It was a clean sweep for Taylor Swift at the 2024 Gold Derby Music Awards. She came into our fourth annual event with nine nominations and walked away with nine victories including Artist of the Year for the fourth year in a row. Watch the announcement video above for winners in all categories, and scroll down for the complete list.
In the history of the GDMAs thus far, Swift is the only artist who has won Artist of the Year. She’s also the only artist who has won Record of the Year and Song of the Year. But her Album of the Year victory for “Midnights” is only her second in that race. She previously won in 2021 for “Folklore,” but Lana Del Rey claimed that honor in 2022 for “Chemtrails Over the Country Club” and Beyonce prevailed in 2023 for “Renaissance.”
Swift’s other victories included her third for Best Music Video...
In the history of the GDMAs thus far, Swift is the only artist who has won Artist of the Year. She’s also the only artist who has won Record of the Year and Song of the Year. But her Album of the Year victory for “Midnights” is only her second in that race. She previously won in 2021 for “Folklore,” but Lana Del Rey claimed that honor in 2022 for “Chemtrails Over the Country Club” and Beyonce prevailed in 2023 for “Renaissance.”
Swift’s other victories included her third for Best Music Video...
- 2/2/2024
- by Daniel Montgomery, Chris Beachum, Denton Davidson, Marcus James Dixon, Joyce Eng, Ray Richmond and Christopher Rosen
- Gold Derby
Taylor Swift is the most nominated recording artist in the 4th Annual Gold Derby Music Awards nominations, but she’s not the most nominated individual. Scroll down to see the entire list of Gdma contenders, watch the nominations announcement above, and visit our predictions center now to start voting for the winners. You have until the end of the day on Friday, January 19, 2024, to get your votes in. Winners will be announced at a later date to be determined.
SEEGrammys flashback: Fun’s ‘We Are Young’ won Song of the Year and introduced the music world to Jack Antonoff
Swift picked up an impressive nine nominations including Artist of the Year, Album of the Year (“Midnights“) and Record and Song of the Year (“Anti-Hero”). To date she has never lost the Artist of the Year category, and she previously won Album of the year for “Folklore” in 2021. She’s by...
SEEGrammys flashback: Fun’s ‘We Are Young’ won Song of the Year and introduced the music world to Jack Antonoff
Swift picked up an impressive nine nominations including Artist of the Year, Album of the Year (“Midnights“) and Record and Song of the Year (“Anti-Hero”). To date she has never lost the Artist of the Year category, and she previously won Album of the year for “Folklore” in 2021. She’s by...
- 12/18/2023
- by Daniel Montgomery, Chris Beachum, Denton Davidson, Joyce Eng, Ray Richmond and Latasha Ford
- Gold Derby
Image Source: Ace Amir
Vagabon wanted her new album, "Sorry I Haven't Called," to provide some relief for people after a few hard years. In order to do that, the artist, whose real name is Laetitia Tamko, decided to retreat from the world to write it.
"I have friends who live in Germany, and they told me about this house in the countryside of Germany. Being the dreamer that I am, I was like, 'Hmm, I can see myself in a house in the countryside of Germany. That sounds nice,'" she tells Popsugar. "For me to sit down and make an album - I've only made three albums, but it seems to always start with a little nugget of a dreamlike thing like that that can get my fires going."
The strategy worked, and the retreat ignited her creativity. The result is her most electric, expansive album yet.
Vagabon...
Vagabon wanted her new album, "Sorry I Haven't Called," to provide some relief for people after a few hard years. In order to do that, the artist, whose real name is Laetitia Tamko, decided to retreat from the world to write it.
"I have friends who live in Germany, and they told me about this house in the countryside of Germany. Being the dreamer that I am, I was like, 'Hmm, I can see myself in a house in the countryside of Germany. That sounds nice,'" she tells Popsugar. "For me to sit down and make an album - I've only made three albums, but it seems to always start with a little nugget of a dreamlike thing like that that can get my fires going."
The strategy worked, and the retreat ignited her creativity. The result is her most electric, expansive album yet.
Vagabon...
