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New Album Review

Lingua Ignota: Sinner Get Ready

With 2019’s “Caligula,” Lingua Ignota established herself as one of the leading voices in a number of genres. She’s achieved a level of mainstream indie success that eclipses most her peers in classical, metal, darkwave, or power electronics. “Caligula,” was a dark and trying indictment of extreme music, tying the genres violent and misogynistic imagery with Hayter’s own experiences of abuse within the community. Her live shows were known for having most audience members in tears by the intermission, her music reflected that reputation. This is all to say that Lingua Ignota had a very established brand going into her next album cycle, and she had seemingly already released her masterpiece. Personally, as someone who loved “Caligula,” a little too much, I was skeptical as to whether she could really evolve from this without abandoning her brand entirely because she’d seemingly achieved all she possibly could with her current style. Boy was I wrong about that.

“Sinner Get Ready,” is a stylistic and thematic shift, starting at roughly the same emotional point her last album ended on, with Hayter’s operatic elegy to God of “I don’t give a f—, just kill him, I’m not asking.” But this initial desperation gives way to a more melancholic and instrumental experience centered on sacred music. Hayter has occupied roughly every position on faith you could imagine, from alter girl to new atheist, but she returns to religious imagery from the perspective of a respectful outsider here. Like I said earlier, I love Lingua Ignota’s music enough that I’m probably not able to give an evenhanded or objective review of this album. Instead, I want to take on a tour of the religious aspects of Ingota’s music, because while her faith was always a part of her music, it really takes centerstage on “Sinner Get Ready.”

During the pandemic, Hayter moved to Pensyltucky and immediately needed incredibly painful and debilitating surgery on her spine. This pain, combined with the rural atmosphere, saw Hayter looking to the sacred music of Appalachia for inspiration. This move is not entirely out of character. While we associate folk with lighthearted music and upbeat country songs, traditional Southern folk music, especially music dealing with religion, is pervaded by ambience of death and millenarism that meets Ignota’s dark and theatrical energy. She sings songs of the apocalypse on “REPENT AND CONFESS NOW,” which features such uplifting religious messages as, “I can’t say I don’t deserve it, he took my legs and my will to live.”

Ignota’s vision of God might be unfamiliar to you if you didn’t grow up Catholic or hardline Calvinist. The current tone of megachurch-style evangelical Christianity is positive, uplifting, and focused on the love and mercy of God, and this dominates public perception of Christianity as very chipper and a little detached from reality. Lingua Ignota focuses on the God I remember from the Presbyterian Church: the God of wrath and suffering. This makes her new album about as depressing as music can get, as she combines harsh and dissonant instrumentals with lyrics preoccupied with death, hell, and the day of judgement.

Now, if that sounds like something you would never want to listen to, that’s very understandable. However, there’s something deeply beautiful at the bottom of all this angst and atmosphere. Lingua Ignota has a deep genuine respect for the types of music she’s using, going as far as to learn banjo and cello for this project. Many a classical composer has taken inspiration from this region, but what “Sinner Get Ready,” does that is absent in “Appalachian Spring,” is empathize with the deep sadness and intergenerational pain that the music’s beauty masks. So, when Ignota draws in samples that challenge the culture she’s appropriating, such as televangelist Jimmy Swaggart’s crocodile tears of repentance or a woman proclaiming that she will not get covid because she’s covered in Jesus’ blood, it doesn’t feel like a cheap insult (see The Queitus for that terrible take on this album). Instead, it feels like a shot of realism to balance the unconditional musical admiration in display in the instrumentals.

The least discussed, and in my opinion, most important sample on the album comes very early. It’s an interview with a mountain hermit discussing his solitary lifestyle and his music. He sings a few lines of an old hymn, before recalling to the audience that he can still her his dead mother singing it in a church pew decades ago. It’s a sample that pulls the emotional weight and the perverse addictiveness of this kind of hopeless caterwauling. It’s one of countless touching but sad moments on a touching but sad album.

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New Album Review

Scout [EP] by Samia Review

ALBUM: “Scout” by Samia

RELEASE YEAR: 2021

LABEL: Grand Jury Music

RATING: 7/10

BEST TRACKS: “As You Are,” “Show Up” and “The Promise”

FCC: None

“Scout” by Samia is the new companion to her first album “The Baby”. The EP came out July 23, 2021, around a year after the release of “The Baby”. Although this EP is not ‘quarantine music’, it still feels self-reflective. The title “Scout” is Samia’s nickname. Samia has been called a coming-of-age artist, someone who makes music that can move from earnestness to angst in a split second. This EP is full of true love feelings, Samia sings about her family and friends, promising to love them unconditionally. “Scout” plays with different genres, moving from indie-pop to rock to a touch of electronica. 

