That song title, the psychedelic video still from the very psychedelic video. Captain Murphy, the newly emerged rap artist that first appeared (that I know of) on Flying Lotus’ new track with Earl Sweatshirt entitled “Between Friends” which was for the Adult Swim Summer Singles Series. It’s a great song but the Captain Murphy figure took a lot of people off guard. Who is this guy? Is he Tyler the Creator under a new alias, could it be the combination of Earl and Tyler’s voice over eachother under many layers of warping? Maybe Flying Lotus rapping too?
Some people are clawing away at the internet trying to find out who this guy is, but I just want more tracks to come out that sound like “Between Friends” and “Mighty Morphin Foreskin!” The prior has classic Flying Lotus production, really laid back and pretty druggy while the latter is something you’d hear out of a demented Madvillain tape. It’s got samples of old cartoons, video games, and other random things that make this track one of the best hip hop tracks of the year. “Between Friends” is a great song too, but there’s something about “Mighty Morphin Foreskin” that makes it so different and alluring.
Gah, I’ve honestly listened to this song about ten times in a row now. Check out both of the songs below.
Here are five more album reviews! It looks like I’ve written a bit more about these this time, so bear with me. They’re great albums, so it’s not like you’re going to be reading about bad music. That isn’t flawed logic, eh?
But yeah, if you didn’t see the last one, I’m going to be catching the blog up to the present by writing about five albums a post, all being on my “Top 50 Favorites of 2012” list. These albums are those I have not yet featured on the blog previously and if I had it would have been with a song or two. I’m pretty behind! Also, these won’t have scores, because you can go to any other blog and read their score which is probably a lot more justified than mine. I just write about the albums.
Have a blast!
The Invisible – Rispah
The Invisible have stayed true to their name, I think. I remember seeing them being interviewed in Under the Radar Magazine a while ago, decided to look them up on iTunes and they weren’t there. I looked online and there are not many articles on them either. I do some more research and I find their debut album was iTunes “Album of the Year” in 2009. How can an album win iTunes album of the year when it isn’t even on iTunes?
Anyways, I’ve finally nailed down a release from this band, this year’s spacey “Rispah” which is a tribute of sorts to bandleader Dave Okumu’s mother, who passed away during the creation of this album. It’s full of melancholy melodies backed up by beautiful synth washes and arpeggiated gutiars that immediately bring Kid-A/In Rainbows era Radiohead to mind.
Not saying this is a bad thing, though. There are plenty of things that separate the two bands, like a very lively percussion section and more influences from traditional African music and jazz rather than British pop or alternative. The African music influence comes from Okumu’s background and there are interludes of Kenyan chants performed at Okumu’s mother’s funeral laced within the record, cementing an aura of sorrow in the music.
This record, like a few others this year, is not one you can just put on and listen to in the background. The first few tracks have shimmering light in them, but I can only compare progressing through this album to going deeper into the ocean. Light is far more scarce, things are more droning and dark, you have to pay more attention to your surroundings or else you’ll get eaten by something bigger than you. But, even in this harsh environment, there’s still a feeling of relief. There is still life at the bottom of the sea, light can still enter the darkest reaches of the ocean floor, so not only is this album about grief, it’s also about hope. Accepting the things in life that have brought you down and using those things to make you a better person. I know that’s what Okumu did with this.
Overall, it’s a very rewarding album to put your concentration into. I highly guarantee you’ll enjoy this.
DIIV – Oshin
The feelgood record of the summer? Well, one of the better ones, anyways. Diiv is a side project off of the band Beach Fossils, which are also known for laid back tunes that evoke a hot summer day. Heck, they even have a song called “Lazy Day.” DIIV, I think is directing themselves more into the “dream pop” territory by slathering just about everything in reverb, so much so that most of the time the lyrics are unintelligible. But that doesn’t matter, it’s all about the vibes, man! These are some catchy, feel good songs that are meant to be played on lazy days out on the beach or in the countryside.
There’s one exception to this collection of tracks, which is the penultimate track “Doused.” This is the only track that the band seems actually awake for (not saying that’s a bad thing) and features a driving, hard bassline accented by just as driving guitar lines. It’s a truly badass affair. But the rest of the album sits back and watches this one wail. I’m fine with that.
