Barack Obama has shared his annual summer playlist, which features songs by Beyoncé, Kendrick Lamar, Rosalía, Harry Styles, Drake, Bad Bunny, and more. Wet Leg, Jack White, Lil Yachty, Omar Apollo, and Amber Mark also made the cut. Check out the playlist below.
“Every year, I get excited to share my summer playlist because I learn about so many new artists from your replies — it’s an example of how music really can bring us all together,” Obama wrote on social media. “Here’s what I’ve been listening to this summer. What songs would you add?”
Last year, Obama’s summer picks included tracks by Jay-Z, M, Silk Sonic, Bob Dylan, The Rolling Stones, Arooj Aftab, and others. Check out our own 2022 summer playlist.
Every year, I get excited to share my summer playlist because I learn about so many new artists from your replies—it’s an example of how music really can bring us all together.
Long Beach-based artist Emily Yacina started writing and recording songs in 2010 at the age of 14. She grew up in the same Philadelphia suburb as Alex Giannascoli, aka Alex G – with whom she has frequently collaborated – but has since been carving out her own style of bracingly vulnerable songwriting, marked by an earnest yet often surreal emotionality more akin to Frankie Cosmos or Lomelda. After putting out a series of lo-fi-leaning releases on Bandcamp, she came through with her debut studio album, Remember the Silver, in 2019. It was co-produced alongside Eric Littman, who passed away two years later. A few years earlier, Yacina had lost another close friend, Mark Ronan, to whom she dedicated the 2015 record Soft Stuff.
This Friday, Yacina will be releasing All the Things: A Decade of Songs, a career-spanning compilation that begins with recordings she made in her teens and concludes with three brand new songs produced with Jay Som’s Melina Duterte. “Too fucked up to be real/ But I know more than anything you’d want me to laugh/ I want to dedicate my life to your mind,” she sings on the wrenching ‘DB Cooper’, in which she honours Littman’s memory. As a whole, the collection serves as a carefully curated document of her life in music as well her personal growth. The way it recontextualizes and draws a line through seemingly disparate songs is striking, revealing her unique perspective as a songwriter whose work has always been attuned to the soft edges of experience, but who, with time, has only become more aware of all the things – new, old, and all-consuming – that compel her to keep exploring.
We caught up with Emily Yacina ahead of the release of All the Things to talk about the process of compiling her songs, how they relate to one another, grief, and more.
What’s your headspace like with the release coming up? How do you feel about the new songs that are out?
I feel really excited. The new tracks that are on there happened so organically, and they were meant to be the final songs to this ten-year group of songs. I wrote them in a very organic way, and recording them felt kind of the same. Sometimes you can be doubtful about things right before they come out, because there’s so much time between it being finished and when it’s revealed to everyone. Something I lean on in times where I’m feeling a little bit like insecure about things that I’m about to put out, I’m like, “I know that when I was making this, it felt very true and right and natural.”
My friend, Matthew [James-Wilson], who I work with here in California, he’s a good friend of mine, and we met in college actually, probably in like 2014. We lived on the same hall, and we’ve been really tight ever since then. He was kind of the one who proposed the idea; I hadn’ really thought about a compilation or thought that could be possible. We were talking about it, and he knows me so well and knows my relationship with music so well. I was talking to him about just how my songwriting, even though it’s evolved for sure, I still feel like there’s like a lot of things that make it what it is, and the frustration that comes with that. I expressed to him feeling like I was like on the verge of something different, like I’m in a very experimental phase of my life and I don’t know how long it will last or what it will lead me to. But his idea was, why not make something to celebrate this time, all of this music that’s been made over the past 10 years? And to do it in a way that feels true to me, because I get to select the ones that I most resonate with and arrange the songs thematically and chronologically. It felt like a really nice way to honour this time, even though I feel like the world around me is changing so much and I’m changing so much.
The collection starts with ‘As We Go’, which you put out when you were just 14 or 15. Given how some of the more recent songs deal with loss, I was struck by the line “I’ve got this silly fear/ That everything is leaving me.” It’s so close to the “everyone” that comes up a few lines earlier, but “silly fear” makes it a bit lighter, the “everything” less personal, though still genuine. What do you remember about writing it, and how does the song speak to you now?