As You Are

The first track on the EP begins and ends with fuzzy and comforting voicemails. The piano accompaniment works well with Samia’s strong vocals. This track leans more towards pop, catchy and foot-tapping. 

Show Up

This song begins slow and soft, but the crescendo a minute in dramatically shifts the song. This track reminds me of Mitski, they both have hard-hitting lyrics and show-stopping vocal skills.  

Elephant

This track has a more shoegaze sound. Samia’s vocals rise above the reverb. This is the shortest song on the EP, I wish it was longer. The lyrics are powerful and haunting.  

The Promise ft. Jelani Aryeh 

A cover of When in Rome’s’ “The Promise”, Samia makes this track her own. The 80’s synth transforms the song. Jelani Aryeh’s vocals complement Samia, and they harmonize perfectly. 

So excited to hear what comes next for Samia.

-DJ lil witch

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New Album Review

“Take the Sadness Out of Saturday Night” New Album Review

ALBUM: “Take the Sadness Out of Saturday Night” by Bleachers

RELEASE YEAR: 2021

LABEL: RCA Records Label

RATING: 7.25/10

BEST TRACKS: “Chinatown” “How Dare You Want More” “Stop Making This Hurt”

FCC: None

“Take the Sadness Out of Saturday Night” is finally out after over a year of teasing by Jack Antonoff, who said at the beginning of 2020 that his third album would come at some time that year. 

With a total of 10 songs that clock in at nearly 34 minutes, this album contains collaborations with Annie Clark (better known as St. Vincent), Lana Del Rey and Bruce Springsteen. The three singles “45,” “Chinatown” and “Stop Making This Hurt” are indubitably three of the strongest tracks.

As a fan of Antonoff, I was somewhat surprised by how reminiscent of Bleachers’ previous album, “Gone Now,” this release was. To Antonoff’s credit, he did experiment more than usual on this record, as seen with an instrumental solo in the back half of “How Dare You Want More” and strong vocals in the opening track, “91”. However, he seemed to fall back into his own tropes of big jazzy instrumentation and writing about the same themes he’s been writing about for his entire solo career (shadows, heroes/being saved, and waking up being just a few of the tropes he falls back on). What once felt like a refreshing take on pop music is now starting to feel somewhat trite.

What some may see as repetitive, others may interpret as cohesive and consistent, so it’s a matter of how you frame the context surrounding the album. Criticism aside, the album is good, and definitely worth the listen, but simply not what I was hoping to see from Antonoff. 

Track 9, “Strange Behavior” (previously known as “Behavior”), is a cover of a song he had written in Steel Train, a former band of his. The new rendition is more soulful and intimate than the previous, but I’m partial to the rock instrumentation and the overall execution on the Steel Train version.

As always happens with a Bleachers record, the album’s themes and generally upbeat nature left me feeling hopeful, which is a rare and beautiful gift that Antonoff possesses, and is one that just can’t be taught. Although I definitely prefer Bleachers’ two previous records, “Strange Desire” and “Gone Now,” I appreciate the artistry and love that clearly went into “Take the Sadness Out of Saturday Night.”

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New Album Review

New Album Review: Thirstier by TORRES

In this age of music consumption, I find myself listening to albums in a way that wouldn’t have been done fifteen years ago. I’ll often listen through one time, extract the songs I like into a playlist, and rarely go back to it in album form if it’s not one of my absolute favorites. I’ll often measure albums on how many good to great songs I can pull from it, or the ratio of those to the total number of songs. If you listen to music that way, and I’m pretty sure most people my age do, “Thirstier” will be a very memorable experience, otherwise, it might seem like less than the sum of its parts.

