Now Hear This: New music from Meek Mill, The 1975, Grimes and Miley Cyrus, plus spotlight artist ZuZu
e’ve reached the end of the week, which
is good, because I was worried my head was going to explode. When it gets to
this time of the year, it feels like your entire life gets taken over by lists:
of presents you need to buy; the best albums; things to look forward to in
2019; best new artists…
One list I never dread is the
playlist (geddit) because it is – pretty much every week – really uplifting to
see another wave of great new music released. Take arlo parks,
who just released her debut single, “Cola”. I am blown away by this 18-year-old
(18!!!!) poet/singer from London who has emerged, apparently fully formed, out
of nowhere.
Cola”
falls somewhere between portishead and syd of the Internet;
the track opens and is carried by this ultra-smooth bass hook, with Parks’
husky vocals making cool, slightly withering observations about someone she
used to be in love with. Arlo Parks is clearly going to be one to keep an eye
out for next year.
On a different plane (or
planet) you’ve got grimes with her eerie, space-rock track “We
Appreciate Power” – the first single from her currently untitled fifth album.
It’s a blistering, distorted onslaught of noise featuring chugging guitar riffs
and scratchy, buzzing, screaming synths. Grimes sounds disturbingly emotionless
as she whispers: “Submit” as the track reaches its squalling conclusion. Yikes.
I saw
Calpurnia last night at Koko in London (y’know, the band with the kid from Stranger Things in it), and got severe flashbacks from
that time I went to a One Direction concert, by which I mean there was A LOT of
screaming. I’m not convinced Finn Wolfhard and co. have quite earned enough
stripes to justify playing such a big venue, and the vast majority of their
audience only seemed to be interested in seeing the young TV star in the flesh.
While the band are clearly very enthusiastic and they do have a couple of
good songs (”Greyhound”, “City Boy”) – a lot of their live set looked like they
were play-pretending to be in a band and mimicking what they’d seen a bunch of
classic rock groups get up to. TL;DR: plenty of promise, but not quite living
up to the absurd hype from certain parts of the music press (at least not just
yet).
Meek Mill has released his new album Championships, which features plenty of guest
appearances from the likes of Cardi B, Young Thug, Kodak Black and 21 Savage.
Arguably the most talked-about (and in my opinion the best) track on the record
is “What’s Free” ft Rick Ross and Jay Z that nods to
the Notorious BIG’s “What’s Beef” – Hov basically blows all the other guest
artists out of the water with his verse, which takes aim at Kanye West and his
MAGA hat.
Other
albums out today include the s A Brief History of Online
Relationships. If
you’ve been reading this column with any regularity you might have seen me
venting about some of their singles. While I still stand firm in my view that
there are some big inconsistencies in quality on the record, there are also
some serious gems, and it’s definitely their best to date. They also seem to
have improved the mixes on those earlier singles: “It’s Not Living (if it’s Not
With You)” in particular sounds sharper and slicker. Definitely give our critic
Jazz Monroe’s excellent review a read here.
I’m a massive fan of miley
cyrus
returning
to her country roots (with the help of producer extraordinaire, Mark Ronson,
who recently announced a new album of “sad bangers” for 2019). Cyrus channels
her godmother Dolly Parton on the sweeping, epic ballad “Nothing Breaks Like a
Heart”.
Sharon van etten released
her new single this week, and it’s got me even more geared up for her
forthcoming album Remind
Me Tomorrow (the
follow-up to 2014’s Are We There).
Where the first single “Comeback Kid” was a pulsing synth-rock jam; “Jupiter 4”
is a more sprawling, spine-tingly kind of track with a menacing drum beat and
Van Etten’s ghostly vocals crawling along that buzzing synth line.
My spotlight artist this week
is zuzu, a Liverpool-born, London-based singer who seemed to be at just
about every festival that mattered this summer. She writes charismatic
pop-rock, and doesn’t erase her accent from her singing, which I love.
I’m premiering her quirky new video for the single “Can’t Be
Alone” – check it out and read my Q&A with her, below:
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