Yeah, that’s the oldest one that’s on there. I was a sophomore in high school, and I had a really life-changing year that year. I think a lot of people can relate to school being – you’re starting to understand who you are a little bit more and what the world has to offer to you. And for me, socially, that was a really impactful year. I wrote that song about this group of kids who were in my high school who were a few years older than I was, and they kind of took me under their wing. It was the first time that I was feeling so satiated by, like, people, and what other people were into, and it was just so exciting. I was like, Wow, there really is this whole world. But the impermanence thing, like “everything is leaving me,” I think I was thinking, like, ’cause they were seniors… [laughs]
Oh, so it’s not like a mortality thing.
Yeah, totally. But I almost feel like it kind of like holds hands with it in some sort of way. It’s knowing that this is so fleeting, and I feel that way about just life in general now. And a lot of that has to do I think with my relationship with grief. But for this song, I was just keenly aware that the way that this is happening now is only going to happen for this year, and then who knows? Who knows where they’ll be?
‘As We Go’ and ‘White Bull’ are separated by a decade, but they both, in some way, communicate the feeling of someone new coming into your life. But while in the first case it stirs up this fear of impermanence, on ‘White Bull’ you’re aware of the self-confidence that makes you embrace it, and it becomes almost dreamlike. Besides time, what else did it take to recognize that bravery in yourself?
Everything that you said about ‘As We Go’ versus ‘White Bull’ definitely is true and resonates a lot with me. And yeah, I think just time and the quality of relationships that I’ve been able to obtain. I guess this is more like about romantic relationships, but not being ashamed of my needs, having them be met, and the confidence that comes with that. Like, I know what I need, and feeling way more assured in that, instead of like, Is this too much? Is this reasoable? There’sa confidence in knowing myself a little bit more through time. That’s definitely one part of it.
Another part I definitely feel like is the experiences that I have had with death, and how those experiences have been the most formative in how I situate myself in life and how I feel about life. It’s just a knowingness that it is so impermanent. But also kind of leaning in to that, too, if that makes sense. Maybe acceptance, like there’s less of a fight – everything’s going too fast and I can’t like process it all and I don’t have control over anything, to more of a place of accepting, like: We’re only here for this amount of time, things change all the time. And the only thing that kind of centres me in that knowledge is just getting to enjoy everything when it happens and appreciating it. Expressing love to people is a big thing.
I love the phrase “muffle the broken sound of everything” as a way of expressing that. It reminds me of ‘Soft Stuff’, where you describe this tender intimacy that fills up a space between two people. All these years later, what does “soft stuff” mean to you – not necessarily the song itself, but the thing it evokes?
Yeah, it’s interesting. I haven’t thought about that phrase in a really long time, but it definitely has to do with a lot of things that you’re talking about. The intimacy that’s shared between friends or lovers, that is so fleeting and soft, like the opposite of concrete. I haven’t thought about that, but it’s so true that it relates to the things that we’re talking about.
There’s a kind of vague vagueness to “soft stuff,” and I was surprised how often you use this sort of language throughout the collection – “all the things,” “all the pieces,” “all the stories” – all those everythings. But when you put them together this way, it made me think about how each everything, as honest and total as it can seem in the moment, is fleeting, more like a snapshot. And it’s always changing and expanding. I’m curious if arranging this collection has led you to that realization as well.
Totally. And something that I thought of when you were talking about everything and how there’s a vagueness to that: I was just having a conversation with my friend the other day, and she told me – I was kind of processing something with her and explaining all the different feelings that were coming up in this personal situation – and she was like, “Isn’t it crazy how much we can hold at once?” You know, there could be like a primary feeling, but there’s also so many other things that you could be feeling at the same time that are in your body. I feel like that speaks to the everything, all the things – it’s not that there’s a limited space for everything, that there’s a capacity; all of these things are coexisting at the same time. And I think that’s also what I was trying to get at, too, with the title. I think I’ve gotten more comfortable with the idea that so many feelings can coexist at once, even if they seem like they’re contradicting one another.
