David Gray

David Gray’s latest project, ‘Dear Life,’ marks a triumphant return to his signature style of intricate, profound songwriting that resonates deeply with fans of thoughtful and poetic music. In this 13th studio album, Gray delves into the essence of life itself, exploring themes of relationships, mortality, and existential questions with a blend of sincerity and playfulness. The album features a poignant female presence, including vocals from Gray’s daughter Florence and a dynamic duet with rising star Talia Rae on the lead single, ‘Plus & Minus.’
As a globally acclaimed arena artist, David Gray achieved monumental success with his iconic album ‘White Ladder,’ which remains one of the best-selling British records of the 21st century. Despite influential figures in the music industry, like Adele and Ed Sheeran, recognizing Gray’s significant contributions, he has stayed true to his artistic vision, constantly striving for authenticity and creative purity. ‘Dear Life’ stands as a testament to Gray’s unwavering dedication to his craft, reflecting his deep passion for creating music that is not only special but also transformative. Gray’s artistic journey continues to inspire hope and magic among his audience, underscoring his belief in the power of music to evoke profound emotions and experiences.

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Joe Jackson

Joe Jackson, born David Ian Jackson on August 11, 1954, in Burton-upon-Trent, Staffordshire, England, emerged as a remarkable talent in the midst of the late 1970s music scene. Raised in Portsmouth and nearby Gosport, Joe faced challenges with asthma from a young age, which redirected his focus from sports to music. His journey into the world of music began when he took violin lessons at the age of 11, followed by exploring percussion and piano. By 16, he was already performing in pubs and forming musical groups, eventually leading him to study music at the Royal Academy of Music in London.
Transitioning from rock to reggae and jump blues, Joe Jackson’s versatility shone through as he delved into various music genres, culminating in the 1982 album ‘Night & Day.’ This album, inspired by Cole Porter, showcased Jackson’s evolution into a sophisticated songwriter. Hits like ‘Steppin’ Out’ and ‘Breaking Us in Two’ propelled his career, allowing him to venture into diverse projects such as classical music compositions and experimental albums like ‘What a Racket!’. Jackson’s musical journey reflects his unwavering dedication to creativity and exploration, setting him apart as a dynamic and influential figure in the music industry.

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Marcus King

The artist, known for their captivating music, recently released their latest album titled ‘Mood Swings.’ This highly anticipated album showcases the artist’s versatility and unique style, captivating audiences worldwide. With a blend of soulful melodies and heartfelt lyrics, the album has already garnered critical acclaim and is resonating with listeners of all ages.
Embodying creativity and innovation, the artist has established themselves as a trailblazer in the music industry. Their dedication to pushing boundaries and exploring new musical horizons sets them apart as a visionary artist. ‘Mood Swings’ is a testament to their artistic evolution and commitment to delivering unforgettable music experiences. As fans eagerly embrace the album, the artist continues to redefine the music landscape and inspire audiences with their extraordinary talent.

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The War On Drugs

The history of rock ’n’ roll is a story of splintering. Stop here for 10 seconds, and think: How many niches can you name without even trying, without having to pause for just a split second? They seem infinite and, already the better part of a century since rock’s bastard birth, still ceaseless, each new form defined by the mainframe’s perpetuity of flux. But over the last 15 years, The War on Drugs have steadily emerged as one of the mightiest counterweights to this endless division, reconnecting rock’s manifold hyphenates with an ardor and ease that suggest they were never split far apart in the first place. Folk, indie, kosmiche, noise, roots, arena, psychedelic, soft, whatever—The War on Drugs are this century’s great rock ’n’ roll synthesists, obviating the gaps between the underground and the mainstream, between the abstruse and the anthemic, making records that wrestle a fractured past into a unified and engrossing present. The War on Drugs have never done that so well as they do with I Don’t Live Here Anymore, their fifth studio album and their most compulsive and bold set of songs to date.

