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Album Review: Vampire Weekend – Father of the Bride

Artist: Vampire Weekend

Album Title: Father of the Bride

Release Date: May 3, 2019

Label: Columbia

“We took a vow in summertime / Now we find ourselves in late December.” These words kick off “Harmony Hall,” the first single from Vampire Weekend’s Father of the Bride. Simple yet striking, they invoke the alarming passage of time in an apt way for a band whose work set the stage for many a music lover’s coming of age.

If you’re anything like me, each of their releases arrived at a pivotal period in your music education. Perhaps Vampire Weekend came along when you were in middle school and just starting to branch out from top 40 radio into the alternative sphere. Contra found its way into your rotation at the halfway point of your high school career, while Modern Vampires of the City became your record of the summer after freshman year of college. At all of these crucial junctures, you found your conception of music—and what it could be—dramatically and permanently altered.

And now it’s been 11 years since we first started that journey. We’re all a little older now—wiser in some ways, in others not, and still constantly learning. Same goes for Ezra Koenig and his bandmates, who returned from a six-year absence this year to announce the release of a new album. As we witness modern culture’s constant splintering-and-reorganization process, it seems as good a time as any for yet another checkpoint from the band.

But after 11 years and 3 groundbreaking records, what more can Koenig and Chrisses Baio and Tomson—now deprived of founding member and key creative force Rostam Batmanglij—really have to say? The answer, evidently, is quite a bit. Enough, at least, to fill the most audacious, ambitious curveball in the band’s catalog thus far.

Love and God through different lenses

If Vampire Weekend are the Beatles of their generation, Father of the Bride is their White Album. (Hell, the cover is even mostly white.) It’s a sprawling, idiosyncratic, dizzyingly fun work that sees the group spinning out in myriad experimental directions with the help of journeyman producer Ariel Rechtshaid. Koenig has cited country star Kacey Musgraves as a major inspiration for his songwriting this time around. As a result, Bride takes the city-bound boho-punk of the band’s previous work for an excursion through a sunny, chilled-out countryside. Softly strumming guitars, laid-back rhythms, chirping birds, and trickling streams abound.

The outwardly pleasant sound, however, is at constant odds with Koenig’s grimly self-reflective lyrics. The frontman still finds himself deep in the throes of the existential crisis that dogged him throughout most of Modern Vampires. Much of Bride sees Koenig continue to grapple with spiritual turmoil and the fallout of his romantic failures. The notable difference is that he largely eschews the opaque, preppy poetics that have become his trademark in favor of more direct, confessional lyrics.

Take, for instance, breezy single “This Life.” Atop buoyant guitar and giddy handclaps, Koenig bemoans his own amorous recklessness: “Baby, I thought pain was as natural as the rain / I just thought it didn’t rain in California…I’ve been cheating through this life and all its suffering / Oh, Christ, am I good for nothing?” Time, it turns out, has made him a more honest lyricist, and it yields some of the best songwriting of his career.

Everything old is new again

Rechtshaid and the band’s experimental leanings here don’t always work–the album’s second half, in particular, proves disappointingly uneven. But when they do work, the results can be awe-inspiring. The doleful “My Mistake” sounds like a lost Tin Pan Alley number; Sinatra himself could’ve sung it had it been written 60 years earlier. The watery awe of “Big Blue” and the cheeky, string-laden “Rich Man” could pass as McCartney cuts from c.1968. And “2021”—a devastating meditation on time built from a piece by ambient composer Haruomi Hosono—is unlike anything the group has done before.

Of course, the record isn’t a complete overhaul of the signature art-pop sound of Vampire Weekend. We still get plenty of shimmering Afrobeat guitar, ethereal choir tones, ecstatic blasts of melodramatic strings, and so on. The semi-baroque ascending keyboard notes that open “Sunflower” could easily be part of a hypothetical sequel to 2008’s “M79″—that is, before the drums and guitar kick in and turn the track into a hazy funk-soul workout. In a sense, the band are doing what they’ve always done; all that’s changed is the way in which they do it.

On major standout “Harmony Hall,” a flood of virtuosic guitar-pickin’ gives way to a thunderous, soaring chorus with a quirky piano hook that sounds weirdly similar to George Michael’s “Freedom! ’90” or Counting Crows’ “Hanginaround.” It’s odd, but it works–largely because it refines what the group do well while still managing to explore uncharted territory. It easily ranks among the best songs the group has ever written. (That being said, it’s telling that the best song on the record is one the band co-wrote with Batmanglij. It seems they haven’t quite recovered from his departure just yet.)

The ballad of Ezra and Danielle

Working with serial collaborator Kanye West has clearly had an effect on Koenig’s approach to songcraft, and all over Bride, he makes stellar use of a few friends in high places. Among the illustrious supporting players on the roster are the Internet’s Steve Lacy, Chromeo’s Dave Macklovitch, Mark Ronson, Ludwig Göransson, ILoveMakonnen, and Michael “BloodPop” Tucker.

One guest star, however, has more of an effect on the record’s direction than perhaps any other. I’m referring, of course, to one Danielle Haim. Three of the album’s 18 tracks are heartfelt love-gone-wrong duets between Koenig and Haim that mark the closest Vampire Weekend may ever come to country-western balladry.

Gentle acoustic opener “Hold You Now” casts Koenig as a sad-sack ex-lover struggling to come to terms with his fizzled-out relationship with Haim’s bride-to-be. Their conversation is interrupted by a eerily distorted sample of Hans Zimmer’s jubilant score for 1998’s The Thin Red Line, mirroring the struggle to find inner and outer peace in a world that breeds calamity.

“Married in a Gold Rush” depicts the two flailing in the wake of a romance that happened all too fast. The chipper, disarmingly straightforward “We Belong Together” starts out as a cutesy list of opposing romantic complements (“black and white, day and night…real and fake…”) before gradually taking the form of an argument. It’s as if they’re trying to force a love that isn’t quite there. Haim’s unmistakable alto offers a perfect counterpoint to Koenig’s staccato yelp. Think a much hipper version of Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton.

Final thoughts

Bride’s sparse, piano-heavy closing track, “Jerusalem, New York, Berlin,” makes a profound connection between three cities with deep meaning in the Jewish tradition. Koenig sings somberly of “that genocidal feeling / That beats in every heart.”

Contemplating humankind’s destructive nature seems like a particularly dark note on which to end a record. In context, however, the lyric is more hopeful than damning. Life is fleeting and humans can be deeply cruel, yes–but there is goodness and meaning in the human experience if you’re willing to find it. And ultimately, that’s a solid summation of Koenig and Vampire Weekend’s ethos: finding the joy in a dark, meaningless world.

On Father of the Bride, their search for that joy takes Vampire Weekend to numerous places, some more palatable than others. But, taken as a whole, it’s the work of people who love music and believe in its power. And that’s a considerable part of what makes a great record.

