Showing posts with label Bird Streets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bird Streets. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 September 2025

Lily Frost - Bird Streets - Mathis Akengin ft. Claire Passard - The Steel Wheels

Lily Frost - Cure For Loneliness.

Since the late 1990s, Toronto singer/songwriter Lily Frost has built an impressive body of work that spans pop in nearly all its forms, from vintage to contemporary. On top of that, Lily’s dynamic performing skills and impeccable personal style have cemented her status as one of Toronto’s most beloved musical artists.

Lily is now excited to announce that she has partnered with New York-based KMG Distribution and The Royalty Network to reissue two of her recent acclaimed independent albums, 2019’s Retro-Moderne and 2022’s Decompression. As well, she is sharing the single “Cure For Loneliness,” a jaunty western swing ditty, co-written with Eleni Mandel, and featuring Toronto twang master Nichol Robertson. Lily is celebrating all of this news with a Toronto show on Wed. Sept. 24 at Sauce on Danforth.

Lily’s new partnerships will bring greater international exposure to Retro-Moderne and Decompression, while generating further opportunities for song placements, an area in which she has enjoyed great past success. In 2001, Lily’s song “Who Am I?” appeared on the Crazy/Beautiful soundtrack, and in 2009 she was nominated for a Gemini Award for co-writing “All I Ever Wanted To Be,” the theme for the CBC television series Being Erica. Lily’s songs have also been heard in the shows Grey’s Anatomy, Charmed, Felicity, Stargate SG-1, Workin’ Moms, as well as in commercials for Chevrolet and Hudson’s Bay.

However, Lily is thrilled by the prospect of audiences (re)discovering Retro-Moderne and Decompression, two collections that display the full range of her songwriting abilities. The former shines with infectious hooks, while the latter is grounded in heartfelt alt-country.


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Bird Streets - Run For Our Lives.

Brooklyn's Bird Streets (John Brodeur) is thrilled to present the latest single from their forthcoming album The Escape Artist. "Run For Our Lives" is pop-rock in the classic sense, overflowing with vocal and guitar hooks, and sporting a chorus that will stick in your frontal lobe for days to come. Recorded in Los Angeles with producer Jason Falkner, "Run For Our Lives" is the third single in advance of the new record, following the introspective folk-pop of "It's A Start," and the driving rock noir of "Mistaker."

Brodeur says, “Run For Our Lives has roots in the late ‘90s. I had the first few verses but could never figure out where to go from there–I tried probably a dozen different choruses over the years. I showed it to Jason when we were auditioning material for the record, and he offered up some chords and a melody. It was one of those chocolate-and-peanut-butter moments–his chorus was exactly what the song needed."

The vibrant "Run For Our Lives" music video prominently features members of New York-based theatrical dance troupe The Love Show. Shot in the troupe's own Hidden Jewel Box Theater–a performance space constructed inside a defunct Mrs. Field's Cookies shop at Manhattan's Port Authority–the clip finds Brodeur and his band coming face to face with a merry band of kooks. Viewers may notice subtle nods to one or more George Harrison videos.

The Escape Artist, out October 17, is a self-described paranoid guitar-pop record, that "runs the gamut from claustrophobic folk to angular indie-rock to power-pop to punk-rock freakout." Written and recorded during and after the global pandemic, the album touches on themes of fear, isolation, and existential dread, while serving up the indelible melodies and arrangements that have made Bird Streets one of indie-rock's most underrated artists.


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Photo - Hugo Horsin
Mathis Akengin ft. Claire Passard - Mer d'hiver.

There are seas that no longer make waves. In his new single ‘Mer d’hiver’, Mathis Akengin lends his voice to that very sea, joined by the delicate voice of Claire Passard. A winter sea slowed down, dense, almost frozen, where everything seems to be holding its breath. In winter, the sea becomes a metaphor for suspended time, for life slowed down, for what seems asleep yet continues, silently, to transform.

An old sailor whispers: ‘As-tu vu passer l’orage?’ (Did you see the storm pass by?), the question lingers, simple yet devastating. Did we notice the moment when everything shifted? Was it already too late? The piece moves with restraint, between silences and resonances, like a memory one hardly dares to touch.

At the age when his peers were learning to read and write, Mathis Akengin discovered a passion for a different form of expression: the piano. Like many early talents—often referred to as ‘prodigies’ due to their rarity—the young musician entered the Conservatory at the age of six, where he would study for fifteen years, later adding a stint at the Haute Ecole de Musique in Lausanne. His exemplary path confirmed his natural talent.