Liars – WIXIW
If you’ve never listened to Liars before and you like what you’re hearing when listening to this album, I have some news for you: this isn’t how Liars usually sounds. On this record, the band is primarily using lots of electronics: synths, samples and other interesting sound effects, which is new to them. Usually they’re full of screeching guitars and smashing drums; synths are used occasionally to create that perfect uncomfortable texture. Of course, the trio usually reinvent their sound with each LP, but this time they took a totally different and unexpected step.
Usually Liars records are brash and destructive, creating albums about witchcraft or making an album that mostly consists of percussion. These exploits have earned them the title of “dance/art-punk,” usually there to cross boundaries and challenge their fans. This, unlike their other wild discography, is far more reserved and almost sounds like it was grown underground in a lab. This leads to the imagery being dark and isolated, like on “Ill Valley Prodigies” which I can only compare to the environment of Texas Chainsaw Massacre after the action goes down: there are crows cawing, a strange chopping sample, a sample of a man screaming, other samples of woodland creatures, a bit of static and a plethora of other eerie sound effects. This really paints a picture of a forgotten valley community of sociopath lunatics, lost in time and forever enshrouded in a dirty cloud of dust. Not the brightest picture, eh? Don’t worry, not all tracks evoke that much morbid imagery. The synths are to thank for that. Sort of.
The electronics, at times give the music a sterile and unloving feel, but in other times it’s warm and almost soothing at times. Same with the vocal delivery, sometimes it’s cool and collected and the next has tinges of paranoia dripping off of it. The push and pull of polarizing emotions is said to be a central theme on this record, having one song be beautiful and calming and the next be demented or maybe even vengeful.
Take the opener, “The Exact Color of Doubt,” a dreamy love song backed up by hazy synths, cooing vocals and a really unique drum sample. The song after it, “Octagon,” is started off by a very off-putting, immediate synth patterns and a schizophrenic drum beat and are then joined by a sneering vocal delivery that just puts you right in an uncomfortable place. After this, you’re put back into the comfort zone with “No. 1 Against the Rush” that features more ear-pleasing synth effects and samples of plucking violins. The contrasting ideas are constant on this LP, which is a reason that makes it so great.
This record has garnered many Radiohead comparisons, I read one saying this album was the “Best Radiohead album since Kid A” which I mean, is a huge statement, since all of Radiohead’s albums are amazing, but you get the point. Sure, there are a lot of Radiohead-like things on here, but it’s all about what the band does with the music and how they organize it. I think Liars succeeds.
Fang Island – Major
If you’ve never listened to Fang Island, I’ll take this time to describe their sound to you. Imagine waking up one day and you have the powers of any super hero. So, using your super hero powers, you go up into space and watch cosmos explode while space dinosaurs fight meteors with rocket launchers. You land on a random planet and you see thousands of volcanoes erupt around you, while jetpack tigers leap through the air while shredding on a triple neck guitar. Then everything just comes together in a magnificent high five in total, universal victory.
So yeah, that’s Fang Island. It’s loud, radical, totally unique, righteous, awesome, etc. While listening to Fang Island you’ll probably want to: sprout wings and cure cancer; create a new community of shark people that eliminate world hunger just by being there; grab your pet and superman hold he or she around the house; grow other appendages and become extremely productive; or just high five everything you see. It’s crazy motivating, it’s really an instant pick-me-up and it is extremely radical. Shred on, kids. Shred on.
Baroness – Yellow & Green
I have a list of albums that I’m going to write about in these next few days and I was having trouble deciding which one I was going to write about next. Then, an epiphany occurred when the song “March to the Sea” came on my “Best of 2012” shuffle. We’ll get back to that song later.
Baroness’ new LP, a massive, 76 minute affair is my first experience with this band. I also haven’t really listened to any other bands like this, besides Mastodon’s album from last year, “The Hunter” which I’ve heard is a lot more tame than their other releases, like this release compared to Baroness’ other two albums. Even though I don’t have much experience with the band, I could totally pick that up after the first listen: “A ‘metal’ band with acoustic guitars featured on a lot of songs? What’s goin on here? Is this song basically post-rock?” These are things that went through my mind while listening to this album.
