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2025 New Music Thread (2 Viewers)

The Rooks - Right About Now

Oh yeah!

Glaswegian Indie Rockers with a Post Punk, Power Pop banger that reminds me of The Plimsouls.


 
I love concept albums but they're a rare species these days. Car Seat Headrest's The Scholars and The Waterboys' Love, Death and Dennis Hopper are both new ones that are worth at least a couple of listens. I respect their ambition in world of 3-4 minute songs.

The Dennis Hopper album is more accessible because songwriter Mike Scott is working with existing IP. You can listen casually and nod your head knowingly when he does shout outs to Sal Mineo and Frank Booth. I think the album succeed better on its concept than the music. There's a number of spoken word and experimental pieces that further the concept but don't work as well as songs. When reflecting back on the album, I remember the references to Hopper's career more than any of the melodies.

Car Seat Headrest has kind of the opposite problem. The songs are some of the best and certainly most ambitious and complex of Will Toledo's career; he's come a long way from his early home recordings. There's a epic trilogy of songs on the album's second half that clock in at 11, 11 and 19 minutes that may not work in their entirety but have some excellent segments. I haven't been able yet to tie the songs in with the concept which deals with a bunch of college students. I probably have to listen again while reading the lyrics like in the olden days.
 
billy woods ft. Despot and El-P - "Corinthians"

Brand spanking new for 2025. We'll never get a proper album from Despot but he seems willing to guest on woods's albums every three years and it's a welcome thing. This is off of the album GOLLIWOG

 
A few hits on RR today




And for some reason, the Disclosure song on the playlist Spotify generates specifically for me, is grayed out and I can't listen to it. (And no, it's not the child-proof bad language setting.)
Idiots.
 
Velvet Trip - The Bends

Delightful retro 80's vibe and video from Austrailia, like if Nile Rodgers had produced Duran Duran.


 
Because stranger things kid making decent music isn't something I'd have guessed at.

Didn't want to use bingo card.
I think it’s a pretty good song - and I’m sure him being involved in Stranger Things could be just as big as a detriment to people taking his music seriously as it was a help to get him there in the first place.
 
Revivalry - Kick Off

"Untethered (UK) teens Revivalry release KICK OFF to launch debut EP"

Youngest band ever to play Kendal Calling Festival and I don't think any of them are older now than 17, but these kids can rock. 🎸


 
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The Cavs - Headshot 🔫

🎶Hit 'em with a head shot cos you might miss the next one🎶

Manchester UK Indie Rock band with a melodic guitar driven rocker.


 
Pippa Blundell - Crave

Glasgow, Scotland folk singer drawing influence from the storytelling lineage of folk music.

She reminds me of Joan Baez and Buffy Sainte-Marie, however my initial reaction upon hearing this was that her vocals were a little over-the-top for my tastes but I kept listening to this tune and was glad I did.


 
Wuinguin, Funny Factures - Triangle

Wuinguin is a Tokyo based singer/songwritter/producer.

I am really at a loss as to how to classify this...Trip Hop? Shoegaze? DreamPop?

I ran across this a few weeks ago on Spotify and it put it aside but came back to it today and thought "This really is pretty good"


 
Beverly - Every Breath You Take

Cover of The Police hit, but doesn't come across as if the singer is a creepy stalker - maybe because it is uptempo, danceable and that the vocalist is female.

Beverly, is a Filipina pop singer based in Japan.

Found it on Spotify's "J-Pop streaming Weekly New Releases" and was almost afraid to listen to it but glad I did.


 
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Shoeing up as new Stereolab on my RR.

I never know if it a rerelease, or previously unreleased.. but her voice sounds different/older, and I'd heard they were making new music... I like it regardless!

 
Cool! Seeing Malkmus solo next week.

Edit: Reading the comments, had no idea Harness Your Hopes went viral on Tik Tok and is now the most played Pavement tune on Spotify. Cool tune, but not sure that's in the top 30 for me. Social media is weird.
 
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Frank On Tap - Mary & Me

New Zealand Indie Rockers. Haunting tune driven by hypnotic bassline and guitar interplay.

"Mary & Me is a raw and honest portrayal of the battle against addiction, cleverly wrapped in an upbeat, feel-good sonic package."


 
Because stranger things kid making decent music isn't something I'd have guessed at.

