weekly listening march 2022, volume 2 with an illustration of daffodils

Weekly Listening: March 2022 #2

Cherokee Rose – To All the Wild Horses

Buckskin, the debut album by Cherokee Rose was recorded in the early 90s thanks to a connection to a session engineer at Prince’s Paisley Park Studios. But limited to a small cassette run, which was sold to fans at shows in 1993, the album never achieved the widespread success it deserved. Follow-up To All the Wild Horses was better supported, particularly on reservation radio stations and Native cultural festivals, but still Rose’s music was held back from mainstream acclaim. As a result, both albums have existed in a kind of limbo in the years since, that is until they were discovered by Joe Steinhardt of Don Giovanni Records. He set about tracking down Cherokee Rose and approached her about reissuing the records. In celebration of the release, Cherokee Rose has unveiled a video for the title track of To All the Wild Horses, animated by Chicago artist and musician Izzy True. Check it out below:

To all the wild horses, may you run forever free
May you never feel the yoke of man
Upon your windswept mane
May you pound the heartbeat of the earth
Through canyons wild and tame

Buckskin and To All the Wild Horses are out now via Don Giovanni Records. Order them from the Cherokee Rose Bandcamp page.

Crumbsnatchers – Keep Your Honey

Led by frontman ‘Guetts’ Guetterman, Nashville‘s Crumbsnatchers have made their name with a moreish blend of pop, punk and rock, all tied together by Guetterman’s playful vocals. This was challenged on latest single ‘Keep Your Honey’ for Like You Mean It Records, when Guetterman developed vocal nodules on the day of recording. But it was always going to take more than that to stop them. Instead, he merely sang at a conspicuously lower vocal range, deviating from the usual Crumbsnatchers style but losing none of the spirit in its sinuous, sensual sound

‘Keep Your Honey’ is out now via Like You Mean It Records.

The Dead Tongues – Little Lies

April sees the release of Dust, the fifth record from Ryan Gustafson’s The Dead Tongues project, though it could easily have been very different. Disillusioned with the identity he had built as a musician, Gustafson was keen to purge all his old material from his life and even change his name, though a chance flick through an old notebook directed him to parts of his past selves he was not so ready to lose. Dust emerged from this moment, written with a newfound sense of freedom and fun, recorded in just nine days. Latest single ‘Little Lies’ captures both the loneliness of an identity crisis and the affirming momentum granted when leaning into change.

It’s all the same
No matter what you do
It’s all the same
Whether not it’s true
It’s all the same
When you’re talking to
Someone in your mind
The whole night through

Dust is out via Psychic Hotline on the 1st April and you can pre-order it now from The Dead Tongues Bandcamp page.

Jenny Berkel – Kaleidoscope

“A communication intimate in tone but fully appreciative of the vastness within a person.” That’s how we described ‘You Think You’re Like the Rain’ from Jenny Berkel‘s upcoming album These Are the Sounds Left from Leaving on Outside Music. The latest single from the Canadian poet and songwriter is no less evocative. As the title suggests, ‘Kaleidoscope’ pitches the listener into a disorientating accumulation of information, using a personal instance of manipulation to evoke the wider erosion of truth in the contemporary age.

These Are the Sounds Left from Leaving is out via Outside Music on the 8th April and you can pre-order it now.

Jo Schornikow – Lose Yr Love

Australian songwriter Jo Schornikow recently announced a new album, ALTAR on Keeled Scales. It’s her first new music since 2019’s Secret Weapon, a record we described as “something of a prayer, an album of tender words drawn from love and fear and tied in an awareness of time’s passing and the beauty of things,” and promises to continue her characteristically intimate and inventive songwriting.

Schornikow this week unveiled a video for the album’s second single, ‘Lose Yr Love’, a track which suggests the album will offer more than quiet beauty. It’s a lush folk pop song, sparkled with synths and an airy sense of possibility that belies its sombre subject matter. “‘Lose Yr Love’ grew from a real-life nightmare of losing someone,” Schornikow explains. “The song explores the fear before the fall-out, before finality. It’s a quick and awful spiral, but also a natural counterside of love.”

ALTAR will be released on 2nd May via Keeled Scales and you can preorder it now from the Jo Schornikow Bandcamp page.

John Roseboro – The Banquet

Last year, Haitian-American artist John Roseboro released his debut album, Human Nature. It introduced a distinctive style that draws inspiration from folk, bossa nova and jazzy lounge singer-songwriter material. Spirited music crafted from equal parts bright compassion and steadfast belief. Latest single ‘The Banquet’ is again informed by this rich fondness, breathing relief and joy into a fraught moment, emerging with a calm conviction as to what comes next.

You don’t have to live in fear anymore

‘The Banquet’ is out now and available via the John Roseboro Bandcamp page.

Lady Dan – Not In Love

“I’d like to write a love song about anyone,” opens the latest single from Texas-based outfit Lady Dan. “The problem is I’m so angry all the time / and I’m not in love.” The song builds upon the mood established on last year’s record I Am a Prophet on Earth Libraries, probing into the complicated tangle of existence not with timid reluctance but fierce determination. The result is both stinging and affirming, seizing the wound in order to close it, or perhaps just to feel the pain.

‘Not In Love’ is out now via Earth Libraries and available from Bandcamp.

Mila Webb – Lucky Nights

Ahead of an EP titled Lucky Nights, coming soon on Perpetual Doom, songwriter Mila Webb has unveiled the title track to introduce her lush and reflective brand of folk music. But for all of the warmth of the lap steel and melodies which comprise her classic sound, the music of Mila Webb is shaded by darkness too. “In the demos that became Lucky Nights, I was writing about the sort of restlessness and unfairness of being left wanting more when something dies,” she explains. “It’s everything to do with the passage of time and my attempts to cope with it.” I’m also coping with my feelings about watching the earth lose beauty as it tries to survive human destruction.” The single delves into this darkness, searching for any light within.

The Lucky Nights EP is out via Perpetual Doom later this year.

MXMS – Wave of Mutilation

Self-described ‘funeral pop’ duo MXMS (Me and My Shadow) consists of singer Ariel Levitan and multi-instrumentalist Jeremy Dawson. Having initially operated with minimalist arrangements of piano and vocals, the New York pair gradually expanded their sound to a variety of instruments, though made sure to maintain the haunting spirit which informed their early work. Their most recent single, a cover of Pixies classic ‘Wave of Mutilation’ is a perfect example of this aesthetic. The widescreen sound rings with a clarity only possible in wide open space, as recordings of some other time seep through in the background.

‘Wave of Mutilation’ is out now and you can find out more from the MXMS website.

S. T. Manville – How To Belong

Back in October we wrote about How To Belong, an EP from UK songwriter S. T. Manville, and to book-end this period of his career, he has returned with a new single of the same name. “I’ve always been jealous of people that have a strong sense of heritage and identity,” Manville explains. “An infinity with a place or culture, I’ve never had that.” Unfurling with a melancholic patience, the wrestles with this feeling via the banal details of life on the road, Manville both mourning the home he doesn’t have and making peace with the situation as best he can. “I started writing this song when I woke up in a hotel one morning after playing a show, stupidly hungover and feeling like shit about everything,” he continues. “I realised I felt crappy because I was never in the same place for longer than a few days at a time.”

‘How To Belong’ is out now and available via streaming services. Check out the S. T. Manville Bandcamp page for previous releases.