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Farees’ new single “The Melting” is one of Classic Rock Magazine’s Tracks of the Week
Set to Farees’s self-coined ‘wall of groove’ production style, this duet with The Meters’ guitarist is a syncopated kaleidoscope of squelchy funk, Latin vibes and Stevie Wonder-esque political ire. Plus the sort of trippy, idiosyncratic moments that make us think of Parliament/Funkadelic (‘That’s Farees right there! He’s on the drums, he’s singing, playing maracas, building spaceships, all types of shit!’). It’s not hard to see why the likes of Taj Mahal have endorsed him.
theWorst
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theWorst – Yes Regrets (out June 3, 2022)
In the Spring of 2018, Brooke Binion—guitarist and vocalist of Portland, Maine’s raucous punk trio theWorst—started documenting her life in song, laying the groundwork for what would become the band’s high-energy and profoundly affecting sophomore album, Yes Regrets. Yes Regrets is a ten-track collection of blistering melodic punk songs presented in chronological order detailing the downward spiral of drug and alcohol addiction, the recovery process, and approaching the world with newfound sobriety. Binion’s transparent lyricism and coarse vocals shine atop layers of distorted guitars, fuzz-laden bass and pummeling drums, creating a record equally primed for circle pits and contemplative night drives. “This album was written over a very critical couple of years for me, so I wanted to have the album flow chronologically,” says Binion. “The first couple tracks were written before I got sober, then the middle of the record was written while I was in the process of getting sober, and then the end is sort of where I’m at now.”
Formed in 2016, theWorst gained a quick reputation in the Northeast for their energetic live shows and raw sound that combines the anthemic qualities of 90s alt-rock with driving indie-punk and shades of hardcore, with Alternative Press hailing the group as “[The] glorious love child of Joan Jett & Kurt Cobain.” With Yes Regrets, theWorst have raised the stakes without abandoning the sound that they explored on their 2017 debut LP, Jane Doe Embryo, a testament to the group’s shared musical vision and Binion’s growing confidence as a songwriter. “Jane Doe Embryo was made up of the first songs I’d ever really written, and I tried to make it more poetic and universal,” says Binion. “This new record is so much more personal. I wanted it to be more direct, less metaphorical, to really capture those feelings.”
To record Yes Regrets the trio—Binion, alongside bassist Will Bradford (SeepeopleS) and drummer Craig Sala (Paranoid Social Club, Kurt Baker, Planeside)—teamed up with longtime producer Will Holland (Pixies, Fall Out Boy, The Antlers) at Chillhouse Studios in Boston, MA, and brought in a number of friends and collaborators including Dana Colley (Morphine, Vapors of Morphine), Tony Bevilacqua (The Distillers), Nikki Glaspie (Beyoncé, Nth Power, Maceo Parker), and Nate Edgar (Nth Power, John Brown’s Body).
Yes Regrets kicks off with the heavily distorted dissonance of “Blacksheepish,” an energetic and emotional tribute to a friend lost to suicide, before the sludgy “Serves You Rotten” turns the focus inward, reflecting on and second-guessing the choices that can lead to hardship before ultimately embracing them and pushing forward. Elsewhere on the album, Binion details her struggles with bipolar disorder, chronicling the actions and fallout from manic periods on tracks like “Hurt Forever” and “Monomania.” “When you’re manic, it’s like your brain is making decisions that you don’t agree with but you’re doing them anyway,” says Binion. “There’s a lot of impulsivity and that feeling of knowing something is a terrible idea but suddenly you’re doing it.”
On “This House Didn’t Build Itself” theWorst play with structure and genre, with breakneck hardcore punk verses giving way to a downtempo, sparse chorus containing some of Binion’s most beautiful vocal harmonies. Meanwhile, the album’s title track, “Yes Regrets,” combines elements of fuzzy desert-rock with early-2000s New Jersey emo before building to a noisy, anthemic climax. “It’s exhausting living this way where you’re constantly punishing yourself,” says Binion. “I’ve been through a lot, and most of it was self-inflicted, but this record is just about that pain you can cause yourself and those regrets that wear you down.”
Yes Regrets doesn’t shy away from exploring the realities of addiction, mental illness, and, appropriately, regret, but at its core, the album skirts the tendency to wallow in self-pity and isolation, instead offering a sense of community and acceptance to those who find themselves in a similar situation. “There’s some stuff I wish I could re-do, but I can’t and that’s okay,” says Binion. “I just hope people realize that even if you don’t have that hardcore ‘no regrets’ attitude, that’s alright. You might feel bad about some things that happen, but you can always still move forward from it.”