Didn't want to use bingo card.
I think it’s a pretty good song - and I’m sure him being involved in Stranger Things could be just as big as a detriment to people taking his music seriously as it was a help to get him there in the first place.
Stranger Things has a pretty big young fanbase that I don't think will take his role in that as any sort of negative to his music career at all. The current generation doesn't have the same concepts of authencity and sell out and corporatism as existed in the 90s. And it kind of goes without saying, this target audience for any new band/artist is young folks. The few songs from the album released so far are quite good, I am interested.
 
I'm really digging Arcade Fires new tune.


I hadn’t had an Arcade Fire album on heavy rotation since Reflektor but have been enjoying this one.

I decided to check out opinions online. Wow! Pretty terrible apparently. Even the Arcade Fire subreddit hates it. :shrug:
I don't love the album as a whole. But I like a couple tunes quite a bit. Caveat- im not a fanboy to begin with, but I really like a bunch of their tunes.
 
I'm really digging Arcade Fires new tune.


I hadn’t had an Arcade Fire album on heavy rotation since Reflektor but have been enjoying this one.

I decided to check out opinions online. Wow! Pretty terrible apparently. Even the Arcade Fire subreddit hates it. :shrug:
They feel very of a time to me. There first 3 albums are classics IMO but it's hard to separate them from the time they were released (Bush, War in Iraq, Recession, etc).
 
Revivalry - Blue Underground

"From out debut EP, Modern Nostalgia. Cant wait to hear you all singing along to this on our EP tour"

These Cleethorpes, England, UK teens keep amazing me. The song transitions from acoustic to full electric after the midway point.


 
Revivalry - Blue Underground

"From out debut EP, Modern Nostalgia. Cant wait to hear you all singing along to this on our EP tour"

These Cleethorpes, England, UK teens keep amazing me. The song transitions from acoustic to full electric after the midway point.



Here is a live version in a small London club done late last year while they were still developing the song.

These kids amuse me, they said they wanted to call the song Blue Monday, but "apparently somebody beat us to it"

 
David Lowery of Cracker and Camper van Beethoven fame is releasing a 3LP/2CD album called Fathers, Sons, and Brothers. The sheer length of that makes it seem like almost a farewell album though he hasn’t actually said that as far as I know.

His first preview single is just a a quick homage to the song that changed the trajectory of his life and supports the idea that this might be a farewell or at least a retrospective.

He writes on Facebook:

This is the first preview single from my solo 3LP/2CD album Fathers Sons and Brothers. More on this album here.

STREAM THIS SONG HERE : https://davidl.lnk.to/I_wrote
PREORDER THE ALBUM HERE: https://davidl.lnk.to/FSB
ALBUM OUT MAY 30TH
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++=
I suppose everyone can look back on something they did or a decision they made that put their life on a totally different trajectory. I mean a decision that took them off one track and put them on another. Usually, it’s big things like “I went into the recruiter’s office and joined the Marines” or “I turned around and went back into the gas station and asked your mother for her number.”

I’ve made some big trajectory-shifting decisions too, like going back to college and moving from the west coast to the east coast. But in hindsight, I see that small, impulsive, even frivolous actions had an even greater effect on my life.

The most consequential of these small actions was writing the song “Take the Skinheads Bowling.” It was practically a throwaway song. David McDaniel, the original co-founder of Camper Van Beethoven, and I had been riffing on nonsensical lyrics and implausible narratives for weeks. One day, after a robbery at the liquor store where I worked, McDaniel and I (maybe Chris Molla too) were strumming guitar chords and firing off lines at each other. The idea was to undermine any evolving meaning in the lyrics, so the song would have no point. Eventually, over the course of the next few rehearsals, “Take the Skinheads Bowling” emerged from this.

Why did it change my life? It’s probably the catchiest song on the first Camper Van Beethoven album. Despite the nonsensical lyrics, it’s fun to sing along with the chorus. A couple of years later, it caught the ear of BBC radio DJs, and everything changed. Although some college stations in the US were playing the song, it was only after UK music magazines wrote about us that our popularity grew in the States. Although these magazines were UK mags, they were often sold in US record stores and eagerly read by the college radio kids who were searching for the next band or sound. College radio then really embraced us. Eventually, commercial stations in Detroit and LA started playing the song, and MTV showed the video on their specialty shows.

“Where The Hell is Bill?” Cute song but not substantial enough. “Lassie?” A fan favorite, but the out chorus is too noisy and atonal for the radio. Without “Skinheads,” Camper Van Beethoven might not have become commercially viable and could have faded away. That early success allowed us to quit our day jobs and focus on our music. We quickly wrote and recorded three more albums and soon we were signed to a major label.