The parts themselves are great. Over the last decade, TORRES has built a strong discography around whip-smart lyrics, genre fusions and emotive guitar work, and those are all here and putting on a show. Opening tracks are usually some of my least favorite songs to listen and relisten to because of how much they need the album around them to really hit, so it was refreshing to see “Are You Sleepwalking?” just go for it and be fun and hard-hitting on its own terms. The lead single “Don’t Go Puttin Wishes in My Head” combines her country-adjacent vocal style with a pulsating base of synthesizers and a driving rock beat that turns what could have been overly wordy choruses into butter. This song feels like if The Killers remixed her previous best songs and it had me very excited to hear the rest of the project. The album finishes strong too. A glitchy electronic drumbeat propels “Kiss the Corners” into your memory immediately, but it’s kept there by instantly iconic vocal harmonies in the chorus. And “Hand in the Air” finds its groove instantly and stays in it the whole time, with subtle but attention-grabbing piano parts leading into warm walls of sound that mirror the urgent and powerful vocal delivery.

The issue, therefore, isn’t the foundations or the highlights they produced, but the uneven pacing. I pretty much skipped over the whole middle for a reason, there isn’t much there to talk about. Nothing here is bad by any means, but it just doesn’t click in that ethereal way the best songs on the album figured out how to do. “Big Leap” has a mournful tone that hooked me in, but the narrative being told felt a little unfocused and I wasn’t taken to where I felt the song wanted me to go. Both “Hug From a Dinosaur” and “Thirstier,” both felt slightly clunky; either a chorus that didn’t land or sounding just too overblown for their own good. And all of these otherwise small issues are magnified when they’re all stuffed into one section.

Now, this isn’t a big deal if you listen to albums like I do. The aforementioned highlights truly are highlights and songs that I don’t see leaving my music rotation for a long time. If that’s how the album is remembered, then it’s another classic from TORRES. But if you prefer to knock out entire albums in one sitting multiple times, then you might be skipping more tracks than you’d want.

– Erie Mitchell

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New Album Review

Scout by Samia EP Review

“Making it look easy is the hardest thing in the world to do” – Sarah Ban Breathnach

One of the best ways an album can be enjoyable to listen to is by sounding effortless. This works for any genre; being able to settle into a groove and make the listener think the carefully planned lyrics are just coming out in a stream of consciousness. Samia’s last album, 2020’s “The Baby,” thrived off this concept. Lines didn’t sound forced but like they flowed out under their own steam, taking center stage over minimal and light instrumentals. This wasn’t an album that clicked with me right away, but a year later, it’s stayed in my music rotation and I don’t see myself stopping anytime soon. It managed to walk that very thin line between trying too hard and sounding lazy. This is a very difficult balancing act, and it’s one that at times hurt “Scout” but kept its true potential in check.

One thing it got perfectly right was its choice of the lead single. “Show Up” has been one of my favorite songs of the year and one that perfectly captures this spirit of effortlessness. It tells a vaguely defined story, name-dropping characters we don’t hear from again, to draw the listener into its world before hitting us with its understated and inspirational chorus. The ability for Samia to pull narratives from conventional song structures and not feel like it was forced in is a highlight of the EP and Show Up was the best example of that.

Ironically, the other highlight was the song that ditched the understated feel the most and went big with hard-hitting drums and a strong vocal feature, “The Promise.” This made no effort to hide its best qualities and was some of the most immediate fun I’ve had with a Samia song.

The other two tracks weren’t bad by any means, but they had some issues that require a separate category to mention. “As You Are” had a vocal sample at the beginning that lasted for far too long and got in the way of the actual singing. These kinds of choices jump out to me. I really don’t know why that was played as long as it did, and consistency is a big part of why I like any song, so having something irksome like that is when I tend to look at a song less favorably. It, along with the other track “Elephant,” also ran into the issue of trying to mimic a style rather than go for something different. It’s not too egregious, as it is her style, but both of those songs to me felt like the weakest off “Scoutm” or maybe B-sides. Elephant” did come alive at the end with some neat wordplay and a well-executed chorus but it just didn’t grab my attention that way I’ve come to expect from Samia’s discography.

I was probably a little too hyped coming into this EP. While of course EPs aren’t a bad art form, in my experience I tend to prefer an artists’ album output. “The Baby” was intimate, gripping and meditative, but most of all it was surprising, a debut album that absolutely blew me away. “Scout” was a strong EP and follow-up, but it just couldn’t surprise me like her previous release. Now her next album though…

– Erie Mitchell

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New Album Review

New Album Review: I Know I’m Funny Haha by Faye Webster

ALBUM: “I Know I’m Funny Haha” by Faye Webster

RELEASE YEAR: 2021

LABEL: Secretly Canadian

RATING: 8/10

BEST TRACKS: “I Know I’m Funny Haha,” “Kind Of” and “Cheers”

FCC: “I Know I’m Funny Haha”

The soft and sultry vocals of Faye Webster wash over you in her new album. “I Know I’m Funny Haha” is her fourth album on Secretly Canadian Records. Atlanta native Webster blends folk, r&b, and indie with her own spin. Released on June 25, this album is perfect for a sweltering summer. 

