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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
slumberlandrecords

Prolific San Francisco artist Glenn Donaldson is back with his second record as Reds, Pinks & Purples in just six months and it is one for the ages. “Uncommon Weather” might be Glenn’s most personal record yet, a gorgeous and melodic snapshot of San Francisco full of beauty, melancholy and absolutely sterling tunes. I hear echoes of everything from The Chills to The Television Personalities to Blueboy, and you will no doubt hear others. “Uncommon Weather” is a tribute to the mysterious and enduring power of the best pop music and to Donaldson’s singular musical gifts. We’ve teamed-up with our friends at Tough Love in the UK to release this brilliant album, and it is out today.  Get it here: https://smarturl.it/uncommon-weather

indiepop indie sf
matadorrecords
(photo : Alysse Gafkjen)
If you are lucky enough to have a future where the present anxieties of distance become romantic memories, I hope there are people who turn this album over in their hands years from now and remember the world it tumbled into....

(photo :  Alysse Gafkjen)


If you are lucky enough to have a future where the present anxieties of distance become romantic memories, I hope there are people who turn this album over in their hands years from now and remember the world it tumbled into. A world that, in whatever future moment exists, will likely be defined by the work people undertook and the fights people continued to show up for. But it will also be a world defined by how many of us exist on the other side of distance.

In the moment, here is a new Julien Baker album that arrives as a world comes to newly understand its relationship with touch, with distance. At the time of this writing, I shouldn’t want to run into the arms of anyone I love and miss, and yet I do. In an era of hands pressed on the glass of windows, or screen doors. An era of hands reaching back. An era where touch became an illusion. If we have been unlucky enough, our own lifetimes have prepared us for the ever-growing tapestry of aches.

To wrestle with the interior of one’s self has become a side effect of the times, and will remain a side-effect of whatever times emerge from these. The first time I ever heard Julien Baker, I wanted to know how an artist could survive such relentless and rigorous self-examination. I have been lonely, I have been alone, and I have been isolated. There are musicians who know the nuances between the three. What whispers in through the cracks of a person’s time alone. Julien Baker is one of those artists. A writer who examines their own mess, not in a search for answers, but sometimes just for a way out. A lighthouse to some newer, bigger mess.

It is hard to put into words what this feels like. Little Oblivions is an album that steps into that feeling and expands it. Sonically, from the opening swells of sound on “Hardline” rattling the chest, loving but persistent jabs to the way “Relative Fiction” spills into “Crying Wolf,” which feels like speeding down a warm highway that quickly turns into a sparse landscape, drowning in a hard rain. Lyrically, too, of course. There are writers who might attempt to bang at the doors of their listeners, shouting their particular anguish of the hour. And there are undoubtedly times when I have needed that to get from one sunrise to the next. But there are also writers who show up assuming anyone listening already knows what it is to crawl themselves back from one heartbreak, or to shout into an enduring darkness and hear only an echo. Little Oblivions is an album that details the crawling, details the shouting. An album that doesn’t offer repair, or forgiveness. Sometimes, though, a chance to revel in the life that is never guaranteed. Yes, the life that grows and grows and is never promised. How lucky to still be living, even in our own mess.

The grand project of Julien Baker, as I have always projected it onto myself, is the central question of what someone does with the many calamities of a life they didn’t ask for, but want to make the most out of. I have long been done with the idea of hope in such a brutal and unforgiving world, but I’d like to think that this music drags me closer to the old idea I once clung to. But these are songs of survival, and songs of reimagining a better self, and what is that if not hope? Hope that on the other side of our wreckage – self-fashioned or otherwise – there might be a door. And through the opening of that door, a tree spilling its shade over something we love. A bench and upon it, a jacket that once belonged to someone we’d buried. Birds who ask us to be an audience to their singing. A small and generous corner of the earth that has not yet burned down or disappeared. I can be convinced of this kind of hope, even as I fight against it. To hear someone wrestling with and still thankful for the circumstances of a life that might reveal some brilliance if any of us just stick around long enough.

Julien, how good it is to hear you again. And now, in all of our anguish and all of our glory. I miss the way the outside world reflected myself back to me. Now, I make mirrors out of the walls. I am so thankful for a better noise than the howling of my own shadows. Julien, you have done it again. You expert magician. You mirror-maker. Thank you for letting us once again watch you maneuver through all of your pleasant and unpleasant self-renderings. If there is a future, there will be people in it who might not remember how this album came at a time when so many hungered for a chance to put themselves back together. When the imagination of a person, a city, a country, was expanding. When, despite all of that, in the quiet moments, there were people who still wanted to be held by someone they maybe couldn’t touch. Thank you, Julien, for this comfort. This glass box through which a person might better be able to see a use for their own grief. This kingdom of small shards of sunlight, stumbling their way in to disrupt the darkness.

— Hanif Abdurraqib


Hanif Abdurraqib julien baker little oblivions matador records
dustedmagazine

Yo La Tengo — We Have Amnesia Sometimes (Matador)

image

These quarantine days are formless, measureless, the minutes oozing by in a humid stasis, one very much like another, and if you made an attempt to imagine this in musical terms, it might sound a lot like this five-track EP from Yo La Tengo. This music was recording during the worst of the East Coast pandemic, in April, in Hoboken, with all three members gathering one assumes at least six feet apart, no singing, no talking.

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yo la tengo we have amnesia sometimes matador jennifer kelly albumreview dusted magazine indie drone instrumental quarantine
doomandgloomfromthetomb
Stephen Malkmus - MOTH Club, London, England, September 18, 2019
Via Tapeworm Stu, a nice recording of a recent Stephen Malkmus solo gig. Heavy on the askew synth-rock Groove Denied material, which is good – that album is definitely a grower. There...

Stephen Malkmus - MOTH Club, London, England, September 18, 2019

Via Tapeworm Stu, a nice recording of a recent Stephen Malkmus solo gig. Heavy on the askew synth-rock Groove Denied material, which is good – that album is definitely a grower. There are also some nice surprises, including some stripped down Pavement tunes (the “Black Out” that closes things out is gorgeous) and a pair of Silver Jews covers, which aren’t easy to listen to given the tragic events of last summer, but feel heartfelt and lovely all the same. And hey, speaking of Berman, I just stumbled across this handy webpage, which gathers together some otherwise uncollected DCB bits and bobs. 

Stephen Malkmus pavement silver jews
moretransistorssmashed

Bands still actually pay to be on compilations? I thought that died with the whole “vinyl’s back” trope a decade ago.

Seriously, every one of these “pay to be on our comp” deals always seems to have some heavy grift on the organizer’s part. There’s one being organized here now. One of the people behind it is constantly grifting. The locals he is corraling to be on it are either blind to that, dumb or simply don’t care.

Also, it seems every one of these types of comps just sits in the “local” section of any record store for years.

If a band’s whole goal is to have something out on vinyl, save up the cash and put one out themselves. The internet explains every step on how to.

Do not give some self-proclaimed scene keeper money to be part of their vanity project.