However, the youngling from Franche-Comté (France) didn’t want to limit himself to classical music. Contemporary music quickly caught his attention. At the age of twelve, he formed his first band and started his first tours. Little did he know that, a few years later, he would join the blues-rock duo Catfish, a band he had once opened for. Projects multiplied. By the age of twenty-five, his list of collaborations was already impressive. Mathis’ keyboards, both in the studio and live, resonate in a variety of formations with sounds ranging from Dead Chic (rock), Eméa (world-soul), Alexandrie (pop), to Neptune Quartet (oriental jazz). Eclectic, Mathis is also a versatile artist. He’s often sought after to arrange albums, always finding new ways to develop his creativity and skills.


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Photo - Monik Geisel
The Steel Wheels - Chase It All Away.

Today, Virginia-based Americana pioneers The Steel Wheels announce the release of their new self-titled LP to coincide with their 20 year anniversary as a band. The LP will come out on CD + vinyl on Oct. 31, but won’t be released to streaming services until next year on March 14, 2026, emphasizing the fan first mentality that has been a hallmark of the band’s since their inception. Today, they’ve also shared new single “Chase It All Away,” which combines a pop melody, a New Orleans style jazz piano, frontman Trent Wagler’s twangy vocals and an expansive fiddle solo for a commentary on the hustle of modern-day life. 

On the new track, Wagler shares: “Hold it all at once. The diagnosis, the beautiful beach, the hard work coming, the lazy afternoon. How do we measure the need of the day? Is it in widgets moved, checklists marked, or in winding paths taken? How do we keep our inner fire burning to keep curious and passionate, without breaking down when life hits us with the unexpected?” 

Their ninth studio album, The Steel Wheels was co-produced by D. James Goodwin (Goose, Bonny Light Horseman, I’m With Her), who mixed the band’s 2019 album Over The Trees. The project was recorded at Goodwin’s new Shenandoah Valley studio during a snowy Virginia winter, and the process was fluid and swift. Sessions were punctuated by peals of laughter and occasional tears as the group embraced vulnerability and leaned into every emotion as it came. The album that resulted captures a band at its creative apex: honoring their roots as a harmony-centric acoustic ensemble but fully leaning into the folk rock that they’ve grown into over the last 20 years. 

On the LP, in typical Steel Wheels fashion, Wagler’s lyrics pose big, philosophical questions that he realizes have no answer. The sneakily profound earworm “Easy” they released last month is a perfect example of that – asking if in this age of technology and accessibility, is everything really easier? 
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Wednesday, 20 August 2025

Alexa Rose - Bird Streets - Terra Lightfoot - Wyldest - WILDES

Photo - Zach Strum
Alexa Rose - Where The Magic Lives.

Asheville’s Alexa Rose has announced a new album ‘Atmosphere’ to be released October 31 on First City Artists. Once praised by NPR as “the soul child of Bob Dylan and Dolly Parton,” Rose returns with a stunning collection dwelling between the shimmering falsetto of Alison Krauss and the supernatural tone of Adrianne Lenker. The album lyrically attends to the symbiosis of joy and grief, terror and hope, heaviness and lightness in our daily lives. 

Regarding Where The Magic Lives Alexa Rose explains, “Have you ever been in some situation you should be enjoying but somehow just can’t? It’s happened to me at the best concerts and under the starriest skies. This song is about fighting to find enchantment again, and making peace with the time that feels lost. I was thinking a lot about growing up in the early aughts, before I always had a phone in my pocket, and how I felt a curiosity about the world that couldn’t be answered with a quick Google search. Sometimes I think leaving a little mystery is what we need to be able to run towards those dreams, to let ourselves bask in a question before we know the answer.”

Alexa Rose recorded her new album at Betty’s, a studio created by Sylvan Esso nestled in the North Carolina woods. Shortly after the session, Hurricane Helene hit the western part of the state, washing away lives and landscapes in the hometowns of half the band. The storm’s wake, eerie and desolate and decisive, cast a new light upon the record. “I related to the music in a different way,” says Rose. “I had just moved into a new place after losing access to my house, and felt a little tossed around the way everyone did. 

The experience deepened my love for my home and my belief in the resilience of the land and communities in Appalachia.” Rose spent the harsh winter to follow revisiting the album and re-recording certain songs in her cabin outside Asheville, replacing studio shimmer with intimate sparsity, a deliberate bareness to better express her feeling at the time. “Stripping the songs down felt truer: nothing to hide behind anymore, but believing the roots are strong enough to hold.”

