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Advance
Best New Music
Fuck Buttons
"The Red Wing (Edit)"
Chvrches
"Gun"
Disclosure
"When a Fire Starts to Burn"
Glass Candy
"Warm in the Winter"
Daft Punk
"Doin' It Right" [ft. Panda Bear]
The National
"Sea of Love"
Various Artists
After Dark 2
The second installment of Italians Do It Better's After Dark compilation features muscular updates on their buzzy neon template by the likes of Chromatics, Glass Candy, and Mirage. Its assembly line nature also reminds us that while some strains of classic dance music were meticulous and expert, many were cheap and quick.
Baths
Obsidian
After an illness, Will Wiesenfeld channeled his pent-up frustrations and desires-- for escape, for artistic growth, for transformation, for death, for self-actualization-- into Obsidian, a significantly darker record than Cerulean.
Dirty Beaches
Drifters / Love Is the Devil
The latest from Alex Zhang Hungtai's reference-heavy experimental music project is a double album. One half offers some electronics-heavy twists on the desert noir songs of his last album, Badlands, while the other veers into abstraction. Taken together, they offer a sonic travelogue that takes the textural aspects of his work to impressionistic heights.
King Tuff
Was Dead
Burger Records reissue King Tuff's incredibly sought-after 2008 LP, which rebooted the project after several years of playing with Feathers, and J Mascis collaboration Witch. It cemented Kyle Thomas as a grade-A purveyor of power pop-inclined rock'n'roll: Was Dead features one exhilarating hook after another.
Four Tet
Rounds
For listeners who knew Kieran Hebden from his days in instrumental post-rock outfit Fridge and who might have considered his early recordings under the name of Four Tet as more of a side attraction, his 2003 album Rounds announced the arrival of one of electronic music’s vanguard producers. This reissue adds an excellent live set from the period.
The Breeders
LSXX
The expanded 20th anniversary edition of the Breeders' breakthrough affirms its status as an alt-rock classic. The set includes a 1994 live show and a disc of rarities and demos that put the finished product in context. Meanwhile, the EPs from the period show off the wide stylistic range of everything the Breeders could do well.
Reviews
Various Artists
After Dark 2
By Andrew Gaerig
The second installment of Italians Do It Better's After Dark compilation features muscular updates on their buzzy neon template by the likes of Chromatics, Glass Candy, and Mirage. Its assembly line nature also reminds us that while some strains of classic dance music were meticulous and expert, many were cheap and quick.
Tricky
False Idols
By Nate Patrin
Tricky's newest collection returns to the ethereal, almost fragile intensity that marked his well-loved 1995 debut Maxinquaye, but with the more solemn perspective of a grown man who's felt like he's lost his way.
Classixx
Hanging Gardens
By Larry Fitzmaurice
While Classixx have made a name for themselves as internet remixers du jour, that by no means guaranteed a strong original debut album. But Hanging Gardens shows the duo to be great producers and songwriters. It's bright, warm, and breezy, making its early summer release perfectly timed.
Sean Nicholas Savage
Other Life
By Jamieson Cox
Sean Nicholas Savage's latest album for Arbutus is an unvarnished, honest set of avant-pop meditations on love and identity. His love of adult-contemporary instrumentation rendered tinny and toy-like recalls Dan Bejar's Destroyer, while his unflinching narratives mean he shares more than just a label with Majical Cloudz.
Jenny Hval
Innocence is Kinky
By Stephen M. Deusner
Norway's Jenny Hval makes a breakthrough on Innocence Is Kinky, her second album for Rune Grammofon. In the past, her music has tended toward subdued art-pop; as this title suggests, her new album is more direct, more brazen, more aggressive, and more provocative, both conceptually and musically.
Kylesa
Ultraviolet
By Grayson Currin
Since their inception, Kylesa have translated instability into energy, outlasting membership changes and tragedies to create strange and compelling stylistic welds. But on their darker sixth album, the Savannah band sometimes let this genre pillaging overtake their songcraft.
Rivers Cuomo / Scott Murphy
Scott & Rivers
By Ian Cohen
Weezer's Rivers Cuomo hooked up with Scott Murphy, frontman for pop-punk band Allister, for this Japanese-language album. Released on Universal’s Japanese imprint, Scott & Rivers splits most of its time between ruthlessly utilitarian power pop and midtempo, jangly acoustic alt-rock.
