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Guest Lists

Shabazz Palaces

Ishmael Butler, mastermind behind the brain-bendingly outré Seattle rap act Shabazz Palaces, talks to Carrie Battan about the cleanest water known to man, that one fan who licked sweat off his face, and why his son is like Howard Hughes.

  • Update

    Avi Buffalo

    After a promising debut album in 2010, psychedelic folk rockers Avi Buffalo all but disappeared. Jeremy Gordon talks with leader Avigdor Zahner-Isenberg about skipping college, isolation, and the long wait for his upcoming second record, At Best Cuckold.

  • Secondhands

    Our Own Private Saturns: Future Music Now

    Mike Powell looks back on "futuristic" music from the last 50 years—from Joe Meek, to Kraftwerk, to Girl Talk—and considers what these utopian sounds say about our culture's past and present.

  • Afterword

    Tommy Ramone

    Following last weekend's death of drummer Tommy Ramone—the towering punk band's last surviving original member—Evan Minsker looks back on his personal history with the Ramones and details why Tommy was so important to their entire ethos.

  • The Out Door

    Labeling the Future

    In experimental music, record labels remain vital for supporting, curating, and even shaping the music itself. Marc Masters and Grayson Haver Currin delve into four important imprints: Erstwhile, Bathetic, Students of Decay, and Immune.

  • Update

    Christopher Owens

    On his second solo album, the former Girls leader revisits his past by reuniting with old band members while expanding his sound to include bold elements of vintage country. He talks to Ryan Dombal about quitting drugs and finding love.

  • Show No Mercy

    Pallbearer

    The doom metal quartet talk with Brandon Stosuy about finding hope in humanity's downfall, why their version of a pop song happens to be 10 minutes long, and their immense-sounding second album, Foundations of Burden.

  • Overtones

    Mozart Makes You Smarter... And Other Dubious Musical Theories

    Questions about music's effect on the brain have stumped scientists for years, and "common knowledge" in this area can be riddled with rumors. Jayson Greene tries to separate fact from fiction.

  • Staff Lists

    Overlooked Records 2014

    Some of the year's worthy records that you may have missed, including albums by Madlib and Freddie Gibbs, eclectic pop upstart Shamir, infectious Swedish punks Makthaverskan, Japanese sample whiz Lee, and many more.

  • Interviews

    United Nations

    Former Thursday frontman Geoff Rickly talks to Ian Cohen about his shadowy conceptual hardcore band United Nations, which aims to expose punk hypocrisy while providing plenty of blistering punk aggression at the same time.

  • Starter

    Sun Ra: 10 Essential Tracks

    This year marks the 100th anniversary of Sun Ra's birth, and his interstellar take on jazz and funk continues to live on and inspire to this day. Jason Heller chronicles the pioneering Afrofuturist's career and offers a playlist of highlights.

  • Update

    Duke Dumont

    Part of the British wave of chart-topping dance acts that also includes Disclosure, this producer is enjoying worldwide success with his pop-friendly take on classic house. He talks with Jordan Sargent about what he's got in store for his debut album.

  • Electric Fling

    Rattling Hum: Ambient Music's Alternate Realities

    Andy Beta breaks down the mysteries of ambient music by Aphex Twin, Jorge Velez, and others while exploring the idea that these atmospheric sounds can act as a sonic gateway drug.

  • Starter

    Footwork: 10 Essential Tracks

    Wills Glasspiegel offers an introduction to the long-running Chicago footwork movement—which is marked by hyperspeed dancing and equally frenetic beats—along with a playlist of tracks by innovators including DJ Rashad.

  • Update

    Mykki Blanco

    The genre—and gender—exploding rapper talks with Jayson Greene about what's in store for her forthcoming debut album, working with Tricky and Basement Jaxx, and why she looks up to Death Grips and Marilyn Manson.

  • Interviews

    Black Sun Rising: Ten Years of Hyperdub

    Hyperdub has proven to be a bedrock at the center of a fast-moving electronic landscape. Label head Kode9 talks to Gabriel Szatan about where the imprint has been and where it's going.

  • Photo Galleries

    Before the Storm: Trash Talk Offstage

    Photographer Brick Stowell captures the L.A. hardcore band during rare moments of calm around the release of their new album, No Peace.

  • Update

    A Sunny Day in Glasgow

    This globe-spanning psych-pop act turn separation—there was not one moment during the recording of their forever-morphing new album when the entire band was in the same place at the same time—into a virtue. By Ian Cohen.

  • Ordinary Machines

    Pretty When You Cry

    In a culture that expects women to be happy, shiny objects, sadness can become its own form of defiance. Lindsay Zoladz details the perfectly gloomy online teen-girl aesthetic, typified by the all-encompassing sorrow of Lana Del Rey.