Rating: 8.3

Best tracks: “Harmony Hall,” “Married in a Gold Rush,” “Sunflower”

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Music

Album review: Lizzo – ‘Cuz I Love You’

Artist: Lizzo

Album Title: Cuz I Love You

Label: Atlantic Records

Release Date: April 19, 2019

Save your expectations for someone else’s album because they’ll be wasted on Lizzo’s latest project. The singer’s major label debut is a concoction of attitude, honesty, and fearlessness. As one of Qrewcial’s seven acts redefining R&B, she’s certainly living up to the what’s-she-going-to-do-next hype.

Often times, with music this feel good and upbeat, artists hide behind repetitive lyrics, catchy hooks, or dance-worthy beats but Lizzo takes the time to deliver something you can groove to and think about. Right off the shower-time superstar high you get from title track “Cuz I Love You”, she hits you with girl-power anthem “Like a Girl”. In the first verse alone she imagines herself as president, lists her feats of independence, and drops some science terms on you before going on to sing about the endless amount of ways women can rule the world.

But that’s just the first punch in the combo. Sandwiching single and ultimate I’m-that-bitch declaration, “Juice”, is Lizzo’s own TED talk about self-love, “Soulmate”, in which she pours her heart out to herself. It’s an important type of love song. “They used to say to get a man, you had to know how to look / They used to say to keep a man, you had to know how to cook / But I’m solo in Soho, sippin’ Soju in Malibu / It’s a me, myself kinda attitude” she chants in a commentary about loving yourself before loving anybody else.

 

The back end of “Cuz I Love You” is where you get to know Lizzo more personally, as Melissa Viviane Jefferson. The musical tributes to her mentor Prince live here. “Who this call for, babe? / Don’t pretend like you don’t know / A lot of girls have time for this shit / Honestly, I don’t” open “Crybaby”.

In her explanation to Apple Music about what inspired the song, she mentions the legend by name. “This is one of the most musical moments on a very musical album” she says, “And it’s got that Minneapolis sound. Plus, it’s almost a power ballad, which I love. The lyrics are a direct anecdote from my life: I was sitting in a car with a guy—in a little red Corvette from the ’80s, and no, it wasn’t Prince—and I was crying.”

Whether the song was about him specifically or not, Lizzo delivers an unapologetically sexy sound on “Crybaby” and album closer “Lingerie” that the late crooner would’ve been proud of.

Additionally, the second half is where back to back features “Tempo” and “Exactly How I Feel” reside. The first, a Missy Elliot assist, is the club banger of the group and in true Lizzo fashion is a plead to the DJ for something someone with a little junk in the trunk can dance too. The Gucci Mane featured “Exactly How I Feel'” is the Nene Leakes I-said-what-I-said GIF of feel-good songs. “Love me or hate me / Ooh, I ain’t changing /And I don’t give a fuck, no” might just be the simplest way for Lizzo to say she’s going to embrace all of her emotions, good or bad, as they come and not apologize for it.

 

Overall Lizzo managed to pull from different realms of the musical landscape to create an album that speaks power to young girls, labeled full-figured women sexy, and gave the end all be all of pep talks to the unsure. Bookend ballads “Cuz I Love You” and “Lingerie” show off the singer’s talent and musicality while Aretha Franklin-inspired “Heaven Help Me” and “Better In Color” express her creativity and diversity.

I mean, I never knew I’d enjoy singing along to “If you think you got me dickmatized I need to get you out of my life” but evidently I do and I wouldn’t have known that if it were not for her. Always the one to excite, Lizzo is presenting her best work yet in a way only she can—with killer confidence that can’t be cracked.

Rating: 8.2/10

Best Tracks: “Cuz I Love You”, “Juice”, “Lingerie”, “Heaven Help Me”

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Seven artists redefining R&B

Why is it that when asking any upcoming R&B singer about their influences their go-to response is Aaliyah?

Not to diminish the impact of the late crooner but wouldn’t it be interesting—shocking, even—if someone named an act that came out after 2000 as a musical influence?

But that would be hard to do given that most iconic R&B acts were products of the 90s and the genre hasn’t been the same since those golden years. The popularity of artists like Khalid, Miguel, and Janelle Monáe are giving the genre some shine but their sounds are a far cry from the sultry baby-making melodies of yesteryear and maybe that’s the key to returning R&B to its former glory: moving the genre forward instead of recreating the past.

With that innovation in mind, here are seven artists creating their own lanes and redefining R&B music in the process.

Chloe x Halle

The Grammy-nominated sister duo got its start on YouTube where the Atlanta natives would post covers of popular songs, often putting their own unique spin on them. Taking a page out of Destiny’s Child’s book, Chloe x Halle have an incredible knack for harmonizing and creating emotion and drama in their music that could rival a full gospel choir.

After signing to Beyonce’s Parkwood Entertainment label, they’ve supported an international tour, performed at Coachella, joined the cast of Grown-ish, and released their debut album, The Kids Are Alright to much acclaim. Drawing from the eclectic sounds of the south, Chloe x Halle put out a melting pot of music that does a balancing act between gritty trap beats, pop-inspired synths, and bluesy guitar riffs, and that’s before you even hear their incredibly unique voices.

Chloe’s raspier low tones ground Halle’s angelic high notes in a complementary effort on par with Tammy and Marvin. What’s most notable is that the sisters are doing it for themselves garnering writing, production, and instrument performance credits. With talent like that, the music is going to be great obviously, but if this year’s Grammys or Superbowl were any indicators, the real treat is their live performances.

Must listen: “Everywhere”, “Happy Without Me (feat. Joey Bada$$)”, “Drop”, “Down”

NAO

I’m sad to say that Nao is a new find for me because it just means that since her 2014 debut I, in fact, have not been living my best life. And maybe you haven’t been either.

I’ve had her 2018 breakout hit “Another Lifetime” on repeat for a while now but it took coming across a live performance of her songs “Orbit” and “Saturn” for me to take a deep dive. A month later and I’m still lost at sea. Whether she’s backed by a dance-hall beat or funky doo-wop, her pillow-soft vocals pierce through the veil and drive every track, leaving a lasting impression.

In the context of other R&B singers, her voice is truly what sets her apart because it is so unfamiliar. Her niche sound might have gone overlooked had it not been for her level of artistry. Listening to her 2018 album Saturn, she seems to reinvent herself on every track, recapturing your attention every time by taking you on a new ride.

Must Listen: “Adore You”, “Curiosity”, “Another Lifetime”

Kevin Garrett

I’ve personally invited myself on this next artist’s tour just so I can see his creative process but the details still need to be ironed out. You know how it is.

A relative newcomer to the scene, he already boasts some enviable credits from writing and producing for Beyoncé and Justine Skye, to touring with Alessia Cara, Mumford & Sons, and X Ambassadors. His 2015 EP Mellow Drama landed him on the Tidal X stage where he captivated the audience with an intimate set that truly captured the spirit of his music. Garrett’s silky smooth voice is truly used as an instrument for his honest, gut-wrenching lyrics.

His debut album, Hoax, is filled with gems about love, from the unrequited to the loss of, that make it easy to see why he’s being tapped to contribute to Grammy-nominated albums. Garrett’s own work might be the furthest on this list from what most would consider traditional R&B but the influence is definitely there and that paired with the poetic feel of his music is enough reason to give him a listen.

