Philly-based band The Districts return with their third LP, what KEXP Music Director Don Yates calls, "their strongest set to date, with a fuller, more dynamic and densely textured sound combining thick, swirling guitars, muscular rhythms and often-dark lyrics of isolation and dysfunctional relationships juxtaposed with anthemic, life-affirming choruses and sweeping melodies."
Guided By Voices deliver a new one: "the latest album from Robert Pollard & co. sounds like one of their strongest releases in quite a while, with more consistently stellar songs ranging from crunchy Who-style power pop to brooding psych-pop." On her fourth LP, Brooklyn-based artist Frankie Rose brings "an assured blend of propulsive, nocturnal synth-pop and shimmering, Cocteau Twins dream-pop."
The third solo album from Gillian Welch's longtime musical partner David Rawlings "is another smartly crafted blend of string-band music with elegiac folk-rock and orchestral country-soul, featuring Welch on harmony vocals along with accompaniment from acclaimed fiddler Brittany Haas and members of Old Crow Medicine Show and Dawes." Veteran British-bred band The Cribs return with their seventh full-length, "a solid set of grungy garage-rock. Recorded and mixed by Steve Albini, the album combines thick, rumbling guitars and muscular rhythms with fist-pumping song hooks." And the third LP from Providence, RI band Downtown Boys is "a hard-hitting blend of driving post-punk and raucous garage-rock, combining buzzing guitars, searing keyboards, wailing sax and energetic rhythms with Victoria Ruiz's impassioned vocals and politically militant, bilingual lyrics attacking racism, classism, and homophobia."
Brooklyn-bred band Grizzly Bear return with their fifth LP, a release KEXP Music Director Don Yates calls "an adventurous set of densely layered and intricately arranged prog-pop, featuring a punchier, more beat-driven sound to more forcefully drive home the band's dark, imagistic lyrics of decay a…
It's a great week for local music. The latest from Olympia-via-Seattle artist Briana Marela is what KEXP Music Director Don Yates calls, "her strongest set to date of adventurous electro-pop. Co-produced by Juan Pieczanski and Ryan Heyner of Small Black, the album features a brighter, more dynamic …