There are some of the earlier songs here that try to nail down a specific feeling, and then you get through the collection, and you get to ‘Dominos’, and that’s where all of these feelings that you wouldn’t necessarily imagine co-existing, do. There’s the all-consuming desire that you express in a lot of the first songs, and there’s the grief that permeates the newer ones. And they both feel like they’re part of the same thing. And there’s an acceptance that was absent on ‘As We Go’, where you’re maybe trying to suppress it a little bit – that fear – but on ‘Dominos’, you’re capable of embracing it.
Yeah. 100%. [laughs]
Do you want to talk a little bit about that song?
I’m really excited about that one. The first lines are, “That must have been you/ Moving balloons across the living room floor.” Last year, I was living with a really good friend of mine, and I have such a soft part of my heart for her. It was in the earlier days of the pandemic and we were feeling a bit more isolated. I had just moved to LA, and we were just spending so much time together in this home that we shared. It was just such a weird year, and she bore witness to a lot of crazy stuff in my life, and I did the same for her. It was a very specific time.
It was her birthday party – I guess it was like two days after her birthday party, but we still had balloons in our apartment. And one of the balloons, we noticed, even if the air was off or the windows were closed, kept moving around. And then I kind of jokingly said to her, and to the balloon: “Mark” – Mark is my friend who passed away when I was in my early 20s – I was like, “Mark, if that’s you, I want you to move to my bedroom door.” And I said it completely just off the cuff, and the balloon started moving on a very straight path from my living room, and then went right up and knocked against the door to my bedroom. And that’s what that part of the song is about.
I love that person so much, Mark. And it’s been I guess like seven years since he died. It’s so interesting, the ways that he’s still very much present in my world. And even though the edges are a little bit softer, with time, I still very much feel him, like, in me. I still kind of hear his reactions to jokes, or, like, new things in my life that he doesn’t know. I feel him all the time.
If you’re comfortable, could you share a recent moment where you felt his presence in some way?
Yeah, I’m trying to think. It’s interesting because, last year, I lost another really good friend of mine. And I don’t want to say that that experience has overshadowed my first experience with death. In a way, it kind of has made it all connect a little bit more to me. Really, it’s the only thing that I can compare this recent loss to, is my loss of Mark. It’s the only thing that I can relate it to. So, it’s been interesting, because as I’m processing this more recent loss, I’m thinking about Mark a lot – a lot more than I was the year before. And it’s in a way that’s helpful, but also has its own sadness. I feel like I now have the knowledge that time does go on, and that’s something that I’m really struggling with this most recent one: I know, because of this experience with Mark, that the world will in five years will look completely different than when this person was in it. And so, there’s that knowledge, but also, in a way, I feel like Mark’s kind of helping me with this most recent situation, if that makes any sense. That whole experience is informing my approach now, to grief.
Something that I think about a lot is how that experience was so formative and felt so personal. And then with this most recent experience – and I’m sure anyone who’s had close death can kind of relate to this in a way – but with my friend who passed last year, there was this feeling like, Oh my god, this is a part of life. Like, this isn’t just a one-time, random, crazy thing. And in some ways it is, but the bigger picture – everyone is going to die. [laughs] And that’s the most unavoidable – that’s the biggest truth to me.
I forget how I was gonna connect that to Mark, but I guess just that knowingness. I really try to internalize it in a way that makes me appreciative of the time that I do have with people. Going back to like the expressing love thing – that’s a big part of my life.
There’s one part of it, right, which is about expressing that love in the present moment as truly and honestly and fully as you can. And then there’s another aspect of it, which I feel is partly realized through this collection, that has to do with the act of remembering and reflecting. I wanted to go back to the title of Remember the Silver, which I read is from a book about alien abduction, and it refers to this mantra about remembering how real everything felt. I wonder, when you look back on all this stuff – all the songs and the memories that they contain – what helps you remember how real it actually was?
