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2. Mirage - Ft Quelle Chris -
3. Stanton Davis and the ghetto mysticism with a song called Delta Six/Brighter days.
4. Danny Brown - Theme song
5. The Watts Prophets - Saint America
1. Abbey Lincoln - Golden Lady
2. Stevie Wonder - Golden Lady
3. Yesterdays New Quintet - Golden Lady
4. Stevie Wonder - Superwoman (where where you when i needed you)
5. Stevie Wonder - They won't go when I go
1. Common - Soul Power
2. Bjork - Venus as a boy
3. Equiknoxx - Urban Snare Cypher
4. Lord Creator - Such is life
5. Stereolab - Caledescopic
6. Blackstar - Little Brother
7. Kodak Black - Vibin in this Bitch Ft. Gucci Man
8. Sampha - Blood on me
9. Richard Pryor - That N**** is crazy
10. Dj PayPal - Dose
Now half a year in the pandemic, weâre starting to see the emergence of quarantine records, whether in the trove of reissues hastily assembled to stand in for new product or home recorded projects made with extremely close friends and family or albums that are conceived and written around the concept of isolation. Music isnât real life, exactly, but it lives nearby. And in any case, itâs still music and can be good or bad whether itâs been unearthed from a forgotten box of tapes, recorded at home without collaboration or side people or technologically gerry-rigged so that distanced partners can work together. So, as long as you all are making music, we will continue to listen and find records that move us, as the world burns all around. This editionâs contributors included Patrick Masterson, Andrew Forell, Tim Clarke, Jennifer Kelly, Bill Meyer, Jonathan Shaw, Justin Cober-Lake and Ray Garraty. Enjoy.
+ â #playboy (Deluxe Edition) (self-released)
#playboy (deluxe edition) by +
One of the most genuinely confounding records Iâve heard this year comes courtesy SEO-unfriendly artist + aka Plus Sign fka Emanuel James Vinson, a Chicago rapper, city planner and all-around community activist who spends his time helping with the cityâs Letâs Build Garden City initiative when heâs not making music (which is frequent, by the way â take a look at the breadth of that Bandcamp discography). The concept with #playboy, originally released in April but deluxed in late May, is simple: Two kids find a music machine called #playboy in their basement and start tinkering with it. Its childlike whimsy is conveyed in the song titles (âGetting the Hang of It,â âWake Up Jam (Waking Up)â) every bit as much as it is in the music, with occasionally grating indulgences, the odd earworm and a brief appearance by borderless internet hip-hop hero Lil B that makes perfect sense in context; the kindred spirit of that community-building cult auteur is strong here. You may wind up loving this record or you may wind up hating it, but I can promise you this: Youâll be thinking about it and the artist behind it long after itâs over.
Patrick Masterson
 Actress â Mad Voyage Mixtape (self-released)
I once suggested Darren Cunningham mucks about with his music because he canât help himself. That was about six years ago on the occasion of his purported âfinalâ album Untitled; with the benefit of hindsight, we can see he was (like so many others, to greater or lesser consequence) just pulling our leg with that PR. Hell, heâs released two albums worth of music in July alone: The first was the mid-month surprise LP 88, which follows in the vein of his acclaimed high period as an often brilliant, occasionally frustrating patchwork of submersible beats best played at high volume with a low end. The second came at the end of the month in an m4a file shared the old fashioned way on a forum via Mediafire link, nearly an hour and a half long, and per the man himself, âAll SP-303, sketchbook beats, recorded this past week [the first week of July] straight to recorder or cassette.â It feels very much like a homespun Actress mixtape and is probably best thought of as livelier accompaniment to 88 but, even still, thereâs no noticeable drop in quality â once Actress, always Actress. If headier lo-fi beat tapes are your beat, this will slot comfortably in line.
Patrick Masterson
 bdrmm - Bedroom (Sonic Cathedral)
Hull five-piece bdrmm play a satisfyingly crepuscular version of shoegaze on their debut album Bedroom. Ryan Smith, his brother Jordan on bass, guitarist Joe Vickers, Danny Hull on synths and drummer Luke Irvin combine the widescreen sound of Ride with a cloak of gothic post-punk. Like the late, lamented Girls Names, bdrmm find a sweet spot where atmosphere and dynamics either build to euphoric crescendos or bask in bleak funereal splendor. Bedroom seems deliberately sequenced from celebration to lament. âA Reason To Celebrateâ evokes Ride at their most anthemic, the tripping staccato driven âHappyâ summons the spirit of The Cure of Seventeen Seconds before the pace drops for the second half, the songs become quieter and darker as the band finds a more personal voice. â(The Silence)â is an ambient whispered wraith of a thing, âForget The Creditsâ impressively mopey slowcore. bdrmm donât always transcend their influences, but this debut is an atmospheric treat if your taste runs to the darker end of the musical buffet.
