Best New 2021 DIY Song Submissions, Vol. II – Desperate Journalist, Lucid Express, New Math & more

As summer rolls along at a clip (like it always does), we’ve been listening to dozens and dozens of new DIY indie tracks sent in through our submission form. And as usual, we come across some really good ones that we are inclined to share with all of you. Some of these artists may not show up anywhere else on the blogosphere but that’s because we are able to detect talent and potential where the others can’t – which has been part of our brand since 2008.

This second volume of our favorite 2021 DIY Song Submissions features a bunch of noise rock, dream pop, shoegaze and more. (Please like and share if you dig).

Desperate Journalist – London, England
Lucid Express – Hong Kong, ‘China’
New Math – Seattle, Washington
Don’t Connect – London, England
Burkini Beach – Berlin, Germany


desperatejournalist

Desperate Journalist – “Fault”

The fairly popular London-based indie/alt rock outfit Desperate Journalist belts out post-punk mixed with goth elements on the new track, “Fault,” in such a dreary and aggressive signal that it is borderline industrial rock/hardcore goth. And yet there is a gentle melancholy at play right along. Vocalist Jo Bevan’s vocals are fierce and firey, bursting with anxiety and fear.

The song’s lyrical content speaks to a situation in which the subject is basically about being stuck with bad decisions and not taking action to avoid bigger problems. Powerful shit.


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Lucid Express – “Hotel 65”

Based in the precarious city of Hong Kong, five-piece indie rock band Lucid Express has dropped an impressive new single, “Hotel 65.”

It is the standout single so far from the band’s debut album dropped on July 16th via Kanine. The video for the song is described by the band as a collage of footage taken from the band’s travels in their native Hong Kong, as well as in Vietnam, Japan, the U.K. and the United States.”

“These flashes of scenery,” the band wrote, ” reflect the lyrical turns of the song, while being interspersed with the words themselves scrawled onto mirrors, notebooks and paper scraps.””

Shoegazed, fuzzy guitars wrapped around beautiful soft vocals make this dream-pop track one of the best of the summer so far.


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New Math – “Lowe”

Multi-instrumentalist Chris Fish, aka New Math, busts out experimental shoegaze/noise pop to create blazing sonic artworks. This is on full display via his new album, Kudzu. If you’re a fan of experimental, noise pop or shoegaze, this is a place you may want to hang.

Fish, who is based in Seattle, picked the opening track, “Lowe,” as the first single from the album. The song, like the rest of the album, was and recorded during the quarantine “while I struggled with sobriety, the pandemic, and the collapse of society.”

“It’s not as depressing as it sounds,” he adds, ” I swear. The video is composed of edited stock footage, and I think it compliments the dreamy apocalyptic vibe.”

His solo ‘bedroom’ project began, he says, as “an acoustic drone experiment, Epigenesis (2013), and has since evolved into an experimental noise pop act [New Math].” Fish cites his top musical influences as My Bloody Valentine, Mclusky, and Kanye West.

Interestingly we also received a single the same week from the band Victims of the New Math. Stay tuned.


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Don’t Connect – “Burning Rubber in the Sun”

We don’t know much about the mysterious artist behind Don’t Connect, but we do know a few things. His name is ‘Charlie,’ he’s based in London, and his new song “Burning Rubber in the Sun” is fire.

Preferring to let his music speak for itself, “Burning Rubber in the Sun,” is a chilled acoustic guitar-driven slow-burner that picks up with percussion and rhythm in the second half of the track, a transition assisted by some taping effects.

Despite providing any more details about himself, the ‘unknown artist’ did provide some insight about the song:

“‘Burning Rubber in the Sun’ is a song written to capture the feeling of summer, escapism and the ability to forget about everything going on in your life and just have a good time.”

Obscure Sound wrote: ” The one-minute mark unveils playful interaction among guitars, synths, and a dose of backing strings; the feeling here is quite fondly reminiscent of Beck.”

Don’t Connect is aiming to drop his debut album Running soon.


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Burkini Beach – “Crying at the Soundtrack”

Berlin indie rock guitarist/vocalist Rudi Maier didn’t provide many details his new single, “Crying at the Soundtrack,” simply writing: “I wrote a song to remind of the downsides of touring, haha. Thought you might like it.”

We do but we might like it even more if a song description came along with it. (Artists should really understand that the chances of them being featured on blogs greatly increases when a real song description is included. It gives the blogger something to post and it provides context. Additionally, an artist is much more likely to connect to listeners by providing a ‘behind-the-scenes’ description of the song.)

Anyways, Maier’s band, Burkini Beach, record and tour with him in between his projects and side gigs touring with Thees Uhlmann and Emperor XX and Das Paradies. The band members include Emma Elisabeth Dittrich (vocals), Simon Frontzek (keys, bass), Franz Neugebauer (drums), Sönke Corpus (pedal steel).

