UK singer-songwriter Naima Bock is following up her fantastic 2022 solo debut with her second album, “Below a Massive Dark Land”, on September 27th via Sub Pop.

Most of the writing of Naima Bock’s second album, “Below A Massive Dark Land” was a solitary affair. It may not sound it – it’s made up of strong, purposeful arrangements with a huge host of musicians; filled with cradling space and warm light. This will also come as a surprise to anyone who has seen Naima perform in the time since the release of her 2022 debut “Giant Palm”, undoubtedly a communal experience.

With a band of ten, three, or even just solo, when Naima plays there’s a rare bond between the musicians on stage and the audience. In their interview with her, The Quietus declared “after every song the applause and cheering is immense, so immense in fact that it seems to be coming from a different place than the usual formalities of a live show, a link between performer and artist forged somewhere deeper and more personal.”

It was in “Giant Palm’s” music too, a record that sweeps and swells, a chorus of voices and instrumentation that rises and falls as one alongside Naima’s own somersaulting voice.

It’s true though, most of “Below…’s” songs started life very simply; Naima alone, living in her grandmother’s shed in South London, writing just with her voice, guitar and violin. She’s no violin virtuoso but had taken it up as a songwriting exercise for its ability to draw melodies from her – a trick that undoubtedly worked, these are songs that drift into the back of your mind and settle there like fallen leaves, songs you wake up singing. The remainder was written on the road after those moments of audience connection, in the quiet that follows.

There’s power in the solitary too. “Giant Palm” was arranged with collaborator Joel Burton but going it alone in search of something truly hers, Naima found she was capable of more. “After me and Joel stopped working together”, she remembers, “it was an impossibility to even fathom doing arrangements myself but then I started learning violin. Playing it isn’t easy but writing melodies on it is”. Finding that she could go it alone was incredibly powerful for Naima, “I think I needed it, to be able to feel proud of something. Like, that’s me! That feels good.”

Once that writing portion is over though, this ends. The record is not a stark, stripped back affair. “Below…” still has that majesty that made “Giant Palm” so remarkable. Tugging the first record down from the skies and spreading it across the earth; there’s a newfound vocal power and confidence born from hundreds of hours on stage and the music sounds fuller, more tangible, but no less enveloping.

This can be found in the album’s lead singles. ‘Kaley’ feels fresh and surprising in its rug-pull choppiness but is distinctly Naima in its swinging, jubilant choruses. The accompanying ‘Further Away’ takes a different tack, drawing you irresistibly near in its simplicity. Finally, the hazy, luxurious beauty of ‘Feed My Release’ draws on the sepia-toned traditions of The Roches, John Prine and Loudon Wainwright III but imbues them with the kind of stark confessional song writing of Mount Eerie. Lyrically reaching deeper and darker than “Giant Palm“, these are ambitious, rich arrangements.

‘Kaley’ and ‘Age’ were produced by Naima herself and ‘Feed My Release’ was produced by Naima and caroline’s Oliver Hamilton who also helped in various places with arrangement. For the bulk of the record however, Naima brought her arrangement ideas into The Crypt Studios in London where she worked with Bristolian duo Jack Ogborne (aka Bingo Fury) & Joe Jones who were working together and producing for the first time outside of Ogborne’s own album, alongside a core band of Clem Appleby (Bass, Backing vocals), Meitar Wegman (Saxophone), Oscar De Guardans (Backing vocals, Electric Guitar, Harmonium) and Cassidy Hansen (Drums, Backing vocals) alongside and expansive choir, horn and string section. “I put my foot down slightly more this time but that’s not to detract from how much everyone put into it,” Naima says, “it shouldn’t be understated their contribution to the record”.

Having not gelled with slicker, more experienced producers, Naima found the duo a production team who were able to take her ideas and apply a boundless enthusiasm and meticulous attention to detail in executing them. They had a remarkable knack for knowing exactly how to record Naima’s less-concrete ideas and a flexibility in getting what she needed particularly when it came to recording her voice. “I do still struggle with singing in the studio”, Naima recalls, “we had to figure it out. I kept having to put myself in different places like in the hallway, or in another room just to be able to access something”.

