Another week into the new year, and itâs still the same old you when you look in the mirror. What happened? You used to, like, dream and have hopes and stuff. Look at what a sell-out youâve become. Donât give us that look. Weâre just telling you what all of your closest friends and loved ones have been saying for years. Possibly decades for all we know. Donât shoot the messenger is all weâre saying.
You might be thinking that itâs too late to change. Thatâs just the kind of conclusion to which someone as hopeless as you would jump. Believe it or not, though, youâre wrong. Kind of. We canât fix everything. What we can do, however, is get a jump start on fixing your archaic and increasingly lame taste in music by providing you with a handful of brand new songs. With any luck, youâll feel as if youâve been ushered into a brand new age instead of stalling in an era of past and repeated mistakes.
Without further ado, here are six new songs that our expert ears have been tuned into. They wonât call a barber for you or fix your resume, but maybe theyâll take your mind off of things for up to twenty minutes.
Pissed Jeans âMoving Onâ
When we heard that Philadelphiaâs Pissed Jeans had announced their first new album in nearly 7 years, we got so excited that we all collectively pissed ourselves. After a quick change and a thorough cleaning of the office, we finally got some time to peruse their latest single. âMoving Onâ from the forthcoming LP âHalf Divorcedâ veers a bit further into the pop-punk realm than the deranged quartet has dared to go into the past. Still, with its notable brightness, the track still carries the same signature gut-punch hooks and anxiety producing backbeat fans like us have come to expect. We canât wait to hear the rest of the record when our hearing comes back in March.
Faye Webster âLego Ring ft. Lil Yachtyâ
Atlanta singer-songwriter and noted wunderkind, Faye Webster, has finally announced her highly anticipated fifth studio album âUnderdressed At The Symphony.â Following two heavily emotional singles, âBut Not Kissâ and âLifetime,â Webster has coupled the record reveal with the excellently woozy âLego Ring.â The lyrics revolve around a simple desire to obtain and wear a ring featuring, you guessed it, a Lego piece made entirely from crystal. Featuring recent psych rock legend and long-time friend of Websterâs, Lilâ Yachty, the track is an exciting genre-bending trip that demands repeat listens while Googling the aforementioned and ostentatious ring.
Superchunk âEverybody Diesâ
There are few certainties in life: Death, taxes, and new music from power pop legends Superchunk. While the former two are less than pleasing, we can at least be thankful for the latter. Three decades into their storied career, Superchunk are still cranking out the jams with the ferocity of some wide eyed twenty-somethings who have yet to be beaten down by the world. On their latest single, âEverybody Dies,â Mac McCaughan and company take the inarguable reality of mortality and heighten it to one of their most endearing scream-along choruses in years. Weâre not sure itâs meant to be as uplifting as it sounds, but weâre certain the band knows no other way to deliver such a somber message.
Cosmic Joke âCosmic Jokeâ
If youâre anything like us, you miss the days when hardcore was faster, catchier, and easier to skate to. Fortunately, weâre no longer alone in this miserable and unforgiving world. LAâs latest hardcore outfit Cosmic Joke is on a mission to bring the genre back to its sunny SoCal 80âs roots, and they are doing so with aplomb. Their freshly released self-titled debut album rips through nine tracks in just under fifteen minutes and there isnât a single miss in the run-time. If you long for a time when bands like the Adolescents and Bad Religion were still relevant and felt safe to rep without feeling like a middle-aged weirdo, Cosmic Joke is for you.
Dancer âPassionate Sundayâ
Glasgowâs indie-pop outfit Dancer have announced their much-awaited debut LP â10 Songs I Hate About Youâ along with its lead single âPassionate Sunday.â Itâs a sparsely painted anthem complete with the bandâs penchant for avante-garde trimmings and love-sick lyricism. As lead singer Gemma Fleet soars with her signature wail, the melodic bass stylings of Andrew Doig coupled with the dedicated backbeat of Gavin Murdoch lay down the perfect foundation for guitarist Chris Taylor to go absolutely apeshit over the track, painting it with enough flair to make you consider spending your entire paycheck on a used DigiTech Whammy again.
Bloody Head âNeti Netiâ
Nottinghamâs noise-rock quartet, Bloody Head, have been crafting chaotic, ear-splitting, and borderline dangerous material for nearly a decade now. Their seventh album, âPerpetual Eden,â was just released last week and it is nothing short of massive. Packed to the brim with acerbic guitars, saturated vocals, and a rhythm section that sounds like itâs ready to throw the entire train off the rails at a moments notice, the record is a disorienting and must-listen affair. Album highlight âNeti Netiâ plays out like a thrash metal song on ketamine, while the refrain of âwhatever you think this is, no itâs not thatâ describes the entire effort to a T.
We know you have a lot going on, or at least thatâs what you tell people. To help ease your burden even further, weâve taken the time to compile these and other songs in an ongoing playlist. Itâs updated weekly so all you have to do is blindly follow it and let it warp you accordingly. You can click here to do just that! Thank us when you finally have some relevant bands to talk about.