Alex Nicol – Working On My Tan
A release which “accepted this state of things, viewing honesty as the first step towards moving forward.” That’s how we described It’s Been a Long Year Vol. 1, the recent EP by the Montreal-based songwriter Alex Nicol. It was a collection of songs “written in a time when the pandemic only underlined years of chronic neglect and saw once bustling towns pushed further into decay,” which presented a lingering sense of loss with a wry playfulness. This December sees Nicol add a second batch of songs to the EP for a full-length album, Been A Long Year Vol. 1 & 2, and new single ‘Working On My Tan’ dials into this mood again to offer sound attuned to both the sadness and mysteriousness of the world we have created.
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Watch the video by Jérémie Boivin below:
Been A Long Year Vol.1 & 2 is out on the 1st December and you can pre-order it now.
Christopher Tignor – Forms In a Flame
Writing of previous single ‘Ritual of a Thousand Limbs‘, we described how Christopher Tignor’s new album The Art of Surrender “explore[s] instinctive territory, pushing the violin towards an almost atavistic sound which foregoes too much planning or intention to instead embrace raw movement.” The album is out now via Western Vinyl, and final single ‘Forms In a Flame’ is the jewel at the heart of the release. A mammoth, near thirteen-minute collision of poignant classical and urgent electronic styles, fragile, aching violin joined by glitter atmospherics and galloping percussion.
Daneshevskaya – Challenger Deep
Daneshevskaya‘s forthcoming album Long Is The Tunnel, out next month on Winspear, presents a peculiar image of time. One “where the past, present and future are treated not as distinct things but rather parts of an encompassing whole,” as we wrote of single ‘Somewhere in the Middle‘. It’s a fitting device for a record which explores how personal histories and present experiences come to shape the world as we experience it. Latest track ‘Challenger Deep’ is typical of the poetic tone of Daneshevskaya’s work, the wistful fondness of the delivery landing somewhere between lullaby, hymn and love song.
There’s a foxhole prayer I say
A mistake I like to make
Saving you for the end
It’s all pinks and reds
There’s a dog chasing the fence
And now I’ll never see you againWill you wait for me
Where there is no later on
Will you wait for me at the end, the end
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Watch the video filmed by Madeline Leshner and edited by Zach Stone below:
Long Is The Tunnel is out via Winspear on the 10th November and you can pre-order it now from the Daneshevskaya Bandcamp page.
Gilded Lows – Brave
After learning the trade as part of Austin jazz punk outfit Dead Swagger, Spencer Carter has since turned his attention to new project Gilded Lows. Taking some of the croon of the previous band and adding a healthy dose of cowboy attitude, Gilded Lows follows a lineage descending from Johnny Cash, Roy Orbison and Nick Cave. A country style charged by Spencer’s baritone to sound both full of longing and supremely confident. That old cowboy spirit where the wish for a better life is matched only by nostalgia for what was. The result is a present at once fatalistic and self-deprecating. “I’m not brave / I’m not sweet,” Spencer sings at the close of the track, “In fact, I’m the one who’s terrified of feeling much of anything.”
‘Brave’ is out now and available from the usual places.
Middle Sattre – Pouring Water
“It’s my way of processing internalized homophobia, religious trauma, and shame from growing up gay in the Mormon church,” explains lead Hunter Prueger of Middle Sattre. Writing songs as an act of both confrontation and defiance. The project started as a solo project in Salt Lake City and has since blossomed into a eight-piece in Austin, retaining the intensely personal tone while pushing the instrumentation in all sorts of interesting directions. The result, as captured by new single ‘Pouring Water’, lands somewhere between Sufjan Stevens and Typhoon, where collaboration brings a immersive richness to the sound but never occludes the intimate lyricism at the track’s heart.
Riley Skinner – Dirty
Based in Minneapolis, singer-songwriter Riley Skinner makes music that invites the listener into a world of honest and courageous vulnerability. Next month, she will release new album Surrender, a record that explores queer identity through the lens of the natural world, embracing its inherent chaos to experience the peace and acceptance at its heart. Latest single ‘Dirty’ is a great example, a quietly powerful folk rock song about finding the bravery to be your true self. “When I wrote ‘Dirty’,” Skinner describes, “I was thinking about the ways in which we withdraw from closeness and love because we feel we are not worthy or deserving of receiving it.”
Surrender releases on 10th November and you can pre-order it now from the Riley Skinner Bandcamp page.
TESHA – Like a man
Back in 2019, we wrote about Growing Pains II by Israeli-born, Brooklyn-based artist TESHA. A collection of songs we called “ethereal yet rooted in personal suffering,” it drew on the likes of Bjork and Fever Ray to combine experimental electronics with an otherworldly power. Now TESHA is back with a brand new single, ‘Like a Man’, which seethes with righteous anger as it takes aim at the patriarchy and the ongoing unrest in her home country. A dark and pulsating pop song, it urges an end to the masculine posturing and the blind search for power, instead finding strength in compassion and vulnerability.
‘Like a man’ is out now and available from the usual places.
Upper Narrows – My Lottery Dream
While We’re Warm, the upcoming album from Upper Narrows on Repeating Cloud, represents a meeting point between digital and organic sensibilities. “[Tyler] Jackson’s delivery [provides] that human core to what could otherwise be an almost extraterrestrial soundscape,” as we put it in a preview. “His voice [adds] a warmth so often lost in synth pop, and helps the album to live up to its name.” The final single before the album’s release, ‘My Lottery Dream’ furthers this style, leading the listener into a detailed, technological soundscape with the vocals as a guiding hand. But despite the blips and bloops, it maintains a real heartfelt humanity.
Weeper – De Algo Hay Que Morirse
‘De Algo Hay Que Morirse’, the new single from Buenos Aires-based indie pop band Weeper, was written about a recurring dream experienced by lead Mary Craig. “I used to drive people off of cliffs, bridges, etc to our deaths and wake up,” she describes. “When I dreamt the dream with my Argentine partner, he responded, ‘You have to die of something – De algo hay que morirse.’” The song starts gentle and heartfelt as it reflects on the dream’s sense of loss and guilt, but builds in energy as it progresses. “I’m alive and I can’t believe my luck,” Craig sings around the halfway mark as she comes to find a carefree joy in accepting her own mortality.
‘De Algo Hay Que Morirse’ is out now via streaming services.