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Photo - Vivian Wang
Bird Streets - It’s A Start.

Last month, Bird Streets, the alter-ego and musical brainchild of Brooklyn-based singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist John Brodeur, announced the forthcoming release of his third LP, The Escape Artist, due October 17, 2025 on Plastic Dreams Records, and share the album’s catchy lead single “Mistaker,” and yesterday, the band came back with another taste of what’s to come, with the brilliant “It’s A Start,” alongside its accompanying music video directed by B.A. Miale.

The album was almost entirely performed by Brodeur and his longtime collaborator, producer Jason Falkner (Jellyfish, Beck, St. Vincent), with contributions from Gina Romantini (Wallflowers, Jayhawks), Zach Jones (Sting) and Oscar Albis Rodriguez (A Great Big World). The Escape Artist was recorded at Jason Falkner’s studio, Rhetoric, in Los Angeles, and additional tracking was completed at Studio G and Brodeur’s home studio in Brooklyn. Bird Streets has also detailed a run of upcoming shows throughout the east coast of the U.S.

Speaking on the song out this week, Brodeur says “This one came to me on a long walk in the California sun. The first verse was a complete thought, and I tried to model the rest of the song around that. It took a long time to get right–I forced myself to finish the lyrics so we could record it, then rewrote and re-recorded most of them a year later. (Sorry Jason!) The music is indebted to later-period Elliott Smith, his more psychedelic work. Figure 8 was a huge influence when I was making my first solo record, and it’s one I come back to a lot because of its range of sounds. My friend Gina Romantini plays violin on this. I love the suspense it creates in the track.

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Photo - Melissa Payne
Terra Lightfoot - Red (feat. Bill Priddle).

Acclaimed JUNO and Polaris Prize-nominated Canadian singer-songwriter Terra Lightfoot has unveiled a haunting and heartfelt new single: a cover of “Red,” originally written and recorded by Canadian alt-rock band Treble Charger. Reimagined through a melancholic folk-rock lens, Lightfoot’s rendition of “Red” highlights her emotive vocal delivery, introspective tone, and a warm, rootsy arrangement that nods to classic country influences.

Lightfoot’s rendition of “Red” also features Treble Charger’s Bill Priddle, who penned the original. Their musical connection stretches back to their time playing together in the band Don Vail, and the idea for this collaboration came to life after a live show in Priddle’s hometown.

“I’ve loved this song since I was a kid, and became friends with Bill Priddle when we were both playing in the band Don Vail,” shares Lightfoot. “We’ve kept in touch and he came out to our show in Sault Ste. Marie last summer. I had the idea to cover this song with him then, and after we sang it together, it made so much sense to cut this one for this record.”

The song’s soft, country-tinged instrumentation was a collaborative effort shaped by Lightfoot and co-producer/husband Jon Auer, who suggested the genre twist and even played drums in a makeshift living room studio. The track also features Annie Lindsay on fiddle, giving the arrangement a tender, Dolly Parton-inspired charm.


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Photo - Tom Gaiger
Wyldest - After The Ending.

Wyldest today announces her new album 'The Universe Is Loading' - out 14th November via Hand In Hive. Alongside the announcement, she releases haunting and euphoric new single 'After The Ending'. Following last month's delicate meditation on familial estrangement ('All It Would Take Is A Phone Call'), new single 'After The Ending' finds Wyldest confronting the fragility of the human body, and exploring love and bonds that transcend space and time, all amidst a haze of celestial indie-rock.

With its nods to simulation theory, ancient medicine, and the quiet terror of losing control, the song was written shortly after Wyldest received an endometriosis diagnosis. Opening with a reference to ‘trephining’ (an ancient practice of drilling holes in the skull to release evil spirits), it continues through sci-fi metaphors before arriving at its pivotal bridge refrain: “I’ll look for you, if you seek me out there too… / In our past lives… I’d wait for you / If the time was on our side, We’re passing tides for the moment…”

Speaking more on the release of the new single, Wyldest said: "'After the Ending' is a post-apocalyptic pop song, about sustaining love from one existence to the next; “The moment, we lost it / so I’ll find you, after the ending”. It was written with space and time in mind - a scenario whereby a relationship can’t exist in the present reality, perhaps due to life circumstances, timing, or something more extreme, like separation by death - and the promise of finding each other in a different existence where they can be there together.


