Some New Songs

Valerie June / Photo: Concord

Tortoise – Layered Presence

The quintessential post-rock band, Tortoise set the standard for how forward-thinking, genre-bending and far-reaching rock could sound in the ’90s, with landmark albums like Millions Now Living Will Never Die (’96) and TNT (’98). They defined a loosely connected scene stretching across Chicago, Montreal and Glasgow, yet never stopped evolving on their own terms. Now, nearly a decade after their last record, The Catastrophist, Tortoise return with new music. “Layered Presence” is the lead single from their new album Touch.

Now that Dan Bitney, John Herndon, Douglas McCombs, John McEntire and Jeff Parker are scattered between Los Angeles, Portland and Chicago, the band approached this record with more deliberate, disciplined sessions – without sacrificing the intuition and collaborative spark that has always fueled their music. “Layered Presence” may only run a little over three minutes, but it’s a vivid reminder that Tortoise’s singular blend of jazz, electronica, krautrock and prog remains as vital as ever, and that their sonic horizons are still expanding.

Sudan Archives – DEAD
Three years after her victorious sophomore album Natural Brown Prom Queen, and following tours with the likes of Caroline Polachek and André 3000, singer and violinist Brittney Parks – aka Sudan Archives – issues the first single from her upcoming album. “DEAD” marks a musical rebirth from an artist who’s impossible to pigeonhole. The track’s “orchestral Black dance music” sound cleverly builds from artsy synth-pop to a full-blown dance floor banger, leaving us breathless at the end, just begging for more.

Africa Express – Soledad / Otim Hop

Non-profit organization, cross-cultural collaborators and global music collective Africa Express is teasing their highly anticipated July 11 album Bahidorá (World Circuit) with two new singles this week. “Soledad” is a gorgeous take on Mexican bolero with co-founder Damon Albarn in duet with Mexican singer-songwriter Luisa Almaguer, backed by Nick Zinner (Yeah Yeah Yeahs), Seye Adelekan (Gorillaz), Joan as Police Woman and Mexican Institute of Sound. “Otim Hop” takes another musical direction but is equally as stunning. Featuring Bootie Brown (formerly of the Pharcyde), Ugandan electronic pioneer Otim Alpha, K.O.G (Kweku of Ghana) and producer Tom Excell (Chief Rockas Collective), it’s more proof of music being our strongest common language and a unified force of power.

Kieran Hebden & William Tyler – If I Had a Boat

Kieran Hebden (Four Tet) and Nashville guitar vanguardist William Tyler have just announced their collaborative debut album, 41 Longfield Street Late ’80s, with this exquisite and free-spirited take on Lyle Lovett’s classic tune “If I Had a Boat.” Hebden and Tyler use the original song like a framework for discovery, based on an equal understanding of American primitive-style acoustic guitar, experimental electronics, field recordings and post-rock, thus constructing their very own vessel to explore brand new waterways.

Obongjayar – Jellyfish

A surprisingly raging new single from the Nigerian-born, London-based singer Obongjayar. He’s been lending his distinctive voice to many different musical projects, including collaborations with Little Simz, Fred again.. and Everything Is Recorded, not to mention his incredible debut album, Some Nights I Dream of Doors (2022). His new material is, as always, pleasantly difficult to pigeonhole – “Jellyfish” has an art-rock/punk attitude, aimed towards spineless British politicians. Written with Fontaines D.C. guitarist Carlos O’Connell and slowthai producer Kwes Darko. 

U.S. Girls – Bookends

U.S. Girls, fronted by Meg Remy, announces their forthcoming album Scratch It (June 20) with this brand-new single. “Bookends” is a 12-minute sprawling masterpiece, aided by a cast of established Nashville musicians including bassist Jack Lawrence of the Raconteurs and harmonica player Charlie McCoy, from Roy Orbison’s “Candy Man” and Bob Dylan’s Nashville Skyline. “Bookends” is also a tribute to Remy’s late friend and Power Trip singer Riley Gale, “through the lens of Remy’s reading of John Carey’s Eyewitness to History.” 

DEADGUY – Kill Fee

With their 1995 debut album, the highly influential Fixation on a Co-Worker, New Jersey’s DEADGUY proved that metalcore was akin to the hardcore punk and noise rock released on Amphetamine Reptile or Touch and Go. Following a 2021 reunion at Decibel Magazine Metal & Beer Fest, the legends now return with their first new album in 30 years. “Kill Fee” totally rips, proving that age is just a number. Expectations are high for the full LP dropping in June.

