3 new songs and 3 new albums to check out this weekend
Jeff Tweedy returns with four new songs, plus new albums from Lord Huron and Alex G.
Images from left: Lord Huron (Christian Waite); Hermanos Gutiérrez and Leon Bridges (Jackie Lee Young); Jeff Tweedy, Twilight Override (Shervin Lainez)
Welcome to our weekly music post, where we spotlight our favorite new songs and albums. Hop in the comments and tell us: What new music are you listening to?
Hermanos Gutiérrez, “Elegantly Wasted” (feat. Leon Bridges)
“Elegantly Wasted,” a collab track between Hermanos Gutiérrez and Leon Bridges, came together after the Latin instrumental band, which consists of brothers Alejandro and Estevan Gutiérrez, opened for Bridges on a two-month U.S. tour. It’s Hermanos Gutiérrez’s first song with English lyrics, which Bridges delivers with just the right amount of heat to complement the seductive instrumentals. In a press release, the band said, “We’ve always been fans of Leon’s style and his way of approaching music. When we were in Nashville together last November, we had a window of maybe four hours before our show at the Ryman [Auditorium] that night, but managed to finish a song we’d been working on for months. Leon showed up, and he heard the track for the first time at the studio together with Dan Auerbach, the whole team of Easy Eye Sound and Leon’s crew. He took a microphone, and he just started to sing a melody over it. It sounded like an angel. We all expected him to crush it with his first note, and he did.”
Jeff Tweedy, “Out In The Dark”
To announce his fifth solo album, Twilight Override (out September 26), Wilco frontman Jeff Tweedy released four new tracks: “Out In The Dark,” “One Tiny Flower,” “Stray Cats In Spain,” and “Enough.” That ambition is mirrored in the record itself, which is actually a triple album that consists of 30 songs. All four tracks are well worth a listen, but we chose to feature “Out In The Dark” specifically because of its delightful music video featuring dancer Aranivah. “Out In The Dark” is a meditation on darkness and creativity, themes which Tweedy expanded upon in a press release, saying, “When you choose to do creative things, you align yourself with something that other people call God. And when you align yourself with creation, you inherently take a side against destruction. You’re on the side of creation. And that does a lot to quell the impulse to destroy. Creativity eats darkness.”