Eluvium
Nightmare Ending
By Brian Howe
Eluvium's commanding new double LP was supposed to be the immediate successor to the drone artist's 2007 album Copia. Although there's been five years of mixed successes in between, it's Copia's contemporary at least in terms of quality, providing an alternately delicate and deluging take on Matthew Cooper's penchant for elegant piano and dreamy electronics.
Agrimonia
Rites of Separation
By Kim Kelly
Rites of Separation is Agrimonia's first album since 2010's Host of the Winged, and their debut for Southern Lord. It recalls the work of Downfall of Gaia and Tragedy, embracing their crust punk foundations, but constantly branching out in search of more.
Human Eye
4: Into Unknown
By Evan Minsker
Underground rock'n'roll kingpin Timmy Vulgar has recorded some of his most boisterous work over the past two years, releasing scummy, blown-out rock as Timmy's Organism, and sci-fi psych as Human Eye-- whose wild fourth album backs away from the muscle of 2011's They Came From the Sky.
The-Dream
IV Play
By Andrew Ryce
Terius Nash's fourth solo album as The-Dream is packed with guest stars including Jay-Z, Beyoncé, and 2 Chainz. In one sense, it feels like a bold grab at the pop stardom that has eluded him in his solo career. But for the first time, it feels like he’s trying to keep up with everyone else.
CocoRosie
Tales of a GrassWidow
By Brian Howe
After building their career on provocation and repulsion, the Casady sisters' fifth album feels remarkably straightforward. Grass Widow highlights CocoRosie's most practical songwriting, with refreshingly natural vocals and themes that tend toward the soapy and sentimental rather than disturbing.
King Tuff
Was Dead
By Evan Minsker
Burger Records reissue King Tuff's incredibly sought-after 2008 LP, which rebooted the project after several years of playing with Feathers, and J Mascis collaboration Witch. It cemented Kyle Thomas as a grade-A purveyor of power pop-inclined rock'n'roll: Was Dead features one exhilarating hook after another.
Still Corners
Strange Pleasures
By Ian Cohen
The second album by the London dream-pop duo sees them establishing a presence more than a personality, offering miniature motorik jams and nebular atmospheres of ethereal gauze and smooth alabaster.
Mount Kimbie
Cold Spring Fault Less Youth
By Andrew Gaerig
On the London duo's second album, and first for Warp, they alter course from the manicured electronics of their debut, taking more risks-- especially with their vocals, and those of unexpected collaborator King Krule. And refreshingly, there's no nostalgia, dubby decay or wistfulness here.
Baths
Obsidian
By Ian Cohen
After an illness, Will Wiesenfeld channeled his pent-up frustrations and desires-- for escape, for artistic growth, for transformation, for death, for self-actualization-- into Obsidian, a significantly darker record than Cerulean.
The Pastels
Slow Summits
By Mike Powell
The Pastels' first proper release in 16 years is typically intimate, marrying the rough naïveté of indie pop with soft, jazzy music influenced by the likes of Burt Bacharach. Chicago studio wizard and multi-instrumentalist John McEntire captures each sigh and flourish in vivid clarity.
Kingdom
Vertical XL EP
By Nate Patrin
Few producers have made the recent transition from underground bass music enigma to pop-adjacent craftsman as seamlessly and effectively as Brooklyn's Kingdom. On his new Vertical XL EP, he's closer than ever to perfectly balancing the two things in his music that've always stood out: heavy pulses and airy spaces.
When Saints Go Machine
Infinity Pool
By Stuart Berman
This Danish quartet doesn't just embrace electronics, it surrenders to them. The band’s previous two releases inspired no lack of synth-pop descriptors, but for them, the synthesizer is a literal concept-- an interface that allows them to fuse the human and the artificial, and translate emotions into digital frequencies and vice versa.
Black Host
Life in the Sugar Candle Mines
By Hank Shteamer
Forward-thinking avant jazz drummer Gerald Cleaver proves a formidable bandleader on the fourth album by Black Host, where he's joined by saxist Darius Jones, guitarist Brandon Seabrook, and pianist Cooper-Moore. Spanning crunchy, choppy jazz rock to hazy psychedelic ambiance, Life... exudes a raw, otherworldly beauty.