Geckøs – Dance of the Gecko

The new collaborative project from Howe Gelb (Giant Sand), M. Ward and McKowski (The Lost Brothers) takes us right to a sun-drenched Southwestern backyard barbeque. “Dance of the Gecko” captures the magic when three brilliant gentlemen happen to be in the same room together. The song was recorded by accident in Tucson by Gabe Sullivan (XIXA, Giant Sand), and later mixed by John Parish in Bristol. Geckøs will tour Spain this May while we eagerly await more music from these desert lizards.

Little Barrie & Malcolm Catto – Count of Four

The London-based, genre-bending trio Little Barrie has been around for a quarter of a century, always exploring new musical directions based on psychedelic rock, soul, deep funk, 1960s blues and more. If you haven’t heard any of their previous records, you might have caught a glimpse of their music when watching Better Call Saul – they did the theme song. Following the tragic passing of their original drummer, they teamed up with the Heliocentrics’ Malcom Catto and just released their first album on Dan Auerbach’s Easy Eye Sound label. “Count of Four” is one of several standout tracks from Electric War, where they seamlessly connect the dots between the Zombies and Can in a rather thrilling way. 

Curtis Harding – There She Goes

“There She Goes” marks the first new music in four years from acclaimed Atlanta retro-soul singer Curtis Harding, following collaborations with artists like RÜFÜS DU SOL and Jazmine Sullivan. Standing on the shoulders of giants like Stevie and Curtis gives his music both a solid foundation and wide-open musical horizons, and “There She Goes,” a “poetic description capturing the beauty and duality of the ideal woman,” proves that Harding is still mastering the fine art of honoring musical traditions while creating songs that are equally modern and timeless.

Greet Death – Country Girl

Flint, Michigan’s Greet Death is back with a killer new track from their highly anticipated album Die In Love (June 27). Still draped in doomy shoegaze, “Country Girl” shimmers with a more organic sound than before, and floats like a daydream (or nightmare) on a rambling story referencing movies like Halloween, The Fog and A Nightmare on Elm Street. The accompanying music video looks like a homage to 1980s VHS horror movies, and singer Harper Boyhtari has described the song as “trying to solve a murder mystery and finding out you were the killer the whole time.”

UNIVERSITY – Curwen

Earlier this April, North West English emo/screamo punks UNIVERSITY released the complex but catchy single “Curwen,” from their upcoming debut album McCartney, It’ll Be OK. In four minutes and 30 seconds, they take us on a dizzying roller coaster ride of explosive energy and emotional tension. Recorded by producer Kwes Darko (slowthai, Sampa the Great) at Damon Albarn’s Studio 13 in London. 

Valerie June – Endless Tree

It would be easy to turn to hopelessness and despair in times like these, when one horrific headline follows the next. “Watching the news almost every night / telling the stories of all that ain’t right / but what could be done from a house and a home?” Cosmic folk/soul singer Valerie June asks the question on “Endless Tree,” a plea for hope, freedom and change. Her gorgeous, joyous new album explores the possibilities of a more harmonious world, and is just the medicine we all need right now. Owls, Omens, and Oracles is beautifully produced by M. Ward, and features contributions from Norah Jones and the Blind Boys of Alabama. 

Florry – First it was a movie, then it was a book

Irresistible slacker anthem from Philly’s Florry. “First it was a movie, then it was a book” explores a landscape similar to Kurt Vile and MJ Lenderman, with a hint of free-spirited Southern groove and endless late-night, country-rock jam spirit.

Short write-ups about selected song favorites originally published weekly in tidal.com/magazine.

Year of the Rooster: Årets album og låter 2017

Mitt lyttemønster preges i stor og økende grad av enkeltlåter framfor konsentrerte dypdykk ned i enkeltalbum. Noe skyldes et relativt stort musikalsk konsum hver dag og uke, som ikke gir altfor store rom for grundig fordypning over tid, et luksusproblem som også sier noe om det enorme berget av god musikk som kontinuerlig kommer ut (mest middelmådig, men hvem har vel tid til å bry seg om denslags). Det er derfor kanskje litt bråkjekt å si det, men 2017 har ikke vært preget av dette ene opplagte albumet – det som virkelig har klistret seg fast til den digitale eller fysiske platespilleren i uke etter uke, men snarerer denne jevne strømmen som legger seg til det evig voksende lasset som venter på å bli hørt i den kontekstuelle helheten de fortjener.