The original band was a loose, ever-evolving ensemble that included Chris Molla, Victor Krummenacher, Mike Zorn, Bill McDonald, and Daniel Blume. After a few months, Chris Molla and I decided to move back to Santa Cruz. We asked McDaniel and Krummenacher to join us. Victor agreed, but McDaniel had a startling confession: he felt called by God to become a minister. He enjoyed playing music but felt his life had a different purpose. He followed through on this, and as I explain in the song, “he went on missions all around the world, while I toured around meeting girls who liked the song called ‘Take the Skinheads Bowling.’”

That song changed my life, but for David McDaniel, it didn’t change much. He was locked on a path long before the song was written. I’ve spoken with him over the years, and he doesn’t seem to have any regrets. I joke in the song,”I wrote a song called ‘Take the Skinheads Bowling,’ Reverend McDaniel built an orphanage.” I don’t know if he built orphanages, but he seems to have lived a consequential life, and “Take the Skinheads Bowling” is simply an unusual footnote.

I WROTE A SONG CALLED TAKE THE SKINHEADS BOWLING.

I was working in a liquor store in San Bernardino
Summer of 1983
The liquor store got robbed while I was stocking up the cooler
Took a 40 and I went home and wrote a song
I wrote a song called take the skinheads bowling

So won’t you take the skinheads bowling take them bowling
It’s a song that don’t mean anything
It’s a song that put me on a different trajectory
Take the skinheads bowling take them bowling

Co-founded the band with a guy named David McDaniel
Had a calling from God and left the band
He went on missions all around the world
While I toured around
Meeting girls that liked the song called
Take the skinheads bowling
Take the skinheads bowling take them bowling

I wrote a song called take the skinheads bowling
Reverend McDaniel built an orphanage
Sadly, you’ve never heard of him and you barely heard of me
Though I wrote a song called take the skinheads bowling
++++++++++++++++++

Listening to this now. I admittedly am a Camper and Cracker stan but it’s a lovely retrospective. Feels like the track listings are in chronological order. I haven’t made it through the whole thing yet, just started.

Here’s Mexican Chickens: https://youtu.be/nPjuwVIZ2TU?si=HAc24WvthaxDttv5

I don’t have Spotify, sorry. Sweet and sad and raw tune.
 
Last edited:
David Lowery of Cracker and Camper van Beethoven fame is releasing a 3LP/2CD album called Fathers, Sons, and Brothers. The sheer length of that makes it seem like almost a farewell album though he hasn’t actually said that as far as I know.

His first preview single is just a a quick homage to the song that changed the trajectory of his life and supports the idea that this might be a farewell or at least a retrospective.

He writes on Facebook:

This is the first preview single from my solo 3LP/2CD album Fathers Sons and Brothers. More on this album here.

STREAM THIS SONG HERE : https://davidl.lnk.to/I_wrote
PREORDER THE ALBUM HERE: https://davidl.lnk.to/FSB
ALBUM OUT MAY 30TH
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++=
I suppose everyone can look back on something they did or a decision they made that put their life on a totally different trajectory. I mean a decision that took them off one track and put them on another. Usually, it’s big things like “I went into the recruiter’s office and joined the Marines” or “I turned around and went back into the gas station and asked your mother for her number.”

I’ve made some big trajectory-shifting decisions too, like going back to college and moving from the west coast to the east coast. But in hindsight, I see that small, impulsive, even frivolous actions had an even greater effect on my life.

The most consequential of these small actions was writing the song “Take the Skinheads Bowling.” It was practically a throwaway song. David McDaniel, the original co-founder of Camper Van Beethoven, and I had been riffing on nonsensical lyrics and implausible narratives for weeks. One day, after a robbery at the liquor store where I worked, McDaniel and I (maybe Chris Molla too) were strumming guitar chords and firing off lines at each other. The idea was to undermine any evolving meaning in the lyrics, so the song would have no point. Eventually, over the course of the next few rehearsals, “Take the Skinheads Bowling” emerged from this.

Why did it change my life? It’s probably the catchiest song on the first Camper Van Beethoven album. Despite the nonsensical lyrics, it’s fun to sing along with the chorus. A couple of years later, it caught the ear of BBC radio DJs, and everything changed. Although some college stations in the US were playing the song, it was only after UK music magazines wrote about us that our popularity grew in the States. Although these magazines were UK mags, they were often sold in US record stores and eagerly read by the college radio kids who were searching for the next band or sound. College radio then really embraced us. Eventually, commercial stations in Detroit and LA started playing the song, and MTV showed the video on their specialty shows.

