An Triangles – Mother on You
The recording project of Boston‘s Doug Poppe, An Triangles works within a variety of styles to achieve its distinctively idiosyncratic sound. Think the emotion of Mount Eerie, the lo-fi energy of Pavement and Daniel Johnston-esque eccentricity. Ahead of debut album Triangular Life, Poppe has unveiled new single ‘Mother on You’. A slice of classic bummed-out bedroom pop which offers a glimpse into the inner child which drives the record’s curiosity and vulnerability. “And I know you got my bag / It’s got everything I have,” Poppe sings. “And I know you got my dues / It’s got everything I lose // I’ll call my mother on you.”
Blush Club – Ornamental Ponds
After the success of 2021 EP A Hill To Die On, Glasgow five-piece Blush Club are set to return later this year with a brand new EP, Ornamental Ponds. Ahead of the release, the band have unveiled the title track. It’s a song which adds a newfound catchiness to their hybrid pop/post-punk style, so while the leftfield jaunt and characteristically sardonic tone are still present, some of the frantic verbosity of the previous release is swapped for a slower, more confident flow. Which means we can now sing along with the cutting commentary on our rubbish-filled Anthropocene, pining for the sweet ignorance of the nineties.
Jacob Brodovsky – Night Baker
Winnipeg-based songwriter Jacob Brodovsky has shared brand new single, ‘Night Baker’, a character study of a figure facing long-hour loneliness amid the unseen ecosystem of a city at night. “The night baker leaves the lights on in the basement even though he never goes down there,” opens the song by way of introduction. “The night baker once a Christian now a Quaker leaves his shoes on when he walks down stairs.” Channelling the sincerity and wry humour of fellow Manitoban John K. Samson, Brodovsky presents the scene with equal parts playfulness and emotional resonance, our titular baker mocked by the sourdoughs and begged by the bagels as he pines after his lost love, the gluten-free flour asking if he is okay.
‘Night Baker’ is out now and available via various streaming services.
The Other Each Other – Heads
Apparently Joel Finch, frontman of Seattle punk rock outfit The Other Each Other, is not a real person. Their website has few details. There are no tour dates, no merch, no jazzy social media pages. Just a list of previous releases and the date of a forthcoming album, Mirror Memorials, coming later this summer. Single ‘Heads’ is the first taste of this new album, a conflicted track which struggles with the pandemic-era confinement while also appreciating the luxury of having a place to be stuck inside. Indeed the track has a twin, ‘Tails’, one of several count/counterpoint pairs on the record intended to more fully explore the nuances of living. “The truth is probably not just one perspective,” as Finch puts it, “but multiple.”
Mirror Memorials is out on the 19th August and you can find more info on their website.
Poolblood – twinkie
After releasing the EP Yummy back in 2019, Toronto-based artist Poolblood had only shared one single, ‘I’m Sorry’, a collaboration with Louie Short and Eliza Niemi. But signing to Next Door Records, this summer saw the first taste of a new phase of the Poolblood project with the single, ‘twinkie’. A rich and nostalgic sound lifting searching vocals, capturing a blend of fondness and uncertainty for the bittersweet summer croon we’re all craving. Check out the video directed and shot by Emma Cosgrove below:
‘twinkie’ is out now and available via the Poolblood Bandcamp page.
Pound Land – Bunker
Formed by lyricist Adam Stone (Future Bomb/Holy Ghost People) and multi-instrumentalist Nick Harris (Reverends of Destruction/ex-Dead Sea Apes), Pound Land is a self-described ‘kitchen-sink punk’ project based in Manchester. Their self-titled debut came out in 2020 on Misophonia Records, though Cruel Nature Recordings has recently put on Pound Land Plus, a repackaged version with extra material. Playing like The Fall meets Threads, new track ‘Bunker’ is as good an introduction to their pitch black style, a nine-minute noise punk behemoth ranting about dooms both future and present.
Thomas Stajcer – Building A Home (Yip Walla Wahoo)
Written on the back of a John Deere mower in Seaforth, NS, ‘Building a Home (Yip Walla Wahoo)’ is not the usual slice of American melancholy or heartbreak you might expect from a good old fashioned folk song. The latest release from Thomas Stajcer, the track instead celebrates life’s blessings, however big or small they might be, with the playful energy of John Prine or more recent compatriots like Doug Poole. The result is a lesson in looking forward in a genre that’s often all too ready to look back.
Tunnel – Lemonhead
The project of LA‘s Natasha Janfaza, Tunnel are readying the release of their debut EP, Vanilla on Washington DC label House of Joy. The record sees Janfaza joined by D Saperstein, Owen Wuerker and Fugazi drummer Brendan Cant, who come together to craft a sound that owes as much to 90s rock and alt pop as it does to contemporary acts like Snail Mail. ‘Lemonhead’ is the EP’s lead single, what the band describe as a “soft and cruel” song which introduces both the Tunnel sonic sensibility and their general sense of apathetic cool. Janfaza delivers her vocals with a sardonic edge (“Tell me the truth,” she sings in the opening line, “I’ll think you’re lying”), which transforms a tale of frustrated romance into something that feels fresh and raw.
Love is fine
Love is boring