- 9/15/2023
- by Eden Arielle Gordon
- Popsugar.com
Despite singer-songwriter Laetitia Tamko’s singular talents, her career as Vagabon nonetheless traces a familiar arc. Like Sudan Archives and Mitski before her, Tamko has evolved from a DIY indie artist—on her bracing debut EP, Persian Gardens—into something approaching a conventional pop singer. Tamko’s third studio album, Sorry I Haven’t Called, leans in a more tonally upbeat direction than her previous releases, with help from Rostam Batmanglij, who co-produced the album. The result is a serviceable enough pop effort, but much of Tamko’s edges have been sadly sanded away.
Opener “Can I Talk My Shit” is so springy and breezy that the angst and moodiness of Tamko’s past output don’t just seem far off, they feel like the creation of a completely different artist. Here and on “You Know How,” her vocals feel devoid of any distinctive characteristics and are needlessly Auto-Tuned.
Tamko’s voice can be expressive,...
Opener “Can I Talk My Shit” is so springy and breezy that the angst and moodiness of Tamko’s past output don’t just seem far off, they feel like the creation of a completely different artist. Here and on “You Know How,” her vocals feel devoid of any distinctive characteristics and are needlessly Auto-Tuned.
Tamko’s voice can be expressive,...
- 9/11/2023
- by Charles Lyons-Burt
- Slant Magazine
Carly Rae Jepsen has officially released her seventh studio album, The Loveliest Time. Stream it below.
Featuring production from former-Vampire Weekend member Rostam Batmanglij, the album boasts some of the uber-singable pop hooks and danceable tracks you’d expect from Jepsen. The James Ford-produced single, “Shy Boy,” which dropped last month, was evidence of this, offering an irresistibly catchy chorus.
Jepsen first announced the album earlier this month, explaining that it will be a thematic follow-up to her 2022 album, the similarly-titled The Loneliest Time. “It’s sort of the completion to The Loneliest Time,” she said in a statement. “I had these fantasies that I wanted to put to song about what it would be like when the world opened up and we could travel again and fall madly in love and live life like it’s an adventure. So, I’m really looking forward to this next project,...
Featuring production from former-Vampire Weekend member Rostam Batmanglij, the album boasts some of the uber-singable pop hooks and danceable tracks you’d expect from Jepsen. The James Ford-produced single, “Shy Boy,” which dropped last month, was evidence of this, offering an irresistibly catchy chorus.
Jepsen first announced the album earlier this month, explaining that it will be a thematic follow-up to her 2022 album, the similarly-titled The Loneliest Time. “It’s sort of the completion to The Loneliest Time,” she said in a statement. “I had these fantasies that I wanted to put to song about what it would be like when the world opened up and we could travel again and fall madly in love and live life like it’s an adventure. So, I’m really looking forward to this next project,...
- 7/28/2023
- by Jo Vito
- Consequence - Music
Carly Rae Jepsen has announced The Loveliest Time, the follow-up to her 2022 album The Loneliest Time, and just like its predecessor, it features production from an all-star crew that includes Rostam Batmanglij. Continuing her string of companion B-side albums, this one is out July 28th. “Shy Boy,” which was revealed last month, serves as the project’s first single.
Rostam confirmed his involvement earlier this month on Twitter, quoting a clip of Jepsen — who said The Loveliest Time came from her fantasies of life post-covid while locked down during the pandemic — and adding, “the two we did for The Loveliest Time have BPMs — get ready to dance.”
Now, if you want to get technical, all songs have BPMs (or beats per minute). But it’s likely the artist and producer was tipping fans off to songs with a particularly fast Bpm, since he mentioned dancing.
“I got to know loneliness...
Rostam confirmed his involvement earlier this month on Twitter, quoting a clip of Jepsen — who said The Loveliest Time came from her fantasies of life post-covid while locked down during the pandemic — and adding, “the two we did for The Loveliest Time have BPMs — get ready to dance.”
Now, if you want to get technical, all songs have BPMs (or beats per minute). But it’s likely the artist and producer was tipping fans off to songs with a particularly fast Bpm, since he mentioned dancing.
“I got to know loneliness...