“Where The Hell is Bill?” Cute song but not substantial enough. “Lassie?” A fan favorite, but the out chorus is too noisy and atonal for the radio. Without “Skinheads,” Camper Van Beethoven might not have become commercially viable and could have faded away. That early success allowed us to quit our day jobs and focus on our music. We quickly wrote and recorded three more albums and soon we were signed to a major label.

The original band was a loose, ever-evolving ensemble that included Chris Molla, Victor Krummenacher, Mike Zorn, Bill McDonald, and Daniel Blume. After a few months, Chris Molla and I decided to move back to Santa Cruz. We asked McDaniel and Krummenacher to join us. Victor agreed, but McDaniel had a startling confession: he felt called by God to become a minister. He enjoyed playing music but felt his life had a different purpose. He followed through on this, and as I explain in the song, “he went on missions all around the world, while I toured around meeting girls who liked the song called ‘Take the Skinheads Bowling.’”

That song changed my life, but for David McDaniel, it didn’t change much. He was locked on a path long before the song was written. I’ve spoken with him over the years, and he doesn’t seem to have any regrets. I joke in the song,”I wrote a song called ‘Take the Skinheads Bowling,’ Reverend McDaniel built an orphanage.” I don’t know if he built orphanages, but he seems to have lived a consequential life, and “Take the Skinheads Bowling” is simply an unusual footnote.

I WROTE A SONG CALLED TAKE THE SKINHEADS BOWLING.

I was working in a liquor store in San Bernardino
Summer of 1983
The liquor store got robbed while I was stocking up the cooler
Took a 40 and I went home and wrote a song
I wrote a song called take the skinheads bowling

So won’t you take the skinheads bowling take them bowling
It’s a song that don’t mean anything
It’s a song that put me on a different trajectory
Take the skinheads bowling take them bowling

Co-founded the band with a guy named David McDaniel
Had a calling from God and left the band
He went on missions all around the world
While I toured around
Meeting girls that liked the song called
Take the skinheads bowling
Take the skinheads bowling take them bowling

I wrote a song called take the skinheads bowling
Reverend McDaniel built an orphanage
Sadly, you’ve never heard of him and you barely heard of me
Though I wrote a song called take the skinheads bowling
++++++++++++++++++

Listening to this now. I admittedly am a Camper and Cracker stan but it’s a lovely retrospective. Feels like the track listings are in chronological order. I haven’t made it through the whole thing yet, just started.

Here’s Mexican Chickens: https://youtu.be/nPjuwVIZ2TU?si=HAc24WvthaxDttv5

I don’t have Spotify, sorry. Sweet and sad and raw tune.
Apparently these were three albums that weren’t previously released to streaming (plus a few brand new songs)? Anyway, all new to me. Lots of excellent songs. Piney Woods is my favorite so far.
 
Salarymen - Just Because You Can

A fun retro bop from this Sydney, Australia duo who "Combine vintage and modern influences"


 
Katie & The Honky Tonks - Honky Tonk in Iowa 🤠

🎶Tell me where can I find a honky tonk in Iowa🎶

File under: Americana, Country, Alt Country, Country Rock.


 
David Lowery of Cracker and Camper van Beethoven fame is releasing a 3LP/2CD album called Fathers, Sons, and Brothers. The sheer length of that makes it seem like almost a farewell album though he hasn’t actually said that as far as I know.

His first preview single is just a a quick homage to the song that changed the trajectory of his life and supports the idea that this might be a farewell or at least a retrospective.

He writes on Facebook:

This is the first preview single from my solo 3LP/2CD album Fathers Sons and Brothers. More on this album here.

STREAM THIS SONG HERE : https://davidl.lnk.to/I_wrote
PREORDER THE ALBUM HERE: https://davidl.lnk.to/FSB
ALBUM OUT MAY 30TH
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++=
I suppose everyone can look back on something they did or a decision they made that put their life on a totally different trajectory. I mean a decision that took them off one track and put them on another. Usually, it’s big things like “I went into the recruiter’s office and joined the Marines” or “I turned around and went back into the gas station and asked your mother for her number.”

I’ve made some big trajectory-shifting decisions too, like going back to college and moving from the west coast to the east coast. But in hindsight, I see that small, impulsive, even frivolous actions had an even greater effect on my life.