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Frank Turner

Singer/songwriter Frank Turner transitioned to folkier acoustic music following the disbandment of Million Dead. A globally acclaimed artist, Turner is renowned for his thought-provoking folk-punk-pop rebel songs, addressing themes like atheism, sexism, and the essence of rock & roll. Often compared to icons like Billy Bragg and Bruce Springsteen, Turner has carved a distinctive space in the realm of British music. His musical journey started with the release of ‘England Keep My Bones’ in 2011, marking his entry into the Top 200. Over the years, his sound evolved, incorporating diverse rock and pop influences while maintaining his unique lyrical style.
Born in 1981 in Bahrain, Frank Turner’s music odyssey began after his tenure with Million Dead. His love for folk and country led him to explore the acoustic realm, resulting in the EP ‘Campfire Punkrock’ in 2006. With subsequent releases like ‘Sleep Is for the Week’ and ‘Poetry of the Deed,’ Turner’s musical prowess gained recognition in both his home country and the U.S. His discography showcases a blend of introspective tracks and anthemic melodies, resonating with audiences across continents. His relentless touring and consistent releases have solidified his position as a versatile and influential musician in the contemporary music scene.
In 2017, motivated by global events, Turner embarked on his seventh studio album, ‘Be More Kind.’ This album, produced in Texas, conveyed a poignant message inspired by a line from a Clive James poem. Turner’s commitment to his craft is evident in his diverse projects, from music videos and EPs to books on songwriting. His subsequent releases like ‘No Man’s Land’ and collaborations with artists like NOFX reflect his willingness to explore new themes and musical styles. Turner’s independence from major labels reflects his artistic integrity and unwavering dedication to producing authentic and impactful music.

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Devon Gilfillian

Love You Anyway, the new album from Devon Gilfillian, is an intoxicating, genre-blasting game changer spanning soul, hip-hop, R&B, and rock, all under the banner of Black joy. With an incisive eye and unassuming swagger, Gilfillian re-imagines modern soul music by redefining its possibilities.
Produced by Jeremy Lutito (Joy Oladokun, NEEDTOBREATHE), Love You Anyway (available April 7th, 2023, via Fantasy Records) confronts as well as comforts. Chronicling Gilfillian’s journey as a Black artist living in the tumult of 21st century America, it’s as much about fighting for what you believe in: equity and representation, as it is about love.
A captivating can’t-miss live performer, the Philadelphia-born, Nashville based singer-songwriter regularly commands club, theater, and festival stages around the world. Now, on Love You Anyway, Gilfillian conjures the raw, sexy emotions of his predecessors and the next-level grooves of his contemporaries, taking soul music into an exciting and restorative new future.