- 7/12/2023
- by Carys Anderson
- Consequence - Music
Phoenix have shared their second-ever formal collaboration today, recruiting Clairo for a remix of “After Midnight,” a standout track from the band’s recent album Alpha Zulu.
Though the two artists are longtime fans of each other, it took a few connections before they finally crossed paths: Phoenix met Clairo through Rostam Batmanglij, who produced the indie pop star’s debut album Immunity and whose former Vampire Weekend bandmate Ezra Koenig contributed vocals to the Alpha Zulu single “Tonight” (which we named Song of the Week).
“We’ve loved Claire since day one!” Phoenix share in a press release. “What a treat it is to have her sing with us! We hope you’ll enjoy it as much as we do.” Clairo adds: “I’ve been a massive fan of Phoenix for as long as I can remember, and I’m very grateful that they asked me to sing on this remix.
Though the two artists are longtime fans of each other, it took a few connections before they finally crossed paths: Phoenix met Clairo through Rostam Batmanglij, who produced the indie pop star’s debut album Immunity and whose former Vampire Weekend bandmate Ezra Koenig contributed vocals to the Alpha Zulu single “Tonight” (which we named Song of the Week).
“We’ve loved Claire since day one!” Phoenix share in a press release. “What a treat it is to have her sing with us! We hope you’ll enjoy it as much as we do.” Clairo adds: “I’ve been a massive fan of Phoenix for as long as I can remember, and I’m very grateful that they asked me to sing on this remix.
- 3/16/2023
- by Abby Jones
- Consequence - Music
With her tart direct address, Leila makes a cheeky protagonist in “The Persian Version,” a Sundance-blessed dramatic comedy about the wide rift between an immigrant mother and her Iranian American daughter. Layla Mohammadi and Niousha Noor portray Leila and her mother, Shirin. They also carry the weight of writer-director Maryam Kesharvarz’s third feature, which braids comedy and tragedy, vibrant aplomb and thoughtful soberness.
In 2011, Kesharvarz made her directorial debut at the Sundance Film Festival with “Circumstance,” winner of that year’s audience award for dramatic feature. Set in Tehran, that LGBTQ-hued film focused on a well-to-do Iranian family dealing with their sexually rebellious daughter (and Daddy’s girl) and a son who recovers from drug addiction by replacing it with a fresh mania for fundamentalist ideology. “The Persian Version” moves between the present and the past and shuttles from New York to New Jersey to a rural outpost in Iran,...
In 2011, Kesharvarz made her directorial debut at the Sundance Film Festival with “Circumstance,” winner of that year’s audience award for dramatic feature. Set in Tehran, that LGBTQ-hued film focused on a well-to-do Iranian family dealing with their sexually rebellious daughter (and Daddy’s girl) and a son who recovers from drug addiction by replacing it with a fresh mania for fundamentalist ideology. “The Persian Version” moves between the present and the past and shuttles from New York to New Jersey to a rural outpost in Iran,...
- 1/22/2023
- by Lisa Kennedy
- Variety Film + TV
Christine McVie’s musical impact inside of Fleetwood Mac — and as a solo artist — carried a legacy that transcended generations. Following her death at age 79 on Wednesday, the keyboardist and singer was remembered by the likes of Sheryl Crow, Japanese Breakfast, Muna, and many other artists.
“God damn legend. Every time I tried to write a classy synth line in the studio I’d always say I was trying to channel my inner Christine,” Michelle Zauner tweeted from her Japanese Breakfast’s Twitter account. “I even got Craig a framed...
“God damn legend. Every time I tried to write a classy synth line in the studio I’d always say I was trying to channel my inner Christine,” Michelle Zauner tweeted from her Japanese Breakfast’s Twitter account. “I even got Craig a framed...
- 12/1/2022
- by Tomás Mier
- Rollingstone.com
Carly Rae Jepsen is one of the most exquisite joys of being a pop fan over the past decade. The Canadian pop goddess is one of our most underrated treasures—ten years after the world fell in love with this girl in “Call Me Maybe,” she still hasn’t made a single weak record or failed move. The Loneliest Time is her most emotionally adventurous music yet—high-gloss post-bubblegum synth-pop that packs a serious punch even at its fizziest. Carly Rae just keeps dancing her way through the heartbreak, a...