During the release of “Giant Palm”, Naima spoke about how she left previous bands and went it alone due to difficulty enjoying touring. However, with headline tours including London’s EartH and support shows for artists such as A. Savage, J. Mascis, Squid, Rodrigo Amarente, Arab Strap, and This is the Kit,

Naima’s feet have hardly touched the ground since 2022. Instead, what she found is her place in touring, largely entirely alone. “I managed to find my favourite little safe spaces”, she says, “its nice compiling spots like that in every city, now every time I circle back to the place, there’s like at least five or six people I know”.

This is touring at its most romantic. “Traipsing around and playing music”, staying with artists, friends, or just friendly people and finding the artistic pockets in every city. Naima has always been slightly nomadic – living as a child between Brazil, Greece, and all over London – and that background has now led to a place where she’s truly fallen for touring and travel. This appears in the album title which comes from Olga Tokarczuk’s book Flights, a description of the view from an aeroplane. It’s a title that initially may sound imposing but in its context this vastness, dimpled with the weak glow of city lights, is a form of comfort.

These safe spaces bleed into the writing; songs written hiking the wide horizons of Tucson, Arizona or inspired by the residents of one particular Amsterdam hotel with a penchant for swimming naked in the canal behind. ‘Further Away’ meanwhile was written on a rare non-musical holiday in Greece, “after about four days without an instrument, I start getting itchy. So, I went to the shop and bought a tiny bouzouki and wrote it on that”. This became the album’s starkest moment, one of those rare songs that arrived so tender and fully-formed it didn’t need to be touched.

It’s not all grand vistas and clear waters though. There were lonely, difficult moments and clarifying conversations in these places around things like depression, family and abortion, relationships and break-ups and growing old that melded with Naima’s own experiences, bringing them into view for her, working their way into her lyrics and finding release.

It’s these types of conversations that mean the lyrical content of “Below…” often yearns for more stability. ‘Gentle’ wrestles with ideas of settling more. “It’s something I’d like to do one day but my tendency is to move, I find myself unable to feel fully at home in the world”, she says, “I just feel like it would be difficult to bridge that gap”. The album elsewhere is often interested in the process of ageing. This comes in the reckoning that “gravity is just kind of slowly pulling us down” in ‘My Sweet Body’, a song where sweetness is gently tinged with a creeping unease as she sings “I cannot seem to look after this body”. “It’s beautiful” Naima says, “but emotional to think about and a burden sometimes”. The traps we can fall into as we age appear in the wry good time of ‘Age’. Naima saw this first-hand on a less pleasant touring experience staying with someone whose “things were better in my day” mindset consumed and warped otherwise well-intentioned beliefs.

This results in a record that may occasionally appear to contradict itself; communal but solitary, rooted in place but free, intimate but spacious. This, however, is what makes “Below…” comforting and familiar. Who doesn’t contain within them these contradictions, who doesn’t want things that are directly at odds with each other. Like the safe spaces Naima has found the world over, “Below…” doesn’t require all the answers, not yet, but provides a safe place to look. 

releases September 27th, 2024 Sub Pop Records

She’s shared two songs from the album you can listen to now.

I’m thrilled to announce that I will be doing two solo tours this fall: Europe & the UK in September, followed by a run of dates in the USA in November.

This is an extension of the This is What It Looks Like tour I did earlier this year. I loved that tour so much I wanted to keep it going, update the show, and bring it to some new places. The shows will feature songs from my solo catalogue as well as the stories behind them. I’ll also be debuting some new songs that I’m very excited to share.

One of my favourite songwriters, Kathleen Edwards, will be joining the September UK and Euro dates as a special guest. This is super exciting to me. I’m a huge fan of Kathleen’s records.

