This week in new releases, we hear from several artists who've been dormant for a while. Sufjan Stevens returns with his majestic new album, Carrie & Lowell, named after his mother and stepfather and partly inspired by his mother’s death. Several KEXP DJs have already hailed it as a contender for "Album of the Year," and KEXP Music Director Don Yates says, "it’s a powerful, deeply poignant album with a spare sound combining finger-picked acoustic guitar, occasional piano, atmospheric synths, hushed vocals and unflinching, autobiographical lyrics of love, family and death."
Local luminaries Death Cab for Cutie return with their first new album in four years, and their first without founding member Chris Walla. Yates states, "the album’s moody, atmospheric alt-rock sound is very much in the Death Cab tradition, though it’s a bit darker and more restrained than usual, with a variety of smartly crafted songs combining bittersweet melodies with lyrics of lost love, separation and renewal." Another Northwest treasure, The Sonics, re-emerge with their first new album since 1967. "Remarkably, the legendary Tacoma band sounds as vital as ever on their first album in 48 years, a scorching set of high-octane garage-rock with loud guitars, honking sax, searing organ, pounding rhythms, urgent vocals and primal rock screams."
Other highlights this week include the latest from Lower Dens, "a well-crafted set of hypnotic, ‘80s-steeped post-punk and dream-pop with ringing guitar lines, chilly synths and metronomic rhythms accompanying Jana Hunter’s haunting vocals and increasingly personal and direct lyrics." Oakland artist Luis Vasquez (aka The Soft Moon) releases "a potent set of adventurous, goth-tinged coldwave and postpunk, featuring a bleak, dystopian sound with cold, alien synths, industrialized rhythms, ominous vocals and dark lyrics." And Iowa-based singer/songwriter William Elliott Whitmore releases his seventh album, "a fuller, more electric sound on a variety of well-crafted, tradition-steeped songs ranging from gritty electric blues-punk to sparse folk ballads. "
It's a throwdown for album of the week, and The Mountain Goats just might come out on top with their fifteenth full-length Beat the Champ. KEXP Music Director Don Yates calls it, "a fascinating set inspired by professional wrestling though often dealing with notions of identity, justice, death and …
Spring is springing with excellent new releases, including the highly-anticipated debut (of sorts!) from Melbourne, Australia artist Courtney Barnett. KEXP Music Director Don Yates calls the release, "a masterful set that improves upon her promising early releases with even sharper songwriting and …