I actually really really like this album! I can’t really say I like Baroness as a band yet because I haven’t heard their other, harder material, but where I stand with this is a very favorable position. The first song I heard off of it was the previously mentioned “March to the Sea” which is just a zeitgeist of harmonious, shredding guitars, crashing drums and images of valiant pirates fighting a sea monster or something like that. Previously, I had thought that metal is just about lots of energy and pure fury, but there are tons of really musical moments on this record, these guys truly know what they’re doing.
Even if you’re not a metal fan, or sludge/prog/experimental rock advocate, check this out. There are some really killer moments and some of the lighter tracks on here are really enjoyable!
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Some really good albums this time! Well, great albums last time too, but a lot of vareity!
I haven’t been updating the blog very much, have I? It’s mostly just been lists, playlists and random ramblings, hasn’t it? Well I feel bad because I haven’t posted songs and albums that I’ve been enjoying, so I’m going to post five mini-reviews of albums that are probably going to be on my Top 50. So basically it’s another list. BUT it’s a list with heart. I really did enjoy writing all these descriptions. Also they’re five albums I’ve legitimately enjoyed for a while, so there’s that too.
They aren’t in any order at the moment, they’re just chilling in a list. I will be posting more five album lists throughout this year. I find it easier than reviewing and giving a score. Woo.
These are all usually ones that haven’t been featured at all on the blog yet so I hope y’all find some new music out of this!
Young Prisms – In Between
Basically if you like shoegaze, AKA My Bloody Valentine, Slowdive, Ride or any other band of that era, you’re going to enjoy this release. Deluges of reverb on everything, floods of washed out guitars and swamps of foggy vocals. Also, it isn’t “just another shoegaze clone record.” It almost breathes fresh life into a genre that has been abused for a number of years after being so great in it’s beginning. If anything it’s more like this is the child of a “Loveless” and they’re a newer form of something old and sacred. Good stuff.
Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs – Trouble
This dinosaur can boogie. No but seriously, this guy usually dresses in a homemade dinosaur costume at his concerts, among other things. This Jurassic fellow is making some dancefloor-ready bangers that have garnered him comparisons to Hot Chip, but this guy is more house influenced than more disco, groovy stuff. They’re both great and honestly I don’t think they sound that similar, so I’d check it out anyways. These are totally modern blasters that don’t get totally in your face. At times it reminds me of Discovery, the solo project of Rostam Batmanglij from Vampire Weekend. Totally fun and danceable, pick this one up if you love electro-dance or just want something fun to blast on some good speakers.
Errors – Have Some Faith In Magic
The more I listen to this record, the more I find that I can’t describe it in words. Now, that looks bad here because I’m supposed to be doing that. But this defies a lot of usual genre guidelines and it continues to stump me to this very day. It has waves of gauzy synths that mask the whole thing in a kind of radiant haze, while vocals that sound like they’re being sung into a canyon filter all around the listener. In some moments, you have this feeling of true asphyxiation but at the next moment it brings you back down to earth with vibrant percussion and a sound that I can only describe as “dreamy nostalgia of memories you’ve never had.” As strange as this sounds, you gotta hear this whole album to fully understand it.
Purity Ring – Shrines
At long last, it’s finally here! Purity Ring’s full-length! Even though almost half of it was already released by the band, the tracks that are new on here really continue their signature sound pushing forth manic, alien-like beats combined with angelic vocals. It really surges and pulsates with dark, swirling energy; if you compared an image to it I would say something like what a nightmare looks like from the outside. The music isn’t just dreamy like the music of many other artists this year, the music is so distorted and mangled that it can only belong to the darkest depths of the mind, only to be awakened in a nightmare.
This twisted energy is enforced and usually augmented by the morbid lyrics and their chilling deliveries, harking mental images of a pristine maiden singing about having herself become a shrine by ripping her ribs out or drilling holes into her eyelids due to her unruliness. The lyrics also conjure up nightmare type scenarios with their limitless mysticism, talking about becoming a forest island, being surrounded by ghosts, among other hypnotic and dense imagery.
But, this album is not about being constantly tormented and defeated by these visions, it’s about the journey of going through these visions. It’s about personal change within the narrators of the nightmares. The album really brings all of these tales together into a sort of demented fairy tale tome, chronicling the events that take place in the minds of these young characters as they take on issues that have been plaguing them. It’s really a theatrical piece of work, taking the listeners through eerie labyrinths of the mind, filled with forms of almost-forgotten memories and the melancholy ghosts of those that have been forgotten.
