Read on January 26th 2011 at the Sydney Opera House
9. The Problem With Saints
10. In Transit
11. Signs of a Life
12. Oceanic
Meg Remy has shared the second U.S. Girls single of 2022, ‘Bless This Mess’. Following July’s ‘So Typically Now’, the track arrives with a video created by Remy and artist Evan Gordon. Watch and listen below.
“Before camera phones, the family camcorder was often the mirror tool used to capture selfie-like performances of teenage daydreams and insecurities,” Remy explained in a statement. “Recently I unearthed a VHS tape housing footage of my 1998 self singing on top of my favorite songs of the day, along with my 2000 self publicly performing music for the first time, plus various other blush-worthy self-portraits. I decided to air out this acutely personal footage. My meta music video vision: 1998 self singing a song that 2020 self wrote.”
Gordon added: “I buckled down and painstakingly dragged the eight-minute clip over each word of the song, forwards and then backwards, splitting off any partial or direct match. Beyond my expectations, I was able to find multiple matches for each phrase. From here, I worked on stitching the clips together to make complete phrases, selecting from my list of matches much like making a comp of vocal takes. This video is a realfake. It’s naturally authentic while being transparently fake. Its intent is not to deceive or convince, but rather to induce reflection and remembrance.”