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.
Saint Etienne, The Night
Over 30 years after their debut, the Vaseline-lensed electro-pop trio still titillates without any consideration of boundaries as they continue their recent shift toward spectral-sounding gravitas.
Daft Punk, Discovery [Interstella 5555 Edition]
Reissued in honor of its complementary anime film’s 20th anniversary, the French house duo’s breakout LP feels like a time capsule for a brief period of pre-9/11 optimism.
The Coward Brothers, The Coward Brothers
Inspired by Christopher Guest’s recent radio play reviving Elvis Costello and T Bone Burnett’s 1985 fictional band, this playful debut album proves that this inside joke still has legs.
Nate Rogers
Boognish be praised, Gener and Deaner have gotten the band—or is it the bands?—back together.
The unlikely duo hung out together for a “CBS This Morning” segment about the free Major Lazer concert that went down in Havana over the weekend.
“Dolls of Highland” is out April 29—just in time for the actual Pentecost—on Sub Pop.
Industry standards are overrated.
The director of the elephantine indie “Meadowland” plugs in to shine a light on where the roads of her career meet—and how those roads have brought her to where she is now, shooting Martin Scorsese’s “Vinyl.”
Missed #TwinPeaksDay by about ten hours, dudes.
“It Calls on Me” is out now via Trouble in Mind.
“City Sun Eater in the River of Light” is out April 8 via the band’s mothership label, Woodsist.
“Teens of Denial,” the follow-up to last year’s “Teens of Style,” is out in “late spring” via Matador.
Subtitled “The Search for More Money,” the 4K UHD–series will air via the BBC sometime this year.
His debut LP “Cut and Paste” is out May 13 on Wichita.
The parody release features such soon-to-be Mark Kozelek classics as “I Watched the Movie The Revenant with Leo DiCaprio” and “Fields of Marigold.”
It’s the primary contradiction presented on DIIV’s second album, “Is the Is Are,” that makes it so beguiling.
Ten new “Love Mojis” featuring the Beatle’s take on 8-bit melodies are now on Skype.
“Singing Saw” is out April 15 via Dead Oceans.
“No Show Jones” will co-star Jessica Chastain as Tammy Wynette and will be written by “Straight Outta Compton”’s Alan Wenkus.
Time to pretend that you have a child to feed.
Imagine those customers’ intrigue, then, when they find out that “Night Fiction” has a story to go along with it.
Don’t think he’ll be getting the deposit back for that motel.
“Chaosmosis” is out March 18 via First International/Ignition.