- 10/20/2022
- by Rob Sheffield
- Rollingstone.com
Carly Rae Jepsen is okay with being on her own – in fact, she’s intrigued by the concept. The singer will explore isolation in her newly-announced fifth studio album The Loneliest Time, set for release on Oct. 21 via Interscope Records.
“I’m quite fascinated by loneliness,” Jepsen tweeted alongside the album announcement. “It can be really beautiful when you turn it over and look at it. Just like love, it can cause some extreme human reactions.”
The Loneliest Time will feature the pop figure’s comeback single “Western Wind,” a...
“I’m quite fascinated by loneliness,” Jepsen tweeted alongside the album announcement. “It can be really beautiful when you turn it over and look at it. Just like love, it can cause some extreme human reactions.”
The Loneliest Time will feature the pop figure’s comeback single “Western Wind,” a...
- 8/2/2022
- by Larisha Paul
- Rollingstone.com
Beyoncé led the field with nine nominations for the 63rd Grammy Awards, which were announced Tuesday morning by the Recording Academy.
Beyoncé, who has 24 Grammy wins in her career, scored a nom in the marquee Record of the Year and Song of the Year categories for “Black Parade” and “Savage” with Megan Thee Stallion, joined by Taylor Swift, last year’s runaway winner Billie Eilish, Dua Lipa, Post Malone and Black Pumas with multiple noms in the General Field categories.
Doja Cat and Megan Thee Stallion also received multiple noms, and both will face off in the Best New Artist category with Phoebe Bridgers, Ingrid Andress, Chika, Noah Cyrus, D Smoke and Kaytranada.
Other notables include Justin Bieber in the Pop categories and Fiona Apple in the Rock and Alternative categories, and DaBaby in Rap.
A total of 84 categories were unveiled this morning to honor the year’s best in music.
Beyoncé, who has 24 Grammy wins in her career, scored a nom in the marquee Record of the Year and Song of the Year categories for “Black Parade” and “Savage” with Megan Thee Stallion, joined by Taylor Swift, last year’s runaway winner Billie Eilish, Dua Lipa, Post Malone and Black Pumas with multiple noms in the General Field categories.
Doja Cat and Megan Thee Stallion also received multiple noms, and both will face off in the Best New Artist category with Phoebe Bridgers, Ingrid Andress, Chika, Noah Cyrus, D Smoke and Kaytranada.
Other notables include Justin Bieber in the Pop categories and Fiona Apple in the Rock and Alternative categories, and DaBaby in Rap.
A total of 84 categories were unveiled this morning to honor the year’s best in music.
- 11/24/2020
- by Patrick Hipes
- Deadline Film + TV
The nominations for the 63rd annual Grammy Awards were revealed in a lifestream Tuesday. Beyoncé came out on top with nine nominations, followed by Taylor Swift, Roddy Ricch and Dua Lipa with six apiece. Brittany Howard, of Alabama Shakes fame, picked up a surprising five nods for her solo debut.
Among those picking up four nods: last year’s Grammy queen, Billie Eilish, along with Megan Thee Stallion, Phoebe Bridgers, Justin Bieber, DaBaby, jazz musician John Beasley and classical composer David Frost. (One of the predicted leaders, The Weeknd, was shut out.)
The complete list of nominees for the 2021 Grammys:
General Field Record of the Year
“Black Parade” — Beyoncé — Beyoncé & Derek Dixie, producers; Stuart White, engineer/mixer; Colin Leonard, mastering engineer
“Colors” — Black Pumas — Adrian Quesada, producer; Adrian Quesada, engineer/mixer; JJ Golden, mastering engineer
“Rockstar” —DaBaby Featuring Roddy Ricch — SethinTheKitchen, producer; Derek “MixedByAli” Ali, Chris Dennis & Liz Robson, engineers/mixers; Susan Tabor,...
Among those picking up four nods: last year’s Grammy queen, Billie Eilish, along with Megan Thee Stallion, Phoebe Bridgers, Justin Bieber, DaBaby, jazz musician John Beasley and classical composer David Frost. (One of the predicted leaders, The Weeknd, was shut out.)
