Cornelius - MIND TRAIN
Last month Keigo Oyamada released his eighth album Ethereal Essence, an inessential extension of the ambient/minimalist path he's been going down in recent years. This soon after he also released a new single that sounds nothing like it, which you have to say is a flex. Instead, nine minutes of Neu!-level motorik, pulsing slow build synths, looping guitar figures leading up to a coruscating solo, incidental sound effects and a spacey intermission. He's popping over for End Of The Road (yay!) and the Barbican in September.
Hamish Hawk - Men Like Wire
More classier-than-you dramatic roar excavation of the psyche and lost opportunity from Hawk's third album A Firmer Hand. Contains the lyric "an uncanny Frankie Valli".
Laura Marling - Patterns
Sort of title track from Patterns In Repeat, the still somehow only 34 years old Marling's eighth album, first in four years and first as a mother (of a daughter, premonition fans), retreating a little to her sublimely woody folky inclinations.
Loose Articles - Are You A Welder?
First of all, incredible title. The Manchester outfit who recently opened for the Foo Fighters at one of their stadium gigs (as did our old pals Chroma, and the two toured together as a warm-up) have been on the fringes of our radar for a while for their early 80s Fall-inspired attitudinal sardonic socio-political oblique punk, finally getting an actual mention as Alcopop! picked up their debut album Scream If You Wanna Go Faster, out 26th July, from which they disassemble gender roles and expectations over a repetitively insistent burrowing riff that, has to be said, sails close to the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion's Wail.
Nightshift - Sure Look
We wrote about the Glasgow not-actually-supergroup-except-maybe-in-reverse the time before last; the latest track previewing Homosapien on 26th July wears its heart on its sleeve, its tempo knowing when to hold back and when to tumble down the proverbial hill (Ray Aggs' fiddle once again helping set the tone) and its guitar power chords set to stun.
Public Service Broadcasting - Electra
And this fifth time of asking it's... Amelia Earhart's final, failed, attempted solo round the world flight! The Last Flight, in fact, out 4th October, the first taster named after her trusted Lockheed plane which links their electroKrautsample origins - more than a hint of the Everest construction about the effects, we think - to the synth-funk groove of Bright Magic, from which EERA returns on guest vocals.
Screensaver - Permanence
The Melbourne dark post-punks are already two albums down, this being a stopgap ahead of some debut August UK and Europe dates that ratchets up the intensity that accommodates a chorus that sounds ripped from Siouxsie and the Banshees amid racing drums, sci-fi synth and art-guitar noise.
Supermilk - Many Thanks
Another part of that sprawling ME REX/Fresh/cheerbleederz family tree have a third album impending, leader Jake Popuyra laudably not letting his ALS diagnosis get in the way at all. High Precision Ghosts (ooh, Prefab Sprout reference!), out on Specialist Subject come 9th August, has as an advance party 110 seconds or so of jagged riffage and Futureheads/Field Music offbeat vocal arrangement, as if - apologies in advance - they've realised they might not have long left to get all this out here.
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