This is an extremely stacked week for new music. I highlight 11 new albums below, Bill tackles 10 in Bill's Indie Basement (including Kelly Lee Owens, Röyksopp, Melody's Echo Chamber, Dany Placard & Julie Doiron, Honeyglaze, Scalping, Shilpa Ray, Astrel K of Ulrika Spacek, and more), and we've got nearly 60 honorable mentions.
Here they are: Future, Bloc Party, Toro y Moi, Frog Eyes, Kehlani, Rammstein, Psy (the "Gangnam Style" guy), Tomberlin, Girlpool, Helms Alee, Frontperson (New Pornographers, Woodpigeon), The Head and the Heart, Pierre Kwenders, Devil Master, Dälek, Congotronics International (Konono Nº1, Deefhoof, Juana Molina, etc), Willie Nelson, William Basinski & Janek Schaefer, Lola Kirke, Oumou Sangaré, Ransom, Seratones, Courtney Swain (Bent Knee), Gaika, NoCap, Carla Morrison, Diane Coffee, Market, Flora Purim, Steven Lambke (Constantines), Charles Watson (ex-Slow Club), Last Wishes, Lou Roy, KMRU & Aho Ssan, Louie Vega, Sofi Tukker, Corb Lund, Golden Apples, Many Voices Speak, Fox Lake, Caution, Blossoms, Erica Eso, PJ Morton (ft. Stevie Wonder, Nas, Chronixx, Wale & more), Hand Model (Wreck and Reference), MJ Lenderman (Wednesday), Ann Wilson (Heart), V.C.R (ft. Pink Siifu, Sudan Archives & more), Unexplained Aerial Phenomenon (ft. Open Mike Eagle, Lil B, Fat Tony, Chester Watson & more), the Kirk Hammett EP, the Buzzcocks EP, the Dumb Numbers/Melvins EP, the Scout Gillett EP, the Raw Plastic EP, the Apostles of Eris & Gossip split, the Faye Webster orchestral EP, and the new versions of Jens Lekman albums.
Read on for my picks. What's your favorite release of the week?
Miranda Lambert - Palomino Sony Music Nashville
The line between pop country and the various forms of "alt" country grows wider and wider, but if there's one person who straddles that line more naturally than anyone else it's gotta be Miranda Lambert. She is a genuine country superstar, but her music continues to appeal even to the people who turn their noses up at pop country, because her songs are just that good. On her new album Palomino, that's as true as ever. Miranda co-produced it with Jon Randall and Luke Dick, and it follows last year's The Marfa Tapes -- the pandemic-friendly album that Miranda, Jon, and Jack Ingram made with just two microphones and two acoustic guitars in the middle of the desert in Marfa, Texas -- and it features full-band, studio versions of a few standouts from that album, including "In His Arms," "Geraldene," and "Waxahachie." But even if you heard that album, it couldn't prepare you for the totally reinvented versions that appear on Palomino. "In His Arms" remains a folky ballad that recalls the Marfa Tapes version, but Miranda turned "Waxahachie" into driving heartland rock, and even if "Geraldene" didn't namedrop "Jolene" in the first verse, it would feel like a sequel to the Dolly Parton classic. Palomino also includes "If I Was A Cowboy," the instant-classic crossover hit that Miranda dropped last fall, and elsewhere on the album, she offers up swaggering, bluesy songs like "Actin' Up" and "Country Money," breezy country pop songs like "Tourist" and "Strange," the animated singalong "Music City Queen" (which features The B-52's), a country-rockin' cover of Mick Jagger's "Wandering Spirit," the melancholic balladry of "That's What Makes the Jukebox Play," and more. Palomino's varied sequencing keeps you on your toes, and almost every song feels memorable enough to become Miranda's next big single. She clearly knows how to write a surefire hit, but also remains committed to breaking the boundaries of standard pop country, and that's a big reason this album endures throughout its 15-song runtime. Even the songs with the most undeniable hooks are full of surprises.