It's another busy week for new music, with some especially heavy hitters from the indie world and a lot of other great stuff too. I highlight ten new releases below, and Bill highlights even more in Indie Basement, including Metronomy, Midnight Oil, Sea Power, Sally Shapiro, and Elephant Stone.
On top of all that, here are a bunch of honorable mentions: Matt Pike (High On Fire), Gregor Barnett (The Menzingers), Curren$y & The Alchemist, Bad Boy Chiller Crew, The Body & OAA, And So I Watch You From Afar, Lavender Country, Shout Out Louds, Immolation, Yeat, Sada Baby, BUÑUEL (Eugene S. Robinson of Oxbow), Sarah Shook & the Disarmers, Kendra Morris, Big Nothing, Dreamtigers (mem Caspian, Defeater), Ann Beretta, A Will Away, Brick by Brick, Modern Studies, White Lies, Shovels & Rope, Methyl Ethel, Liam Benzvi, Bottom Bracket, the Human Issue EP, the Gilded Age EP, the Blue Hawaii EP, the Ergs EP, the deluxe box set of Tame Impala's The Slow Rush, the Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros live album, and the Ben Gibbard-curated Yoko Ono tribute album (ft. Death Cab, David Byrne & Yo La Tengo, The Flaming Lips, Japanese Breakfast, Sharon Van Etten, U.S. Girls, Jay Som, Deerhoof & more).
Read on for my picks. What's your favorite release of the week?
Hurray for the Riff Raff - Life On Earth Nonesuch
On their last album as Hurray for the Riff Raff, 2017's The Navigator, Alynda Segarra broke from the alt-country sound of her early years in favor of something with a harder edge and an album that embraced the Puerto Rican musician's Latinx heritage. Its peak was "Pa’lante," which became an iconic protest song of the Trump era. Five years later, Alynda is finally back with a followup, Life On Earth, and they're once again going in a different direction. They cite an array of different influences on the album, from Beverly Glenn-Copeland’s 1986 new age classic Keyboard Fantasies to Vietnamese American poet Ocean Vuong (whose voice is sampled on this album) to the organization Freedom for Immigrants, which Alynda recently started working with. They enlisted the help of producer Brad Cook, who they chose due to Cook's work on Waxahatchee’s Saint Cloud, Kevin Morby’s Sundowner, and Hand Habits' Placeholder, but perhaps the biggest difference about this album is that Alynda wanted to finally stop looking backwards. "So much of my twenties was spent being very nostalgic and feeling I was born in the wrong time," they said in the press materials for this record. "I didn’t want to do that anymore, because finally there’s resistance happening, a young-people movement wanting to change the world. Popular music has also been opened up more toward women and people of color, queer people. I was more excited about being in the present moment, and I wanted to use the tools of now."
Using the tools of now is exactly what Alynda did on Life On Earth, an album that moves between soaring, synth-coated indie rock, tender folk music, piano balladry, spoken word-infused sophisti-pop, horn-fueled art pop, and some of that ambient new age influence they picked up from Beverly Glenn-Copeland. And Alynda wasn't trying to write a protest song like "Pa'lante" this time around, but they do get political, speak-singing about ICE on "Precious Cargo," looking at colonization on "Rhododendron," and taking inspiration from climate change, the pandemic, and the 24-hour news cycle. They also get personal, like on "Pierced Arrows," a self-described "heartbreak song" which includes a line about Alynda trying to avoid running into their ex on Broadway. And in many ways, the political songs are personal too, especially the album's climactic, penultimate track "Saga," which finds Alynda taking inspiration Dr. Christine Blasey Ford’s Senate testimony and coming out with a powerful song about processing, and eventually overcoming, their own trauma ("I don't want this to be the saga of my life"). The Navigator positioned Alynda as a musician-meets-activist, but Life On Earth may actually be her most radical album yet, on both a musical and lyrical level. Her words pop out at you, and prove to be as poetic as they are blunt, as detailed and intimate as they are universally impactful. All the while, the album's ever-changing musical backdrop keeps you on your toes and makes the record fly by. It's a genuinely significant work that sounds full of intent, self-assurance, and the determination to prove oneself -- not that the Alynda Segarra of 2022 needed to do that.