During the tour we will visit the Nashville Nights festival in Odense, Denmark, my third time at this great festival. Kathleen and I will play together at this one, in a songwriter’s round. Also at Nashville Nights, I’ll be recording a live version of my podcast That’s How I Remember It, with Kathleen as my guest.

Sept 08th – Nottingham, UK – Bodega *

The vinyl reissue of Night Beats’ 2011 self-titled debut album is out now, There’s a splatter vinyl LP available from the Fuzz Club store with a fold-out poster, “LEVITATION” have an exclusive sunburst LP and the purple LP can be found in all good record stores.

An acid-drenched modern garage-rock classic this 12-track set is a reckoning, a shoot-out at dawn, the ear-splitting peel-out that leaves nothing but a cloud of red dust in its wake.

A modern garage-rock classic in the Texan thirteenth-floor tradition, Danny Lee Blackwell’s R&B-inspired Western Psychedelic sound on this 12-track set is a reckoning, Following early releases in the shape of the ‘H-Bomb’ 45 and a split 10” with UFO Club (a collaborative project between Blackwell and The Black Angels’ Christian Bland), the ‘Night Beats’ LP was the first full-length introduction to the band and propelled them to the forefront of burgeoning contemporary psych scene in a blaze of scuzzy rock’n’roll release.

Heavy touring immediately ensued and hasn’t let up in the years that followed, and the definitive Night Beats hit ‘Puppet On A String’ has since clocked up millions of streams and become the soundtrack to an underground, fuzz-worshipping generation.

Looking back on the record and upcoming reissue, Danny Lee Blackwell says: “Turning stones, looking for a sound. In bloom, or right before. Looking back on this first album I see a band with ideas that committed early on. I see where things will be built from, ideas that set up the groundwork for sounds to expand far beyond while honing a classic sound. I ventured with my voice and guitar and glad I did because there’s self acceptance and experimentation on this album. I’m proud of it and very glad it’s getting a long overdue repress.”

Genesis “Live at the Hammersmith Odeon” in London, England on June 10th, 1976 ‘A Trick of the Tail’ Tour 1976. Taken from the Pre-FM broadcast audio soundboard recording that is great quality, and one soundboard audio source that is slightly lower quality. This live recording by Genesis was a landmark King Biscuit Flower Hour appearance because it marked the first time the band had been heard on a national broadcast with its new line-up, after the departure of lead singer Peter Gabriel.

The band had toured for over a year between 1974 and 1975, performing 103 shows on the “Lamb Lies Down On Broadway” tour knowing the whole time that Gabriel would be departing to focus on his new family and to launch a solo career. The band had pleaded with Gabriel not to go public with his decision to leave, because the members feared they could not move forward without their charismatic lead vocalist.

This album showcases Genesis’ stellar concert at the Hammersmith Odeon, on 10th June 1976, during the “A Trick of the Tail” Tour.

Broadcast on the King Biscuit Flower Hour, this performance features unmissable renditions of Genesis classics such as ‘Firth of Firth’, ‘The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway’, ‘The Carpet Crawlers’, ‘I Know What (I Like In Your Wardrobe)’ and more.

Setlist: 0:00:00 – Dance on a Volcano 0:07:12 – The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway 0:14:33 – The Carpet Crawlers 0:21:19 – The Cinema Show 0:33:59 – Robbery, Assault, and Battery 0:40:29 – White Mountain 0:48:06 – Firth of Fifth 0:57:44 – Entangled 1:04:28 – Squonk 1:11:20 – Supper’s Ready 1:37:24 – I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe) 1:44:28 – Los Endos ENCORE 1:52:27 – It / Watcher of the Skies | Band Members: Phil Collins – Lead Vocals, Drums, Percussion Tony Banks – Keyboards, Synthesizers Steve Hackett – Guitar Mike Rutherford – Bass, Guitar, Backing Vocals Bill Bruford – Drums

The Dogs D’Amour are an English bluesey hard rock band formed in London in 1983. Over the years the band has had various line-ups, the only constant being vocalist Tyla. Their music has been described as a mixture of the Rolling Stones, the Faces and glam punk. Coming in July Dogs D’Amour – The Dynamite China Years – Complete Recordings 1988-1993. An 8CD boxset featuring the albums In The Dynamite Jet Saloon, Errol Flynn (King Of The Thieves), A Graveyard Of Empty Bottles Vol. 1, …Straight??!! and…More Unchartered Heights Of Disgrace, plus two discs of singles, B-sides and rarities.