Must listen: “In Case I Don’t Feel”, “Precious”, “Coloring”

Sinéad Harnett

Sinéad Harnett is on this list for one sole reason and that is her song “If You Let Me”. The GRADES-produced break-out hit showcases the relatability in Harnett’s voice. There’s a subtle invitation that happens whenever she sings that elicits a deep-seated emotion that’s hard to reconcile with. It’s like being punched in the gut and liking it. Billboard has placed her somewhere between Jessie Ware, Jhene Aiko, and Adele but musically she’s got more range than all three. The way her voice lends itself to an electro-pop beat is what gained her a following in her native UK but her biggest Spotify hits would say she’s most comfortable in an experimental R&B space.

Must Listen: “By Myself”, “Rather Be with You”, “Body”

Ari Lennox

Ari Lennox may have made waves recently with her J. Cole-assisted “Shea Butter Baby”, but would I even be a millennial if I didn’t take this opportunity to say I was a fan of hers before she made it big? Because I definitely was.

Making steady progress since signing to Dreamville Records in 2015, Lennox has been cultivating an unmatched sound that plays tug-of-war between influences like Andre 3000 and Minnie Riperton. Just listen to “Pedigree” and you’ll understand. The most rooted in the R&B space of all the entries, Lennox’s music is for the grown and sexy. The smooth, kick-back-worthy beats and her sultry voice might make you miss when she’s crooning about, ahem, doing it in an alleyway but therein lies her magic. You’re going to get lost in the music and before you know it, you’re replaying the track so you can actually listen to what she said.

Must Listen: “GOAT”, “Night Drive”, “Whipped Cream”

Pink Sweat$

You can thank my younger brother, Erik, for this entry. He’s been playing “Honesty” non-stop for months now and further research shows that Pink Sweat$’s other efforts are just as repeat-worthy. 2018 and 2019’s EPs Volume 1 and Volume 2 are composed of short, sweet acoustic songs perfect for summertime playlists. A Rollingstone Artist You Need To Watch, Pink Sweat$ is giving the R&B genre a youthful glow.

Fair warning, when you give Pink Sweat$ a listen you may be thrown off by the finger snaps and acoustic guitars. While it’s safe to say some of his music might have you imagining him performing at your local coffee shop or at a bonfire, his vocal style and lyrical content could most definitely land him in a 90’s group.

Must Listen: “Coke & Henny Pt. 2”, “Would You”, “I Know”

Lizzo

There’s no easy way to describe Lizzo’s sound because no two Lizzo songs sound alike. The only common thread is the feel-good, on top of the world feeling they’re all likely to inspire. With an album dropping in just a few days, the “Good As Hell” (Yes, that “Good As Hell”) singer has built up quite the anticipation. The impending Cuz I Love You isn’t the singer’s debut though—it’s her third studio album. Lizzo’s been working hard for some time now, all the while getting the stamp of approval from the likes of Prince, Big Freedia, Bastille and most recently, super producer and rap legend Missy Elliot.

A spokesperson for body positivity, Lizzo isn’t afraid of being herself and makes music for everybody to dance around their rooms naked to, no matter what their body looks like. Don’t let the upbeat bops fool you though, Lizzo has pipes and when she’s not simultaneously twerking and playing the flute, she’s using them to belt out hits like title track “Cuz I love You”. A list about redefining a genre wouldn’t be complete without someone who’s redefining sexiness and making a good time accessible to everyone confident enough to claim it for themselves.

Must Listen: “Juice”, “Fitness”, “Truth Hurts”, “Coconut Oil”

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Interview with Pheeyownah – “My artistry is my playground”

For Feyona Naluzzi (a.k.a. Pheeyownah), art is all about freedom. The 31-year-old songwriter, producer, dancer, and poet has a vision that can’t be contained by a single artistic pursuit, so she uses any mode of expression it takes to bring it to life.

Naluzzi seems destined to have been a performer from the start. Growing up in Stockholm (her parents emigrated to Sweden from Uganda in the early ’80s), she avidly watched music videos on MTV and practiced acceptance speeches in the mirror. She envisioned herself playing to massive crowds in giant arenas.

Though she had been writing her own songs since she was very young, it wasn’t until 2011 that Naluzzi began actively pursuing a career in music. After attending a year-long program for aspiring singer/songwriters, she started recording. Her first two singles, the neo-soul-infused “Strugglin'” and “Take it Slow”–as well as her 2012 debut EP City–were produced by classmate Daniel Markus, also known as Megaman Dee.

Freedom through movement

Pheeyownah says that her original gameplan was a dance career, but her change of plans hasn’t derailed that aspect of her art. She still actively participates in the Swedish all-women’s dance crew JUCK.

She describes JUCK as “a practice on its own”—a performing collective that uses movement to explore questions of gender, race, sexuality, and humanity’s concepts of time and space.

“It is the meeting between us, the performers and the audience, that creates the feeling of what JUCK is,” Naluzzi says. “Each and every performance with JUCK is always a powerful experience. We have a very strong sense of sisterhood and an energy that is so comforting.”

“I learn…about myself, my own strengths and weaknesses, empowerment, and what it means to be a performer without any kind of [sic] bounderies while working with JUCK. These are the key words that I try and carry with me everyday and apply to everything I do.”

Silver

Pheeyownah’s upcoming debut full-length, Silver, represents a culmination of everything she’s learned and experienced over the course of her career. She continues to expand upon the more atmospheric, experimental-leaning style of R&B she explored on 2016’s zero9zero9 EP.

Silver is full of ethereal, crepuscular soundscapes and rumbling trip-hop beats, all punctuated by Pheeyownah’s hazy vocals. There’s a quiet power to her work–an anthemic crunch, a dark drama, as if she’s preparing to take the entire world by storm.

The airy, pulsating title track, released ahead of the album as a single, kicks Silver off on a powerful, cinematic note. According to Naluzzi, the song is “about coming to terms with the fact that life doesn’t always turn out the way you want it to. It’s about embracing the imperfections in life…and making the best out of every situation.”

The thrilling power and forward momentum is palpable in Pheeyownah’s voice and the faint but striking sounds that surround it. “You don’t need to give me your space,” she croons, “I’ll take what’s mine, I’ll take what’s mine…You don’t have to lend me yours / I got my own shine.” It’s a beautiful rallying call for what she refers to as “claiming your space”—being authentically and fearlessly yourself, whoever that might be.

Surrounded by nature

The natural world figures big into Pheeyownah’s ethos. Her songs frequently feature motifs of chirping birds or running water, and the dazzling videos for songs like “Vivid, Fearless” and “Pose When Exposed” show her climbing on rockpiles or wandering through the woods at dusk, clad in all black and white. As Naluzzi puts it, it’s just another way her Stockholm childhood informs her art.

“There’s [sic] alot of beautiful nature in Stockholm and wherever you go you’re always surrounded by it or very close to it,” she says. “I use it a lot in my music because it’s the element that completes my vision and enhances my expression.”