“The glorious love child of Joan Jett and Kurt Cobain.” – Alternative Press
“A hard-hitting grungy rocker.” – Brooklyn Vegan
“Echoing Dinosaur Jr or Mudhoney’s early hardcore sound…[will] bowl you over with their intensity.” – Analogue Trash
Atwood Magazine breaks down each track from Austin, TX folk-rock band Under The Rug’s brilliant new LP, Dear Adeline
Loss affects us all in different ways: Some fold into themselves for a long time, whilst others dive headfirst into anything and everything that can keep them occupied and away from their emotional scars. For Under the Rug’s Casey Dayan, the concurrent loss of his mother and dissolution of his relationship sent him down the road of intimate reflection, self-discovery, and world exploration. READ MORE…
Shawn Williams
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Hailing from the melting pot of New Orleans, Shawn Williams makes music that’s every bit as diverse and hauntingly soulful as her hometown. Williams approaches Americana with a punk attitude. She calls it “alt-rocka countrybilly, serial killer blues,” carving out an atmospheric sound that blends amplified guitars, rawly honest lyrics, and nocturnal arrangements into her own brand of Americana-noire. Wallowin’ in the Night, her fourth full-length record, adds a new dimension to that musical mix, unfolding like a soundtrack to the long, lonely hours after midnight.
“I’ve always been drawn to dark themes,” she explains. “Maybe it comes from being in New Orleans. Maybe it comes from my love of the desert. It just flows out of me from somewhere else.”
Wallowin’ in the Night shines its light on the darkness of the human experience, its songs detailing Williams’ experience with heartbreak and hangovers, breakups and booze, vices and vulnerability. Released on the heels of 2020’s The Fear of Living, The Fear of Loving, it’s an album about the people who leave and the hard habits that stick around, written and produced by a songwriter who isn’t afraid to shine a light on the skeletons in her own closet.
“A lot of these songs have a nighttime atmosphere,” explains Williams, a former radio programmer who launched her songwriting career with 2017’s Shadow and its acclaimed follow-up, 2018’s Motel Livin’. “The nighttime is when we’re mostly alone by ourselves, stuck with whatever’s going on, whether that’s sadness or happiness. When I was writing some of these songs, it was mostly sadness.”
From country ballads laced with pedal steel (“Don’t Go”) to angry, alt-rock standouts with overdriven guitar solos (“Everything You Stood For”), Wallowin’ in the Night explores the universal theme of heartbreak with Williams’ singularly genre-jumping approach. The sexually-charged “Buzzed” begins like a haunting folk song, its acoustic guitar chords punctuated by Williams’ invitation to a would-be lover to come spend the night, then builds into an anthemic, full-band salute to the carnal desires that keep us awake after hours. “Fireworks” finds her channeling Neko Case — another country-adjacent rock & roll siren who traffics in the nocturnal and the nuanced — while “So Tired” mixes fuzz guitar riffs and stomping percussion into a proudly pissed-off declaration of hard living and inebriation. Williams mixes humor with heartbreak, too, delivering biting lines — “I really do hope that you two live happily ever after, but who am I kidding? I was never good at telling jokes,” she snaps in “Someone Else” — with the stinging swagger that’s already made her a hometown hero in New Orleans.
Other hometown heroes appear on Wallowin’ in the Night, too, with Williams reconvening her studio band of regional all-stars. John Fohl, a veteran of Dr. John’s band, plays guitar. Casey McAllister (Langhorne Slim, Hurray for the Riff Raff) handles keyboard duties and plays guitar on a few tracks as well. NOLAmericana solo artist Lynn Drury sings harmonies, NPR-celebrated instrumentalist Dave Easley makes a cameo appearance on pedal steel, and The Iguanas — longtime staples of New Orleans roots-rock scene — serve as the rhythm section, matching Williams’ sharp songwriting with deep grooves. Working with engineer Tom Stern at Blue Velvet Studio, Williams produced the recordings herself, spotlighting the combination of creative vision and do-it-yourself drive that’s earned her shows alongside fellow roots-music mainstays like Wanda Jackson and Sarah Shook.
“The unbridled Williams sings of lust and longing at the dark end of the street,” gushes The Advocate, alternately describing the songwriter’s sound as “hillbilly-post-punk-goth-
Yes, there’s darkness at the end of that street. But there’s also melody, guitar-driven muscle, and the cutting insights of a songwriter who, like her New Orleans home, isn’t afraid to embrace both the wild thrills and dangerous possibilities that come with a life lived after sundown.
ICYMI: PopMatters adds new FAREES single – “Mercury / Orgullosamente” – to their Best New Songs column, calling it “a propulsive track full of rhythmic complexity.”
Neo-funk’s Farees has a new LP, Galactic Africa, coming out on 3 June, and he’s teasing it with “Mercury / Orgullosamente”. The Afrobeats artist creates a propulsive track full of rhythmic complexity, almost recalling footwork’s in some of its moments. It attacks cultural imperialism and appropriations: “Everybody wanna dance like Africans / Be tough be cool like Africans / Sing and shout and play like Africans / Smooth like Africans / Tryna look like Africans, talk like Africans, walk like Africans / But you’ll never be real like Africans / Now hit the drum like Africans.”