Propelled by the albums’ three singles ‘The Kid from Kensington’, ‘I Don’t Want You to Go’ and ‘How Come It Never Rains’ edging their way up the charts, when The Dogs D’Amour’s genre-defining 1988 “debut” ‘In The Dynamite Jet Saloon’ (CD2) was released in 1988, it must have looked like the band was an overnight sensation. But this couldn’t have been further from the truth.

The Dogs D’Amour originally formed in 1983, and had already recorded two previous “debut” albums. First was 1984’s now highly collectable ‘The State We’re In’, for Finnish label Kumibeat. Further recordings were made in 1985 and 1986 for Watanabe Records in Japan, and it’s the latter where this collection kicks off. ‘The (Un)Authorised Bootleg Album’ (CD1) was the record originally intended for Japan a mostly acoustic grab-bag of the previous years’ sporadic sessions — became the band’s second album.

The second set in this collection is the aforementioned the critically acclaimed “In The Dynamite Jet Saloon’ (CD2), bursting with classics. A highly prolific band in their earliest days, ‘Errol Flynn’ (re-titled ‘King Of The Thieves’ in the States) (CD3) was released in 1989 as was the extended mini-album, The all-acoustic ‘A Graveyard Of Empty Bottles Vol. 1’ (CD4), a collection of acoustic songs that reached the UK Top 20.

Now officially England’s most notorious and decadent glam rock band, the Dogs d’Amour reeled off another solid, and adequately sleazy follow-up in 1990s ironically titled saw the release of ‘…Straight??!!’ (CD5) featuring the singles ‘Victims of Success’, ‘Empty World’ and ‘Back On The Juice’. Unfortunately, and in true rock ‘n’ roll tradition, the band split up on stage in Los Angeles in 1991.

Steve James started a new project called the Last Bandits, and Bam temporarily joined the Wildhearts. 
Thankfully the band regrouped for the self-explanatory ‘…More Unchartered Heights Of Disgrace’ (CD6) in 1993. This eight CD collection is completed with no less than two discs of rarities, live tracks and B-sides with ’Singles, B-Sides & Rarities’ (CD7) and ‘Even More Singles, B-Sides & Rarities’ (CD8), making this the most complete and comprehensive collection of the band’s recordings for China Records.

 Tyla embarking on a solo career with an album fittingly titled “The Life & Times of a Ballad Monger”.

The Dogs’ sound was firmly rooted in American blues music, and Jo Almeida’s unique and distinctive slide guitar was reminiscent of blues masters like Lightnin’ Hopkins and Charlie Patton. 

An 8CD complete collection of recordings released by China Records.
• Featuring what most consider to be the classic line-up of The Dogs D’Amour; Jo ‘Dog’ Almeida on guitar, Steve James on bass, the onomatopoeic Bam on drums, and of course fronted by songwriter and singer, the inimitable Tyla.

Albums

  • The State We’re In (Kumibeat – 1984)
  • In The Dynamite Jet Saloon (China – 1988)
  • Errol Flynn (China – 1989)
  • Straight??!!’ (China – 1990)
  • …More Unchartered Heights of Disgrace (China – 1993)
  • Happy Ever After (Artful – 2000)
  • Seconds (Basementboy – 2000)
  • When Bastards Go To Hell (Rock Treasures – 2004)
  • Let Sleeping Dogs… (King Outlaw – 2005)
  • In the Dynamite Jet Saloon MMX ( King Outlaw 2011)
  • Graveyard of Empty Bottles MMXII (King Outlaw 2011)


Tyla and The Dogs D’Amour will be on the road in 2024 and 2025 to support this release,

Image  —  Posted: June 23, 2024 in MUSIC

Duel Ferns is a Brooklyn-based band that released their debut single “Softer Silence” last month via Postseason Franchise Records.