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WILDES - Without a Heart.

London-based singer-songwriter WILDES (Ella Walker) will release her second album 'All We Do Is Feel' on 12th September.
 
Today, she shares her new single 'Without a Heart'. She explains: "Of all the album tracks, this probably took the longest to reach its final form. It wasn’t an easy song to get out. I really struggled to nail the production on it and, in the end, I completely re-produced it, focusing on the intimacy and fragility of the verses and bringing in the vocoder choir to emulate that robotic coldness I was feeling when I originally wrote it. It’s mournful, inevitable, and has a finality to it for me. I knew once I’d written and produced it, a door would be closed on my heartache, and it was such a relief to finally finish it and feel free from that sort of pain. That makes it all worth it".
 
When moments slip through our fingers and no feeling is final, WILDES’ returning album is a monument to the love which remains. 'All We Do Is Feel' marks Ella’s reinvention: a kind of radiance that can only be earned when everything – your life and your art – is razed to the ground and built again in faith to a new vision. The story that unfolds across All We Do Is Feel is one which we all recognise: one of love, heartbreak and renewal. But when we are lost in the arctic-white of emotion, when everything is at its most bitter and unending, WILDES will take you by the hand and walk you out of the storm.
 
Co-produced with her best friend Elena Garcia (Tonguetied), the album was recorded in Garcia’s childhood home, and the music is completely unguarded and fearless in the face of experimentation.


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Wednesday, 16 July 2025

LAWN CHAIR - Wyldest - Bird Streets - Emmett Jerome

LAWN CHAIR - War Machine.

German-American indie punk outfit LAWN CHAIR is set to make waves with their highly anticipated debut album, You Want It! You Got It!, slated for release on September 5th, 2025. Today the Berlin-based outfit share new single ‘War Machine’, accompanied by a new live video, the single is a poignant tribute to front woman Claudia Schlutius’ father.  

Over the past three years, the Berlin-based band has carved out a reputation as one of Germany’s most vital and uncompromising new bands. Formed around Seattle-born vocalist and lyricist Claudia Schlutius, the five-piece have brought their exhilarating live energy to festivals like The Great Escape, Reeperbahn and Fusion, toured the UK and Germany, and shared stages with Sleaford Mods, Primal Scream, Getdown Services, Deadletter, and more. With two EPs produced alongside Olaf Opal (The Notwist) and Chris Coady (Beach House, Yeah Yeah Yeahs), they’ve already made serious noise. But You Want It! You Got It!! marks their most expansive and self-assured work to date.

Written during a time of personal and creative transition (as Schlutius and guitarist Eric Haupt relocated from Cologne to Berlin), You Want It! You Got It!! was crafted between November 2023 and September 2024, with extensive pre-production shaping its unique sound. The album’s title, a lyric drawn from ‘The Next Big Thing’, is a tongue-in-cheek response to the relentless demands of the music industry. Lyrically and sonically, the album draws inspiration from the absurdities of late-stage capitalism, fragile male egos, the never-ending quest for inner peace - and Schlutius’ own complicated relationship with both her family and her U.S. origins.

Their new single ‘War Machine’ is a tribute to her aging father, a Vietnam veteran and commercial fisherman in Alaska, whose fiercely independent spirit left its mark on her. “You’re a War Machine” becomes a line directed both outward and inward, a recognition of inherited restlessness and the fragility of the people we admire.


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Photo - Tom Gaiger
Wyldest - All It Would Take Is A Phone Call.

Yesterday, Wyldest returned with her poignant new single 'All It Would Take Is A Phone Call'. Out now via Hand In Hive, the track release follows her widely adored 2022 album 'Feed The Flowers Nightmares'. A delicate meditation on familial estrangement ("Now you’re just another memory / Locked away inside my veins / On your way to leave an everlasting stain"), 'All It Would Take Is A Phone Call' channels the quiet ache of a relationship defined more by blood than by real connection. 

The accompanying self-shot video, filmed by Wyldest on the moors of Connemara in Western Ireland, draws a poetic parallel between the song’s theme of lost connection and the birthplace of modern communication. “I came across a big egg-shaped monument called the Marconi and was fascinated by it. It was in the middle of nowhere – standing alone as a tribute to Guglielmo Marconi, the inventor of the first wireless telecommunication device. I thought, ironically, that was a great link,” Wyldest says.

