Fred again.. has announced a new album called Actual Life 3 (January 1 – September 9 2022). The third installment of his Actual Life trilogy will be out on October 28 via Atlantic Records. To mark the announcement, the producer has shared a new song, ‘Danielle (smile on my face)’, which samples 070 Shake’s ‘Nice To Have’. Check it out below, along with the cover art and tracklist.
The new LP will follow Actual Life (February 2nd – July 19th) and the accompanying Actual Life 2 (February 2 – October 15 2021). Fred again.. has recently shared collaborations with Swedish House Mafia and Future (‘Turn Out the Lights Again..’), I. Jordan (‘Admit It (U Don’t Want 2)’), and the xx’s Romy and HAAi (‘Lights Out’).
Actual Life 3 (January 1 – September 9 2022) Cover Artwork:
Actual Life 3 (January 1 – September 9 2022) Tracklist:
1. January 1st 2022
2. Eyelar (shutters)
3. Delilah (pull me out of this)
4. Kammy (like i do)
5. Berwyn (all that i got is you)
6. Danielle (smile on my face)
7. Nathan (still breathing)
8. Bleu (better with time)
9. Kelly (end of a nightmare)
10. Clara (the night is dark)
11. Mustafa (time to move you)
12. Winnie (end of me)
13. September 9th 2022
Show Me the Body have announced their next LP: Trouble the Water drops on October 28 via Loma Vista. The follow-up to the New York City hardcore group’s 2019 record Dog Whistle is led by the single ‘We Came to Play’, which you can check out below.
The band recorded the new album, which features the previously released single ‘Loose Talk’, at Corpus studios in Long Island City and produced it with Arthur Rizk (Power Trip, Turnstile, Municipal Waste). They’re set to embark on a world tour next month, kicking off a 15-date European run following performances at Desert Daze and Nothing Fest IV in California.
Trouble the Water Cover Artwork:
Trouble the Water Tracklist:
1. Loose Talk
2. Food From Plate
3. Radiator
4. We Came To Play
5. War Not Beef
6. Out of Place
7. Boils Up
8. Buck 50
9. Demeanor
10. Using It
11. WW4
12. Trouble The Water
Halloween Ends, the latest installment in the current Halloween trilogy, will be released on October 14. The film’s score, composed by John Carpenter and his frequent collaborators Daniel Davies and Cody Carpenter, is out the same day, with a physical release to follow on January 20. A companion EP features four versions of the Boy Harsher song ‘Burn it Down’, which will arrive in tandem with the soundtrack via Sacred Bones/Nude Club. Listen to ‘The Procession’ and ‘Burn It Down’ from the Halloween Ends score below.
Boy Harsher said of their contribution to the film:
“During an extremely brief period of rest between tours, we got this call from the music supervisor of Halloween Ends. The director, David Gordon Green, had listened to our music and wanted to use something for this final installment in the trilogy – Halloween Ends. We flew to New York the next day to meet the team and discuss the possibilities. It was totally surreal. Obviously we’re huge fans of Carpenter and the franchise is a fav, but to work with Gordon Green was also so special, his early films (George Washington, Undertow, Snow Angels) were heavy influences on our work. The real kicker is that Halloween Ends was shot in Savannah, GA – the birthplace of Boy Harsher and where we met. Unbelievable. It all felt too synchronous, and we knew we had to make something work although we were about to leave for a multi-month tour that week. We flew home to Massachusetts, dug through old demos, and found “Burn It Down”. In the end it was the perfect energy for the bittersweet love affair between the film characters Allyson and Corey, so during a couple days off – we cleaned it up and made it come alive.
Halloween Ends Cover Artwork:
Halloween Ends Tracklist:
1. Where Is Jeremy?
2. Halloween Ends (Main Title)
3. Laureis Theme Ends
4. The Cave
5. Drags To The Cave
6. Evil Eyes
7. Transformation
8. Because of You
9. Requiem For Jeremy
10. Kill The Cop
11. Corey and Michael
12. Corey’s Requiem
13. The Junk Yard
14. Where Are You?
15. Bye Bye Corey
16. The Fight
17. Before Her Eyes
18. The Procession
19. Cherry Blossoms
20. Halloween Ends (End Titles)
“I got big plans for this home I made,” Sudan Archives proclaims on the opening track of her sophomore album, Natural Brown Prom Queen. She has a whole album’s worth of songs to prove her point, but wastes no time flaunting her conviction. There’s already a strange magic in the air when she invites us to “step inside my lovely cottage,” leaving you to wonder if the description is plucked from a dream – and in the span of five minutes, the song conjures the sense of chaos and comfort of having a space of your own, real or imagined, as well as the pain and loneliness that often sharpens when it’s exposed to others. As shapeshifting percussion, rollicking synths, and fragmented backing vocals populate the scene, the LA-via-Cincinnati artist, also known as Brittney Parks, sounds at home through all of it. In the landscape of her disorienting yet expertly arranged music, messiness is not only a crucial part of the mix, but the only place where it starts to make sense.