Duel Ferns unleash their debut single upon the world with the release of “Softer Silence.” Crafted amidst Brooklyn’s vibrant underground music scene, this song captures the raw essence of their electrifying sound, forged through the intensity of their live shows last summer.

Driven by Charity’s evocative lyrics, “Softer Silence” emanates a haunting allure, enveloping listeners in a landscape where drums, guitar, bass, and violin intertwine with multiple pedal boards to create a mesmerizing tapestry of sound. Drawing inspiration from the atmospheric depths of The Velvet Underground, the fearless experimentation of Kim Gordon, and the gritty textures of My Bloody Valentine, Duel Ferns is both timeless and innovative.

Immerse yourself in the convergence of lo-fi, grunge, post-punk-psychedelia in the heart of Brooklyn’s vibrant music scene. The track is described as “Sonic Youth meets My Bloody Valentine meets The Velvet Underground”, with a raw intensity that delivers a primal and natural blow that hits with a gritty punk spirit that feels like you’re live in a room with beer-soaked floors watching them bring it to life.

released May 29th, 2024

The Telescopes “Radio Sessions” collects together the essence of three live session recordings in 3 different countries over a three year period between 2016-2019. This is the third in a series of Radio Session” releases from Tapete Records that have so far included The Monochrome Set and Comet Gain. More session releases are being lined up for the rest of the year and beyond – enjoy the sonics and stay tuned.  There are some amazing versions of “We See Magic” in existence, this has to be one of my favourites. Astonishing sonic bliss exploration of sound.

released May 31st, 2024

2024 Tapete Records

The Reds, Pinks & Purples debut tour of the UK is now over. Thanks to all that came out. For those that couldn’t make it for whatever reason, we’re now making remaining copies of the tour only LP, “Still Clouds At Noon”, available to purchase via Bandcamp.

Recorded as part of the same daydreaming puzzle as “Unwishing Well”, “Still Clouds at Noon” brings out the slowcore/sadcore elements that drift through The Reds, Pinks & Purples’ melancholy catalogue. Donaldson names ’90s hometown San Francisco acts such as American Music Club and the more obscure Timco as pivotal to his guitar playing and development as a songwriter, both of which shine bright here. The slower tempo ballads on “Still Clouds…” often culminate in heavy fuzz drenched codas and showcase the more abstract poetic side of Donaldson’s lyricism.

There’s an inherent pop-sensibility always at work though, with ear-worm melodies appearing over intoxicating circular riffs. Formerly a Bandcamp only digital release, this black vinyl version is remastered and adds two unreleased tracks, one featuring Mark Monnone from Australian pop-legends The Lucksmiths on bass. Edition of only 500.

Buy “Still Clouds At Noon

In the Summer of 2022, a 10-year journey came to an end in Amsterdam. Its final score, as the curtain closed and the lights came up, was comprised of the orchestrations that preceded and followed the final act: the buzz of a barber’s razor, the droning resonance of a tattoo machine, and the brush of electric sound from the surprise gift of a friend.

For a decade, a leading figure and frontwoman of post-punk staple band Against Me!, Laura Jane Grace,

A musical force since Against Me!’s debut in the late 90’s, Laura Jane Grace has never shied away from themes of political commentary, environmentalism, social critique, and candid self-exploration. Following the 2012 public announcement of her gender transition in the pages of Rolling Stone, Laura Jane Grace racked up several accolades. Against Me! released its most acclaimed record to date, “Transgender Dysphoria Blues” in 2014, which was followed by an Emmy-nominated 10-episode companion documentary, . Hole In My Head is Grace’s twelfth album and an exciting hallmark in her colourful and extensive career.

