Last weekend was the Grammys, and this weekend we'll all gather around our TVs for another major televised event, the Super Bowl (with Jennifer Lopez and Shakira playing the Halftime Show, and hopefully some funny commercials). The other big music news this week was the announcement of the My Chemical Romance reunion tour, and we also got a lot of major music festival lineup announcements this week too.
Meanwhile, there's no shortage of new albums out this week. I highlighted five below, but first, some honorable mentions: Lil Wayne, Drive-By Truckers, Squarepusher, Dan Deacon, Polica, Nathan Gray (Boysetsfire), Walter Martin (The Walkmen), Smoke Fairies, Squirrel Flower, Loving, youbet, Former Worlds, Yatra, Kesha, Ben Watt (Everything But the Girl), Big Scenic Nowhere (mem Fu Manchu, Yawning Man, Kyuss, etc), SQÜRL (Jim Jarmusch & Carter Logan), the late Daniel Johnston's live album ft. Jeff Tweedy & more, the Outburst tribute album (with Power Trip, Higher Power, Fury, Wild Side, Krimewatch, and more), two Panopticon splits (one with Aerial Ruin, one with Nechochwen), Let The Rhythm Lead: Haiti Song Summit Vol. 1 (ft. Jenny Lewis, Jonathan Wilson, Jackson Browne, etc), the Gnaw EP, and the Wild Nothing EP.
Read on for my five picks. What was your favorite release of the week?
Frances Quinlan - Likewise
Saddle Creek
Since releasing their decade-defining 2012 album Get Disowned, Hop Along have continued to expand their sound in all kinds of different directions and their 2018 album Bark Your Head Off, Dog was their biggest-sounding and most fleshed-out record yet. Singer/guitarist Frances Quinlan is now releasing her first-ever solo album under her own name (though technically Hop Along's 2006 debut album Freshman Year, which came out under the name Hop Along, Queen Ansleis, was also a solo album), but going solo doesn't mean stripping back her sound in Frances' case. Just the opposite. She and Hop Along guitarist/producer Joe Reinhart made this record together, and they used all kinds of instruments -- including synths, drum machines, harps, strings, and more -- to achieve a sound that's just as grand as the recent Hop Along records. As ever, Frances remains a hell of a vocalist, with a larger-than-life voice that reels you in every time she opens her mouth, and she continues to match her ambitious arrangements with lyrical depth. It may not be a Hop Along record, but it doesn't feel like a "side" project, just the next great thing in Frances' increasingly interesting career.