9 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: MGMT, Erika de Casier, and More

9 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: MGMT, Erika de Casier, and More

Music


Danish artist Erika de Casier follows her excellent 2021 full-length Sensational with Still. Like her prior album, the new one nods to 1990s and early-oughts R&B, with askew electronic touches on tracks like “Lucky” and “Ice.” The latter single features bars from Florida hip-hop duo They Hate Change, while Blood Orange appears on “Twice,” and London’s Shygirl hops on “Ex-Girlfriend.” De Casier co-produced Still with N, and enlisted players like Kirsten Nyhus Janssen, Nick León, Jonathan Jull Ludvigsen, Carl Emil Johansen, Christian Rhode Lindinger, and Tobias Sachse to fill out the record.

Listen on Apple Music
Listen on Spotify
Listen on Tidal
Listen on Amazon Music
Listen/Buy at Bandcamp
Buy at Rough Trade


Hurray for the Riff Raff: The Past Is Still Alive [Nonesuch]

Hurray for the Riff Raff The Past Is Still Alive

The Past Is Still Alive is the new album from Alynda Segarra’s project Hurray for the Riff Raff, following 2022’s Life on Earth. Segarra recorded their new LP the month after their father died, working in the studio alongside veteran producer Brad Cook. They also enlisted the talents of collaborators like Meg Duffy, Conor Oberst, Anjimile, S.G. Goodman, Phil Cook, Libby Rodenbough, Matt Douglas, Mike Mogis, and Yan Westerlund. Last fall, Segarra released lead single “Alibi,” which they referred to as “a plea, a last ditch effort to get through to someone you already know you’re gonna lose.” Segarra also shared “Snake Plant (The Past Is Still Alive),” “Colossus of Roads,” and “Hawkmoon.”



View Original Source Here

Articles You May Like

347+ Sizzling Deals You Won’t Want To Miss!
After Mike Flanagan Shares Exciting Update For Carrie TV Series, I Need To Talk About Who Should Play The Stephen King Fave
Must Read: International Woolmark Prize Announces 2025 Finalists, Nicole Kidman Covers 'W' Magazine
‘Speak No Evil’ Remake Streaming on Peacock in December
Book review of Power Metal by Vince Beiser