My Favorite Tracks:

I Know I’m Funny Haha

The shortest song on the album, “I Know I’m Funny Haha” is also the title track. Webster sings about her boyfriend’s sister “I made her laugh one time at dinner, She said I’m funny and then I thanked her, But I know I’m funny haha”. There’s something about how she sings “Haha”, it’s sharp and cutting. 

Kind Of

This groovy track has a swinging beat that has you nodding your head and tapping your feet along immediately. You can hear the 90s soul and r&b direction. Webster takes her time, the leisurely chorus lets her instrumental back up shine.  

Cheers

The baseline of this track is almost hypnotic, chugging along throughout the song. This track has the most rock influence of the album but still feels light and fresh. I love how unrushed Webster sounds in this song. She makes her vocals serene even as she belts out the chorus “And let’s cheers to you, And let’s cheers to me”.

If you’re looking for chill songs to accompany you sitting out in the oppressive southern summer heat “I Know I’m Funny Haha” is the album for you.

-DJ lil witch

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Band/Artist Profile New Album Review

Faye Webster- Artist Profile and Album Review

Faye Webster isn’t a huge star right now, but she definitely deserves to be. Her latest album is a triumph, and it’s exciting to see her get both critical attention and actual commercial success from it, as it’s currently on Billboard’s Heat Seekers and folk charts. So let’s get to know Faye Webster, and see what she has to say for herself.

Webster is, first and foremost, a country musician. Based out of the ATL, she has a very retro countrypolitan sound reminiscent of Emmylou Harris, Patsy Cline and Linda Ronstadt. 70s pop country is uncool both within country music, where it garnered a pretty big backlash for selling out, and outside of country where it’s mostly been written out of pop history. But for several years, country musicians were having number one albums getting multiple pop hits a year by being just aggressively sad.

Webster has forgone the pop hits and success, but boy can she be sad with the best of them. She takes the twang out of her voice and relocates to some deeply melancholy lyrics (and some great slide guitars). Her album “I know I’m funny haha,” is perhaps the best indication of what kind of artist she is. It makes her music engaging and beautiful, but in a way that’s not much fun to talk about. If you’ve heard any indie folk, you know what to expect.

Her last album, “Atlanta Millionaires Club,” however, yields a few more interesting details. The album is a tribute to the musical history of Atlanta, both White and Black. The default instrumental palate is a fusion of her countrypolitan aesthetic with classic 70s soul, a fusion that works so well I’m honestly surprised it’s not done more often. There’s even a token country rap song, which, despite not really blowing me out of the water personally, beats the heck out of Florida Georgia Line and Luke Bryan.

So, if you want to know where to start, I might suggest listening to a few of her top songs on Spotify, then hitting up the new album when you’re feeling a little blue. Fusions of country and indie are just getting better and better these days, and Faye Webster is an excellent addition to that trend.

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New Album Review

Colaboyy- Prosthetic Boombox Album Review

This is an album from word-of-mouth only, so I don’t have a lot to go on. The context I can give you is that this is an R&B album, it has a warm nostalgic sheen to it, and that the artist is “A Comrade.” Beyond that, we’ll have to take the music on its own merits, so let’s talk about Neo-Soul for a moment.

Neo-Soul refers to exactly what you’d expect. If an R&B album features little to no rapping, dense retro instrumentation, and is mostly lyric-driven, chances are someone has called it Neo-Soul. If that definition sounds a little vague, it’s because it is, but in practice, the genre is more cohesive than you might expect. The scene started as a specific revival movement for 60s and 70s soul, before taking on a life of its own by incorporating more disco, Motown, and hip-hop stylings. The big mainstream moment for this style was in the late 90s when Lauren Hill, Erykah Badu, D’Angelo and Common took off. The commercial success of the style has waxed and waned over the years, but it has never really gone away. Recently, artists like Tyler, the Creator, Tierra Whack, Frank Ocean, and D’Angelo (again) have been making waves with the style.