Andrew Forell Â
 Circulatory System â Circulatory System (Elephant 6 Recording Co.)
Circulatory System by Circulatory System
Nearly 20 years after its initial release, the excellent eponymous debut album by Will Cullen Hartâs psychedelic chamber-pop band Circulatory System gets a long overdue vinyl reissue. While his previous project, the undeniably great Olivia Tremor Control, tended to lean more towards classic psych-popâs traditional tropes â hard-panned drums, loads of disorientating tape effects, wonky harmonized vocals â Circulatory System taps into something utterly uncanny. Both Signal Morning (2009) and Mosaics Within Mosaics (2014) have their moments, but this is front-to-back brilliant, conjuring a sublime atmosphere of reflective estrangement. The music is a thick, grainy soup of shimmering instrumentation, from the eerie (âJoy,â âNow,â âShould a Cloud Replace a Compass?â) to the joyful (âYesterdayâs World,â âThe Lovely Universe,â âWaves of Bark and Lightâ), but part of the albumâs magic is the way everything flows into a seamless whole. As is vinylâs tendency, the rhythm section really comes alive here, the fuzz bass and tom-heavy drum parts booming out, with plenty of vivid details in the mix swimming into view. A worthy reissue of an essential album.
Tim Clarke
 Cloud Factory â #1 (Howlinâ Banana)
Cloud Factory #1 by Cloud Factory
Cloud Factory, from Toulouse, France, overlays the serrated edges of garage pop with a serene dream-pop drift. Itâs an appealing mix of hard and soft, like being pummeled to death by pillows or threatened gunpoint by a teddy bear. âAmnesia,â for instance, erupts in a vicious, sawed off, trouble-making bass line, then soars from there in untroubled female vocals. Later, âNo Data,â punches hard with raw percussion, then lays on a liquid, lucid guitar line that encourages middle-distance staring. None of these songs really up the ante with memorable melodies, sharp words or that intangible RâNR energy that distinguishes great punk rock from the so so. Not loud, not soft, not great, not bad. Cloud Factory resides in the indeterminant middle.
 Equiknoxx â VF Live: Equiknoxx (The Vinyl Factory)
Thereâs nothing like a little roots music to get you through the sweltering summer heat, and this early July mix by Gavin âGavsborgâ Blair (half of forward-thinking Kingston dancehall unit Equiknoxx) was a personal favorite of the past month for hitting that spot. The group tends to throw curveballs at the genres it tinkers with, and Blairâs mix highlights why theyâre so good at it: The crates run deep. Spanning everything from legendary producer and DJ Prince Jazzbo to in-house music fresh out the box (e.g., âDid Not Make This For Jah_9â was released in late May), Blair sets the mood and educates you along the way. Like everything else these cats do (and that includes the NTS show â support your independent radio station!), itâs hard not to give the highest recommendation.
Patrick Masterson Â
 Ezra Feinberg â Recumbent Speech (Related States)
Recumbent Speech by Ezra Feinberg
Knowing that Ezra Feinberg is a practicing psychoanalyst, itâs tempting to read meaning into the name of his second solo album. But be careful to think twice about the meaning you perceive and ask yourself, is it the product of Feinberg on the couch or your own projection? His choice to name one of the recordâs six instrumentals (there are voices, but no words) âLetter To My Mindâ certainly suggests that thereâs an internal dialogue at work, but the music feels most like a layered deployment of good ideas than an exchange of intrapsychic forces. The synthesizers shimmer and cycle like something from a mid-1970s Cluster record, resting upon a pillow of vibraphone and electric piano tones, which in turn billow under the influence of undulating layers of drums. Feinbergâs guitar leads are bright and pithy, like something Pat Metheny might come up with if he knew he was going to have to pay a steep price for every note he played. Ah, but there I go, projecting an implication of adversary process where there may be none. Might it be that Feinberg, having spent a full work week immersed in the psychic conflicts of others, wants to lay back on the couch and exhale? If so, this album is an apt companion.