Her er lista over albumene og låtene jeg har gledet meg mest over i år, så langt, og jeg tror alle følger med over til 2018 uten å miste altfor mye glans.

Årets album 2017

Kendrick Lamar: Damn
(Top Dawg/Interscope)


– … fordi Hot DAMN. Så bra at han like gjerne ga den ut både framlengs og baklengs. Kunne gitt den ut sidelengs for min del.

Mount Eerie: A Crow Looked At Me
(P.W. Elverum & Sun, Ltd.)


… fordi dette er den av årets plater jeg har hørt mest på som jeg har hørt minst på – og som jeg egentlig ikke vil høre på. Ikke fordi den er dårlig, på langt nær, men fordi det gjør vondt og det er tungt å gå inn i entreen sammen med Phil Elverum denne gangen. Han åpner døra for oss inn til sitt hjem og hjerte, dunkelt belyst er det, leier oss liksom inn, inn i et hus fylt av minner og lukter og savn og sorg etter kona, og han viser oss dette med alt av menneskelig styrke og svakhet som det er mulig å stable på plass i en skjelven favn. Jeg er glad for at han gjorde det. Og lei meg for at han måtte det.

Power Trip: Nightmare Logic
(Southern Lord)

… fordi ingen tar skade av en porsjon mettal for å røske opp litt i ny og ne. Jeg har alltid likt Southern Lord og hatt sans for deres mørke og seige doom-ting, men dette er pur party fra start til slutt, det vil si snaue halvtimen. Jeg har så vidt begynt å olje en litt rusten kjærligheten for vintage thrash, og denne har bare trigget interessen ytterligere. Nightmare Logic har noen av de feteste riffene du vil høre i år, og det i selskap med særs mange sterke metall-utgivelser (Pallbearer, Bell Witch, Converge, Chelsea Wolfe, Wolves in the Throne Room, Elder, Converge…) står denne igjen som årets favoritt – og årets tøffeste råkkeskive.

Tyler the Creator: Flower Boy
(Columbia)


… fordi selv om Tyler the Creator har med seg et fett stjernelag på gjestelisten, inkludert Frank Ocean, Kali Uchis, A$ap Rocky, Jaden Smith, “vår egen” Anna of the North og mange andre, er dette først og fremst blomsterguttens eget mesterverk. På sitt fjerde soloalbum fortsetter Tyler the Creator å tøye musikalske grenser og brette ut sjela si på et vis som er sterkt imponerende.

Rhiannon Giddens: Freedom Highway
(Nonesuch)

… fordi Americana-genren aldri har stått sterkere, med en lang rekke artister, nye og gamle, som alle har levert noen av årets beste og mest relevante plater, som Jason Isbell, John Moreland, Zephaniah Ohora, Rodney Crowell, Hurray For the Riff Raff, Angaleena Presley og en lang rekke andre. Rhiannon Giddens stikker seg likevel ut litt ekstra som en kraftfull og klar stemme i et betent politisk klima. Vandrende langs den sølete frihetsveien har frontfiguren fra Carolina Chocolate Drops laget en plate som med røtter dypt ned i bakken og langt tilbake i tid belyser Amerika av i dag.

Brockhampton: Saturation II
(Question Everything)


… fordi dette Texas/Los Angeles baserte hiphop-kollektivet (unnskyld, boybandet) er årets suverene nykommer, som i år like gjerne fullførte hele sin Saturation-trilogi. Anført av ekstremt kreative Kevin Abstract preges Brockhampton av et vitalt musikalsk overskudd som går på tvers av genre og der alle involverte løfter hverandre opp og fram.

Jane Weaver: Modern Kosmology
(Fire)


… fordi Jane Weaver på sitt sjette album har funnet den perfekte kombinasjonen av deilige krautbeats, rastløs psykedelia og flørtende electronica. Modern Kosmology er som tittelen indikerer en speisa trip ut i kosmos, men det er en plate som heller aldri mister bakkekontakten. Jane Weaver synger med sval og sober stemme, litt sånn Nico-drømmeaktig, og som en sirene lokker hun oss inn i sitt Wicker Man’ske eventyrrike som vi aldri har lyst til å komme ut av.