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Margaret Glaspy

The third full-length from Margaret Glaspy, Echo The Diamond emerged from a deliberate stripping-away of artifice to reveal life for all its harsh truths and ineffable beauty. Like the precious gem of its title, the result is an object of startling luminosity, capable of cutting through elaborately constructed facades. This record came from trying to meet life on life’s terms, instead of looking for a happy ending in everything. The whole experience of creating it felt like effortless catharsis.
Produced by Glaspy with co-production from her partner, guitarist/composer Julian Lage, Echo The Diamond expands on the frenetic vitality of her widely acclaimed debut Emotions and Math—a 2016 release The New Yorker hailed as an album “in which pretty songs often turn prickly, enriched by carefully measured infusions of dissonance and grit.” This time around, Glaspy worked with drummer/percussionist David King of The Bad Plus and bassist Chris Morrissey (Andrew Bird, Lucius, Ben Kweller), recording at Reservoir Studios in Manhattan and embracing an intentionally unfussy process that left plenty of room for spontaneity. I love music with a big element of risk, which was really the heartbeat of this album. A lot of what you hear are the very first takes. Anchored in the raw yet mesmerizing vocal presence and impressionistic guitar work she’s brought to the stage in touring with the likes of Spoon and Wilco, Echo The Diamond holds entirely true to the spirit of its lyrical explorations, presenting a selection of songs both unvarnished and revelatory.
The follow-up to 2020’s Devotion, Echo The Diamond takes its title from a turn of phrase that Glaspy tossed off in the midst of a conversation with Lage. Bruce Lee once said to be water—if water is in a teacup, it becomes teacup-shaped; if it’s in a glass, then it takes the shape of that glass. For me, Echo The Diamond is a way of saying ‘shine bright’, ‘be brilliant.’ All throughout the album, Glaspy’s poetic sense of language creates a heady tension with Echo The Diamond’s tempestuous sound, a dynamic in full force on the exultant opening track “Act Natural.” The song captures the strange thrill of infatuation, channeling so much wonder and wide-eyed bewilderment into her lyrics Spotligtting her rare gift for rendering nuanced aspects of the human experience with primal emotionality and bracing intelligence, Echo The Diamond also offers up sublimely acerbic tracks like Female Brain: a visceral yet sharp-witted piece of social commentary that slyly veers between irony and sincerity That song offers a peek into what life can feel like for me as a woman, especially in the male-dominated landscape that I find myself in. The take we used for the album is actually a rehearsal. “Irish Goodbye,” the following track on Echo The Diamond, shifts into a moment of heavy-hearted storytelling spiked with fuzzed-out guitar and aching harmonies That song is partly meant to be a New York City portrait, but on a more personal level, I’m terribly shy and will often slip out the back door in social situations.
An album informed by profound loss; Echo The Diamond often finds Glaspy sorting through that pain to piece together indelible fragments of wisdom. On “Get Back”—a reflective and soul-stirring track on which her voice achieves a particularly gutting intensity—her insights take the form of both weary observation and tenderly delivered instruction That song speaks to many things that have accumulated over the last few years for me, including grief and loss and finding myself again through all of it. Playing that song sets me free. And on “Memories,” the album takes on a sorrowful mood as Glaspy examines the emotional ruin so easily wrought by our own grieving minds Memories was probably the most challenging song for me to track; the take you hear is the only one I was able to get through completely. It was a level of vulnerability I’d never gotten on record, and it holds a special place in my heart now. Even though it’s about a very specific loss for me, it seems to ricochet in different ways for anyone who hears it.
Originally from the Northern California town of Red Bluff, Glaspy first started writing songs at age 15 and soon began honing the potent balance of sensitivity and incisiveness that now imbues her music. In bringing Echo The Diamond to life, she adhered to a songwriting process meant to preserve and amplify her unfettered expression Along with drawing from an eclectic mix of inspirations—Sonic Youth, Vivienne Westwood’s punk-influenced approach to fashion, Tom Waits’s music and turn as a jailbird DJ in Jim Jarmusch’s Down By Law, the 1985 Japanese Western film Tampopo—Glaspy sustained that sense of thoughtful urgency upon joining forces with King and Morrissey in the studio. This is the most fluid and immediate music I have ever made. I see now that I protected the creative space by surrounding myself with incredible people in making of this record, and I’m so happy I did.
As a result of Glaspy’s rigor in protecting her instincts, Echo The Diamond ultimately marks the glorious realization of her most closely held intentions for the album. I’m excited to make music that doesn’t try to manipulate the listener into wishing for things to be any different from what they are. Ideally, I want my songs to reveal life for what it is, and to show that it’s that way for everyone.

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Inhaler

After the release of their debut album ‘It Wont Always Be Like This’ in the summer of 2021, Irish group ‘Inhaler’ took a set list of songs which chronicled their earliest years of being in a band on a vigorous worldwide touring schedule. The months spent away from home would go on to serve and inform the narrative that would become their sophomore effort ‘Cuts and Bruises’. Sonically, ‘Cuts and Bruises’ travels further away from the seismic distortions and colourations of their debut. In a desire to serve the song, it allows more space for their chemistry as a band to breathe

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My Morning Jacket

Widely ranked among the greatest live bands of their generation, My Morning Jacket have long maintained their status as one of the most vital forces in American rock-and-roll. With their thrillingly expansive and eclectic sound, the Louisville-bred band has influenced an entire era of musicians, largely by staying one step ahead of mainstream pop culture and following their instincts to endless innovation.