Recorded at Native Sound in St. Louis, Missouri the album is a sonic curio cabinet containing multitudes. “Hole In My Head” features warm 50s-rock-influenced guitar riffs, saved-for-later lyrics, love letters to St. Louis, dysphoria apparel, and thoughtful reflections on a punk life lived.

The record’s title track “Hole In My Head” takes off with a driving guitar-heavy approach that will be welcome to long-time fans of Against Me! Electric machinations drive the song for about 10 seconds before launching into the first verse and punctuated by two lines that serve as the chorus as the song progresses, “I won’t learn to feel less/ I need a hole in my head”.

The lyrics are captured visually in the album’s cover art done by the talented Australian artist and designer Annie Walters. Walters contrasts a black and white photograph of the crumpled, short-haired figure of Laura Jane Grace against a barrage of bright colour and illustrative imagery that bursts upward from Grace’s splitting head.

Baby what’s the scene?
I’ve got places to be
Something left unsaid
will explode if not released

I need a hole in my head
I won’t learn to feel less

Keeping up the pace, “Hole In My Head” is followed by “I’m Not a Cop” and “Dysphoria Hoodie” in that order. “I’m Not a Cop” continues in the themes of self-examination and is backed by a 50/60’s rock style melody a la Jonathan Richman and Eddie Cochran. Richman’s influences make several appearances throughout the record. Grace replicates Richman’s distinctive musical styling in the form of jangly guitar rhythms and staccato response harmonies. As the melody is juxtaposed against present-tense ruminative lyrics, the song creates a melodic microcosm of sorts. A space in which the listener cannot stop themselves from examining the progression of rock music as a constant form of counter-culture form of expression.

The first single from the record is one which audiences who have seen Laura Jane Grace play in the last couple of years may be familiar with. “Dysphoria Hoodie” (released on October 4th), has been a staple in Grace’s setlist, and one which is as personal as it is pertinent in today’s climate.

Falling away from the comforts of “Dysphoria Hoodie” and following “Birds Talk Too”, the album pivots back to the influences of Jonathan Richman in the following song “Punk Rock in Basements”.

As the album’s sound begins to settle, Laura Jane Grace’s writing shifts to reflect her surroundings. For the last couple of years, Grace has split her time between Chicago and St. Louis, Missouri. And despite her 2018 song “I Hate Chicago”, Grace wants it known she, in fact, does not hate the Windy City. As a parent, home is wherever Grace’s daughter is.

But after spending the pandemic cooped up in an apartment where she was unable to make music the way she wanted, she needed to get out. Shortly after, Laura Jane Grace landed in St. Louis and (quite serendipitously) posted up in a studio that formerly belonged to Jay Farrar, frontman of Son Volt and founding member of Uncle Tupelo.

The first couple of songs on “Hole In My Head” are straightforward, stripped-back punk-rock-‘n’-roll affairs, but the majority of the album is more bare-bones even than that. Most of the tracks feature an acoustic guitar, accompanied often—though not always—by drums played by Grace herself, as well as a bass guitar courtesy of Matt Patton of Drive-By Truckers. The effect of this rudimentary instrumental arrangement is that many of the songs sound almost cutesy—certainly that’s the case with “Tacos And Toast,” whose subtle yet triumphant refrain, “I ain’t got nowhere I gotta be today” makes it a perfect ode to gentle self-indulgence. 

Grace’s greatest achievement on “Hole In My Head” is to impart the notion that her ability to write with such unerring, toe-curling honesty is dependent upon her willingness to understand the inner machinations of her mind down to every last synaptic firing. There is a potent power in knowing yourself this well; it rises above the anxiety and uncertainty that it illuminates and flows out of the record beautifully, in a way no one song can aptly summarize.

Life can be complicated and often painful, Grace seems to say on “Hole In My Head”but if strength and optimism are to be found anywhere, it’s in seizing your identity—warts and all—and refusing to shy away from it.