Peter Perrett: How the West Was Won
(Domino)

…fordi denne tidligere tidligere frontmannen i The Only Ones (de med “Another Girl, Another Planet” og en drøss andre klassikere) har levd flere liv enn de fleste av oss, kommet ut av rennesteinen på mirakuløst vis og minner om at egenskapene som låtskriver ikke har blitt borte på veien. Snarere tvert i mot. Peter Perrett (65) skriver med hjertet bankende utenpå skjorta. Lakonisk og hjertevarm, mørk og morsom lirer han ut av seg smått briljante låter med et blikk og en penn skarpere og mer presis enn de fleste kan drømme om å nærme seg. Hjerteskjærende bra.

Gun Outfit: Out of Range
(Paradise Of Bachelors)


… fordi jeg er en sucker for slackers. Det har kommet mye fint i denne gata i år, Kevin Morby, Courtney Barnett & Kurt Vile og Michael Nau kunne alle vært med her. Men jeg går for denne. Gun Outfit hangler avgårde sånn akkurat passe vindskeivt og fint, men på finurlig vis får de det til å henge sammen. Liker du den slentrende vokalstilen til David Berman (Silver Jews) og de skakke melodilinjene til Pavement koplet med den rastløse energien til The Feelies er dette akkurat den dosen med Cosmic American Indie du trenger i år.

Curtis Harding: Face Your Fear
(Anti-)


… fordi Curtis Harding har en av disse uimotståelige varme soul-stemmene, og han forvalter arven etter de store (Marvin, Curtis et al) bedre enn de fleste – uten egentlig å bryte ny grunn. Han imponerte med debuten Soul Power i 2014, og fortsetter den fine stilen med Face Your Fear. Jeg hadde ikke tenkt at denne skulle havnet på Topp 20, dette er ikke en plate som nødvendigvis avdekker nye hemmeligheter for hver gjennomhøring, men den sitter veldig godt på øret til de fleste sammenhenger og har hengt med gjennom hele året. Og alle trenger vi en god dose soul i hverdagen.

***

Valerie June: The Order of Time
(Caroline)

Posse: Horse Blanket
(Self-released)

The Feelies: In Between
(Bar/None)

Couch Slut: Contempt
(Gilead Media)

Anouar Brahem: Blue Maqams
(ECM)

Ruby Rushton: Trudi’s Songbook: Volume One & Two
(22a)

Kaleema: Nómada
(Tropical Twista)

Trio Da Kali & Kronos Quartet: Ladilikan
(World Circuit)

Dean Hurley: Anthology Resource Vol. 1: △△
(Sacred Bones)

Zara McFarlane: Arise
(Brownswood Recordings)

Howe Gelb & Lonna Kelly: Further Standards
(Fire)

gelb.jpg

~ ~ ~ bobbling below ~ ~ ~
//JAY Z: 4:44//Susanne Sundfør: Music For People In Trouble//Fleet Foxes: Crack-Up//Thundercat: Drunk//Grizzly Bear: Painted Ruins//Michael Nau: Some Twist//This is the Kit: Moonlight Freeze//The Dream Syndicate: How Did I Find Myself Here//Sannhet: So Numb//Gas: Narkopop//Thurston Moore: Rock N Roll Consciousness//The War on Drugs: A Deeper Understanding//Slowdive: s/t//Protomartyr: Relatives in Descent//Laura Marling: Semper Femina//Aimee Mann: Mental Illness//Waxahatchee: Out in the Storm//Big Thief: Capacity//Joan Shelley: s/t//Aldous Harding: Party//Father John Misty: Pure Comedy//Tara Jane O’Neil: s/t//Rodney Crowell: Close Ties//Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit: The Nashville Sound//Hurray for the Riff Raff: The Navigator//Angaleena Presley: Wrangled//Erlend Ropstad: Alt som har hendt//Phoebe Bridgers: Stranger in the Alps//Matttis Kleppen: Bassgitar//Spoon: Hot Thoughts//Zephania Ohora: This Highway//Tønes: Sesong 4//Esmerine: Mechanics of Dominion//King Krule: The Ooz//

Topp 100 Låter

Hele spillelista hører du her

Father John Misty: Pure Comedy

JAY-Z: The Story of O.J.