Colaboyy is an artist in this tradition, but his musical influences have moved up 20 years, a move that actually took me off guard. Conventional Neo-Soul takes inspiration primarily from the classic soul era, especially the chill yet political work of Marvin Gaye. Colaboyy, by contrast, is stuck firmly in the 90s. He’s not copying 90s Neo-Soul, mind you, that would get a little recursive (Neo-Neo-Soul?), his influence comes from electro-disco and early 90s R&B, before the genre began margining with hip-hop. Boys 2 Men, Poison—this is a pretty fondly remembered era, so it’s cool to see an artist fuse it with a 70s disco aesthetic. He was also inspired by Latin funk according to his website, but this is something I personally struggled to hear in his latest album.

The album isn’t perfect, in fact, it’s a little lacking in cohesive songs, but, as I’m pretty sure my fellow kids are saying, the vibes are immaculate. Colaboyy isn’t trying to make “what’s going on” at the moment, he’s content to make an atmospheric and elegant album with some light political and social theming. It’s easy listening and can play in the background of literally any activity, so give it a shot.

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New Album Review

Home Video- Lucy Dacus Album Review

Patron saint of moody ex-fundies everywhere Lucy Dacus has returned with her third full length album “Home Video.” After big deal releases from her boygenius bandmates Phoebe Bridgers and Julien Baker, expectations were high for Dacus, and she has delivered on “Home Video,” a tour de force in nostalgia and coming of age documentary.

Prior to this album, Dacus was something of an enigmatic figure. Her music was autobiographical, but opaque. Her most personal, (and by far best) song, “Night Shift,” was unique for blending intensely individual details with a kind of universal songwriting style that made it relatable to nearly everyone. But beyond this, you really didn’t get a good feel for Dacus’ internal world or emotional landscape only her musical world.

On “Home Video” Dacus gives a far more grounded account of her life without sacrificing the universal and biting songwriting choices that made her stand out. It’s set not in the abstract fantasy world of song, but in the very specific realm of an evangelical community in Virginia in the 2000s. Every song is set somewhere during high school or the first year or two of college, but the order is scrambled. It’s a mess of early memories, filtered through a sheen of warm, yet critical nostalgia. Dacus isn’t here to defend contemporary evangelical Christianity, but she is here to put herself in that context without shame. A queer woman of questionable faith who actually has some warm memories of her hometown and congregation. It feels a lot more honest than any number of leftist punk rebellions or Katy Perry-style party phases.

Putting aside the core concept, this album is just immaculate. Dacus flexes every musical and lyrical muscle she has, and I can remember some melodic or poetic detail from literally every song on here. Dacus is a master of her craft, and “Home Video,” will likely impress anyone with an appreciation for folk, indie rock, or music in general.

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New Album Review

Bathtub Cig – bed Review

Bathtub Cig, a project from singer-songwriter Hilary James, deals with quarantine feels and grief in their new EP “bed.” The Minneapolis project is strongly influenced by Frankie Cosmos. Bathtub Cig is the best kind of bedroom pop, soft and sweet with lyrics that hit you hard. This EP is mostly the frontwoman James with accompaniment from Adelyn Rose on wind instruments and bass. Still, the songs are simple with James shining with her vocals and electric guitar.    

My Favorite Tracks:

Sepia

The almost bluesy “Sepia” is a great start to the EP. James sings about the end of days and how everything is colored in sepia tones. The track is only a minute and a half long but is a sweet opener to the rest of the EP. The poetic lyrics “I’m floating forward as the flames unfurl” are my favorite.

Quarantine Dream

While this track is about the 2020 quarantine, there is something that resonates in 2021. The lonely lyrics complement the airy woodwinds and strumming guitar. The light synth enhances the depression-pop ambiance. “Quarantine Dream” is cozy and sleepy, a great track to drift off to bed with.      

My Friend – We are the Willows 

This song is dedicated to James’s bandmate Leah Ottman, who passed away suddenly in December 2020. Peter Miller, Leah’s friend and bandmate, harmonizes with James, crooning their love of their friend. The sentimental track focuses on channeling grief and letting go. I love the harmonies and gentle guitar.    

Each of the songs of this EP flows seamlessly together and tells an expansive story. I’m so excited for the full-length album coming out this fall.  

-DJ lil witch