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Saturday, March 25, 2023

New sounds from Grouplove, Feist, Adrienne Nye, Tyler Boone, Stuck on Planet Earth


Grouplove: Hello


The Los Angeles group's sixth album, I Want it All Right Now, is due in July. This single, says vocalist and keyboardist Hannah Hooper, was recorded on the last day in the studio. "We had this demo Ben (Homola, drummer) and I had been working on that wasn’t quite finished and we decided to break it out and mess around with it. ...It feels so lighthearted, like a sing-along, but if you listen it’s all about feeling lost and alone and wanting so badly for people to look up and connect.”

Feist: Borrow Trouble


Here's the fourth single released ahead of the upcoming LP Multitudes. NME calls it "enchanting" and "possibly the most introspective track" released so far. Feist says it "began as a contemplative acoustic morality tale and shape shifted itself into the sound of trouble itself. It’s a mess that holds its own logic.”

Adrienne Nye: I Need the Light


This emerging artist has released just a few singles so far, and this is the first to reach our ears. A Montreal native now based in Vancouver, she has degrees in biology as well as a background in stage and film performance, and released two EPs in 2017-2018 as part of a duo called Fallow State. Her bio says she draws inspiration from artists such as Bjork, Lights, Imogen Heap, Christine and the Queens and Caroline Polachek. She recently launched her own label, Yaletown Records, which will soon release her debut solo EP, These Winter Skies.

Tyler Boone: Running Sideways


This indie singer-songwriter and alt-rocker has been releasing music since 2012 and has been part of our mix since 2016. The South Carolina native, who has worked with musicians and producers in Nashville and Los Angeles, self-produced this track in California for release on his own Artist Formula label. He says that while his "lane" has been blues-rock and Americana, he wanted to try for a more contemporary, current sound on this new single.

Stuck On Planet Earth: Crack In The Glass


This three-piece alt-rock band from Toronto has one LP to its credit - 2020's Beautiful Nowhere - and returned with a couple of singles last year. The press release for this latest track says it "continues the band’s emphasis on the reinvention of their artistry." The trio has more in store for release this year: "We just got back from Nashville where we got to work with some incredible people. This time around, we have not been hesitant to be our most authentic selves and we believe we are writing the most honest music we have ever created.”

Sunday, March 19, 2023

New from The Heavy, St. Paul & the Broken Bones, Hannah Jadagu, Northlake, Daughter


The Heavy: I Feel the Love


Here's the second single to emerge ahead of this funk-rock band's upcoming sixth album, Amen. Never mind that the group hails from Bath, England, American Songwriter says the track "rollicks with Pentecostal-pop energy, rich with Mississippi heat."

St. Paul & the Broken Bones: Sea Star


Photo: Paige Sara
This is the first single from the Alabama band's upcoming album, Angels in Science Fiction. Bandleader Paul Janeway says it was inspired by a fable about a man who picks up a starfish on the beach and tosses it back into the sea. A passerby points to many other washed-up starfish and tells him "you’re not going to make a dent in this." The man replies "I made a difference for that one." Says Janeway: "I hope that the moral is one that I teach my child: ‘Try your best to make a difference, starting with the people that are around you.’"

Hannah Jadagu: What You Did


Photo: Sterling Smith
Following her debut EP, released by SubPop when she was barely out of high school, this Texas native will release her first full-length album this spring. Stereogum calls this single "crunchy and satisfying, a blast of fuzz accompanying Jadagu insistent chorus of  “I know what you did.” 

Northlake: Falling Out of Fashion


Guitarist Dylan Ackelbein, originally from Fleetwood, U.K., and bassist Devlin Manning from Dallas started out playing together around the Dallas/Fort Worth area. They met Austin DeLoach working at a local studio, and in 2020 asked him to join as their singer. Rounding out the group is drummer Josh Street, who grew up in Charlotte, N.C. As diverse as their backgrounds are the influences they cite - from Led Zeppelin, King Crimson and Pink Floyd to The 1975, Clairo and Harry Styles. This single is the first of theirs to reach our ears.

Daughter: Party


Another single emerges from the London trio's upcoming LP Stereo Mind Game. This song is described as "recogniz[ing] that that in order to maintain relationships with others, we must first make peace with ourselves. [It] recounts the place that Elena Tonra got to before deciding to give up alcohol." The lyric speaks of being afraid of getting so drunk at a party that the singer might forget "The worst night of my life / or even worse, the best."