Bill Meyer Â
 Honey Radar â Sing the Snow Away: The Chunklet Years (Chunklet)
Sing the Snow Away: The Chunklet Years by Honey Radar
Jason Henn of Honey Radar has a solid claim at being his generationâs Bob Pollard, a prolific, absurdist songwriter, who tosses off hooky melodies as if channeling them from the spirit world. His least polished material glints with melody hidden beneath banks of fuzz, whispery and fragile on records, but surprisingly muscular in his rocking live shows. This 28-song compilation assembles the singles, splits, EPs and bonus tracks Henn recorded for Chunklet between 2015 and the present; it would be a daunting amount of material except that it goes down like cotton candy, sweet, airy, colorful and gone before you know it. Like the Kinks, Henn has a way of making strident rock and roll hooks sound wistful and dreamy. In âLilac Pharmacy,â guitar lines rip and buck and roar, but from a distance, hardly disrupting Hennâs placid murmur. âMedium Mary Toddâ ratchets up the tension a bit, with a tangled snarl of lick and swagger, but the vocals edge towards quiet whimsy a la Sic Alps; a second version runs a bit hotter, rougher and more electric, while a third, recorded at WFMU, gives an inkling of the Honey Radar concert experience. A couple of fine covers â of the Fallâs early rant âMiddle Class Revoltâ and of the Monkees rarity âWind-Up Manââ suggest the fine, loamy soil that Hennâs art grows out of, while alternate versions of half a dozen tracks hint at the various forms his ideas can take. Itâs a wonderful overview of Honey Radar so far, though letâs hope itâs not a career retrospective. Henn has a bunch of records left to make yet if he wants to edge out Pollard.
Jennifer Kelly
 Iron Wigs â Your Birthdayâs Cancelled (Mello Music Group)
Your Birthday's Cancelled by IRON WIGS
As an adjective, âgoofyâ had gotten a bad rep in hip hop. Anything that is unusual, inventive and not in line with âkeeping it realâ is immediately stigmatized as goofy, weird, nerdy and bad. Iron Wigs is goofy but hold the pejorative connotations. Chicago representatives Vic Spencer and Verbal Kent team up here with Sonnyjim from the UK to do some wild rhyming. They collaborated before, but Your Birthdayâs Cancelled is a complete, fully fleshed project, masterfully executed from start to finish. Instead of the usual gun busting you get a fist in the ribs. Instead of drug slinging, a blunt to activate your rhymes. Each member of the group has a distinctive delivery which makes you to listen carefully for every verse, no skipping. Itâs a relief to listen to rap artists who donât pretend theyâre out in the streets while theyâre at home enjoying a favorite TV series. The standout track here is âBally Animals & Rugbysâ with Roc Marciano dropping by for a verse.
Ray Garraty Â
 Levinson / Mahlmeister â Shores (Trouble In Mind)
Shores by levinson / mahlmeister
Jamie Levinson and Donny Mahlmeisterâs Bandcamp page indicates that theyâre based in Oak Park, a suburb of Chicago. This goes further towards explaining their association with Trouble in Mind Records, which is located in the same county, than their music, which brings to mind something much further north. The duoâs music is mostly electronic, with modular synthesizers setting the pulse and sweeping the pitch spectrum while lap steel guitar adds flourishes and a shruti box thickens the textures. The album is split into two, with each track â one is named âAscend,â the other âReleaseâ â taking up one side of a 50-minute cassette. The first side trundles steadily onwards, and the second seems to bask in a glow to that never totally fades. Since thereâs no âDescend,â itâs easy to imagine this music sound tracking a drive into the Canadian north, the journey unspooling under a sky that never darkens, its progress towards Hudson Bay unhindered by other traffic or turns in the road. Perhaps thatâs just one listenerâs fantasy of easy social distancing and escape from the presentâs grim digital glare into a retro-futurist, analog dream. But in dreams weâre free to fly without being seated next to some knucklehead with his mask over his eyes instead of his mouth, so dream on, dreamers. This tape is volume one of the Explorers Series, Trouble in Mindâs projected program of limited edition cassette releases.
Bill Meyer
 Klara Lewis â Ingrid (Editions Mego)
Klara Lewisâs latest recording shows a narrowing of focus. Previously she seemed to be trying ideas and methods on for size, investigating ambient electronics or hinting at pop melody without completely committing. Given the approach to music modeled by her father, Graham Lewis of Wire and Dome, she probably does not feel the need to do just one thing, and thatâs a healthy angle if one wants to stay interested and flexible. But thereâs also something to be said for really digging into an idea, and thatâs what she has done here. Ingrid is a one-track, one-sided 12.â Burrowing further into one-ness, it is made from one looped cello phrase, which gets filtered and distorted on each pass. The effect suggests decay, but not so much the gradual transformation of a William Basinski piece as the pitiless abrasion of a woodworker going over a plank with sander. The combination of repetition and coarsening hits a spot closer to one that Tony Conrad might reach, and thatâs an itch worth scratching.