I think songwriting in general has always been a vehicle for that for me. Just trying to encapsulate exactly how real a feeling was at the time. It’s also the overarching theme, in a way, of this collection. A lot of the songs are old, but they’re so real in what I was experiencing at the time. And I think writing songs has always been a way that I can honour that. I’m really thankful to have had this practice for so long, because it’s a way to honour the weight of the feelings. Even if they change or if I grow, I did feel those ways when I was making those songs.
I feel like it’s also a rare thing, because a lot of the time, musicians will feel more distant towards their songs as time goes by. Are you at all afraid that these songs might become less intensely connected with the feeling that they’re capturing over time, in a sense, that they will be just songs?
Yeah. I also just think that that’s such a cool and unique part of music in general, it’s really such a time capsule. And even if you as the writer are no longer relating to what you’ve written in the past, there will be people who are feeling those things at that moment. If people message me about older songs, and they’re like, “I know exactly what you mean and I can relate so much this feeling,” I think that’s such a cool part of music and something that’s very specific to music. And even if I feel distanced from it because it is recorded in this place and time, there will be other people who are on their own journey who might come across it and relate exactly to 14-year-old Emily in that moment.
You mentioned earlier that you’ve been experimenting with new sounds and changing up your process a bit, and we talked about how one way of channeling how real a feeling was is through music. Is that something that you’ve been considering as you’ve been taking this new direction? How to make a feeling sound more real and specific?
Yeah, definitely. In music, yes, but also different mediums as well. And that’s been kind of fun, too, because I feel like I’ve been doing music for so long, and I’ve been trying to challenge myself to take on other creative projects. That’s always tricky – just for an example, with drawing, I’ve been trying to draw a little bit more and I’ve been noticing, like, Whoa, I have to be comfortable with being bad at something to work through it and feel good about the things that I’m making. But there are a bunch of different things that I’ve been thinking of that I feel similarly about.
I’m working with two of my really good friends right now, one of which is my friend Sierra, who was my roommate last year. We’re writing a movie together, me, her and my other friend, Corinne. And that whole process has been such a trip, and it’s so different, because it’s so collaborative. We each are bringing all of our ideas to the table, whereas music is very much this insular thing, very in my head. This collaborative process that I’m experiencing is challenging in this whole new way, but it’s also going back to capturing a feeling – that’s also what we’re trying to do when we’re writing together. I think that’s something that hasn’t gone away with whatever art I’m trying to make. I think feelings are, like… [laughs] the best part of life. It’s what life is.
This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity and length.
The Breach is the second film by Rodrigo Gudiño, founder and president of Rue Morgue magazine. Back in 2012, Gudiño made his filmmaking debut with The Last Will and Testament of Rosalind Leigh: a quietly haunting meditation on family ties and Catholic guilt that follows a grieving son as he is stalked by a shadowy presence lurking in the labyrinth home that once belonged to his recently deceased mother. It has taken a full decade for Gudiño to make his sophomore feature, a Lovecraftian police procedural that offers plenty to enjoy – but never quite lives up to its predecessor. Our Culture reviews the film here as part of its selection from the 2022 Fantasia International Film Festival.
Based on Nick Cutter’s Audible Original of the same name, The Breach follows John Hawkins (Allan Hawco), a small-town cop soon to leave for the big city. But before he can put rural life in Lone Crow behind him, he has one last case to crack: a horribly disfigured body (with no bones and extra fingers) has washed up on the shore of the Porcupine River. The body is assumed to be physicist Dr Cole Parsons (Adam Kenneth Wilson), who recently took up residence in a crumbling house hidden deep in the forest that is only accessible by boat. Accompanied by local coroner Jacob Redgrave (Wesley French) and charter-boat captain Meg Fulbright (Emily Alatalo), Hawkins sets out for the isolated building in the hope of finding answers. Instead, he finds a strange machine in the attic from which all manner of cosmic horrors are soon to be unleashed.