In art as in life, things really get complicated when you try to venture out and project some version of yourself into the world – and that’s exactly what the protagonist of Prom Queen, a semi-autobiographical record that follows a Cincinnati girl’s journey to Hollywood, yearns for: a big break, for sure, but also the kind of belonging and intimacy she can’t find in her self-contained bubble. The cinematic scope of Sudan’s work has clearly expanded since her full-length debut, Athena, itself an impressive and forward-thinking fusion of pop, R&B, and hip-hop, and she finds startling new ways to apply her frenetic, genreless approach. The narrative framework allows her to dissect personal struggles without necessarily attaching them to her own self, an exploration that’s as complex and puzzling as it is, for the first time in Sudan’s career, revealing. The album’s dense, lavish opening stretch in particular underscores just how much of her vision is an idealized or fractured projection. Nowhere is this more apparent than on the restless ‘NBPQ (Topless)’, which goes through multiple transformations, and yet, much like the record as a whole, never fully abandons its musical ideas.
At this point, Sudan – or Britt, the character she takes on – is eager and ambitious, steering the way but unsure how to orient herself through every opportunity and expectation coming at her. “Do you know what you feel? Is it even real?” she ponders, in a rare moment of stillness, on the following interlude. As it vacillates between moments of manic expression and lucidity, each song on Prom Queen sets the stage for the next, but not one of its tracks purvey a single mood. On ‘ChevyS10’, the album’s six-minute centerpiece and its most dynamic cut, Sudan drifts through a wide expanse of space, but the closer she pulls a lover looking for escape, the more it locks itself in a groove that’s driving yet unorthodox. After a couple of tracks that are thrilling yet unruly, ‘FLUE’ arrives like a “rude awakening,” and the singer firmly stands her ground: “Why can’t we stay at home/ And find out where we’ve gone?”
The album revolves as much around Sudan’s search for home as it does the sharing of it, both as a reflection of one’s present and the promise of a future. “I gave you my home/ When you was alone,” she sings on ‘Loyal (EDD)’, and it’s that feeling of aloneness that comes back to haunt her on ‘Yellow Brick Road’; both songs end with dreamy, shimmering outros that sound like she’s dozing off into the past. But Sudan never loses focus, whether blazing through insecurities on ‘Selfish Soul’ or steadying herself on ‘TDLY (Homegrown Land)’, where her determination lifts her, however briefly, into a state of rapture. The effect, both dizzying and dramatic, comes into contrast with less heady tracks like ‘OMG BRITT’ and ‘Freakalizer’, which are not only infectious but serve their own purpose in the story. On the surface, ‘Freakalizer’ is playful and flirty, yet also houses some of the album’s most vulnerable confessions (“I don’t wanna be alone,” “I just wanna be real close”) before ‘Homesick (Gorgeous and Arrogant)’ lays them out in the open.
The last section of Natural Brown Prom Queen is fuelled by desire in ways that highlight the album’s progression, moving from dizzy ambition to true self-assurance. But not even the final track, ‘#513’, which is named for her hometown area code, attempts to tie it all together – perhaps an unsurprising choice for an artist who rarely settles in one place for too long, but still a bold one in the context of a sprawling 18-track LP. Yet in a satisfying, almost endearing way, it feels like a kind of homecoming, that constant process of sweeping out all the obstacles blurring your visio. “I’m too rooted in my ways,” she admits, which comes off as anything but a constraint: it’s only by knowing exactly where she stands, and where she’s been, that she’s able to carve her path forward.
Dehd have a new one-off single, ‘Eggshells’, alongside an accompanying video. It follows the Chicago trio’s latest album Blue Skies, which came out back in May on Fat Possum. Check out the clip, directed by singer Emily Kempf and Kevin Veselka, below.