  • Cover Story

    How to Dress Well: Soul to Keep

    After spending years blurring his voice while testing the outermost limits of pop and R&B, How to Dress Well's Tom Krell is channeling his hopes and hurt with a startling new clarity. By Ryan Dombal; photos by Erik Sanchez.

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  • Festival Report

    Bonnaroo 2014

    Paul Thompson reviews this year's fest, which featured a controversial set from Kanye West, Janelle Monáe in a straightjacket, Jack White's old-school rock, and a billion other things going on all at once. Photos by Pooneh Ghana.

  • Update

    Jessie Ware

    The British singer talks with Ryan Dombal about her slow-motion new single, the star-studded team of writers and producers she worked with on her forthcoming second album, and what she's copying from KimYe for her upcoming wedding.

  • Rising

    Total Control

    Sounding like tightly-wound '80s post-punks and drawing influence from nihilist philosophies, this Australian band deals with dark matters of self-consumption that constantly put their own existence in question. By Evan Minsker.

  • Photo Galleries

    Governors Ball 2014

    Photographer Pooneh Ghana captures portraits and backstage moments featuring Kurt Vile, El-P and Killer Mike, Phoenix, Chance the Rapper, Interpol, Sleigh Bells, and many more.

  • Rising

    Quirke

    Obsessive London electronic producer Josh Quirke recalls both the eerily calm and hugely frenetic moods of Aphex Twin while creating a bespoke sound that treats the complex latticework of human emotion like a game of chess. By Ryan Dombal.

  • Articles

    Texas Never Whispers: Two Days on Tour With Parquet Courts

    Mike Powell follows the self-proclaimed "anti-reverb" quartet in their native Texas across 48 hours and finds a band working through their own principles of rebelliousness and romance.

  • Interviews

    White Lung

    Jenn Pelly talks with White Lung frontwoman Mish Way about leaving behind a normal life for the punk-rock grind, finding power in loudness, and the fearless topics—sexual politics, rape culture—she writes about on new album Deep Fantasy.

  • Festival Report

    Nos Primavera Sound 2014

    Mark Richardson runs down the 10 things he learned at this year's Nos Primavera Sound Festival in Porto, Portugal—featuring insights on Neutral Milk Hotel, Courtney Barnett, and more—plus photos by Maria Louceiro.

  • Secondhands

    Class Clowns

    Musicians who aren't afraid of being goofballs can seem second-class by birth, but Mike Powell makes a case for comedy in his latest column, asking: What if being serious was just the wall we had to break through on the way to being funny?

  • Update

    The Antlers

    Though they're best known for an utterly wrenching concept album set in a children's cancer ward, this increasingly Zen indie-rock trio is learning to make peace with their worst fears on new album Familiars. By Jayson Greene.

  • Like many music lovers of a certain age, I have a lot of warm memories tied up with release days. I miss the simple ritual of making time to buy a record. I also miss listening to something special for the first time and imagining, against reason, the rest of the world holed up in their respective bedrooms, having the same experience. Before last Wednesday, I can't remember the last time I had that feeling. I also can't remember the last time I woke up voluntarily at 6 a.m. either, but like hundreds of thousands of other people around the world, there I was, sat at my computer, headphones on, groggy, but awake, and hitting play.

    Such a return to communal exchange isn't something you'd expect to be orchestrated by a band who's wrung beauty from alienation for more than a decade. But if the past few weeks have taught us anything, it's that Radiohead revel, above all else, in playing against type. It's written in their discography; excluding the conjoined twins that were Kid A and Amnesiac, each of their albums constitutes a heroic effort to debunk those that came before it. Although 2003's Hail to the Thief was overlong and scattershot, it was important insofar as it represented the full band's full-circle digestion and synthesis of the sounds and methods they first toyed with on OK Computer. So, after a decade of progression, where do we go from here?

    If the 2006 live renditions of their new material were anything to go by, not much further. With few exceptions, the roughly 15 songs introduced during last year's tour gave the impression that after five searching records, Radiohead had grown tired of trying to outrun themselves. Taken as a whole, the guitar-centric compositions offered a portrait of a band who, whether subconsciously or not, looked conciliatory for the first time in its career. Although a wonderful surprise, their early October album announcement only lent further credence to the theory. Where they'd previously had the confidence to precede albums like OK Computer and Kid A with marketing fanfare worthy of a classic-in-making, this sneak attack felt like a canny strategy to prepare fans for an inevitable downshift.