As that synopsis suggests, one of the most interesting things about Gudiño’s second feature is its genre hybridity. Like many Lovecraftian horror films, it is perhaps best described as a blend of horror and science fiction – but it is also by turns a police procedural, a murder mystery and a siege thriller. These varied genre elements make The Breach feel refreshingly novel at its outset, and its focus on an ordinary cop forced to contend with truly extraordinary events plays like a tribute to the films of Larry Cohen. But a less welcome familiarity begins to creep in as the narrative progresses into its second act, where the film inevitably comes to recall any number of other movies that draw inspiration from Lovecraft such as From Beyond (1986), Prince of Darkness (1987), The Void (2016), Annihilation (2018), Color Out of Space (2019) and even The Incredible Melting Man (1977).
So the screenplay – penned by Ian Weir and Cutter himself – is a little too derivative, and there are some further flaws in the writing. The film is heavy on superfluous explanatory dialogue, which is somewhat ironic for two reasons. First, The Breach’s obvious evocations of films like From Beyond and Prince of Darkness will mean that genre-literate viewers will already have a rough idea of how the plot will unfold. Second, it never fully reveals its secrets anyway, leaving several questions unanswered at its conclusion. This ambiguity is thought-provoking and preferable to a neat ending designed to tie up loose ends, but renders some of the earlier exposition a little needless.
Another problem arising from the screenplay is a lack of thematic or subtextual heft. Many of the characters here have some kind of inner conflict or motivation, but none of them build to a satisfactory conclusion. Really, the message at the centre of The Breach is one common to all ‘mad scientist’ movies: that humankind shouldn’t meddle with things it doesn’t fully understand. It’s an evergreen theme (and here related to a thoroughly modern scientific invention), but one that feels a little empty in the twenty-first century without some fresher subtext to support it.
With all that said, though, there’s plenty to enjoy here. Cinematographer Eric Oh gives the film a distinct visual style, and particularly intriguing is the lighting used for scenes set in the attic that houses the mysterious machine at the centre of the narrative. The room is bathed in pale pinks and soft greens that emanate from the contraption and its control terminal, bathing the frame in tones reminiscent of the primitive Technicolor process used for horror films in the early 1930s – including one of the earliest mad scientist movies, Warner’s Doctor X(1932). It’s a clever homage to the horror of decades past.
And the film is certainly committed to a pleasingly retro style in its extensive use of practical effects work. Paying tribute to the likes of Rick Baker, Rob Bottin, Tom Savini, Chris Walas, Stan Winston and other special-effects pioneers of the 1970s and 1980s, Daniel Baker’s prosthetic and creature effects fill The Breach’s third actwith truly disgusting, gooey imagery that will delight any fan of classic body-horror. As long as they have patience, that is; the film’s more visceral genre thrills take a while to arrive, but they are more than worth the wait. And when the screen is filled with face-melting practical effects, it’s thankfully quite easy to forgive that The Breach never quite delivers on the promise of Gudiño’s debut.
U.S. Girls, the project of experimental pop artist Meg Remy, has returned with a brand new single. It’s called ‘So Typically Now’, and it features vocals from Kyle Kidd. Check it out via the Meg Remy-directed video below.
U.S. Girls released their last album, Heavy Light, in 2020. They’ve since shared the holiday song ‘Santa Stay Home’ as well as a cover of the Birthday Party’s ‘Junkyard’. In 2021, Remy published her debut book, Begin By Telling.
Gambling is one of the oldest and most popular entertainment forms in the world. It’s perhaps no surprise then that casinos have become important entertainment hubs at the heart of society. While these century-old venues have changed over the ages, they’ve withstood the test of time and remained relevant to numerous generations, despite technological and cultural changes.
A mutable entertainment form
Ever since casinos were first invented in the 17th century, they have been associated with the upper classes and the bourgeoisie. Over the years, casinos have become synonymous with glamour, luxury, and stardom. Nonetheless, casinos are essentially an unparallel form of entertainment capable of adapting to any time and age.
For instance, nowadays, casinos have entered the digital space and become one of the leading online home entertainment forms around the world. Casinos and game providers have created new variations of classic games allowing users to access countless virtual rooms inspired by different themes and tropes. The increasing popularity of online casinos has even led to the creation of detailed guides that help players take advantage of promotions, and exclusive offers, and find gambling platforms that better suit their preferences. All this while reshaping what the gambling experience is and once again adding to casinos’ cultural significance. Nonetheless, this hasn’t always been the case.