Bill Meyer
Luis Lopes Humanization 4tet â Believe, Believe (Clean Feed)
The cruel economics of contemporary creative music-making favor an ensemble like Humanization 4tet. At a minimum, the filial Texan rhythm section of Stefan and Aaron Gonzalez (drums and bass respectively) and Lisbon-based duo of Rodrigo Amado (tenor saxophone) and LuĂs Lopes can each count on having the other half of a band on the other side of the Atlantic. But any project thatâs on its fourth record in a dozen years has more going for it than the chance to save on plane tickets. For the Portuguese musicians, itâs an opportunity to feel an unabashedly high-energy force at their backs, as well as a chance to drink from a deep well of harmolodic blues. And for the Gonzalez brothers, itâs the reward of being the absolute right guys for the job; it has to be a gas to know that the heft they put into their swing is so deeply appreciated. While Lopesâ name remains up front, everyone contributes compositions, and everyone gives their all on every tune.
Bill Meyer Â
 Joanna Mattrey â Veiled (Relative Pitch)
Veiled by Joanna Mattrey
This solo CD, which closely follows a collaborative cassette on Astral Spirits, is only the second recording with Joanna Mattreyâs name on the spine. But Mattrey is no newcomer. The New England Conservatory-trained violist has been playing straight and pop gigs for a while. If you caught Chance the Rapper on Saturday Night Live, Cuddle Magic with strings or a host of classical gigs around New York City, youâve seen her. But if black dress and heels gigs pay her bills, improvised music nourishes her heart. And if sounds raw enough to scrape the roof of the world nourish yours, this album is new food. The premise of Veiled is finding veins of concealed beauty concealed, and that search impels Mattrey to tune her viola to sound like a horse-haired Tuvan fiddle, clamp objects to the strings and blast her signal through some satisfyingly filthy amplification. And whether itâs a slender tune or a complex texture, the reward is always there.
Bill Meyer
 Angel Olsen â âWhole New Messâ single (Jagjaguwar)
Everyone processes a breakup differently (though, to be fair, thatâs probably less true now than ever). For Angel Olsen in 2018, it meant retreating to The Unknown, a century-old church in Anacortes, Washington, that Mount Eerieâs Phil Elverum and producer Nicholas Wilbur made into a recording studio. What ultimately came from those sessions was All Mirrors, but Whole New Mess is a chance to revisit that album (fully nine of these 11 songs are ones youâve heard before; only the title-track and âWaving, Smilingâ are new) in a more intimate framework â just Angel, a guitar, a mic and her reverberant heartache. The most cynical view to be taken here is that itâs a stopgap capitalizing on peopleâs vulnerability amid a pandemic quarantine, but it could also be a corrective for the bloat of All Mirrors, a record I listened to once and havenât thought about since. Late Björkian excess doesnât suit her nearly as well as the light touch delivered herein, and your interest will similarly hinge on how much Whole New Mess sounds like the old one.
Patrick Masterson  Â
 Ono â Red Summer (American Dreams)
Red Summer by ONO
Ono, the long-running noise-punk-poetry-protest project headed by P Michael Grego and travis, tackles the Red Summer of 1919, evoking the brutal race riots that erupted as soldiers returned from World War I. During that summer, conflicts raged from Chicago to the deep south, as white supremacists rioted against newly empowered returning Black veterans and an increased number of Black factory workers employed in Americaâs northern factories. Ono captures the violenceâand its links to contemporary race-based conflictsâin an abstract and visionary style, with travis declaiming against an agitated froth of avant garde sound. âA Dream of Sodomyâ lurches and rolls in funk-punk bravado, as travis declaims all the nightmarish scenarios that haunt his nocturnal hours, while âCoonâ natters rhythmically across a fever-lit foundation of hand-drums, mosquito buzz and flute. â26 June 1919â wanders through a blasted, rioting landscape, sounds buzzing and pinging and roaring around travisâ fractured poetry. âWhite men, red men, Manchester town, send âem home, Oklahoma, send âem home, in a Black man house, send âem home, send âem home,â he chants, ominously, vertiginously. The center isnât holding, for sure. The disc closes with the uneasy truce of âSycamore Trees,â where steam blasts of synthesizer sound rush up and around travisâ vibrating, basso verses about meeting under the sycamore trees, a metaphor like the blues and gospel and nearly all Black music is full of metaphor about reuniting in a better place. Powerful.
Jennifer Kelly
 Julian Taylor â The Ridge (Howling Turtle, Inc.)