    The brilliant In Rainbows represents no such thing. Nonetheless, it's a very different kind of Radiohead record. Liberated from their self-imposed pressure to innovate, they sound-- for the first time in ages-- user-friendly; the glacial distance that characterized their previous records melted away by dollops of reverb, strings, and melody. From the inclusion and faithful rendering of longtime fan favorite "Nude" to the classic pop string accents on "Faust Arp" to the uncharacteristically relaxed "House of Cards", Radiohead's sudden willingness to embrace their capacity for uncomplicated beauty might be In Rainbows' most distinguishing quality, and one of the primary reasons it's an improvement on Hail to the Thief.

    Now that singer Thom Yorke has kickstarted a solo career-- providing a separate venue for the solo electronic material he used to shoehorn onto Radiohead albums-- Radiohead also sound like a full band again. Opener "15 Step"'s mulched-up drum intro represents the album's only dip into Kid A-style electronics; from the moment Jonny Greenwood's zestful guitar line takes over about 40 seconds in, In Rainbows becomes resolutely a five-man show. (For all of Yorke's lonely experimental pieces, it's easy to forget how remarkably the band play off each other; the rhythm section of Phil Selway and Colin Greenwood are especially incredible, supplying between them for a goldmine of one-off fills, accents, and runs over the course of the record.) A cut-up in the spirit of "Airbag"-- albeit with a jazzier, more fluid guitar line-- "15 Step" gives way to "Bodysnatchers", which, like much of In Rainbows, eschews verse/chorus/verse structure in favor of a gradual build. Structured around a sludgy riff, it skronks along noisily until about the two-minute mark, when the band veers left with a sudden acoustic interlude. By now, Radiohead are experts at tearing into the fabric of their own songs for added effect, and In Rainbows is awash in those moments.

    The band's big-hearted resurrection of "Nude" follows. The subject of fervent speculation for more than a decade, its keening melodies and immutable prettiness had left it languishing behind Kid A's front door. Despite seeming ambivalent about the song even after resurrecting it for last year's tour, this album version finds Yorke wrenching as much sweetness out of it as he possibly can, in turn giving us our first indication that he's in generous spirits. Another fan favorite, "Weird Fishes/Arpeggi" brandishes new drums behind its drain-circling arpeggios, but sounds every bit as massive in crescendoing as its live renditions suggested it might. "All I Need", meanwhile, concludes the album's first side by dressing up what begins as a skeletal rhythm section in cavernous swaths of glockenspiel, synths, pianos, and white noise.

    With its fingerpicked acoustic guitars and syrupy strings, "Faust Arp" begs comparisons to some of the Beatles' sweetest two-minute interludes, while the stunning "Reckoner" takes care of any lingering doubt about Radiohead's softer frame of mind: Once a violent rocker worthy of its title, this version finds Yorke's slinky, elongated falsetto backed by frosty, clanging percussion and a meandering guitar line, onto which the band pile a chorus of backing harmonies, pianos, and-- again-- swooping strings. It may not be the most immediate track on the album, but over the course of several listens, it reveals itself to be among the most woozily beautiful things the band has ever recorded.

    With its lethargic, chipped-at guitar chords, "House of Cards" is a slow, R.E.M.-shaped ballad pulled under by waves of reverbed feedback. While it's arguably the one weak link in the album's chain, it provides a perfect lead-in to the spry guitar workout of "Jigsaw Falling Into Place". Like "Bodysnatchers" and "Weird Fishes/Arpeggi" before it, "Jigsaw" begins briskly and builds into a breakneck conclusion, this time with Yorke upshifting from low to high register to supply a breathless closing rant.

    Finally, the closer. Another fan favorite, Yorke's solo versions of "Videotape" suggested another "Pyramid Song" in the making. Given the spirit of In Rainbows, you'd be forgiven for assuming its studio counterpart might comprise some sort of epic finale, but to the disappointment of fans, it wasn't to be. Instead, we get a circling piano coda and a bassline that seems to promise a climax that never comes. "This is one for the good days/ And I have it all here on red, blue, green," Yorke sings. It's an affecting sentiment that conjures up images of the lead singer, now a father of two, home filming his kids. A rickety drum beat and shuddering percussions work against the melody, trying clumsily to throw it off, but Yorke sings against it: "You are my center when I spin away/ Out of control on videotape."

    As the real life drums give way to a barely distinguishable electronic counterpart, Yorke trails off, his piano gently uncoils, and the song ends with a whimper. The whole thing is an extended metaphor, of course, and, this being Radiohead, it's heavy-handed in its way, but it's also a fitting close to such a human album. In the end, that which we feared came true: In Rainbows represents the sound of Radiohead coming back to earth. Luckily, as it turns out, that's nothing to be afraid of at all.

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