Music Lists

The Best Folk Albums to Help You Wallow in Sadness

Sometimes you just gotta spend the day deep in your feelings

Ethan Gruska "Enough For Now (feat. Phoebe Bridgers) " [Official Music Video]

The cycle of bad news remains endless, and the world feels relentlessly in free fall.

Dread and anxiety remain our closest acquaintances, and I can't remember the last time I drank for any reason other than "It's Tuesday." Lethargic, isolated, and unable to turn on our AC units without a minor surge of panic, it remains impossible not to wallow in what has become our fraught existence.

"I thought about my life and all its empty meaning," Nadia Reid softly sings over the strum of an electric guitar as her band swells up behind her. "There ain't nothing I can change about me now," Leif Vollebekk morbidly croons on "Apalachee Plain." "No, there ain't nothing I can change about me now."

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MUSIC

Lola Marsh’s “Echoes” Is a Haunting, Twin Peaks-esque Dance Tune

The latest track from Lola Marsh is a noirish, ghostly tune that's guaranteed to have you tapping your feet.

Lola Marsh

The duo Lola Marsh just released their new single "Echoes."

It's an enchanting, textured track, set to an intoxicating beat and tied together by singer Yael Shoshana Cohen's silky vocals.

The band, consisting of Cohen and Gil Landau, formed in 2013 in Tel Aviv, Israel. Since then, they've been crafting noirish, danceable electro-folk, blending melancholia with electric energy to create music that pays tribute to many modern groups but also possesses a sound all its own.

lil marsh echoesLola Marsh

"Echoes" is a mysterious tune, one that lands somewhere between the moodiness of the Twin Peaks theme song, the expansive rhythms of Tame Impala, and the country-rock-psychedelia of early Muse. Its haunting lyrics could tell the story of someone scanning the crowd for a new lover, or wandering the streets alone, remembering a long-gone ghost of the past. Either way, the song feels drawn out of late night scenes, filled with images of neon signs and faint moonlight spiraling through fog.

Though it's about getting caught up in memories of the past, "Echoes" also feels free, like something has been released or exorcized by the end of the track. The band echoed this contrast in a press release, stating,"'Echoes' is about that feeling you sometimes have when you want to disappear, but at the same time, want to be found. That scary beautiful moment just before falling asleep, when you are the most lonesome version of yourself."

The video takes notes from '70s fashion and boasts a distinctly vintage feel. It finds the two musicians dancing as multiple versions of themselves, peering at each other from across an empty loft and slowly moving closer to each other. It's a fitting visual for a song that's disorienting and multifaceted, but also catchy and ultimately certain to get listeners tapping their feet. In some ways, because it's so gloomy and catchy at the same time that it feels designed for a haunted dance party, or maybe a rager at the decaying, vine-covered mansion down the road.

"We are so excited to have new music out there!" said the band. "After we wrote 'Echoes,' we immediately started to dance, and we knew that something very good just happened. Our director Indy Hait gave us the chance to finally show off our silly dance moves for the first time."

Watch the video for "Echoes" below.

Lola Marsh - Echoeswww.youtube.com

MUSIC

Swimming Bell’s Cosmic Debut Creates Worlds Through Sound

The Brooklyn newcomer's first album feels like the start of something that could last a long time.

Sometimes stillness can generate more revelations than any amount of frantic movement. Swimming Bell, fronted by Brooklyn's Katie Schottland, is proof of this; a project born of stagnancy, it seems poised to become something much larger.

Schottland's musical career began when a broken foot forced her to slow down, giving her the time she needed to learn guitar. She puts this skill to good use on her debut album, Wild Sight, which features full-bodied playing and a musical inventiveness that sets her apart from her many indie-folk contemporaries.

Wild Sight is a collection of unhurried songs that each travel far, reaching cosmic heights through softly psychedelic instrumental arrangements. The album feels made for driving home from the beach, for windy festival stages, for nights spent watching candles melt on screened-in porches. It's the sort of album that you can play over and over again, gathering new shards of wisdom or following different sonic paths.

One standout track is "1988," which layers Schottland's soft, strong vocals over light strumming and flickering arpeggiation. "Inside your language, I heard who you are," she sings, a line containing the kind of nuance and abstraction that characterizes the bulk of the lyrics on Wild Sight. "I was born inside your arms," she sings a variation on the themes of creation, love, and becoming.

'1988' by Swimming Bellwww.youtube.com


Swimming Bell - 1988 | Sofar NYCwww.youtube.com

Schottland is adept at spinning everyday experiences and tools into much vaster entities. One of her greatest strengths is her use of vocal harmony; over and over again at different points, waves of vocal lines gather together to form oceanic choirs. "Quietly Calling" is a great example of this, building up from nothing to hypnotic patchworks of sound. But she's strong on her own, too, with songs like "Left Hand Path" and "Love Liked You" guided forward by the lead vocal, steadfast amidst flustered peals of electric guitar.

The album is full of changes, both in terms of its musical shifts from sparseness to abundance as well as the genres it draws from. Songs like "Love Liked You" blend folk, country, and Americana, and the album traverses a wide variety of other styles; for example, "We'd Find" plants itself firmly in the dream-pop realm. "She'd won some battles, she lost the fight. It's you," Schottland sings, as the song takes its cloudy, ethereal journey into the abandon of all-encompassing love. But the album never grows pessimistic, never gets too lost in the ether. Instead, despite its wavering, abstract lyrics, it feels charged with an internal life force that makes each song feel present, homegrown in California sunlight, with deep roots in the solid ground.