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Alabama Shakes

Alabama Shakes was one of the pivotal Americana acts of the 2010s, fusing Southern soul with garage rock — two styles that were in the air in 2012 when the group released their debut Boys & Girls. The quartet had a distinctive synthesis of these familiar styles, distinguished by the impassioned frontwoman Brittany Howard. Guitarist Heath Fogg helped give the band shape and texture but Howard was the center of gravity, singing with power and authority. Alabama Shakes garnered acclaim for Boys & Girls, earning a Grammy nomination for Best New Artist in 2013, then consolidating that success with 2015’s Sound & Color, which took home Grammys for Best Rock Performance, Best Rock Song, and Best Alternative Music Album. Instead of building upon this success, Alabama Shakes entered a hiatus in 2018, with Howard releasing her debut Jaime the following year. At the center of Alabama Shakes is Brittany Howard, a guitarist/vocalist who began playing music while in her teens. Howard met bassist Zac Cockrell while they were both in high school, with the pair forming a group called the Shakes. By the time the group made their live debut in May 2009, they added drummer Steve Johnson, with guitarist Heath Fogg completing the lineup not long afterward. As they honed their live act, the Shakes recorded their original songs at the Bomb Shelter, the Nashville studio of Andrija Tokic. One of these completed songs, ‘You Ain’t Alone,’ was posted on the music blog Aquarium Drunkard in July 2011, spurring a rush of attention from the music industry. In short order, the band added ‘Alabama’ to their name and independently released the eponymous Alabama Shakes EP in September 2011. Boys & Girls entered the Billboard charts at 16, kickstarting an eventful year for the band. Led by the single ‘Hold On,’ Boys & Girls was certified platinum and earned the group Grammy nominations for Best Rock Performance and Best New Artists in 2013; Boys & Girls also received a nod for Best Recording Package. Alabama Shakes didn’t win any awards that year but their performance at the 2013 Grammy ceremony helped push Boys & Girls back into the charts; it reached a peak of number six. Alabama Shakes stayed on the road through 2013, snagging another Grammy nomination in 2014 for ‘Always Alright,’ a song featured on the soundtrack to David O. Russell’s 2012 romantic comedy Silver Linings Playbook.
Alabama Shakes spent most of 2014 working on their second album, which appeared as Sound & Color in April 2015. Preceded by the single ‘Don’t Wanna Fight,’ which climbed to 13 on the Billboard Rock Charts, Sound & Color entered the Billboard Top 200 at number one. Alabama Shakes proceeded to build on this success throughout 2015, with the album’s title track, ‘Gimme All Your Love’ and ‘Future People’ all released as singles. The band received four Grammy nominations in 2016, taking home awards for Best Alternative Music Album, Best Rock song, and Best Rock Performance, which were granted to ‘Don’t Wanna Fight’ — their only loss was for Album of the Year. After winning an additional Grammy for their version of ‘Killer Diller Blues’ from American Epic: The Sessions in 2018 — the track won Best American Roots Performance — Alabama Shakes went on hiatus. Brittany Howard released the solo album Jaime in 2019, while Heath Fogg released an album as Sun on Shade. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi

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Steely Dan

Most rock & roll bands are a tightly wound unit that developed their music through years of playing in garages and clubs around their hometown. Steely Dan never subscribed to that aesthetic. As the vehicle for the songwriting of Walter Becker and Donald Fagen, Steely Dan defied all rock & roll conventions. Becker and Fagen never truly enjoyed rock — with their ironic humor and cryptic lyrics, their eclectic body of work shows some debt to Bob Dylan — preferring jazz, traditional pop, blues, and R&B. Steely Dan created a sophisticated, distinctive sound with accessible melodic hooks, complex harmonies and time signatures, and a devotion to the recording studio. With producer Gary Katz, Becker and Fagen gradually changed Steely Dan from a performing band to a studio project, hiring professional musicians to record their compositions. Though the band didn’t perform live between 1974 and 1993, Steely Dan’s popularity continued to grow throughout the ’70s as their albums became critical favorites and their singles became staples of AOR and pop radio stations. Even after the group disbanded in the early ’80s, their records retained a cult following, as proven by the massive success of their unlikely return to the stage in the early ’90s.
Walter Becker (bass) and Donald Fagen (vocals, keyboards) were the core members of Steely Dan throughout its various incarnations. The two met at Bard College in New York in 1967 and began playing in bands together shortly afterward. The duo played in a number of groups — including the Bad Rock Group, which featured future comedic actor Chevy Chase on drums — which ranged from jazz to progressive rock. Eventually, Becker and Fagen began composing songs together, hoping to become professional songwriters in the tradition of the Brill Building. In 1970, the pair joined Jay & the Americans’ backing band, performing under pseudonyms; Becker chose Gustav Mahler, while Fagen used Tristan Fabriani. They stayed with Jay & the Americans until halfway through 1971, when they recorded the soundtrack for the low-budget film You Gotta Walk It Like You Talk It, which was produced by the Americans’ Kenny Vance. Following the recording of the soundtrack, Becker and Fagen attempted to start a band with Denny Dias, but the venture was unsuccessful. Barbra Streisand recorded the Fagen/Becker composition ‘I Mean to Shine’ on her album Barbra Joan Streisand, released in August 1971, and the duo met producer Gary Katz, who hired them as staff songwriters for ABC/Dunhill in Los Angeles, where he had just become a staff producer. Katz suggested that Becker and Fagen form a band as a way to record their songs, and Steely Dan — who took their name from a dildo in William Burroughs’ Naked Lunch — were formed shortly afterward.
Recruiting guitarists Denny Dias and Jeff ‘Skunk’ Baxter, drummer Jim Hodder, and keyboardist/vocalist David Palmer, Becker and Fagen officially formed Steely Dan in 1972, releasing their debut, Can’t Buy a Thrill, shortly afterward. Palmer and Fagen shared lead vocals on the album, but the record’s two hit singles — the Top Ten ‘Do It Again’ and ‘Reeling in the Years’ — were sung by Fagen. Can’t Buy a Thrill was a critical and commercial success, but its supporting tour was a disaster, hampered by an under-rehearsed band and unappreciative audiences. Palmer left the band following the tour. Countdown to Ecstasy, released in 1973, was a critical hit, but it failed to generate a hit single, even though the band supported it with a tour.

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Lo Moon

Los Angeles four-piece Lo Moon—singer and chief songwriter Matt Lowell, bassist Crisanta Baker, guitarist Sam Stewart, and drummer Sterling Laws—emerged out of nowhere in 2018 with their debut release, “Loveless”, a slow-burning epic that transfixed everyone who heard it. The band honed their paradigm over two critically acclaimed albums, featuring songs that shift and stretch, moving from quiet to loud and back again. They tweak the rock template with impressionistic touches and ambient interludes, anchored by solid gold, melodic pop hooks, Lowell’s affecting falsetto, and intensely personal yet strangely elliptical lyrics.
After supporting tours for notable bands like The War On Drugs, Phoenix, Glass Animals, Air, London Grammar, Chvrches, Metric, Muna, and The Lemon Twigs, Lo Moon is preparing for their third release in ’24. This upcoming album revolves entirely around a single unifying idea, exploring life and personality forged from revelatory moments of lived experience. Bold and ambitious sonically, fiercely literate and imagistic, the songs in this album dance around their theme, flowing through peaks and troughs of fervent emotion. It’s a testament to the musical prowess and confidence of Lo Moon, surpassing heights of ambition with their singular work.

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