Sitting at the intersection of ambient dream-pop and intimate singer-songwriter confessionals, Wyldest’s unmistakably weightless vocal is set against a backdrop of skeletal guitars and airy production textures - recalling the stillness of early Cat Power or the emotional incision of Sharon Van Etten. 

The song’s unhurried pace allows its emotional gravity to settle, drawing the listener into a space of painful reflection and quiet acceptance. Delivered with an almost terrifying emotional precision, Wyldest captures something rarely articulated in song: the quiet, slow ache of becoming strangers with someone you once called family. 


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Bird Streets - Mistaker.

Mistaker, the new single from Brooklyn's Bird Streets (John Brodeur) is a gritty minor-key rocker with enough hooks to last the rest of the summer. It has shades of solo Chris Cornell, the Shins, and the Stones, but overall this is very much a Bird Streets jam–lyric-forward, guitar-driven, and melodic to a fault. We think it's going to sound great on the air.

This is the lead track from the third Bird Streets LP, The Escape Artist, due October 17 on the Plastic Dreams label. The Escape Artist was produced by Jason Falkner (Beck, Daniel Johnson, St. Vincent) at his Los Angeles studio. It's a paranoid guitar-pop record, rife with themes of isolation and existential dread. Recorded over four years, beginning in the early days of the global pandemic, The Escape Artist runs the musical gamut from claustrophobic folk to anthemic indie-pop to punk-rock freakout. While largely a two-man affair, the album features guest spots by Gina Romantini (Wallflowers, Jayhawks), Zach Jones (Sting), and Oscar Albis Rodriguez (A Great Big World).

The Bird Streets sound has been described by The Deli as "rock music with mainstream potential that sounds timeless and honest." The 2002 album, Lagoon, featured contributions from folks like Pat Sansone (Wilco), Ed Harcourt, Aimee Mann, John Davis (Superdrag), and Jody Stephens (Big Star), while the self-titled 2018 release became something of a cult power-pop hit on the strength of single "Betting On The Sun." Bird Streets was selected as a Slingshot Artist by NPR Music, and has been featured by Paste, Magnet, Shindig! and many more.


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Photo - Poppy Morrish (photography)
Emmett Jerome - Nothing To Do.

With a weathered voice and a heart tuned to the truth, Emmett Jerome returns with "Nothing To Do," an upbeat, warm country-rock ode to growing up in a tiny foothills town. It's a wistful look back at carefree days, wild nights, and the bittersweet sting of outgrowing the place – and the people – you love.

Written about his own coming-of-age in Bragg Creek, Alberta, "Nothing To Do" pays tribute to sun-soaked river hangs, midnight highway drives, and stolen cases of cheap beer under prairie moons. "Growing up there meant a lot of freedom in the outdoors," says Jerome. "When I turned 18, I left for good and said goodbye to a lot of formative friendships. This song is about the loss of leaving not only that place behind, but the good people of Bragg Creek too."

The track was recorded live off the floor to hi-fi tape, capturing the raw energy of Jerome's band in the room, before layering in baritone guitar, harmonica, and Rhodes to flesh it out. "We wanted to use the same technology our favourite classic records were made with. Real analog gear and real musicians," Jerome says.

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Tuesday, 27 June 2023

Career Woman - Rubber Blanket - Bird Streets - Achings

Career Woman - Jupiter.

Career Woman is the promising musical project of Melody Caudill, a singer songwriter from Los Angeles, CA. At just 19 years old, she exudes a genuine passion for crafting impactful indie rock songs.

Growing up, she found solace in songwriting and released her first EP at the age of fourteen. Caudill was raised in a creative household that has shaped her deep connection to melodies and lyrics from a young age.

Career Woman draws inspiration from a range of artists such as, Lomelda, Snail Mail, Samia and even the scores and soundtracks of her favorite video games like Life is Strange. These distinctive styles have left an indelible mark on her artistic voice.

"'Jupiter' was the first song I wrote since coming to college and it encompasses all of the new feelings that come along with starting a new life" says Caudill of the new single, adding "I was experiencing overwhelming joy but also paralyzing fear because of all of the new people I met and everyone I had to leave behind. The lyrics are all really specific and I tried to capture details that only me and the people involved could pinpoint, while still speaking to a larger message that could be universally relatable. The song started out as an acoustic folk track but my bandmate Jackson turned it into the full band sound it has today, and I think it was definitely a smart musical choice. I hope the song communicates the feeling of being in a completely new environment and starting a new life stage because it definitely articulates how it felt for me."

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Rubber Blanket - Good Times.