Kendrick Lamar: HUMBLE.

Shabazz Palaces: Shine a Light (feat. Thaddillac)

Grizzly Bear: Four Cypresses

Drake: Passionfruit

Ezra Furman: Driving Down to L.A.

Hurray For the Riff Raff: Pa’lante

Harry Styles: Sign of the Times

Thundercat feat. Michael McDonald & Kenny Loggins: Show You the Way

~~~Bubbling below~~~
Frank Ocean: Chanel
Cende: What I Want
Ariel Pink: Another Weekend
Fleet Foxes: -Naiads, Cassadies
Girl Ray: Stupid Things
Posse: Keep Me Awake
Washed Out: Get Lost
Kevin Morby: City Music
Phoebe Bridgers: Funeral
The Dream Syndicate: How Did I Find Myself Here

Kendrick Lamar: The Heart Part 4
Faux Ferocious: Me and Johnny
Peter Perrett: Living in My Head
This is the Kit: Bullet Proof
Michael Nau: Big Wind No Sail
Future feat. Kendrick Lamar: Mask Off (Remix)
Valerie June: The Front Door
Zephaniah O’Hora: High Class City Girl From the Country
King Krule: Dum Surfer
Thurston Moore: Turn On

The Feelies: Turn Back Time
Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit: If We Were Vampires
QTY: Michael
Laura Marling: Soothing
Sudan Archives: Come Meh Way
Linda Vidala, KingSkurkOne, OnklP, Kamelen: Bængshot (Remix)
Vic Mensa: Say I Didn’t
Bedouine: One of These Days
Beach Fossils: Down the Line
Gun Outfit: Strange Insistence

Luis Fonsi, Daddy Yankee, Justin Bieber: Despacito (Remix)
J A Y E L E C T R O N I C A: Letter to Falon
Andrew Combs: Rose Colored Blues
Big Sean: Bounce Back
Sampha: (No One Knows Me) Like The Piano
Michael Nau: Big Wind No Sail
The War On Drugs: Thinking of a Place
Manchester Orchestra: The Alien
Miley Cyrus: Malibu
Steven Wilson w/ Ninet Tayeb: Pariah

King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard: Tezeta
Gold Star: Come With Me
Kamasi Washington: Truth
Real Estate: Darling
Afghan Whigs: Arabian Heights
Otis Taylor: Walk on Water
Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever: French Press
Curtis Harding: On and On
Karen Elson: Distant Shores
Mount Eerie: Real Death

Big Thief: Mary
King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard: Rattlesnake
Floating Points: Silurian Blue
Jay Som: The Bus Song
Lizzo: Water Me
Courtney Barnett & Kurt Vile: Over Everything
Rodney Crowell: It Ain’t Over Yet
Erlend Ropstad: Det Store Blå
David Ramirez: Twins
Tara Jane O’Neil: Flutter

Milk Music: Crying Wand
Mashrou’Leila: Roman
Mary Epworth: Me Swimming
Kacy & Clayton: Just Like a Summer Cloud
Bing & Ruth: The How of It Sped
Protomartyr: My Children
Saba Abraha: Wicked Ways
Ought: These 3 Things
Pinegrove: Intrepid
Woods: Spring Is in the Air

Emily Haines & the Soft Skeleton: Fatal Gift
Selena Gomez: Bad Liar
Vince Staples: BagBak
Algiers: The Underside of Power
Kevin Morby: Baltimore (Sky at Night)
Leikeli47: 2nd Fiddle
Brockhampton: SWEET
Charlotte Gainsbourg: Ring-a-Ring O’ Roses
St. Vincent: New York
Lilly Hiatt: The Night David Bowie Died

Slowdive: Sugar For the Pill
Everything Is Recorded feat. SYD, Sampha: Show Love
Kaleema: Sierra Leona
Colter Wall: Kate McCannon
Tønes: Våkna ny
Jeb Loy Nichols: Come See Me
Sam Gellaitry: Jungle Waters
Julien Baker: Appointments
Sufjan Stevens: Tony Harding (in D Major)
Lambert: In the Dust of Our Days