Love or fear

Like so many artists, Pheeyownah often finds herself plagued by self-doubts. However, she says, she’s growing better at quieting them.

“I’m better at listening to my heart’s desires and staying true to my visions,” she says. “It hasn’t always been easy…But I’ve learnt to stand my ground more and more over the years.”

“I really have to work against myself and eventually manage to remind myself of my strengths and what it means to me to be an artist,” she adds. “My artistry is my playground where I feel 100% free.”

Of course, it doesn’t hurt to have a supportive group of like-minded creative people behind you. Naluzzi finds fellowship and strength within her family, as well as with her JUCK cohorts and close friends.

One of these companions is Amanda Arin, who also served as Pheeyownah’s stylist on the “Pose When Exposed” video. Near the end of Silver cut “Yellow Light,” we hear Arin speak via a voicemail message. “Sometimes,” she says, “the most spontaneous and simple things end up being the most honest and true.”

Arin frequently leaves messages with this kind of helpful advice. As Pheeyownah puts it, there are “just periods in life when you feel a little bit overwhelmed a need to slow down and just pause everything for a while in order to get yourself together again and she reminds me of that.”

Through her art, Pheeyownah stresses the importance of individuality and self-love in a world that actively discourages both. As a chief inspiration for this philosophy, she cites a quote from none other than comic legend Jim Carrey: “You are ready and able to do beautiful things in this world, and as you walk through those doors today, you will only have two choices: love or fear. Choose love, and don’t ever let fear turn you against your playful heart.

Silver is out May 3 on Labrador Records.

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10 great albums you might have missed so far this year (January-March 2019)

With 2019 a third of the way behind us, it’s time to look back on the treasures with which the music world has graced us over the past months. We’ve already covered some of the more high-profile album releases from folks like James Blake, Solange, and LCD Soundsystem, but there are plenty more masterpieces we haven’t even touched on yet.

The sheer volume of new music available at any given time can be intimidating, and it’s obviously impossible to listen to absolutely all of it. But we’re steadfastly determined to do our part to keep great art from disappearing into the endless thresher of new releases. Here’s a list of 10 outstanding but overlooked gems that are more than worth your consideration.

William Basinski’s On Time Out of Time / Temporary Residence

1. William Basinski, On Time Out of Time

The ambient visionary is no stranger to musical concepts that bend the fabric of time and space (see his 2003 magnum opus The Disintegration Loops). But On Time Out of Time just might be his most ambitious project thus far. Working alongside Louisiana’s LIGO physics project, Basinski creates eerily lovely, warm tones from the sounds of a 1.3 billion-year-old black hole collision. It’s a groundbreaking, deeply moving piece of work—but then, you’d expect nothing less of a composition that literally pulls an ancient slice of the universe down to Earth.

Listen: William Basinski, “4(E+D)4(ER=EPR)”

Cherushii & Maria Minerva’s Cherushii & Maria Minerva / 100% Silk

2. Cherushii & Maria Minerva, Cherushii & Maria Minerva

After a fire at Oakland artists’ collective Ghost Ship tragically claimed the life of producer Chelsea Faith Dolan in 2016, her pen pal and colleague Maria Minerva soldiered on to finish their collaborative EP. The finished product is a sugary collection of atmospheric, lushly-orchestrated left-field dance-pop jams with an air of otherworldly mystique. The vibrant melancholy of Minerva’s sultry vocals calls to mind the stylings of Françoise Hardy and Brigitte Bardot. Together, she and the late Cherushii celebrate the healing power of dancing and party-going, as well as the half-remembered snippets of life and love that come between. It’s a splendid testament to the lasting power of artistic fellowship.

Listen: Cherushii & Maria Minerva, “A Day Without You”

Fjerstad’s 8-Circuit Neurorgasmic Trigger / Ephemerol Night Terrors

3. Fjerstad, 8-Circuit Neurorgasmic Trigger

Chad Fjerstad’s debut full-length is 50 minutes of high-octane, gleefully misanthropic IDM. Fjerstad wears his varied influences (rave, drum & bass, Japanese synth-rock, 16-bit video game scores) unabashedly on his sleeve, but still manages to make his music sound like nothing that’s come before it. His hothouse-slasher, kitchen-sink approach to composition makes for an overwhelming and dizzying—but always entertaining—sonic experience. Detached robotic voices hatch murderous plots atop industrial buzz and hiss on “Under the Floorboards,” while sinister bass thuds and dissonant synth lurches swirl into a chaotic stew on “Banging the Guixian Tam-Tam.” It’s a vicious electronic head-trip rife with rough textures, grim erotica, belching machinery and a truly warped sense of humor. You’ll find yourself having a killer time even as the carnage unfolds before you.

Listen: Fjerstad, “Gun Guy 88”

Pavo Pavo’s Mystery Hour / Bella Union

4. Pavo Pavo, Mystery Hour

Many a difficult breakup has been mined for a great album (Rumours, Sea Change, and Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating in Space spring readily to mind). Pavo Pavo co-founders Eliza Bagg and Oliver Hill aren’t Fleetwood Mac, Beck, or Spiritualized, but they’ve still crafted an excellent document of their dead romance in Mystery Hour. Influenced heavily by the film of the nouvelle vague, the Yale alums make their bubbly baroque sensibilities burst with melodramatic fun and buoyant harmonies. Among the highlights: chamber-pop dance party “Around” and uncanny-valley girl-group number “Close to Your Ego.”

Listen: Pavo Pavo, “Around, Pt. 1”

Pond’s Tasmania / Spinning Top/Interscope

5. Pond, Tasmania

The Tame Impala associates have released album after album of solid, eccentric psych-rock for over a decade, but has never made a particularly grand musical statement—until now, that is. Tasmania, the group’s Kevin Parker-produced eighth disc, eschews their psychedelic trappings for majestic, funky, stadium-ready space-pop. Pond have never sounded bigger, bolder or more fully realized, spinning surreal tales of bewilderment in the end times of the early 21st century. Nick Allbrook’s raspy intonement of this line from “The Boys are Killing Me” seems to summarize the conceit of the record itself: “So we linked arms and we staggered off into the night / Drunk, but overjoyed just to be employed.”

Listen: Pond, “Daisy”

Jessica Pratt’s Quiet Signs / Mexican Summer

6. Jessica Pratt, Quiet Signs

There’s an ageless, mystical quality to Jessica Pratt’s dreamy folk-pop. Her songs sound as though they’ve existed in nature for thousands of years, like someone encountered them by chance under a shady tree next to a quiet stream. Quiet Signs presents the strongest and best manifestation yet of the L.A.-based songwriter’s ethos. For 27 captivating minutes, she weaves a devastatingly intimate song-cycle full of somber, melancholy beauty. Her distinct gossamer warble leads the way, augmented only by the velvet tones of her guitar and pitch-perfect touches of organ, flute and Mellotron. A bittersweet oasis in a chaotic world, Pratt’s intoxicating melodic tapestries offer more to love with each listen.