South London trio PVA have released a new single, ‘Bunker’, which is taken from their upcoming debut LP BLUSH – out October 14 via Ninja Tune. It follows previous offerings ‘Hero Man’ and ‘Bad Dad’. Listen below.
“We started playing ‘Bunker’ almost as soon as the band started,” the band explained in a statement. “Originally just a looped groove, it has evolved into the live track it is today through various compositions and outings live. The song tries to act as a reminder to overcome the want to chase things that ultimately lead to isolation.”
Drowse, the musical project of Portland musician Kyle Bates, has announced a new album titled Wane Into It. The follow-up to 2019’s Light Mirror lands on November 11 via the Flenser. Today, Bates has shared a self-directed video for the new single ‘Untrue in Headphones’, a collaboration with Midwife. Check it out below, along with the album artwork (featuring photography by Nyree Watts) and tracklist.
“’Untrue in Headphones’ was the first song that I wrote for Wane Into It,” Bates explained in a statement. “In fall 2019, I captured the Bass VI parts DI through a preamp in my apartment because I couldn’t make too much noise. I recorded in different spaces and it kept expanding: live vibraphone arrangements, textures from Mills College’s Buchla 100s, field recordings of my van sampled into percussion etc… I asked Madeline from Midwife to collaborate on guitar and vocals because I knew her haunting style would add otherworldly colors to the sound. Working with her was surreal.”
He continued: “The song is about ambiguity, listening to Burial’s Untrue on a train to anesthetize myself, and being ok with our inability to fully know another person—finding the value in it. The accompanying video was shot during a residency in La Barre, France, and on the Oregon Coast. It invokes the difficulty of being present: thoughts fragmenting through time and place.”
Wane Into It Cover Artwork:
Wane Into It Tracklist:
1. Untrue in Headphones
2. Mystery Pt. 2
3. (Ashes Over the Pacific Northwest)
4. Wane into It
5. Telepresence
6. Gabapentin
7. Blue Light Glow
8. Three Faces (Cyanoacrylate)
9. Ten Year Hangover / Deconstructed Mystery
Kelela has returned with her first new song in five years, ‘Washed Away’. The track comes paired with a music video directed by Yasser Abubeker and shot in the Danakil Depression in Ethiopia. Watch and listen below.
“I love a banger, but for the first point of contact out of my hiatus, it felt more honest to lead with an ambient heart-check,” Kelela said of the song in a press release. “I specifically want to speak to marginalized Black folk and highlight the work we do to find renewal in a world that’s built to make us feel inadequate. This song is the soundtrack to the relief we find after going inward.”
Kelela released her debut album, Take Me Apart, in 2017.
Algiers have joined forces with billy woods and Backxwash for ‘Bite Back’, their first new music since 2020’s There Is No Year. The collaborative track arrives with an accompanying video directed by Murat Gökmen. Check it out below.
“Shit’s been so real the past few years, we really needed to grow our community of collaborators and make solid the bonds we’ve always felt, particularly with rap heads,” multi-instrumentalist and producer Ryan Mahan said in a statement. “And to have the two best rappers around, billy woods AND Backxwash, on the same Algiers-produced track? Pinch me, for real.”
Vocalist Franklin James Fisher added: “Ryan showed up one day with this beautifully epic instrumental and said, “I’ve got this song and I want to call it ‘Bite Back’. It immediately reminded me why I joined this band and the rest of the song seemed to write itself. It’s a classic example of our Lenin-McCartney dynamic.”
“This feels like the soundtrack to revolutionary struggle,” Backxwash commented. “I am honored to participate side by side with an incredible array of artistry.” billy woods had this to say: “Working with Algiers was a dope experience on many levels, and I was even more excited when they said they were shooting a video. Plus knowing Backxwash was involved, I had to do it.”
Angel Olsen and Sturgill Simpson have teamed up for a new version of ‘Big Time’, the title track of Olsen’s latest album. Check it out below.
“It’s crazy to write a song and then watch someone else you really admire sing your words, kinda turns the whole thing on its head,” Olsen commented in a statement. “I loved the song already but hearing Sturgill’s take on ‘Big Time’ made me smile ear to ear, he made it come alive on a different level.”
Following her Wild Hearts Tour alongside Sharon Van Etten and Julien Baker, Olsen is set to embark on a tour of Europe and the UK later this year, with support from Tomberlin.