Los Angeles' Rubber Blanket (members of Wounded Lion and The Intelligence), a group that proffers a distinct humor/horror consciousness that is coaxed via a crate of oddball musical machinery that is arranged in a manner that bucks all subterranean boogie, is set to release their sophomore album. Our Fault, via Mt.St.Mtn on June 29.

Our Fault thoroughly trounces the laziness cabal. Its 10 tunes beckon listeners to embark on a preternatural sojourn under the collective Blanket of Brad Eberhard, Lars Finberg, and Jun Ohnuki (survivors all of WOUNDED LION), three artists and composers, working together forever and then some.

Unless there’s literal goo-goo-gah-gah, the notion that rockish musics with discernable peculiarities must possess childlike predilections is shite nouveau, serving only to signal that the experimental market is not blonde enough to churn hype butter. This kind of trash-think ignores the existence of real wonderment, as if the constant ingestion of multiverse stimuli couldn’t / wouldn’t / shouldn’t impact the capacity for marvel within the living human sponge. Our Fault is bright enough to recognize and even reproduce this strange ever-growing awe. A tumultuous, and somehow scientifically programmed spontaneity, is bottled on Our Fault. Different Rock’n’Roll, bright and strange.

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Bird Streets - California High.

When John Brodeur began his recording career in the early 2000s, he never imagined he would someday have his most rewarding musical experiences – working with members of Superdrag, Wilco, Big Star, and Jellyfish, artists he greatly admired – while struggling through one of the most difficult periods in his personal life. But that has thus far been the story of his project Bird Streets, whose first album was released concurrently with Brodeur’s separation from his wife of more than a decade, and whose latest, Lagoon, plays almost as a concept album about the emotional weight of divorce and regret. Released in November by newly minted Los Angeles label Sparkle Plenty, Lagoon is as personal a statement as you’re likely to hear this or any year–a rollercoaster emotional ride from “one of [the] prime architects of present-day rock” (Americana Highways), bolstered by masterful production and an array of guest appearances, including Ed Harcourt and Aimee Mann.

On June 30, Lagoon will be reissued as a deluxe digital edition with an additional eight tracks, including two new songs: the Patrick Sansone-produced “California High,” and “What In The World,” featuring Sting drummer Zach Jones. The re-release will be accompanied by a series of live engagements in the Northeast U.S. and Sweden.

“California High” marries layers of soft-strummed acoustic guitars to a lyric that could either be about seasonal depression or impostor syndrome, with a bridge section that takes a surprising leap into prog-adjacent territory. Recorded in 2019 at Nashville’s famed Creative Workshop, during the first Lagoon sessions, the track finds Sansone in full multitask mode, serving as producer and mixer, plus playing bass, additional guitars, piano, vibraphone, and singing backing vocals. With pedal steel by session legend Jim Hoke (Dolly Parton, Paul McCartney), the windswept folk-pop of “California High” would sit comfortably alongside Harvest-era Neil Young, America, or The Thrills. In another universe, it might have been Lagoon’s lead single, but Brodeur shelved it because “it didn’t fit the narrative. Had it been a 15-song album–which it easily could have been–this would have gone on side one.”

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Achings - Undoing Home.

LandLand Colportage recently announced that they signed Philadelphia's Achings, and the band are releasing an album titled All These Shapes, All These Days for the label on July 14th. Now the band is back with a new single from the LP.

Achings formed in the fall of 2018, almost by sheer accident. Singer-songwriter Rebecca Joy, having just started maternity leave, happened to overhear one of guitarist Justin Myer’s guitar tracks. The synchronicity was instantaneous: “I immediately knew how the song should go- I heard it with total clarity, and wrote the accompanying melodies and lyrics on the spot, and Justin was thrilled with the results; we both were.” That song was Abdication, Planet Earth.

One week later, Rebecca’s daughter was born, and over the course of her leave, Achings began to take shape, and an EP soon followed. While the EP largely tackles the specific life transition of becoming a parent in an increasingly uncertain and tumultuous time, the upcoming full length, “All These Shapes, All These Days,” broadens its scope, grappling with the various types and tones of connections past and present, and their indelible impact on our sense of self and place in the world.

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Celestial Bums - The Brook & The Bluff - KiKi Holli & The Remedy - Cut Flowers - The Legal Matters

Celestial Bums - The Letters. Shoegaze warmth and dream pop elegance converge in Celestial Bums’ “The Letters” Barcelona’s Celestial Bums ...