Listen: Jessica Pratt, “This Time Around”

Spellling’s Mazy Fly / Sacred Bones

7. Spellling, Mazy Fly

With Mazy Fly, Tia Cabral invites us into a freakily romantic universe of her own creation. Ghostly 80s-horror synths flutter and warble atop pulsating beats punctuated by Cabral’s smoky croon. From the slick, chilly sensuality of “Haunted Water” to the beach blanket shindig freak-out of “Dirty Desert Dreams,” the record deals as much in sublime beauty as it does winking schmaltz. It’s like listening in on the ritualistic chants of the hippest coven that’s ever existed. Get ready to have your dreams haunted in the best possible way.

Listen: Spellling, “Dirty Desert Dreams”

Tallies’ Tallies / Hand Drawn Dracula/Kanine

8. Tallies, Tallies

Toronto’s Tallies make lilting, jangly dream-pop, and they do so remarkably well. Their delightful debut effortlessly channels the breezy, lived-in warmth of the Smiths, the Sundays, and Cocteau Twins to the point where you’d be tempted to write them off as a throwback novelty act. But you’d be wrong, because a record that sounds this great could only come from a band pouring everything into its craft. Sarah Cogen’s impassioned vocals drift ethereally over soaring guitars, pounding drums and glittering synthscapes. The group splashes their upbeat anthems with the perfect dose of wistful melancholy; their earnest, erudite lyrics paint vivid slice-of-life narratives as emotionally real as they are charming. Tallies is a gorgeous, vibrant, joyous thing–a monumental achievement from a group whose musical journey has only begun.

Listen: Tallies, “Mother”

Jozef Van Wissem & Jim Jarmusch’s An Attempt to Draw Aside the Veil / Sacred Bones

9. Jozef Van Wissem & Jim Jarmusch, An Attempt to Draw Aside the Veil

The Dutch lutist and the legendary indie filmmaker/guitarist join forces once again for a strikingly primal record inspired by the rock of William Blake, Godfrey Higgins, and Helena Blavatsky. The duo strike a sweet spot between dark ambient and medieval folk, making for one of the most quietly metallic listening experiences of the year. It’s the sound of monsters creeping forth from Hell itself, of a grim yet oddly beautiful apocalypse. Plus, it offers just enough gothic strangeness to tide over Jarmusch acolytes until his new zombie comedy, The Dead Don’t Die, releases this summer.

Listen: Jozef Van Wissem & Jim Jarmusch, “Concerning the White Horse”

Yves Jarvis’ The Same But by Different Means / Anti-

10. Yves Jarvis, The Same But by Different Means

The Same But By Different Means is a dizzying, freewheeling grand tour of the mind of Montreal native Jean-Sebastien Audet (previously known as Un Blonde). The gifted bedroom-recorder strings together a total of 22 bedazzling miniature epics over the course of 50 minutes. His strange but enticing blend of early-Dylanesque folk, Motown soul, neo-R&B, minimalist electronica, hip-hop, gospel, etc. etc. births a whirlwind of changing moods in which you can’t help but get swept up. Audet clearly has a lot on his mind, but judging by the streamlined wonder of Means, he’s well on his way to finding both inner and outer peace.

Listen: Yves Jarvis, “That Don’t Make It So”

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Music

Six incredible things that happened at the 2019 Grammys

Let me preface by saying this: I hate awards shows. In my experience, they’re all obnoxious, petty spectacles that create unnecessary competitions. They’re glistening, empty corporate flex-parades with no value for artistic merit. They reward only that art which has the most potential to make a bunch of soulless industry moguls unbelievable stacks of money. And most of them are at least three hours too long.

That said, the 61st Annual Grammy Awards this past Sunday had plenty of cool stuff to offer. The mood at music’s biggest night of the year was one of mutual respect and artistic fellowship. The undisputed highlights, as always, were the performances–the gorgeous, awe-inspiring, intricately-choreographed performances. Here’s a look at some highlights from the show that made it feel like actual art was being celebrated that evening.

#1

Janelle Monae helped make the Grammys gay again

Performance-wise, this year’s ceremony was perhaps the most queer in recent memory, with spirited appearances by LGBT superstars like Brandi Carlile and St. Vincent. But the highlight of the evening was, without dispute, Monáe’s stunning medley of three cuts off Qrewcial’s favorite record of 2018. You could feel the electricity through your TV screen as the raw sexual power of “Make Me Feel” came to life, complete with the vagina pants from the “PYNK” video. Always a born performer, here Monáe brought on moves as slick as those of her late mentor Prince. She strutted and writhed across the stage, cloaked in bisexual pink-purple lighting and surrounded by gyrating ArchAndroids. (That this singular artist gave us this capital-P Performance and walked home with nothing definitively proves these awards are a farce.)

The whole thing was much, much more than just a killer set. Monáe reminded the entire room of the exhilarating, life-giving power of music–the joy of watching a blisteringly-confident artist do the thing they do best. “I love you, Dirty Computers,” she whispered as the song ended. The feeling’s mutual.

#2

Alicia Keys was full of love for everyone

After two excruciating James Corden-hosted ceremonies in a row, watching Keys take the stage was truly a blast of fresh air. Ever the impeccably-dressed ray of sunlight, she delivered a freewheeling but enthusiastic intro that struck a mood of love and celebration. “Do you feel that love in the room,” she asked her crowd of fellow artists. “This is love, this is life, this is livin’, this is light–and all because of music!” Keys’ endless positivism and reassurance throughout the night were a true blessing. She called the audience “sparkly and gorgeous” and promised them, “I got you.” Also on hand for the opening were Lady Gaga, Jada Pinkett Smith, Jennifer Lopez, and Michelle Obama, who all had powerful words on how music had impacted their lives. It ultimately made for a legitimately beautiful moment that undercut the cash-fueled cynicism of the event.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dGmx-XE_kfw

#3

Brandi Carlile made Post Malone cry

Like Nina Simone and Jeff Buckley before her, the Americana icon has one of those once-in-a-generation voices. She sings in a fiery, heavenly wail that simultaneously rocks your soul and reduces you to a puddle. A sequin-suited Carlile put her remarkable talents to great use on Sunday, absolutely shaking the rafters with a performance of “The Joke,” off last year’s By the Way, I Forgive You. With the watered-down yowl-fest that is “Shallow” looming large over the night, it was neat to see the real deal showing the youngsters how it’s done. Even human-manifestation-of-a-Spencer’s-Gifts Post Malone could be seen vibing to Carlile’s soaring, impassioned delivery. Carlile snagged three awards that evening, with By The Way taking home Best Americana Album and “The Joke” earning Best Roots Performance and Song.

#4

Cardi B twerked on a piano.

Cardi only won one of her five nominations this year: a richly-deserved Best Rap Album for Invasion of Privacy. However, that didn’t stop the phenomenal talent from making her mark on the evening. Clad in an ornate black leopard-print suit and enormous feathers to match, Cardi ripped into an ostentatious version of recent single “Money.” Amid scores of backup dancers on a grand burlesque set, she exhibited her spitfire flow—not to mention a few killer dance moves—on top of a Swarovski crystal-studded piano once owned by (I’m not making this up) Liberace. Few figures in the music biz today can put on quite as spectacular a show as Ms. Almánzar, and she’s yet to fail to amaze in every way possible.

