With 232 pages and an expanded 12″ by 12″ format, our biggest print issue yet celebrates the people, places, music, and art of our hometown, including cover features on David Lynch, Nipsey Hussle, Syd, and Phoebe Bridgers’ Saddest Factory Records, plus Brian Wilson, Cuco, Ty Segall, Lord Huron, Remi Wolf, The Doors, the art of RISK, Taz, Estevan Oriol, Kii Arens, and Edward Colver, and so much more.
Photo by Michael Muller. Image design by Gene Bresler at Catch Light Digital. Cobver design by Jerome Curchod.
Phoebe Bridgers makeup: Jenna Nelson (using Smashbox Cosmetics)
Phoebe Bridgers hair: Lauren Palmer-Smith
MUNA hair/makeup: Caitlin Wronski
The Los Angeles Issue
Alice Phoebe Lou, Oblivion
The South African indie-folk songwriter’s sixth album presents her at her most intimate and creative—yet still unknowable—as she traces the lines of isolation and transition.
Bruce Springsteen, Nebraska ’82 [Expanded Edition]
With the oft-rumored electric version of Bruce’s unhappiest album as its centerpiece, this five-disc collection helps to inform the maudlin medicine that fills the songwriter’s new biopic.
The Lemonheads, Love Chant
Evan Dando finds a middle ground between nostalgia and the present with his grunge-pop outfit’s latest LP, which isn’t any less messily melancholic than the project’s early-’90s peak.
A.D. Amorosi
After experimenting with primal psychedelia and Prince-esque pop-funk on 2019’s This Land, the Austin blues songwriter’s fourth album is wondrously diverse in all the right places.
The pop-country superstar leans into her homespun folk roots with mournful grace and the tiniest teardrop of tenderness.
The soundtrack to the avant-garde jazz composer’s HBO series is guided by spirits divine and self-determined whose overall effect is shapeless, cluttered, and serene.
The latest installment from the experimental ensemble’s live series revisits a May 1973 set at Paris’ L’Olympia where the band stretched out with noisy jam-like elasticity and hypnotic density.
Adding to their signature angled rhythm, Brooklyn’s jagged-alt supergroup explores spaciousness and dedication to melody on their sixth release.
The indie-rock icon’s first solo album in nearly 20 years applies her early material’s magical-realist melancholy to real-life grief with unexpected directness.
In celebrating 10 years of funky compositional invention and soulful emotion, Stephen Lee Bruner offers an extended look at his first major-chord masterpiece.
The songwriter and co-founder of the Black Country Music Association talks building community, compiling her debut album, Beyoncé’s country turn, and more.
Leaning into mellower vibes and a sound far less overproduced than their recent material, the electro-funk duo’s mature, sultry sixth LP comes off as a bit of a surprise.
The Oscar-winning filmmaker discusses his new animated investigation into the life of disappeared Brazilian jazz musician Francisco Tenório Júnior, co-directed by Javier Mariscal.
The former Against Me! vocalist returns to the business of blisteringly blunt and spare rock music with elements of her COVID-era folk efforts captured in what often feels like a rough haste.
On his eighth album, Roberto Carlos Lange reaches deeper within the self while tying the project further to electronic music as he manipulates it to suit the emotional lyrical output.
The alt-R&B innovator discusses his way with sensual, emotional songwriting ahead of the release of his third LP.
Documenting a pair of 1985 London shows, this long-bootlegged double-LP offers an early look at the playfulness and boundary-testing the no wave icons would soon perfect on EVOL.
Celebrating 50 years with a bonus rough mix of the LP, McCartney’s third album with his post-Beatles band captures a man looking to outpace his immediate past while borrowing from its glories.
Released posthumously with the production assistance of Tricky, the producer-toaster’s final statement is a collection of seamless collaborations and chic synthwave.
With her 2001 disco single going viral after soundtracking the bold finale to Saltburn, the songwriter explains how this newfound attention precedes a return to a love of dance music.
Backed with liner notes from Tim Kinsella, this career-spanning comp unites the project’s three studio albums of ragingly ornamented and searingly rarified post-punk with previously unissued tracks.
The member of the terminally cheerful Kids in the Hall comedy troupe talks venting his frustrations with Amazon’s censorship of the series’ revival with a new solo comedy show.
The Wire frontman’s 1997 turn toward drum ’n’ bass, techno, house, and industrial music is guided by the goal of atmospheric mood-shifting and a love story just beginning to build.