It was in St. Louis that Grace celebrated her 42nd birthday, a day commemorated in “Hole In My Head’s” seventh track “Tacos and Toast”. This track in addition to its predecessor “Cuffing Season” slows down the tempo of the record moving forward as its lyrics delve into Grace’s renewed ability to make music in a new place. Grace follows up this love for St. Louis in the album’s ninth track, “Keep Your Wheels Straight” as well. Immortalizing a night of CBGB’s and nonalcoholic beers, a city plagued by urban decay is brought back to life.

“St. Louis really opened its arms to me and I just have such a great time when I’m there… it’s a really special city … It’s like, to me it feels like the way every city in America felt when I first started touring in the late 90’s. And this crazy mix of like, fun and adventure, but danger and possibility”

Backed by her own drumming, Grace’s forward vocals complement her skills as a guitarist on “Hole In My Head“, while the added contributions of Drive-By Truckers bassist, Matt Patton, bolsters a full-band sound throughout the album. Patton, who was recruited through a brief conversation with Grace over Twitter, brought a smooth and collaborative experience to the project, despite the genre differences between the two. When asked, Matt said:

“I would say that our working relationship was immediately comfortable just in the way that she was able to articulate you know, what it was that she wanted me to do.

And you know, she had the musical cue and vocabulary to get her points across to where we can work efficiently without any confusion or disagreements. It was a, you know, it was a different level for me.”

Patton’s playing is all over the record, but really took his moment to shine when given a blank slate with the song “Mercenary”. According to Laura Jane, “Mercenary” is the oldest song on the record and had been workshopped on and off over the years. Patton had wrapped up his time in the studio with Grace and was headed home when Grace sent him the track and told him to do whatever he wanted with it. “Mercenary” has a more roots-based sound with a metronomic sliding bass sound which allows it to stand out on the album. Grace’s ever clear vocals keep it consistent with the rest of the songs though. There is a sharp edge in her voice, almost as if she’s breathing out a challenge as she sings:

If there’s money on the table
you can take it and leave
If there’s a seat in the car
no one rides for free
I’ve got gold, solid gold
Come on and shine with me
Go on and take all you want
There’s nothing here that I need

Writing from life is easy to do but it’s difficult to master. Life is strange, it’s messy, and for all the talk of it being short, living is the longest thing we can do. How do we get to the point of it all? Writing about it is just one way to make sense of it all. In taking these strange moments, it’s tempting to crowd the story with metaphor or description in an effort to entertain others as we invite them to these parts of our lives. Laura Jane Grace has honed her craft as a songwriter, and takes on the difficult task of telling her stories without losing the details.

In the final two tracks of the album “Hard Feelings” and “Give Up the Ghost”, there is almost a stream of consciousness where Grace flows between apologies and regrets to seemingly embellished experiences. Except when she sings “I’m standing at the center of the universe/ screaming at god, I’m not done” in the final track “Give Up the Ghost”, she’s being serious.

The Center of the Universe, an auditory phenomena on a footbridge in downtown Tulsa, Oklahoma. A place where tourists can stand at its center and yell yet not be heard by those standing outside of them. It is an isolating experience for some, where in one space you can say everything or nothing and maybe only god will hear you. Or not. “Give Up the Ghost” is relatively sparse compared to the rest of the record. As it was in the American Hotel in Amsterdam and the bedroom of her childhood, it is just Laura Jane Grace and a guitar, setting her time and memory to melody the hard-edged yet honest way she’s mastered.

“Hole In My Head” is a record which captures the nuances of humanity and experience in a strangely optimistic manner. The lightness of its influence and the journalistic recollection of experience set against a battered and warm folk-punk delivery from beginning to end makes “Hole In My Head” a fun comfort. It is a welcome embrace of life and just the start of a new chapter in Laura Jane Grace’s raucous journey. 

releases February 16th, 2024

All songs written & performed by Laura Jane Grace,