Deftones season approaching! After way too many teases, the news of album nine is finally real and we got the first single today. We can't wait to hear more of that, but meanwhile, there are a whole lot of great new albums out today.
I highlight eight below, and here's a bunch of honorable mentions: Nas, Fireboy DML, Matmos (ft. Yo La Tengo, Oneohtrix Point Never, members of Pig Destroyer and tons of others), Guided by Voices, Secret Machines, Erasure, H.C. McEntire, Mulatto, Sophia, The Front Bottoms, Cut Copy, Everything Everything, Bent Arcana (mem Oh Sees, TVOTR, Gang Gang Dance), Flee Lord x 38 Spesh, Dikembe, Old 97's, No Joy, Tuning, Sally Anne Morgan, Xythlia, Ars Magna Umbrae, Atramentus, Expander, Self-Hypnosis (mem Esoteric, Lychgate), Lotus, The Waterboys, The Lemon Twigs, Alex the Astronaut, Gull, AFI side project Blaqk Audio, Fruit Bats' covers album of The Smashing Pumpkins' Siamese Dream, the Buried Alive EP, the Vic Mensa EP, and the Reserving Dirtnaps EP.
Also: Armani Caesar's Griselda debut was originally due today but it was pushed back due to the death of DJ Shay. Stay tuned for the new release date.
Read on for my eight picks. What's your favorite release of this very stacked week?
Bully - SUGAREGG
Sub Pop
Bully (the project of Alicia Bognanno) isn't shy about how directly she borrows from '90s grunge. She wrote the music for the Hole-esque band in Her Smell, covered Nirvana, signed to the label that helped turn grunge into a phenomenon (Sub Pop), recorded her new album SUGAREGG in the studio where Nirvana recorded In Utero and PJ Harvey recorded Rid of Me (Pachyderm Studios), and you can't deny the similarities between the artwork for SUGAREGG and Nevermind. It's all dangerously close to being too on the nose, but it works for Alicia Bognanno because she's really got the songs to pull it off. SUGAREGG is a good 25-30 years too late to be part of the alternative rock zeitgeist, but it rivals a lot of the bands who were part of the '90s alt-rock boom.
Having produced her first two albums herself, Alicia made this one with John Congleton, whose work with Cloud Nothings, Cymbals Eat Guitars, and Manchester Orchestra has already established him as a good fit for '90s-style rock bands, and together Alicia and John came out with one of Bully's best sounding records. Like many of the best grunge classics, it sounds big and bright and loud but never overly polished. And matching the great production is a great batch of songs, including some of the strongest ones Alicia has written yet. She pulled lyrical inspiration from some heavy topics, like dealing with her bipolar II disorder and the pressures women face in society to become mothers, and she delivers her words with some of the most immediate hooks she's written yet. It's hard to say yet if SUGAREGG has any individual song as show-stealing as "Trying" or "I Remember" from her debut, but it's perhaps her most overall consistent album, with song after song that just makes you wanna crank the volume a little more each time.
Bright Eyes - Down in the Weeds, Where the World Once Was
Dead Oceans
Bright Eyes are reunited and back with their first album in nine years, which is also one of the most ambitious records they've ever made, with an orchestra, a choir, bagpipes, Flea on bass, and more. You can my read full review of it here.