#5

St. Vincent was St. Vincent.

Annie Clark, one of our chief arbiters of queer post-pop weirdness, did not disappoint on Grammy night. Taking the stage in what could only be described as Saint-Laurent BDSM-chic, she launched into a minimalist, ecstatically sexy take on the title track of 2017’s Masseduction. Joining Clark was Best New Artist Dua Lipa, whose hit “One Kiss” set the scene for one of the most beautiful, sensuous, and straight-up fun performances in Grammy history. Lipa draped herself around Clark, gazing lovingly into her eyes as Clark punctuated the track with one of her signature face-disintegrating guitar solos. A dazzling, robotic display of pure future-cool for the ages.

#6

A living legend took the stage in honor of…herself.

After receiving the MusiCares Person of the Year award two days earlier, country music legend and national gosh dang treasure Dolly Parton graced the Grammys with a joyous greatest-hits mini-revue. She and her various guests–including ROTY winner Kacey Musgraves–took the Staples Center Stage by storm with a medley including standards like “Jolene,” “9 to 5,” and “Here You Come Again.” It’s rare to see an artist actively participate in their own Grammys tribute–but then again, we’re talkin’ about Dolly here.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aiKXGLqw-bU

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Music

Album Review: James Blake’s ‘Assume Form’

Artist: James Blake

Album Title: Assume Form

Label: Polydor

Release Date: Jan. 18, 2019

When James Blake’s eponymous debut arrived in 2011, the London-based producer turned heads and blew minds with his stunning, devastatingly minimalist fusion of post-dubstep and robotic R&B–a sound seemingly beamed in from an alien dimension. His next two records–2013’s Overgrown and 2016’s The Colour in Anything–further explored and capitalized upon his R&B sensibilities and mellifluous vocal stylings.

With Assume Form, Blake demonstrates the most fully-realized refinement of his songcraft thus far. He simultaneously broadens and sharpens his sonic and scope and, in the process, uncovers the warm, beating heart beneath the icy surface of his music. The end result is a glorious aural whirlwind–the most gripping, personal work Blake has ever produced. It feels like his entire career has been building up to this moment, and the payoff for both him and us is exponential.

The record kicks off with the title track, a gauzy, meditative number that opens with sprightly piano flourishes atop a wave of haze. You envision yourself floating above yourself within the “ether” Blake speaks of–lost in your thoughts and anxieties, just barely conscious of your surroundings. As the track continues, though, it slowly gains momentum, the empty spaces filling with layered vocals and sumptuous strings–the sound growing fuller and more inviting. “I will assume form, I’ll leave the ether,” Blake croons in his inimitable broken falsetto, “I’ll be out of my head this time / I will be touchable by her, I will be reachable / I couldn’t tell you where my head goes either.” As far as stripping a track back to its most basic, skeletal elements goes, Blake remains one of our true modern masters. He does so much with so little in a way none of his peers can.

Thus Blake illustrates his own attempts at a journey from an inward-facing existence to an active, deliberate experience of life–specifically, his love life. This narrative thread flows through much of Assume Form, and the guest artists he employs help him further examine his own feelings of depression and disconnect.

“Mile High,” a collaboration with two of the biggest stars of late ’10s hip-hop about sex on an airplane. Metro Boomin assists Blake in enveloping the track in an intimate, low-key trap vibe with an ethereal flute loop. Travis Scott brilliantly evokes the mood of drugged-out ecstasy with his disarmingly simple verses (“We on a drive, looped in / Two seat ride, couped in / Who gonna slide, who’s in / Big rocks, round of ten…Rollin’ up out the reef / Put me down, straight to sleep”); his and Blake’s voices intertwine in the refrain, spiraling towards the heavens like an early-morning flight.

Metro returns for the spacy, twinkling “Tell Them,” which depicts the strange mix of passion and detachment associated with a one-night stand. The otherworldly, ancient-sounding quaver of Moses Sumney floats through the song, acting as the voice of Blake’s soul: “Can’t return the sacred time you steal / A fact betrays the way you feel…” Andre 3000 lends a nervous, acrobatic verse to the marimba-synth-feedback-hiss of “Where’s the Catch?” In Spanish avant-flamenco chanteuse Rosalía Vila Tobella, Blake just may have met his match in terms of heartbreaking subtlety; her shivery, flinty vocals perfectly complement his own on the haunting “Barefoot in the Park.”

Some of the most beautiful moments on Assume Form, however, come when Blake works through these issues on his own. As Blake continues to move towards a sense of connection to reality, the tracks begin to center more on his new relationship with The Good Place star Jameela Jamil and the intense passion they feel for one another.

“Can’t Believe the Way We Flow” forms a perfect, rapturous paean to this kind of intimate connection using a gorgeous, Pet Sounds-esque collage of expertly-layered sounds and vocal samples from an old Manhattans cut. The swoony, daydreamy sweetness of the almost Tin Pan Alley-like “I’ll Come Too” embodies the feeling of being head-over-heels in love with someone, wanting to be with them everywhere they go (“I don’t wanna go home / Shall we drive from zone to zone? / I wouldn’t do this on my own / But I’m not on my own tonight”). The fluttering strings, woodwinds, and harmonies that vibrate throughout “Power On” create the feel of a lovestruck paradise–a safe place where he and his beloved can go to “talk shit about everyone.”

The record comes to a quiet, graceful, and poignant close with its pair of preceding singles. On “Don’t Miss It,” Blake’s wobbly AutoTune rides a sparse piano track with ghostly vibrato vocals as he reflects on how avoiding what causes him distress might make his life easier, but would also make him miss out on much of life itself. Soothing towers of “aaahhhs” and slowly pulsating synths permeate appropriately-nocturnal closer “Lullaby for My Insomniac.” Blake soothes his restless lover, promising to spend the night by her side: “I’d rather see everything as a blur tomorrow / If you do.”

Assume Form is a gorgeous, methodical exercise in impassioned restraint, bathed in half-remembered dreams and visions of love–effortlessly hip, borne of a quiet mystique. It’s the work of an artist in full command of his powers. May Blake continue finding his way towards a life better lived–and may he inspire the rest of us to do the same.

Rating: 8.6/10

Best Tracks: “Can’t Believe the Way We Flow”, “I’ll Come Too”, “Lullaby for My Insomniac”

Categories
Music

Album Review: gnash’s ‘we’

Artist: gnash

Album Title: we

Label: Atlantic

Release Date: Jan. 11, 2019

Garrett Nash is nothing if not sincere. The 25-year-old L.A.-based rapper and DJ, also known as gnash, has made a name for himself with his unique brand of bittersweet, confessional backpack-rap. His songs speak to the anxiety and self-doubt that plagues millions of teenagers facing the daily grind of high school and all its toxicity. And they’ve won him legions of devoted followers. Even now, several dozen of them are probably blasting his and Olivia O’Brien’s 2016 breakout hit “I Hate U, I Love U” (or perhaps his remix of MAX’s “Lights Down Low”) on their iPhones, forgetting how terrible the world is for a while. And that’s great. He has found his audience.