Burkini Beach has opened for indie bands like Cigarettes After Sex and Warpaint and include among its top musical influences Purple Mountains, Mount Eerie, and Phoebe Bridgers. The band was founded in 2017.


Make sure to follow us on whatever platform you choose to get more fresh, impressive singles from DIY/underrated DIY artists and bands.






The Flaming Lips’ ‘The Soft Bulletin Companion’

The Flaming LipsSoft Bulletin was a watershed moment for the Oklahoma City rock band. Released in 1999, it was a moment when the group essentially started all over again with something wholly new as they reacted to the death of Wayne Coyne’s father, as well as other deaths of loved ones experienced by longtime guitarist and keyboardist Steven Drozd. Dubbed by a few bold critics at the time as the Pet Sounds of the ’90s, their ninth studio record started to unlock a whole new level of festival audience far beyond what came before for the psychedelic weirdos from the Sooner State.

Frontman Wayne Coyne has often referred to rare Flaming Lips hits during past interviews as gifts from the “gods of music.” Concert staples such as “Do You Realize??” or the title track off 2002’s Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots are moments when the gods bent down and tapped the band on the shoulder, said it was time, and rewarded the good work they had set up previously with the best tracks on The Soft Bulletin only three years before (“Race for the Prize” and “Waiting for a Superman”).

It’s abundantly clear that The Soft Bulletin Companion is a compilation of curios for diehard fans of a monumental album from early in the band’s nearly 40 years of existence. There are odd experiments, melodic dead ends, plenty of outtakes, prototype mixes, and everything in between on this 13-song collection originally intended by the band’s manager and Warner Bros. as a promo-only CD to pair alongside The Soft Bulletin. It’s seen new life this year during Record Store Day, and longtime fans of the band will take note of hearing rarities like the fuzzed, psychedelic rocker “The Captain,” which are a welcome sight on vinyl after years of being hard to find.

Also, it’s nice to hear a couple stereo versions of tracks from the endlessly curious 1997 experimental release Zaireeka (which, infamously, was ideally played from four separate CDs blasted in unison from different car sound systems). In other corners of the release, a Lips Mix of The Soft Bulletin’s “Buggin’” and an early mix of “The Spiderbite Song” both fall far short of the quality heard on the original Soft Bulletin classics.

The Soft Bulletin Companion’s early versions of “Slow Motion”and “Little Hands” are also not too bad, and remind you of the band’s songwriting chops during the period, with Coyne directing the band on the rough mix of the latter track. The Soft Bulletin still stands as a classic where the best of ’90s experimental rock and pop collided, and its companion piece does sit fairly comfortably in its long shadow. Seeking this one out as a chaser to another long sip on the Soft Bulletin vibe is the best way to experience it.

Alexis Marshall (Daughters) Debut Solo Album ‘House of Lull . House of When’

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Imagine the scene: You’re in some smoky, crowded backroom speakeasy for an open mic poetry night. Most people performing do so in the way you’d expect—they shuffle up to the lonely microphone in the spotlight, tentatively read a poem or two that they’ve printed out, and then shuffle off again to a polite round of applause. And then, out of the shadows, a tattooed beatnik/Hare Krishna/Frank Booth hybrid walks onstage with a boombox. He sets it down and presses “play,” allowing a dystopian cacophony of industrial noise to fill the room. And then he—he being Alexis Marshall, the vocalist of uncompromising, cult-like Rhode Island noise rock outfit Daughters—starts shouting and ranting, bellowing the words of a lost soul, one forsaken by both God and the devil, one whose reality is entirely internal yet still reflects the turmoil raging incessantly and constantly in the ravaged world outside. 

All of which is to say that House of Lull . House of When—Marshall’s debut solo album—sounds like the end of the world. It’s not one brought on by a Hollywood blockbuster-style disaster, however. Rather, this album’s nine tracks—all of which were essentially improvised in the studio with help from Daughters drummer Jon Syverson and Young Widows’ Evan Patterson—capture the collapse of modern industrialized society and the ravaging, fatal effects of the economic system that rules it. It’s not just capitalism’s destructive tendencies that this record depicts, though, but also the damaging effects of religion, and a more harrowing mental collapse. 

On their own, devoid of the sinister, macabre soundscapes and post-apocalyptic atmosphere created by the music and Marshall’s unhinged delivery, it’s hard to know if these poems—for these are poems much more than lyrics—would stand their own. Opener “Drink From the Oceans Nothing Can Harm You” and the visceral descent into madness of “Religion as Leader” contain some riveting imagery, but they’re much enhanced by Marshall’s powerfully deranged delivery. Yet while there’s merit and substance to the words and imagery here—unlike, for example, the poetry by Touché Amoré frontman Jeremy Bolm (who has previously released poems by Marshall on his label, but whose poetry doesn’t really work on paper)—the arresting, atmospheric soundtrack certainly helps carry them further than they’d otherwise go. Whether that’s the buzzsaw frenzy of “Open Mouth,” the disturbed paranoia of “Hounds in the Abyss,” or the tormented ender “Night Coming.” 

