Water From Your Eyes compose freaky pop music out of helter-skelter beats, pitch-bent guitars, weltering synth glitches, signal-jammed earworms, and vocalist Rachel Brown’s sometimes chanted, sometimes chatty, always oddly catchy cadences. Preceded by “Barley,” the alt-pop artists’ sixth studio album and Matador debut twists familiar sounds into horribly misshapen, Beefheartian symphonies that nonetheless make sense of our broken times and minds. Read Pitchfork’s feature “Alt-Pop Duo Water From Your Eyes Commit to the Bit.”
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Arlo Parks: My Soft Machine [Transgressive]
Arlo Parks wrote her second album of immersive indie folk, pop, and rock about a first love, “mid-twenties anxiety,” her friends’ substance use, and “PTSD and grief and self sabotage and joy, moving through worlds with wonder and sensitivity,” she said in press materials. The British singer-songwriter named the album after a quote from Joanna Hogg’s The Souvenir about the allure of cinema: “We don’t want to see life as it is played out; we want to see life as it is experienced in this soft machine.” Phoebe Bridgers features on the single “Pegasus.”
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