The most consequential of these small actions was writing the song “Take the Skinheads Bowling.” It was practically a throwaway song. David McDaniel, the original co-founder of Camper Van Beethoven, and I had been riffing on nonsensical lyrics and implausible narratives for weeks. One day, after a robbery at the liquor store where I worked, McDaniel and I (maybe Chris Molla too) were strumming guitar chords and firing off lines at each other. The idea was to undermine any evolving meaning in the lyrics, so the song would have no point. Eventually, over the course of the next few rehearsals, “Take the Skinheads Bowling” emerged from this.

Why did it change my life? It’s probably the catchiest song on the first Camper Van Beethoven album. Despite the nonsensical lyrics, it’s fun to sing along with the chorus. A couple of years later, it caught the ear of BBC radio DJs, and everything changed. Although some college stations in the US were playing the song, it was only after UK music magazines wrote about us that our popularity grew in the States. Although these magazines were UK mags, they were often sold in US record stores and eagerly read by the college radio kids who were searching for the next band or sound. College radio then really embraced us. Eventually, commercial stations in Detroit and LA started playing the song, and MTV showed the video on their specialty shows.

“Where The Hell is Bill?” Cute song but not substantial enough. “Lassie?” A fan favorite, but the out chorus is too noisy and atonal for the radio. Without “Skinheads,” Camper Van Beethoven might not have become commercially viable and could have faded away. That early success allowed us to quit our day jobs and focus on our music. We quickly wrote and recorded three more albums and soon we were signed to a major label.

The original band was a loose, ever-evolving ensemble that included Chris Molla, Victor Krummenacher, Mike Zorn, Bill McDonald, and Daniel Blume. After a few months, Chris Molla and I decided to move back to Santa Cruz. We asked McDaniel and Krummenacher to join us. Victor agreed, but McDaniel had a startling confession: he felt called by God to become a minister. He enjoyed playing music but felt his life had a different purpose. He followed through on this, and as I explain in the song, “he went on missions all around the world, while I toured around meeting girls who liked the song called ‘Take the Skinheads Bowling.’”

That song changed my life, but for David McDaniel, it didn’t change much. He was locked on a path long before the song was written. I’ve spoken with him over the years, and he doesn’t seem to have any regrets. I joke in the song,”I wrote a song called ‘Take the Skinheads Bowling,’ Reverend McDaniel built an orphanage.” I don’t know if he built orphanages, but he seems to have lived a consequential life, and “Take the Skinheads Bowling” is simply an unusual footnote.

I WROTE A SONG CALLED TAKE THE SKINHEADS BOWLING.

I was working in a liquor store in San Bernardino
Summer of 1983
The liquor store got robbed while I was stocking up the cooler
Took a 40 and I went home and wrote a song
I wrote a song called take the skinheads bowling

So won’t you take the skinheads bowling take them bowling
It’s a song that don’t mean anything
It’s a song that put me on a different trajectory
Take the skinheads bowling take them bowling

Co-founded the band with a guy named David McDaniel
Had a calling from God and left the band
He went on missions all around the world
While I toured around
Meeting girls that liked the song called
Take the skinheads bowling
Take the skinheads bowling take them bowling

I wrote a song called take the skinheads bowling
Reverend McDaniel built an orphanage
Sadly, you’ve never heard of him and you barely heard of me
Though I wrote a song called take the skinheads bowling
++++++++++++++++++

Listening to this now. I admittedly am a Camper and Cracker stan but it’s a lovely retrospective. Feels like the track listings are in chronological order. I haven’t made it through the whole thing yet, just started.

Here’s Mexican Chickens: https://youtu.be/nPjuwVIZ2TU?si=HAc24WvthaxDttv5

I don’t have Spotify, sorry. Sweet and sad and raw tune.
Apparently these were three albums that weren’t previously released to streaming (plus a few brand new songs)? Anyway, all new to me. Lots of excellent songs. Piney Woods is my favorite so far.
This is really good stuff imo
 
Honey Motel - If You Didn't Exist

Jangly Liverpool UK band with "A mix of styles that come together to create something more than their sum. Melodic Indie Pop with some tasty blues guitar flourishes along with splashes of Alt Rock intensity"


 
Loaded Honey - Tokyo Rain

London duo, a side project of the band "Jungle"

This is a 60's/70's Motown, Stax throwback.

‘Tokyo Rain’ recently premiered as Jack Saunders’ Hottest Record on BBC Radio 1


 
A few of Ty Segall's songs from his upcoming album have been popping up in my mixes. Love what I'm hearing.


I keep meaning to check him out he’s opening for Primus
Saw Primus on the Sailing The Seas of Cheese tour @ City Gardens (RIP), good ole Trenton, NJ.
 

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