It’s an uneven listen, and its abrasive, experimental weirdness can be too overbearing (as on “It Just Doesn’t Feel Good Anymore”), but House of Lull . House of When is nevertheless a weird, wild ride worth experiencing at least once, even if that’s just to see whether you can make it all the way through.

Originally published in Flood Magazine

2021 Albums: Wolf Alice’s ‘Blue Weekend’

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© Jordan Hemingway

Opening number The Beach is a slow build track. It begins with a strong pulse composed of a steady drum beat and guitar, with lead singer Ellie Rowsell’s gentle upper register inviting you into the world of Blue Weekend. From here, the track builds with more shoegaze style layers until it transcends into a frantic dreamlike state until it stops suddenly, leaving you bleary eyed and asking for more. And more Blue Weekend gives. It’s a stunning opener to an incredible album.

Wolf Alice first sprang onto the scene with their Creature Songs EP, with their breakout track Moaning Lisa Smile. The subject matter of that song is unconventional, a track written from the perspective of Lisa Simpson of The Simpsons. It’s a cleverly written song and showed a keen aptitude for great melodies coupled with interesting lyrics. The potential was even more on show on 2015’s My Love Is Cool, a kaleidoscopic album filled with ideas that give the album a kind of jukebox feel. This potential was realised on Visions of a Life, the Mercury Award winning album which spawned international hit Don’t Delete the Kisses. There was speculation as to where they could go from such a good album.

Blue Weekend takes that speculation and promptly sets it alight. The album is a true classic in every sense of the word, an act of fulfilling potential so well to the extent that it seems impossible for them to do anything wrong. Everyone on this album sounds like they’re having the time of their life, playing to the very top level. The rhythm section is the adrenaline pouring through the heavier tracks, and the heartbeat to the emotional numbers. Rowsell’s vocals keep getting better, moving from heavenly upper-register notes like in Safe from Heartbreak (if you never fall in love) to roaring like a woman possessed on Play the Greatest Hits. And Joff Oddie adds another level to each song, providing catchy, addictive licks that make the hairs on the back of your neck stand to see what that glorious noise is.

This is their most consistent album to date. All of the tracks keep the shoegaze dreamlike tendencies that instantly transport you into the setting they have created. The album cover perfectly advertises the contents of the record. Lipstick on the Glass has the most accomplished chorus of their career, emotional, intense and instantly memorable. The second most accomplished chorus of their career is a grand total of three tracks later on the fourth single from the album How Can I Make it OK?, a very rare type of track offering itself to you like a warm blanket after heartbreak.

It wouldn’t be a Wolf Alice album without some true heavy rockers. My Love Is Cool had the creep-blasting You’re a GermVisions of a Life had the vicious Yuk Foo and Blue Weekend has two in its 40 minute runtime. Smile is the second single, and includes the most furious guitar line you have heard. It’s the kind that will make your morning commute feel like the 3.7 mile long straight in the Le Mans 24 hour race. It’s exhilarating. Play the Greatest Hits somehow becomes even more vicious. It starts by letting you like it’s just heaviness with no melody. At halfway through however, it’s small but significant melody appears, giving a boost to the rest of the song.

And even though all the songs on the album are fantastic, special recognition has to be given to the emotional zeitgeist of The Last Man of Earth. It should be a crime to write a song that can consistently give you goosebumps, that can give you a huge emotional reaction each time, that can impress you this much. It’s easy to pick apart a song and mention which parts are good and give you that feeling, but to do that to this song would be bordering on sacrilege. (Bonus: listen to this performance of the song that was done on UK show Later… with Jools Holland and try not to be moved).

There are albums you recommend, and there are albums that you recommend. This one is the latter. If you have had any interest in Wolf Alice, you must listen to this album. Then show your family. Then show your friends. Music this good deserves to be shouted from the rooftops. Wolf Alice have created a masterclass in their own kind of music on Blue Weekend, and who are we to ask for anything more.

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Lane 8 takes Sultan + Shepard’s “nCTRL” for progressive spin with new remix

Back when Sultan + Shepard dropped “nCTRL” in March, house fans went haywire. Many had been waiting for the song to come out since Lane 8 played it during his sunrise stream a few months back, and so this news is going to be music to everyone’s ears. The legend has put his own groovy spin on it for a sensational remix that was released yesterday on his label This Never Happened, as part of Sultan + Shepard’s remix EP. 

The combination of these artists’ sounds makes for a match made in heaven. The “nCTRL” remix has an ethereal beginning, with shimmering chords and a slow, crawling build that lets you know you’re in for a true heater. Lane 8 takes their four-minute techno-inspired tune and fleshes it out into over seven minutes, infusing the track with a smooth yet powerful progressive tempo and breathing bouncy energy into an already vibrant song. 

You can listen to his version below. Enjoy!

Sultan + Shepard – nCTRL (Lane 8 Remix)

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