Saturday, March 11, 2023

Eclectic New Music: The Drifts, Matt Andersen, Touch The Buffalo, Slaid Cleaves, Holly Rees


The Drifts: Breaking Every Bone


One of three new-to-us artists that we're featuring this week, this Toronto-based alt-rock band was formed in 2019 and has one album to its credit. This single from an upcoming EP was co-written with the Monowhales, with singer Alyssa Holmes and bandmate Sam Nyberg building around on their collaborators' initial lyric of “I’m breaking every bone in my body / Trying to write a love song.”

Matt Andersen & The Big Bottle of Joy: So Low Solo


An award-winning blues guitarist and singer-songwriter from New Brunswick, Andersen selected eight musicians and singers and then wrote music specifically for their talents. The result is The Big Bottle of Joy, the name of both the band and their new album. It was recorded "live-off-the-floor" at The Sonic Temple in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Touch The Buffalo: In Six Heads About It


When the promo for a new release says "for fans of Aerosmith [and] Mumford and Sons," one has to be skeptical. And really this band from the Washington DC area doesn't sound much like either, but this track does include both ukelele strumming and loud guitars. We're told this single will be on a new EP called Bodhicitta, which means "a mind that is aimed at awakening." Yet the band says this track "lyrically, structurally and emotionally is trying to capture the feeling of a descent into madness"

Slaid Cleaves: Through the Dark


This is the sort-of-title track from Together Through the Dark, the first new collection in five years from the Texas-based folk singer. Cleaves has said the song is "about offering comfort in hard times" -- which resonates given that the album was recorded between Covid surges early last year. “Can’t fight the storm outside" he sings here, "but we can wait it out.”

Holly Rees: Missing Out (Again)


The original recording of "Missing Out" was on the singer-songwriter's 2018 solo acoustic EP Slow Down, and is heard now and then on our midday show, The Bistro. Now the Newcastle, UK, artist has released this re-imagined, full-band version. The song is billed as "the punchy antithesis of tired break-up songs, where catchy guitar riffs meet a witty tongue-in-cheek lyricism coated over sincere feeling."

Saturday, March 4, 2023

New: Peter Gabriel + Ian Hunter + Natalie Merchant + Sam Roberts Band + Madison Cunningham


Peter Gabriel: The Court


Of this latest single from the upcoming album I/O, Gabriel says: "I had this idea for ‘the court will rise’ chorus, so it became a free-form, impressionistic lyric that connected to justice, but there’s a sense of urgency there. A lot of life is a struggle between order and chaos and in some senses the justice or legal system is something that we impose to try and bring some element of order to the chaos. That’s often abused, it’s often unfair and discriminatory but at the same time it’s probably an essential part of a civilised society. But we do need to think sometimes about how that is actually realised and employed."

Ian Hunter: Bed of Roses


The veteran rocker and former Mott the Hoople frontman has brought together an all-star cast for his next album, Defiance Pt. 1. This first single features Ringo Starr on drums and Mike Campbell on guitar. Other contributors to the LP include Jeff Beck, Todd Rundgren, Billy F. Gibbons, Slash and many more. The project started during lockdown, with Hunter putting together basic tracks in his Connecticut basement. He put out word to his musician friends and was overwhelmed with responses.  “It was a fluke,” he says. “It’s amazing what’s happened. It’s been such a buzz.”

Natalie Merchant: Come On, Aphrodite (feat. Abena Koomson-Davis)


After a gap of nearly a decade, the singer-songwriter and former member of 10,000 Maniacs will release her ninth solo album, Keep Your Courage, next month. She describes this first single as an "invocation to the goddess of love and passion. ...In the lyrics, I list all the clichés we use to describe falling in love: being drunk and blind, over the moon, weak in the knees, and half out of our minds. For the Greeks, when the spirit of love descended, it was seen as a kind of assault; you would become powerless against an all-consuming, sweet madness. Amazingly, humans still crave it, in spite of the perils.” Merchant is joined here by Abena Koomson-Davis, a performer, educator and musical director of the Resistance Revival Chorus.

Sam Roberts Band: Picture of Love


Photo by Dave Gillespie
It's the 20th anniversary of this Montreal native's debut album, We Were Born in a Flame, which won JUNO awards for Album of the Year, Rock Album of the Year, and Artist of the Year. The next SRB album, following 2020's All of Us, is due in the fall, and this is the first single. It's a warm mid-tempo number with a mix of strumming and chiming guitars.

Madison Cunningham, Remi Wolf: Hospital (One Man Down)


These two Los Angeles-based artists teamed up to reimagine this song from Cunningham's Revealer album, which was released in September and won the Grammy for Best Folk Album. Cunningham says the song "has always had this underlying feeling of wanting to fall apart at the seams and then actively restraining itself. ... I wanted to make a version that knew zero restraint and hinges off completely. Being a major fan of Remi’s, I knew she would be the voice to help me cross that line."

Photo by Claire Marie Vogel.