There’s just one problem: Nash’s music is terrible. He’s a hopelessly sentimental lyricist who thrives on a gratingly cutesy aesthetic, and the weak, syrupy production value of his tracks only drags them down further. His debut full-length we–stylized in lowercase letters, as Nash insists on doing for every album and song title and even for his own stage name–highlights his sincerity and compassion, but also his weaknesses as a songwriter and musician.

Within the first few tracks, Nash’s sweet, lovelorn persona wears out its welcome. Opener “Happy Never After” is a painfully-obvious examination of how Hollywood films set up unrealistic expectations for our relationships. “True love doesn’t have a happy ending,” he chirps, “‘Cause when it’s real, it doesn’t ever end,” he chirps, “If I did a rewrite, would I change a damn thing? / Would I flip the script or would I do it all again?” That’s the kind of lyricism we’re dealing with here.

And it only gets worse from there. Just take a look at the chorus of “T-Shirt,” a loves-labors-lost lament with an ethereal guitar-driven backdrop that sounds eerily like a contemporary Christian worship song. “I gave you love and all you did was leave first/ Then you told me that I shouldn’t be hurt/ I tried to hide it, but it couldn’t be worse…I’ve learned karma tends to be a b-word / So I hope you get everything you de-serve/ You broke my heart and all I got was this t-shirt.”

https://twitter.com/gnash/status/1084212999383121920

Nash packs every song on we with this type of flashy, loop-de-looping (but ultimately substance-free) rhyme scheme. This is crass, embarrassing, amateur-hour stuff. It makes Ed Sheeran’s extensive discography of sweet nothings seem like divine wisdom. It makes Jason Mraz look like GG Allin. You find yourself longing for the subtle, nuanced flows of post-2004 Eminem.

His voice, whether singing or “rapping,” ranges in timbre from “wounded childlike rasp” to “slightly louder wounded childlike rasp” as he drones on about his anxieties, fears, and failed relationships. The characteristically unimaginative beats typically consist of happily-strummed guitar or ukulele chords with tolling piano, pseudo-hip-hop drum tracks, and bland, poppy atmospherics. But once in a while, he’ll augment a big finishing chorus with a bunch of synth-horn blasts and glockenspiel notes and explosion noises because he likes to have fun.

All this goes on and on for 40 interminable minutes. On “Wait,” he deals in dreary “wait”/”weight” wordplay as he begs the love of his life not to leave him. The truly awful “Pajamas” is about how people are mean and the world sucks and he really just wants to stay at home and I think you get the idea. “Dear Insecurity” finds him attempting to work up his self-esteem by addressing his own mental illness as if it was a person. That premise works as an exercise you’d do with your therapist, but certainly not something you put over a precious Starbucks-ready guitar track and release for widespread consumption.

If this was all a huge put-on—if the whole thing was just some sort of weird performance art piece and Nash was deliberately writing sad-sack teenage poetry and setting it to bad music—it would merely be mildly irritating, maybe even a little amusing. But as it stands, Nash is the kind of guy who sing-raps things like “I wonder if the trees think we’re all greedy / If the air thinks we’re all crooks / If the water thinks we’re too needy / If the sun gives us dirty looks” without a shred of irony.

Then we come to the big hit “I Hate U, I Love U,” which is inexplicably crammed into the album’s final minutes. In addition to being a depressing, piano-heavy breakup slog that even O’Brien’s serviceable vocals can’t rescue, it’s also a decent summation of everything bad about gnash’s music: Watered-down production. Lukewarm performances. God-awful metaphors (“Now all my drinks and all my feelings are all fucking mixed”). Artlessly spat-out word salads–with the occasional “fuck” or “shit” tossed in for good measure–masquerading as “alt-rap.” The distinct air of a privileged white kid with piles of money, access to a recording studio, and lots and lots of feelings.

If I come off as harsh here, it’s because I, too, have suffered from chronic anxiety and depression for much of my life. I can relate personally to many of the feelings and sentiments expressed on we. But I’ve also discovered scores of musical works that address the same topics with grace, dignity, and a modest sense of humor. Like Tyler the Creator’s Flower Boy, as a recent example. Or Paramore’s After Laughter. The Cure’s Disintegration, perhaps. Or literally any song by the National. That being the case, hearing gnash play to the cheap seats with his “Aw, c’mon, y’all, why can’t we all just be nice to each other?” schtick is frankly offensive. I have no use for it.

Besides, I’m not really that concerned about hurting the guy’s feelings. He has the sound of a gazillion adoring fans–the din of myriad fingers tweeting out links to “Pajamas” with the single word “MOOD” and a few crying emojis–to drown out my vitriol. I don’t need him, and he doesn’t need me. We suit each other perfectly. Wait, did I just write a gnash lyric?

Rating: 2.0/10

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Music

10 most anticipated albums of 2019

We’re barely two weeks into the new year and the music gods have already blessed us with an abundant schedule of exciting new album releases. We’ve narrowed the list down to ten that we’re especially thrilled about, plus a few honorable mentions. There are plenty of other upcoming records that didn’t make the cut from artists like Girlpool, Guided by Voices, Hot Chip, Maggie Rogers, Mercury Rev, Royal Trux, M83, Carly Rae Jepsen, and the Cure, just to name a few. Plus there are countless others that will drop in 2019 that we are currently unaware of. We’ll get around to all of these and many more as they arrive. For now, here are ten of the most anticipated albums of 2019:

Beirut

Gallipoli

Feb. 1

Beirut's Gallipoli
Beirut’s Gallipoli / 4AD Records

Beirut’s last two efforts, The Rip Tide (2011) and No No No (2015) hinted at movements towards a lighter, more pop-oriented sound from the Balkan-by-way-of-New Mexico indie-folk ensemble. If the Farfisa, synth, and horn-heavy singles “Landslide” and “Gallipoli” are any indication, their fifth full-length intends to offer both a continuation of that trend and a return to basics. In an engrossing post on the group’s site, bandleader Zach Condon details the new record’s writing and recording, which took place in marathon sessions at various locations in Berlin, New York City, and Italy. Every Beirut record takes listeners on a dazzling, panoramic trip across the globe without leaving home, and Gallipoli promises to do the same.

Bon Iver

TBA

TBA

Justin Vernon lives in a constant state of musical creation. In the few years since 2016’s 22, A Million alone, Vernon has contributed to tracks by everyone from Kanye West to Vince Staples to Mouse on Mars, in addition to Big Red Machine, his collaborative effort with the National’s Aaron Dessner. Still, he always seems to save his most fascinating ideas for his best-known project. A cryptic Twitter post from Berlin’s PEOPLE Festival last May teased a couple potential new Bon Iver song titles. Additional online rumblings speculate the new record may arrive as soon as fall of this year. It’s tough to know for sure what the story is, but as Vernon himself tweeted, “You WILL see and understand as this whole thing unfolds in the next days, months and years.”

James Blake

Assume Form

Jan. 18

James Blake's Assume Form
James Blake’s Assume Form / Polydor Records

The trip-hop superstar just announced his follow-up to 2016’s beautiful, sprawling The Colour in Anything last week. Blake’s star continues to rise in the meantime–most recently, he’s helped out with Kendrick Lamar’s DAMN. and the Black Panther soundtrack cuts “King’s Dead” and “Bloody Waters.” A glance at the tracklist for Assume Form ensures yet another intense, ethereal adventure, with guest appearances from the likes of Metro Boomin, Travis $cott, Moses Sumney, Rosalía, and Andre 3000. The sole single “Don’t Miss It” serves as a beautiful and haunting continuation of Blake’s minimalist sensibilities; it’s a wonder how much the man can do with so little.

Deerhunter

Why Hasn’t Everything Already Disappeared?

Jan. 18

Deerhunter's Why Hasn't Everything Already Disappeared?
Deerhunter’s Why Hasn’t Everything Already Disappeared? / 4AD Records

With the exception of last year’s tour cassette Double Dream of Spring, we haven’t heard from Bradford Cox and his merry band of ambient-punks since the release of 2015’s Fading Frontier. Recorded at the legendary Sonic Ranch in Tornillo, TX and in the attic of Cox’s Atlanta home, Deerhunter’s eighth studio effort sees them reunite with perennial collaborator Ben H. Allen III. Singer/songwriter Cate Le Bon and studio techie Ben Etter will assist the band at the helm. A trio of singles–“Death in Midsummer“, “Plains”, and “Element”–suggest a mellower, slightly more polished (but no less lovely) affair than your standard Deerhunter sludgefest.

Run the Jewels

Run the Jewels 4

TBA

Run the Jewels launched a hip-hop revolution with their superb, thunderous trio of collaborative LPs. Two years after presenting the third as a Christmas gift to an unsuspecting world, El-P declared that he and Killer Mike would “probably” release the fourth installment sometime this summer. In an interview with Zane Lowe in 2018, the two hyped up the new record as their “grimiest” and “rawest” thus far—which is saying something for these guys. Given that we haven’t had new RTJ music since Donald Trump’s election—save a handful of soundtrack contributions—hearing their take on the planet’s continued decline since then promises to be exhilarating.

Sleater-Kinney

TBA

TBA

Last week, the punk trailblazers announced a forthcoming collaboration with Annie “St. Vincent” Clark, tweeting a photo of the power quartet in-studio. The Brownstein-Tucker-Weiss trifecta hasn’t graced us with new music since 2015’s rip-roaring No Cities to Love—though they did share Live in Paris, a spectacular document of their reunion tour, in 2017. “We always planned on getting back in the studio—it was just a matter of when”, guitarist Carrie Brownstein said to NPR. “If there is an overarching principle to this album, it’s that the tools on which we were relying proved inadequate. So we sought new ones, both metaphorically and literally.” Indeed, with Clark at the controls, S-K’s newest is likely to provide a much-needed blast of queer energy and righteous anger.

Solange

TBA

TBA

The world’s most famous kid sister has long since proven herself capable of filling the sizable shoes of elder sibling Beyoncé. 2016’s A Seat at the Table was a vivacious, elegant, lushly-orchestrated examination of American blackness. Solange had announced a follow-up to the record slated for sometime in late ‘18. There’s still no official release date for the new LP, but it’s sure to be exciting to hear her further hone her otherworldly talents.

Tame Impala

TBA

TBA

As Australia’s foremost arbiter of psych-pop trickery, Kevin Parker has had the music sphere watching with bated breath for his next move ever the release of his glorious sonic odyssey Currents in 2015. We know Parker’s definitely been busy writing new music, though not necessarily for his meal-ticket project. Last year saw him release a string of collaborative singles with SZA, ZHU, and Theophilus London, in addition to popping up on SNL to accompany Travis Scott. Chatting with Beats 1 last summer, he admitted that he’d be “very disappointed” if a new Tame Impala joint wasn’t out by mid-2019. Perhaps he’ll have it ready by the time they headline Primavera Sound this May.

Vampire Weekend

TBA

TBA

Will 2019 be the year we finally get a new Vampire Weekend record? It’s not out of the question–at the New Yorkers’ Lollapalooza performance last August, frontman Ezra Koenig announced that they’d finished recording the follow-up to 2013’s Modern Vampires of the City. The years following Vampires have proven quite eventful for the band. They’ve seen the departure of founding member Rostam Batmanglij and solo albums from Chris Baio and Chris Tomson, as well as Koenig’s contributions to Beyoncé’s Lemonade and the premiere of his Netflix anime series Neo Yokio. But the new album (working title: Mitsubishi Macchiato) has eluded us all the while. We only know what Koenig’s opted to tell us: that, for instance, the group reunited with Vampires producer Ariel Rechtshaid for LP4, and that the disc will have a “spring-time” vibe partially inspired by the songwriting of Kacey Musgraves. If the thing really is done, which he says it is, it seems all we can do is wait.

Kanye West

Yandhi

TBA

Kanye West's Yandhi
Kanye West’s Yandhi (Def Jam Recordings)

What a wild 2018 Kanye West had. Between his second career as an Internet troll, a surreal SNL performance, and perhaps a bit too much MAGA grandstanding, many almost forgot that arguably the greatest producer in music history actually, you know, produced music. Not long after a sporadically brilliant but ultimately disappointing slew of releases last September, West teased a new project titled Yandhi–ostensibly a sequel to 2013’s Yeezus—set to arrive at the end of the month. After a pair of false starts, Ye decided to continue work on the record and “announce the release date once it’s done.” So is Kanye legitimately dissatisfied with Yandhi, or is this just a textbook case of severe procrastination? Either way, we do know that West recorded the album at least partially at a studio he set up in Uganda, and it will feature guest spots from Ms. Lauryn Hill, Rihanna, Kid Cudi, Migos, and Nicki Minaj, as well as alleged abusers XXXTentacion and 6ix9ine (gulp). Let’s just hope Yeezy lets this one percolate long enough to make it into the masterpiece of which we all know he’s capable—or at least gets rid of the 6ix9ine bits.

Honorable Mentions

  • American Football, American Football (LP3) (Mar. 22)
  • Danny Brown, TBA (TBA)
  • Chromatics, Dear Tommy (TBA)
  • Foals, Everything Not Saved Will Be Lost Part 1 (Mar. 8), Everything Not Saved Will Be Lost Part 2 (fall, 2019)
  • Lana Del Rey, Norman Fucking Rockwell (Mar. 29)
  • Sky Ferreira, Masochism (TBA)
  • Flying Lotus, TBA (TBA)
  • Panda Bear, Buoys (Feb. 8)
  • The Weeknd, Chapter 6 (TBA)
  • Sharon Van Etten, Remind Me Tomorrow (Jan. 18)
  • Toro y Moi, Outer Peace (Jan. 18)