If you’ve enjoyed other Purity Ring releases, you’re gonna love this. If you haven’t, give it a try, there’s some wonderfully evocative settings painted in this LP. For those of you who have never even heard of Purity Ring, it would benefit you greatly if you did check them out. It’s a beautiful record that demands to be heard.
Trust – TRST
Lasers. Sticky, black and white, checkerboard, linoleum floors. Neon goo. Strobe lights. Strangely colored hairdos and styles. Warehouses. Raves. Ecstasy. Grime. No, not Grimes, grime. Sweat. Musty, 90’s basements. Dust. Voyeurism. Swinger parties. Bondage. Other odd sex terms. These are images that this album whips up. It might sound a bit gross, but an album that has that potent of imagery laced within it’s layers is a feat by itself. It’s totally meant to be played in a dark room lit by black lights and lasers, covered in bright spray paint and filled with drug-addled 20-somethings all rubbing their bodies against each other at about 3am.
I can’t relate to this depiction first-hand, or maybe even second hand, but after a few listens to this album you’ll feel like you just partied HARD for about 3 days. You might need a shower. Also there’s a random girl in your bed, covered in that neon goo I had mentioned earlier. Better get to it. Listen to this. It’s a great tribute to/reinvention of stereotypical 80’s/90’s rave culture. Afterwards no one can remember what raves are actually like anyways. This is the closest thing we’ve got.
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Aaaand that’s all for now, folks. There will be many more of these posts, to help catch the blog up to current indie music culture. I really enjoyed writing about these albums and not having to give a score, so I think I’ll do that from now on. Too much pressure on giving a score, also up for a lot of arguments on how the rating scale works, why some ratings with high ranks get out placed on the lists by an LP with a lower rating, the list goes on. Writing about them is a lot more fun.
Five more album write ups coming in the future! Stay tuned, kids!
I gotta say, June was a pretty good month for music. There might not be as many songs on here as the other months, but I think in this case, quality > quantity.What happened in the month of June, for me? Well on May 29th, which is practically June, I saw Radiohead and Caribou perform at the Comcast Center in Mansfield, MA, which was an amazing show. A new single from Grizzly Bear and Yeasayer and new albums from Hot Chip, Fiona Apple, Ty Segall Band and DIIV! Good stuff, if you ask me!
Here’s the songs, in order of appearance in my life over the course of the month:
Well, it has been summer. It’s actually almost half over. Isn’t that sad?
WELL IT ISN’T SAD ANYMORE, ‘CAUSE MUSIC IS COOL!
Yes, music. I’m not sure if I’ve ever done this on the blog, but I’m going to be posting a playlist with summery-ish songs from this year to accompany your daily summer activities and activities that you wish were summer involved. Inspired mostly by Stereogum’s “Cruel Summer” mixtapes, these are entirely available to download in two 16-song parts, resulting in you being 32-songs richer.
And like I said before, they are summer themed, as in you play them when the day is nice or you play them when the day isn’t nice but you want to act like it is. Play them by the pool. Play them in the car. Play them at parties. These are meant to have fun to. Some are meant to relax to. It’s all up to you, now. They’re out of my control.
I enjoy summer with these songs, why shouldn’t you? I enjoy sharing! Have a nice day!
Also I don’t think the songs will go on your computer in order of appearance in this list. Don’t be alarmed.
Have you heard of Twin Shadow? If you haven’t, shame on you. Well I mean, not really. If anything I’m excited to tell you about a band you haven’t heard of/listened to. The band had their debut album, Forget, out in 2010 and it made a huge splash in the realm of “indie” music that year. If anything, it left more echoes over time, making the 80’s, new wave inspired sound more and more potent to the ears after repeated listens.
So anyways, what we have here now is Twin Shadow’s sophomore album entitled Confess, which is filed under the 80’s inspired category as well, but in a different sub section, if that makes sense. This album is heavily influenced by the romance, the flair and the badassery of the 80’s. Not that the one before it wasn’t, but this is more focused on one central idea: the idea of the journey of a cool hero dude, meeting the girl of his dreams, going through drama and stress with her, then riding his motorcycle through the night to rescue her while she’s in peril.