Singer-songwriter Julian Taylor does the little things well. That's not to say that he doesn't do the obvious things well, too, on his latest release The Ridge. His easy voice fits his songs, letting autobiography come with comfortable phrasing. As a writer, he tends toward the straightforward, avoiding extended metaphors or oblique references. The title track considers a particular form of life, and Taylor sticks to the tangible, singing about the stable, âShovel manure, clean their beds, and prepare the feed for the day.â Taylor's songs make sense of the immediate world and relationships around him, but they avoid woolgathering. The album feels a bit removed from the current climate, but that's no complaint when Taylor's developed a welcoming place to visit. It isn't always easy here, but it's always companionable.
But back to those little things. Each song has carefully detailed orchestration and production. The record goes down easy whether tending toward James Taylor, Cat Stevens or something closer to country, and much of that easiness comes from the precise placement of every note. Burke Carroll's pedal steel, for instance, never exists for its own sake, but to serve the lyric that Taylor sings. The album contains enough space to feel like a rural Canadian ridge, with details drawn into to support Taylor's direct stories. The Ridge could easily go unnoticed (unobtrusiveness not being a highly rewarded trait), but its subtlety and care make it worth taking your boots off and sitting down for a minute.
Justin Cober-Lake Â
 Various Artists â For a Better Tomorrow (Garden Portal)
For A Better Tomorrow by Various Artists
Compilation albums loom large in the American Primitive Guitar realm. Takoma, Tompkins Square and Locust all had larger ambitions than merely offering a sampling of wares, and to them, Garden Portal says, âhold my beer. Iâve got some collecting and playing to do.â For A Better Tomorrow started out as a Bernie Sanders fundraising endeavor. But when Bernie bailed and COVID-19 came on the scene, Garden Portal pivoted to support Athens Mutual Aid Network, an umbrella organization that coordinates aid to the underserved in this trying time. But in addition to good works, thereâs some good work going on here. Not all of it is guitar-centric, but even the tracks that arenât are close enough to the strings and heart template of the aforementioned parties to merit consideration under the same rubric. Joseph Allredâs been ultra-productive recently, so itâs actually helpful to be reminded of the spirit that infuses his playing by listening to it one track at a time. Rob Noyesâ âDiminishedâ takes the listener on a deep dive into the construction of sentiment and sound. And Will Csorbaâs Pelt-like blast of fiddle drone, âRequiem for Ociel Guadalupe Martinez,â will put your hair up high enough to make that self-inflicted quarantine do a bit easier to execute.
Bill Meyer
  Various Artists â The Storehouse Presents (The Storehouse)
The Storehouse Presents by The Storehouse
The coronavirus pandemic put the brakes on many things. You doubtless have your own list of loss, but for the proprietors of The Storehouse, the catalog of things kissed goodbye directly corresponds to their endeavorâs inventory of reasons to be. Over the past few years, the Storehouse has invited audiences out to a West Michigan farmhouse to enjoy a potluck meal and a concert played by some musicians of note. If there had been no lockdown, listeners could have enjoyed the Sun Ra Arkestra last April. Instead, no oneâs playing, and no oneâs getting paid, so the Storehouse has compiled this set of live and exclusive studio tracks to sell on Bandcamp in order to benefit the musicians and the Music Maker Relief Foundation. The cause, is good, but so are the tunes. Want to hear Steve Gunn and William Tyler in sympathetic orbit? Or Joan Shelley pledging her love? Or the first hints of Mind Over Mirrorsâ new direction? Step right this way, preferably on one of 2020âs first Fridays.
Bill Meyer
 Z-Ro â Rohammad Ali (1 Deep Entertainment / Empire)
On one of his previous tracks, Z-Ro admitted that heâs basically just writing the same song over and over again (thatâs how meta he is now, writing songs on writing songs). While he exaggerated a bit, he was not that far from the truth. In the last half dozen years heâs been writing the same three or four songs in various combinations, reconfigurations and forms. Rohammad Ali follows the same template: haters hate him, but heâs OK and is counting his money. Multiply this by 17, and here is the album. Despite this self-cannibalizing (lots of poets did that), Z-Ro with every new album sounds fresh and far from tired. The self-repeats just fuel him. Rohammad Ali has only one rap guest, and itâs Shaquille OâNeal whose rap career didnât jump off in the 1990s. A lack of guests only proves that Z-Ro can self-sustain without support from the outside. The only thing from the outside he needs is hate.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
â Live Streamingâ Interactive Chatâ Private Showsâ HD Qualityâ Free Actions
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming