Best Indie Rock Songs, Bands, Albums

ALBUM: Shearwater’s ‘The Great Awakening’

The first full-length release in six years for Austin indie rock band Shearwater, The Great Awakening, was co-produced with Dan Duszynski.

Here are some selected reviews of Shearwater’s newest album:

Sputnikmusic (90):

It’s a dark, gorgeous, twisted, spine-tingling experience that is able to pull off such a decelerated pace because it owns that pace entirely, injecting it with haunting rhythms and naturalistic beauty.

Uncut (80):

Love and hope stay preciously rare yet infinitely possible, and this album’s guttering, guiding light.

Beats Per Minute (78):

Balancing stately pop ornamentation with more bombastically orchestrated moments, the album allows Meiburg to both indulge and scale back his dramaturgical impulses.

Mojo (60)

These opaque, often uneasy sounding songs conjure nature’s unpredictability and vulnerability as well as its beauty.
PopMatters (60)

There are at least a handful of worthwhile inclusions here, and Shearwater’s overarching purpose is admirable. Regrettably, though, good intentions don’t necessarily equate to good execution. For the most part, The Great Awakening is a plodding creation whose occasionally fascinating nuances and continually astute insights are marred by persistent musical tedium and hollowness.

STREAM: New track “Snow Fortress” from Copenhagen s/s he is tall

New song from Danish recording artist deals with acceptance and belonging

COPENHAGEN, Denmark – Indie DIY solo singer/songwriter Troels Thorkild Sørensen, who records nowadays using the moniker he is tall, has dropped a touching and playful new song, “Snow Fortress.”

“Despite the name, the last icy crystals of the winter are long ago melted by the songs outreaching ,” Sørensen writes.

The song is laid-back with a vibrant live sound featuring a confluence of vocal, acoustic, percussion and trumpet parts supported by soaring choruses. “It’s somewhere in between Arcade Fire and https://indierockcafe.com?s=arcade+fire,” adds Sørensen.

Describing the story behind the song, Sørensen writes: “Behind the extrovert sound of the song hides a very introvert and shy main character who is singing about wanting to succeed and fitting into ‘public space’ that one enters as a live performer.”

“The character in the story believes that the solution is to act as someone else and be an extrovert party animal,” he adds. “It all ends with he/she having to use extreme methods in the quest of transformation.”

Besides studio recordings, Sørensen has played numerous live shows around Denmark, including opening shows for international artists like Tyler Childers and The Divine Comedy.

As a one-man-army with an acoustic guitar, Sørensen manages to fill even large stages with his connective presence. In fact, this summer he will be playing a series of festival shows.

His musical influences are varied across the indie rock spectrum: “Growing up as a teenager I have been listening a lot to indie artists like Sufjan Stevens, Bon Iver and Florence and The Machine, but in the past years I’ve grown to really like hiphop and catchy pop melodies. I think my music has become a mix of what I listened to back then and what I listen to now. ‘Snow Fortress,’ he adds, “is a good example of that composite musical universe.”

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WATCH: Billie Eilish debuts new song, ‘TV,’ in Manchester

MANCHESTER, England – Billie Eilish is currently touring through the UK, and during tonight’s set at the AO Arena in Manchester, she debuted a brand-new song called “TV.” In a stripped-down performance, Eilish sat next to brother and producer Finneas (on acoustic guitar) to share the melancholy new track.

“We haven’t played a new song live before it’s out since 2017 or 2018,” Eilish said before launching into “TV.” “This is one we just wrote, and we just wanted to play for you.” This was Eilish’s first UK performance since she performed at Reading in 2019.

Later in the month, she’ll be back for Overheated, a multi-day climate event taking place at the O2 Arena in London on June 10-12 and 25-26.

Watch some fan-shot footage of Eilish and Finneas performing “TV” below.

Via Stereogum – see full original post

ALBUM: The Smile’s ‘A Light For Attracting Attention’

“There was a point a year and a half ago when I wondered whether I would be doing this again,” admitted Thom Yorke on stage at the Albert Hall last October. “I’m a British musician, and I was told during the pandemic, like all British musicians, that I should consider retraining. And after we finally left [the EU] they told us we didn’t really need to tour around Europe anyway, did we? So perhaps I’m one of a dying breed… who knows?”

That classic Radiohead sense of embattled, paranoid defiance was only amplified by Mark Jenkin’s video for The Smile’s “Skrting On The Surface”, released in March, which cast Yorke as a miner, 200 feet beneath Cornwall, his face grimy with soot and sweat as he trundled his lonely cart down a rail track.

Is UK indie rock one more venerable heartland industry to be blithely cast onto the national slagheap? Could Thom [first-named basis?] and Jonny Greenwood’s next jobs be in cyber?

It’d take a heart of stone not to smirk – but there’s something heartening about Yorke and Greenwood’s vocational commitment to angular, knotty, intensely pissed-off art-rock.

Stream album via Spotify

While their ’90s contemporaries have wandered far and wide in search of fresh purpose in the 21st century, they have remained steadfast, even when venturing through abstract electronica or orchestral soundtracks, in mining the same rich seam of truculence and awe.

So much so that The Smile, ostensibly a lockdown project for Thom, Jonny and Sons Of Kemet drummer Tom Skinner, along with long-time producer Nigel Godrich, feels more like a refreshment, refinement or even fulfilment of Radiohead core principles, rather than an extracurricular dalliance.

An early version of “Skrting…” was in fact a feature of the parent band’s live shows at least as far back as The King Of Limbs, while the surging, splenetic debut single “You Will Never Work In Television Again” (“He’s fat fucking mist/Young bones spat out/Girls slitting their wrists…”) suggests the apprentice work of a neural network trained on the Yorke lyrical canon.

On the irresistible one-two of “Open The Floodgates” into “Free In The Knowledge”, he even ventures as close as he’s come to the acoustic balladry of The Bends in a couple of decades.

Funnily enough, though A Light… feels on first listen like Continuity Radiohead, you might find the source or mother lode in a backstage performance from 2008, just Yorke and Greenwood with a couple of acoustic guitars, fingerpicking through Portishead’s “The Rip” as though they had just come up with it in an idle jam session.

The album begins with the forlorn life-support bleep of a fritzing antique Moog, and it surfaces like a subterranean river throughout an album which seems to chart the same blasted, war-torn landscape as Portishead’s Third.

Sensationally so on “Speech Bubbles”, the beautifully mournful centrepiece of the record, set in the eerie calm after a terror attack (“Devastation has come, left in a station with a mortar bomb”).

The serpentine guitar figure might be a cousin of the one that unravelled through the verses of “Paranoid Android”, but what takes the track to a new dimension is Greenwood’s orchestration.

If Robert Kirby’s strings once roamed over the vales of Nick Drake songs like the cumulus clouds in a Constable landscape, then here Greenwood’s rippling piano, breaking through looming uneasy strings and woodwind, feels like a sunbeam in an otherwise foreboding Ravilious seascape.

Continue reading on Uncut

FESTS:  Colorado’s Sonic Bloom electronic dance music festival is entering the metaverse

The festival will offer versions of its real-life elements through new virtual realms when the event returns from a two-year COVID-19 hiatus this month
by Angela Ufheil for 5280.com

The best music festivals are worlds unto themselves. Burning Man, for example, feels like a Mad Max–esque fever dream, while Coachella is a celebrity-studded carnival.

Since it started in 2006, Sonic Bloom, one of Colorado’s biggest electronic dance music festivals, has cultivated a techno-psychedelic summer camp vibe—and, this year, a trip into the metaverse will solidify that brand.

For the uninitiated, the metaverse is a developing network of 3D worlds that exist on the internet, à la Ready Player One. Like the characters in the 2018 sci-fi film, users can don goggles and explore virtual realms, where they interact with others.

The ever-expanding metaverse has long fascinated Annie Phillips, a Denver artist who, in 2019, designed metaversal replicas of her RiNo digital-art gallery, IRL Art, so customers could virtually peruse the exhibition space on different platforms.

“People look at the metaverse as checking out of reality,” Phillips says, “but it’s a cool way to still experience art and feel connected to a community.”

Continue reading on 5280.com

WATCH:  Trailer for upcoming Bowie documentary ‘Moonage Daydream’

Filmmaker Brett Morgen’s new David Bowie documentary, Moonage Daydream, calls his film an “immersive cinematic experience” created from thousands of hours of rare performance footage from Bowie’s earlier years.

The music doc premiered earlier this week at the high-brow, ‘prestigious’ Cannes Film Festival.

Much of the footage in the film features live performances and television show appearances among other video clips of Bowie’s career.

Moonage Daydream is set for theaters and IMAX this fall via NEON, and will stream on HBO Max in 2023.

WATCH:  xx’s Oliver Sim shares new single ‘Hideous’ about living with HIV

The xx’s Oliver Sim has announced his debut solo album, Hideous Bastard, which will be out September 9 via Young.

The album includes previous singles “Fruit” and “Romance with a Memory,” and has just shared a third single, the lush, string-laden “Hideous,” which was produced by his xx bandmate, Jamie xx, and features Bronski Beat and Communards cofounder Jimmy Somerville. He’s also shared its striking video, by director Yann Gonzalez, that just premiered at the Cannes Film Festival.

In a statement about the album and single, Sim revealed that he’s been HIV positive since he was 17. “Two thirds in, having a good idea of what the record was about, I realized I’d been circling around one of the things that has probably caused me the most fear and shame: my HIV status,” Sim writes.

“I’ve been living with HIV since I was 17 and it’s played with how I’ve felt towards myself, and how I’ve assumed others have felt towards me, from that age and into my adult life.”

Continue reading at BrooklynVegan

DEBUT: Midwest duo Black Masses drop self-titled debut and video

TERRE HAUTE, Indiana – Musician Samuel Mason started out playing house shows and festivals in previous projects that lead him to form Black Masses with accomplished drummer Austin Sheese.

In 2019, the duo dropped one album, Phases. Mason evolved again – releasing the self-titled album Black Masses, as well as the super-charged self-titled single and music video.

About the song, Mason writes: “Black Masses is a raw alternative rock record with booming drums and dirty guitars…the lyrics describe our estranged relationships with loved ones over time.

“People change and sometimes not in the ways we expect and that is what this song is all about from start to finish.” The track displays eloquently the duo’s accomplished songwriting and musicianship abilities and serves as a fitting intro to the rest of the album. Rarely, do you see a band name, album and single all with the same name.

The duo’s musical influences include Des Rocs, Royal Blood, and The Black Keys.

NEWS: U2’s Bono & The Edge perform in Kyiv bomb shelter

SPIN – On Sunday, Bono and the Edge played a short set in a Kyiv bomb shelter that was once a subway station, showing support for Ukraine. In a tweet post from U2‘s official account, the duo said that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy invited them to perform there.

 

In their short set, The Irish Times reports that the duo performed “With or Without You,” “Desire,” “Angel of Harlem,” “Vertigo” and a rendition of Ben E. King’s “Stand By Me.” The U2 bandmates performed the cover with a Ukrainian soldier and changed the “me” in “Stand By Me” with “Ukraine.” Throughout the set, Bono and The Edge were joined by local musicians, including Topolia who is serving in the country’s military.

“The people in Ukraine are not just fighting for your own freedom, you are fighting for all of us who love freedom,” Bono told the crowd. He also said that Ukranians’ fight was resonating across the globe and that there was nowhere he’d rather be than in the country’s capital city.

Last month, U2 participated in Global Citizen’s Stand Up for Ukraine live stream. During that, the band performed “Walk On” from 2000’s All That You Can’t Leave Behind. Previously, Bono wrote a poem expressing his support of Ukraine.

STREAM: Indie Rock’s Top 10 New Tracks – April 2022

April was a particularly exciting month for anticipated and big-name artist releases, as well as for some surprise drops by new and on-the-radar indie rock bands.

The kick-ass new single, “Taking Me Back,” from Jack White‘s latest album, easily made our No. 1 spot. Two decades on, White’s power as a force for rock music around the globe is unmistakable. Once the unofficial frontman of indie/alt guitar rock, White has since become a global phenomenon and an A-list rock star.

“Taking Me Back” proves that White can still apply his searing White Stripes-battle riffs with new ideas and concepts.

Plus, check out the other indie rock gems from The Smile; Silverbacks; DITZ; Kurt Vile (yes again); Built to Spill (still got it!); KEG; Viagra Boys, IDLES and another 2022 sensation: Wet Legs.

NOTE: Don’t miss the April Top 50 Songs playlist.

ALBUM: Spiritualized’s ‘Everything Was Beautiful’

Easily one of the pioneers of modern experimental rock/pop, and reputably claimed by some fans as trailblazers of the indie rock movement as a whole, Spiritualized return with an epic new album – Everything Was Beautiful – the band’s most sprawling release to date.

J Spaceman’s latest opus is gloriously satisfying and self-referential, refining his orchestral space rock with alchemical power.

Through sheer force of habit, sailing un-buffeted and serene through the winds of musical fashion, Spiritualized have reached their fourth decade as a paragon of musical constancy. Everything Was Beautiful, their ninth studio album, calls back to many of the band’s habitual influences: The Stooges, gospel, blues, free jazz, the Rolling Stones, et al., which the band finesses into a hypnotic mixture, capable of both savage intensity and benzodiazepine drift. More than anything, though, Everything Was Beautiful refers back to the band’s own gilded history—which would be a problem if they didn’t do it so shamelessly well.

While recording Everything Was Beautiful, Jason Pierce, once again operating under the J Spaceman moniker he has used periodically since his Spacemen 3 days, called on lessons learned when mixing Spiritualized’s classic third album, 1997’s ‘Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating in Space,’ notably the power of carefully constructed layers. The two albums share a spellbinding mixture of astral ambience, artfully tailored musical density, and occasionally sharpened live fury, as well as an emotional depth not always evident in the band’s more glazed-out moments.

(via Pitchfork)

From Bandcamp supporters:

Akira Watts “Everything just sort of comes together here and it’s close to perfect. I don’t think Spiritualized can make a bad album, but this one is very easily among their best. Comforting and joyful and exactly what I needed to hear. Favorite track: The A Song (Laid In Your Arms).”

marc_ian: “This is better than any preceding Spiritualized or Spacemen 3 record. Lush, pretty, catchy and a top notch trip. Favorite track: Let It Bleed (For Iggy).”

Under The Radar: (90)
“There is immensely evident craftsmanship that runs through the album, and a newly revitalized soul that, for all its beauty, And Nothing Hurt missed. If it turns out that Everything Was Beautiful is the last Spiritualized project we ever get, it is an unexpected gift that lives up to the best of Jason Pierce’s storied career.”

AllMusic (90):
Everything Was Beautiful is delirious and exciting, a perfect distilment of the best parts of the band’s various phases that feels reinvigorated and new.

The Telegraph (80)
You don’t need to be in an altered state to become overwhelmed by his mastery of controlled cacophony. It is a pleasure to report that everything is still beautiful in Pierce’s strange sonic world.

Glide Magazine (80)

“‘Everything Was Beautiful’ pulls heavily from throughout the Spiritualized catalog, whether it be the Ladies and Gentlemen-era “Best Thing You Ever Had”, the soft, sentimentality of Pierce’s mid-career work on “Crazy” or the lush balance of And Nothing. All those influences, and their tonal similarities to his last album, never distract or take away from the conceptual success of ‘Everything Was Beautiful.'”

ALBUM: DITZ – ‘The Great Regression’

It’s an album you’ve gotta hear and definitely one of the best debuts of 2022.

With bands like Yard Act, Fontaines D.C. and black midi fueling a new post-punk revival of sorts along comes Brighton, England post-punk band DITZ with a blazing debut, The Great Regression.

Let’s dip in to see what others are saying about the album:

PopMatters :

On their stellar debut,’The Great Regression’, Brighton five-piece DITZ come out hard and dark. They deliver an intense and sonically invigorating assault on the superficial politeness that masks systemic inequality while exploring the elements of personhood that cast some from the mainstream.
DITZ-band2

 Clash Music 
 
The music is stark and abrasive but there is a feeling of hope. Lurking underneath it all themes of gender and insecurity litter ‘The Great Regression’.

Uncut 
 
A record that is intensely visceral, loud and charged yet not needlessly overblown

 Pitchfork 
 
'The Great Regression' has fun pointing out the world’s contradictions, subverting its vulgarity, questioning its systems. At its peaks, it feels like an antidote for the ennui of ceaseless catastrophe.

Other reactions from around the web:

Bandcamp supporter Bardo Morales: “Love every second of it. Fresh ideas, direct execution, creepiness, grooviness. My new favourite emerging Post Punk band.””

Bandcamp supporter dicedfoot “Astounding debut album; a real feast for the ears. violent and beautiful.”

Emma Wilkes (DIY Mag): ‘The Great Regression’’s bravest moments reap the most rewards, and coincidentally, it’s where their identity feels strongest. ‘Ded Wurst’ is a greebo’s dancefloor dream, where jagged synths glitter between bursts of disgustingly deep guitar, while ‘Hehe’ delivers a mighty finishing move with a sludgy, weighty outro. There’s still a little greenness here and there – the Royal Blood-esque ‘Summer Of The Shark’ lacks a little individuality, for example – but in the position that DITZ have put themselves in, there are a lot of places for them to push the boat.

Record Label: Alcopop!