This of course isn’t literally what the album is about, but that’s the kind of mental picture that appears in my head while listening to this music, and it isn’t that off point. George Lewis Jr, the front man of Twin Shadow and the man pictured above, was in a motorcycle crash with a friend that heavily affected his songwriting, to make it something that acts like a unshakable memory like a car accident. Pair this with all the other motorcycle imagery Lewis uses like the promo picture for his “Ton Up” tour and emails depicting him revving his motorcycle engine in his driveway and you’ve got a truckload of motorcycle imagery. Then, take all this imagery and put it into the movie type setting I described in the paragraph above, you’ve got a classic 80’s movie premise. A great one, at that.
I have to say, the first time I listened to this I was a bit disappointed. Mostly because I was expecting to get some awesome, catchy melody lines like in “Slow” or “Shooting Holes” but here, things are more thematic, not so focused on just melody. There’s a bigger picture here, which is impressive. The same kind of thing happened when I was listening to other records of this year, like Chromatics’ Kill For Love and Death Grips The Money Store where there is a central story being told. Large-scale synth textures and deep percussion back up the storytelling here, again following the huge-movie like outfit the album seems wear. The new wave sound is paired with the pop-culture sentiment of the eighties, where the fifties played a heavy influence. James Dean definitely comes to mind when you see GLJ pictured on the cover sporting a leather jacket, looking serious with a red-neon glow on his face. This ushers in images of a late-night vigilante riding through the darkness contemplating his life’s decisions.
Like Twin Shadow’s first album, the more I listen to it the more I fall in love with it. In this case it’s the story and drama that goes into the contours of the album, instead of the immediate gratification of catchy grooves and the allure of the new wave sound.
Currently, I don’t have a car. If you do have a car, motorcycle, scooter, bus, whatever; I highly recommend you play this to enhance your driving experience. Like last year’s Drive soundtrack, Symmetry’s Themes For An Imaginary Film and Chromatics’ Kill For Love, Confess alters your reality and places you in a badass type state. Who wouldn’t want that?
If you haven’t noticed, summer is upon us. If you really haven’t noticed, go outside. Please.
For you kids/adults/people with free time (like myself) use that time to DO things! Not just sit around and scroll through Reddit like I do. Read a book! Watch a TV show on Netflix!! Listen to new music! Start a blog! Exercise– well wait a second now… Exercise? Yeah man. Exercise. It’s good for you.
Okay, well I’m doing that whole exercising thing too and I thought I’d share my EXERCISE playlist with you because it surely gets me motivated when I’m working out. So if you’re struggling to find some musical motivation to rip you off that couch of yours, here’s a list!
I’ll be separating the tracks into categories, along with providing download links when I can. I also might make a Spotify playlist. Howabout that? Technology!
Now as you can see, most of these songs came from either this year or the year before. I’m not covering a lot of ground in terms of motivating music history, so if YOU have some great songs that get your muscles swollen (in a good way, any other way would be kinda gross) post em! I always enjoy hearing new music, so some invigorating tunes would be much appreciated!
As some of you know I started to do a series of “Favorites of MONTH” which abruptly ended at February. Well, I just thought I’d post some favorites from the past three months that might make you a few months nostalgic or remind you of some great music you might of missed.
Also, some of these songs did not come out this year. Some I discovered or really got into in that month. Hence why I said “Favorites” instead of “Best.”
Woo.
Yeasayer has a new, downloadable song called “Longevity” out from their upcoming full length entitled “Fragrant World.” Pretty sure this is the first Yeasayer where there’s strings, which I absolutely love. The whole thing has a futuristic yet desert nomad sound to it, which is awesome. Watch the video below, as well as download that sucker!
Beat the heat today! Stay inside if you can and enjoy air conditioning! Listen to this! Or Purity Ring’s new song. Or both. They’re both great. Just don’t die in this heat!
Purity Ring has unleashed another song called “Fineshrine” from their upcoming debut LP “Shrines.” This song definitely has the “Purity Ring” ambiance with that signature synth wave and pitch-bent backing vocals that characterizes their songs. But this band is just so amazing they manage to take all these familiar sounds and turn them into something totally new. Lemme just say I am elated that their LP is coming out soon.
A stream of consciousness music blog, active since 2010. Established in Ann Arbor, MI, currently in NYC.