Though it rests on strong foundations, Wild Sight is constantly in motion. Schottland is an expert at transitions, at shaping the peaks and valleys of her songs. "Got Thing" builds to a vibrant climax, then doubles back to a space of restraint at the moment it reaches its height. Sometimes these contrasts can feel chaotic, just as the lyrics can grow knotty. "You got your messy hair and crooked teeth. You don't look like your name, but you're a wild sight to leave. You're my moonshine," she sings on "For Brinsley." At times the album resembles this anonymous lover—songs like "Wolf" unravel into cycles of dissonance and shimmering, cluttered synths.

The album feels like an artist testing her wings, oscillating between restraint and release, gathering droplets from whatever collective river of the mind holds its ageless melodies. Swimming Bell is still coming into her own—sometimes her music seems like it's trying to be something else—but when it relaxes into what it truly is, it becomes a force of abundance, sounding like the sort of thing that could last a very long time.


Eden Arielle Gordon is a writer and musician from New York City. Follow her on Twitter @edenarielmusic.


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MUSIC

Lo Lo shows off her Sweater Collection

Plus new music from Sarah Potenza, Ravens & Chimes, Lydia Halloway and more.

onestowatch.com

RELEASE RADAR is here to give you the breakdown of the top singles, albums, and videos of the week, so you can head into your weekend with a new list of killer tunes.

SINGLES

Lo Lo | "Sweater Collection"

Lo Lo has been charming listeners with infectious pop since 2018. Ahead of her debut EP, the Toronto pop sweetheart revealed the cheeky title track. "[In] Sweater Collection, I talk about how every old sweater in the back of my closet represents a failed/missed connection," said Lo Lo. "Each song in the album is about those specific connections, so I thought it was only fitting to name the entire album Sweater Collection. My collection of sweaters is in direct correlation with my collection of songs on the EP."

You Might Also Like: Pusher, laye, Claire Ridgely

Follow Lo Lo on Facebook | Twitter | Instagram

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Ravens & Chimes | "Irreplaceable Artifacts"

New York City's Ravens & Chimes have been consistently making waves in the indie rock world since 2005. Along with success comes mounting pressure, and their latest track reveals the group's struggle to keep pushing. "I wrote this song to stay upbeat about finding the things that are important (friends, family, making good work) and not letting the static get in the way," said vocalist Asher Lack. "It's a lot to ask of a song, but I'm happy with how it turned out and it's one of the rare times when the music actually came out better than it was in my head!

You Might Also Like: Spaceman Spiff, Get Well Soon, Hundreds

Follow Ravens & Chimes on Facebook | YouTube | Spotify

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Lydia Halloway | "Dancing to You"

The debut single from the rising pop queen, Lydia Halloway, pairs infectious dance beats with classic pop hooks. "['Dancing to You'] is about two things at once. It's about wanting someone's attention. But it's also about music itself," said Halloway. "If you listen to the chorus, it's really about how sharing music with someone — dancing with them — can feel like the closest you can ever get. This song is about trying to hold on to that moment."

You Might Also Like:Charlotte Lawrence, Madison Beer, Carlie Hanson

Follow Lydia Halloway on Facebook | Twitter | Instagram

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Belaver | "Swimmer"

New York City's experimental folk artist Belaver teases his upcoming album with another single. The lo-fi indie rock track "Swimmer" creates a wash of beats in which to drift away.

You Might Also Like: Tobias Carshey, VARLEY, Andrew Marcia

Follow Belaver on Soundcloud | Spotify | Instagram

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VIDEOS

La'Britney | Never Fold

Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood star La'Britney embraces her inner beauty in her latest video. "I wanted to create a balance in the visual by showing a very feminine, sensual, yet raw performance," she told Billboard. "Real hair, minimal makeup, simple style, raw emotions and dancing."

You Might Also Like: Cardi B, Nicki Minaj, Kehlani

Follow La'Britney on Spotify | Twitter | Instagram

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Jake Miller | Wait For You

Singer-songwriter Jake Miller teamed up with Edgar Esteves to create the bold visuals for his latest track, "Wait For You," the lead single off his forthcoming EP.

You Might Also Like: Cam Meekins, Luke Christopher, Austin Mahone

Follow Jake Miller on Facebook | Twitter | Instagram

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ALBUMS/EPS

Sarah Potenza | Road To Rome

Sarah Potenza's second solo EP is a feminist battle cry — appropriately released on International Women's Day. Potenza fuses bluesy vocals and a rock n' roll attitude to create her most powerful sound to date.

You Might Also Like: Alabama Shakes, Adele, St. Paul & The Broken Bones

Follow Sarah Potenza on Facebook | Twitter | Instagram

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Kat Saul | ...from Unit 408

Kat Saul named her highly anticipated debut EP after her Nashville apartment number. "These songs are all about situations that kept me up at night pacing around my apartment," Kat explains. "The physical location of Unit 408 is the genesis for this entire project. I want people to feel at home with it."

You Might Also Like:Krysten Simone, Deza, Stela Cole

Follow Kat Saul on Facebook | Twitter | Instagram


Allie Delyanis is an award-winning and losing freelance journalist based in New York City. She likes bands, books, breakfast food, and would love to be David Sedaris when she grows up. You can find more of her work on www.delyanis.com.


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