Four Tet
Rounds
By Andy Beta
For listeners who knew Kieran Hebden from his days in instrumental post-rock outfit Fridge and who might have considered his early recordings under the name of Four Tet as more of a side attraction, his 2003 album Rounds announced the arrival of one of electronic music’s vanguard producers. This reissue adds an excellent live set from the period.
Pure X
Crawling Up the Stairs
By Harley Brown
Where this Austin outfit's debut album unfurled like a drop of ink in a glass of water, its follow-up has a plan, and was meticulously constructed in the wake of a tough time for the band. They did away with the reverb, lending the album a crystalline clarity, and allowing the wild vocal performances to shine through.
Saturday Looks Good to Me
One Kiss Ends It All
By Paul Thompson
When East Michigan's premier indie-poppers released Fill Up the Room over five years ago, many, founder Fred Thomas included, thought it would be their last. Yet they return with the warm, wistful One Kiss Ends It All, which plays like a mixtape of lonesome teenage classics.
Dean Blunt
The Redeemer
By Nick Neyland
The latest from the one-time member of shadowy experimental outfit Hype Williams veers in the direction of proper song and sounds heartbroken, boasting sad horn solos, sweeping strings, and harp flurries, along with ominous clock chimes and distraught voicemail messages.
Xenia Rubinos
Magic Trix
By Laura Snapes
This Brooklyn-dwelling singer-songwriter's music is marked by her electric, smoky voice and overdriven keyboards, and a syncopation-happy rhythm section that leans toward funk.
Tracks
Iamsu!
"Rep That Gang"
Shampoo Boy
"Gift"
Laura Welsh
"Cold Front"
Lockah / Taste Tester
"U Don't Know Me"
Austra
"Painful Like"
Karl X Johan
"Never Leave Me"
Joey Bada$$
"Word Is Bond"
Pure Bathing Culture
"Pendulum"
Chvrches
"Gun"
Morne
"New Dawn"
Close
"My Way (Dusky Remix)" [ft. Joe Dukie]
Elliphant
"Music Is Life"
Juan Atkins / Moritz Von Oswald
"Mars Garden"
Photo Galleries
Features
Overtones
Rap Game Pikachu
Jayson Greene on the current sound of street-rap production-- popularized by beatmakers including Metro Boomin' (Future) and Young Chop (Chief Keef)-- which flips Lex Luger's minor-key formula into something lighter and more playful.
Show No Mercy
Deafheaven
George Clarke, lead screamer for San Francisco's Deafheaven, talks with Brandon Stosuy about his band's triumphant new album, Sunbather, and its deeply personal themes involving depression, family, and the strange desire for wealth.
Guest Lists
Majical Cloudz
Confessional Montreal singer/songwriter Devon Welsh talks to Jenn Pelly about his point-blank performance style, the genius of Arthur Russell and Radiohead, falling for boy bands and nu metal in his youth, and the dangers of singing while driving.
Articles
Queue Up: 20 Essential Music Docs
From the smacked-out Rolling Stones travelogue Cocksucker Blues, to house music history lesson Pump Up the Volume, to a behind-the-scenes look at Fleetwood Mac, Eric Harvey collects 20 great music docs you can stream online right now.
Cover Story
Daft Punk
After 20 years, the world has finally caught up with Daft Punk, so the helmet-clad retro-futurists are embarking on a new mission: to make music breathe again. By Ryan Dombal; photos by Nabil.
Articles
The National
The band talks to Laura Snapes about the making of their new album, Trouble Will Find Me, including an unfortunate run-in with Mitt Romney, nearly being leveled by a tornado, and coming to grips with the stark realities of their own mortality.
Articles
Primavera Sound 2013
Larry Fitzmaurice and Corban Goble run down the highlights, lowlights, fashion trends, and more from last weekend's fest in Barcelona, Spain, including coverage of Animal Collective, My Bloody Valentine, the Postal Service, and Crystal Castles.
Guest Lists
DJ Koze
The veteran German electronic producer talks to Larry Fitzmaurice about finding inner peace in India, getting depressed by TV's evil omnipotence, loving Animal Collective and Louis C.K., and being totally incapable of watching cartoons of any sort.