Casinos over the ages
In the 20th century, with audiovisual entertainment formats on the rise, television and cinema gained the powerful ability to create icons and superstars, but also portray different activities in specific lights and granting them cultural meanings. Casinos were no different and the extensive use of these places as settings for some of the biggest movies in history led to the creation of a widespread notion of what casinos looked like and what they symbolised. All-time classics such as Casablanca or Dr No immortalised casinos and forged the link between casinos and glamour, mystery, action, suspense, and romance.
However, in the 2000s, and as casinos were at the peak of their popularity, the notions relating to these places were challenged. Pop hits such as Poker Face and Waking up in Vegas offered a more relaxed and less serious image of casinos when compared to classic gambling tunes, including Luck Be a Lady or Viva Las Vegas. Simultaneously, the Ocean’s and Hangover sagas helped associate casinos and humour, portraying these places as fun and not as tense and dramatic as previously conceived.
In the digital age and as the online world has become a powerful tool to reshape classic industries and the perceptions around them, it has been possible to further expand casinos and their cultural significance. In fact, online casinos have been able to incorporate all cultural aspects often associated with casinos, whether it be the seriousness, the drama, the glamour, or its purely entertaining nature.
Nonetheless, and as mentioned above, casinos and gambling are an ever-changing cultural symbol and so going forward, and with the help of technological advances, casinos will certainly once again be reshaped, their meaning expanded, and they will ultimately be perceived in a different light by future generations.
GamStop is a free service that allows gamblers to control their own gambling addiction. Most players prefer non gamstop casinos, but it is not possible to register an operator in the UK without using this programme. GamStop has advantages and disadvantages – certainly its help in getting rid of gambling addiction is undeniable, but it is not a panacea.
What is GamStop: details
Online gambling is rapidly gaining popularity in all countries, with players from the UK long considered to be among the most gambling-addicted. Consequently, the number of people for whom gambling addiction has become a significant problem is also increasing. GamStop’s multi-operator scheme is designed to protect players from this kind of unpleasantness, while not restricting freedom – it is up to the individual to recognise their too strong attachment to gambling. The UK’s National Health Service says around 400,000 people in the UK need help for their gambling addiction.
GamStop was started over 4 years ago, under the jurisdiction of The National Online Self-Exclusion Scheme Limited (UKGC). It is an independent platform that invites gamblers to make their own adjustments and use the self-exclusion method. The controlling organisation has the main aim of banning fully addicted gamblers from online casinos. In addition, all users receive debt, practical and moral support.
The programme was launched in 2018. Initially, the registration of operators with a UK licence was advisory, but from 2020 it became mandatory. In other words, one of the positions of effectiveness of the service is the operator’s actions. The use of any online casinos registered in the UK involves controlling gambling addiction.
How it works
This programme is designed to ensure that gamblers with a gambling addiction are not adversely affected. In general terms, the service offers two-step help:
support for vulnerable gamblers;
Self-exclusion in cases of severe addiction that the person cannot cope with on their own.
The first case involves compulsive gambling. If such symptoms are present, a player registered with GamStop can receive counselling and assistance from UKGC representatives. In the second case, there is a radical cure for the addiction by making settings for self-exclusion from certain gaming sections or by blocking access to the online casino.
GameStop workflow: stages
Protecting players from addiction involves the following positions
Operator assistance;
The actions of the gambler;
The program structure of the service.
Operator assistance. All British-licensed online casinos are required to register with the GamStop programme. The process involves filling in the relevant form and taking out a paid subscription. The operator then has full access to the player’s personal details and is required to identify all player activity. The software algorithm determines whether an addiction exists and the gaming service provider controls the rest of the steps to help the addicted user.
Gambler’s actions. All online casinos in the UK offer the GamStop service – this service is available on the home page of the website. The player can read the terms and conditions and make self-exclusion settings – for example, set a timer to block any sections of the games or access to the online casino in general. The self-exclusion periods are 6 months, 1 year and 5 years.
The software structure of the service. There is a special algorithm, providing for cross-checking of data provided by operators, and information that a player specifies when registering at GamStop. Confirmation of gambling addiction is considered to be the coincidence of the information from both parties. In this case a gambler will be blocked in GamStop.
Effectiveness of using GamStop
The programme definitely works and can help gamblers who have self-diagnosed a gambling addiction and want to cope with it. GamStop is also effective in terms of supporting all UK operators, which is important – players can get help on any of the resources, choose a self-exclusion activation period and ask for support.
But there are some negative aspects that call into question the effectiveness of the platform:
Online casinos in other countries are available to UK subjects. For example, a player from Britain can join Milky Wins Casino and play without restrictions.
A minimum of 6 months is too long for self-exclusion.
Registering a new account. This is legally prohibited, but one of the available circumvention options is to create a new profile for someone you know or have a family member.
In conclusion, it should be noted that GamStop is only effective for gamblers who are fully aware of their addiction and really want to get rid of it. Otherwise the service won’t work after all, as there are various ways around it.
Los Angeles-based artist A.O. Gerber has announced her sophomore album,Meet Me At the Gloaming. The follow-up to 2020’s Another Place To Need will be out on October 14 via Father/Daughter Records (US) and Hand In Hive (UK). Today, Gerber has shared the new song ‘Hunger’, alongside a music video directed by Vivian Wolfson. Check it out and find the album’s cover art and tracklist below.
“This song sort of wrote itself in the midst of a really devastating fire season in LA,” Gerber said of ‘Hunger’ in a press release. “I’d been thinking a lot about the opposing forces of desire and negation, all the different ways we both consume and restrict as individuals and as a culture. I’ve spent so much of my life vacillating between these polarities, making myself small physically and spiritually. I haven’t always had the ability to critique that impulse in myself but it felt good to do that here.”
“This song is lyrically heavy, so I knew I wanted the video to poke a bit of fun at itself,” she added. “All I told Vivian (the director, who — let it be known — graduated high school less than a month after we filmed) was that I wanted cake to be shoved in my face at some point. From that she came up with this absurdly stunning set design and concept. Everyone on the crew put so much heart into it. I’ve never laughed so much on set.”
Meet Me At the Gloaming Cover Artwork:
Meet Me At the Gloaming Tracklist:
1. Disciple Song
2. Walk In The Dark
3. Looking For The Right Things
4. You Got It Right
5. Mount Washington Phone Company
6. Hunger
7. For
8. Just As A Child
9. Noon Of Love
10. PFS
11. What Are You Reading?
12. Only Myster
Built to Spill have dropped ‘Spiderweb’, the latest single from their forthcoming album When the Wind Forgets Your Name. It follows the previously unveiled tracks ‘Gonna Lose’, ‘Understood’, and ‘Fool’s Gold’. Check it out below.
When the Wind Forgets Your Name is scheduled for release on September 9 via the band’s new label home Sub Pop. It’s the first Built to Spill LP since 2015’s Untethered Moon.
‘Gimme Some Truth’ is taken from Image Comic’s What’s The Furthest Place From Here Deluxe Issue 6, which includes a split 7” featuring Militarie Gun’s John Lennon rendition and Gulch covering the Pixies. “I’ve always felt a connection to this particular song but I had never really intellectualized it,” vocalist Ian Shelton commented in a statement. “Once I started sending this cover to friends, people were pointing out that the things he’s singing about are the same stuff that I’m always talking about. My main gripe in life is typically contradiction and hypocrisy— whether it be from politicians or peers—I hate seeing someone’s mouth running but their actions doing the opposite.”
Hudson Mohawke has shared two new tracks: ‘Dance Forever’ and ‘Stump’, the latter of which is accompanied by video directed by @kingcon2k11, with AI by Roope Rainisto. They’re set to appear on his forthcoming album Cry Sugar, which was announced with the singles ‘Bicstan’ and ‘Cry Sugar (Megamix)’. Check out the new songs below.