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Upcoming Releases:
January 9: Dry Cleaning – Secret Love SAULT – Chapter 1 Winged Wheel – Desert So Green
January 16: A$AP Rocky – Don’t Be Dumb Jana Horn – Jana Horn Julianna Barwick & Mary Lattimore – Tragic Magic SASSY 009 – Dreamer+
February 6: Beverly Glenn-Copeland – Laughter in Summer Daphni – Butterfly Elori Saxl & Henry Solomon – Seeing Is Forgetting Fabiano do Nascimento – Aquáticos Joshua Chuquimia-Crampton – Anata Mandy, Indiana – URGH Puma Blue – Croak Dream Ratboys – Singin’ To An Empty Chair
February 13: Charli XCX – Wuthering Heights Colin Stetson – Nethering Danny L Harle – Cerulean KMRU – Kin The Olympians – In Search of A Revival
February 20: Altin Gün – Garip Apparat – A Hum of Maybe
February 27: Buck Meek – The Mirror Fabiano do Nascimento – Vila GENA – The Pleasure Is Yours Gorillaz – The Mountain Gus Englehorn – The Broken Balladeer Heavenly – Highway to Heavenly LB aka LABAT – Feel So Good Around U Maria BC – Marathon Mitski – Nothings About to Happen to Me Nothing – a short history of decay Shane Parish – Autechre Guitar
March 6: Hater – Mosquito Natalie Jane Hill – Hopeful Woman Resavoir – Themes For Dreams Scout Gillett – Tough Touch Shabaka – Of The Earth Tomu DJ – Antagonist waterbaby – Memory Be a Blade
March 13: Alexis Taylor – Paris In The Spring Bill Orcutt – Music In Continuous Motion Crack Cloud – Peace and Purpose Cut Worms – Transmitter ELUCID – I Guess U Had To Be There James Blake – Trying Times Johnny Blue Skies & The Dark Clouds – Mutiny After Midnight Kim Gordon – PLAY ME The Notwist – News From Planet Zombie Ora Cogan – Hard Hearted Woman Tinariwen – Hoggar
March 20: Avalon Emerson & The Charm – Written Into Changes Chalk – Crystalpunk Colleen – Libres antes del final Grace Ives – Girlfriend Green-House – Hinterlands Whitney Johnson, Lia Kohl & Macie Stewart – BODY SOUND
March 27: ADULT. – Kissing Luck Goodbye
Buzzy Lee – Shoulder to Shoulder
Fcukers – Ö Holy Fuck – Event Beat Irreversible Entanglements – Future Present Past José González – Against the Dying of the Light King Tuff – MOO Konradsen – Hunt, Gather Lauren Auder – Whole World As Vigil Lone – Hyperphantasia The New Pornographers – The Former Site Of Pan•American – Fly The Ocean In A Silver Plane Robyn – Sexistential Shinchi Atobe – Silent Way Snail Mail – Ricochet Tom Misch – Full Circle
April 3: Arlo Parks – Ambiguous Desire John Andrews & The Yawns – Streetsweeper Makthaverskan – Glass and Bones A Place To Bury Strangers – Rare and Deadly Sunn O))) – sunn O))) Thundercat – Distracted Wendy Eisenberg – Wendy Eisenberg
April 10: Alex Zhang Hungtai – Dras Cactus Lee – Lee’s Dream Flore Laurentienne – Volume III Jessie Ware – Superbloom My New Band Believe – My New Band Believe Squarepusher – Kammerkonzert WU LYF – A Wave That Will Never Break
April 17: Hollie Cook – Shy Girl In Dub!
Tiga – Hotlife Yaya Bey – Fidelity
April 24: Angelo De Augustine – Angel In Plainclothes Friko – Something Worth Waiting For Gia Margaret – Singing Hrishikesh Hirway – In The Last Hour of Light Miss Grit – Under My Umbrella Quiet Light – Blue Angel Sparkling Silver White Denim – 13 White Fence – Orange
May 1: Ana Roxanne – Poem 1 Hiss Golden Messenger – I’m People Lip Critic – Theft World
May 8: Broken Social Scene – Remember the Humans Chinese American Bear – Dim Sum & Then Some Cola – Cost of Living Adjustment Lykke Li – The Afterparty
May 15: Kevin Morby – Little Wide Open Telehealth – Green World Image