The complete list of nominees for the 2021 Grammys:
General Field Record of the Year
“Black Parade” — Beyoncé — Beyoncé & Derek Dixie, producers; Stuart White, engineer/mixer; Colin Leonard, mastering engineer
“Colors” — Black Pumas — Adrian Quesada, producer; Adrian Quesada, engineer/mixer; JJ Golden, mastering engineer
“Rockstar” —DaBaby Featuring Roddy Ricch — SethinTheKitchen, producer; Derek “MixedByAli” Ali, Chris Dennis & Liz Robson, engineers/mixers; Susan Tabor,...
- 11/24/2020
- by Chris Willman
- Variety Film + TV
The Grammys’ rock categories are usually filled with interesting, though sometimes questionable, choices. This year in particular, the rock genre boasts a lot of noteworthy contenders ranging from hard rock to more Americana-inflected music. Let’s take a look at who’s in the hunt for Best Rock Performance and Best Rock Song nominations this year.
The Killers might be the front-runners with their hit “Caution.” The song was number-one on rock and alternative radio, and the band might be overdue for a Grammy at this point with seven past nominations and no wins. Joining them will likely be Brittany Howard with “Stay High,” which could earn her a win due to passion for her potential Album of the Year contender, “Jaime,” not to mention the fact that she’s been nominated five times before for Best Rock Performance, including a win for “Don’t Wanna Fight” in 2016 with her band Alabama Shakes.
The Killers might be the front-runners with their hit “Caution.” The song was number-one on rock and alternative radio, and the band might be overdue for a Grammy at this point with seven past nominations and no wins. Joining them will likely be Brittany Howard with “Stay High,” which could earn her a win due to passion for her potential Album of the Year contender, “Jaime,” not to mention the fact that she’s been nominated five times before for Best Rock Performance, including a win for “Don’t Wanna Fight” in 2016 with her band Alabama Shakes.
- 11/22/2020
- by Jaime Rodriguez
- Gold Derby
Former Vampire Weekend member Rostam Batmanglij — who records under the name Rostam — has dropped a new single “Unfold You,” accompanied by a video featuring Hari Nef.
Directed by Rostam, the video shows the duo meeting on Dune Shacks Trail in Massachusetts. They sit and stare at each other, and later dance in synchronized movements. “Might be taking a risk/But I’m Ok with it,” Rostam sings across a burning saxophone. “I’m Ok with it.”
“Hari and I found ourselves in the same quarantine pod in Massachusetts this past July,...
Directed by Rostam, the video shows the duo meeting on Dune Shacks Trail in Massachusetts. They sit and stare at each other, and later dance in synchronized movements. “Might be taking a risk/But I’m Ok with it,” Rostam sings across a burning saxophone. “I’m Ok with it.”
“Hari and I found ourselves in the same quarantine pod in Massachusetts this past July,...
- 10/14/2020
- by Angie Martoccio
- Rollingstone.com
As part of our newly updated survey of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, we’re publishing a series of pieces on the making and impact of key records from the list. Vampire Weekend’s Modern Vampires of the City came in at number 328.
Vampire Weekend hadn’t even finished work on their second album, Contra, when, in June of 2009, multi-instrumentalist and producer Rostam Batmanglij began writing music for Modern Vampires of the City, the group’s career-defining third LP. The genesis was an early version of what would end...
Vampire Weekend hadn’t even finished work on their second album, Contra, when, in June of 2009, multi-instrumentalist and producer Rostam Batmanglij began writing music for Modern Vampires of the City, the group’s career-defining third LP. The genesis was an early version of what would end...
- 9/28/2020
- by Jonathan Bernstein
- Rollingstone.com
“I don’t know if I’m giving too much away right now, but fuck it,” says Este Haim. “We made puzzles out of our record!”
Este, 34 — the eldest Haim sister and the only one who’s turned on her camera for this Zoom call — holds up a laptop-size jigsaw puzzle of the cover art of Women in Music Pt. III, the San Fernando Valley, California, trio’s third album. The image, shot by their friend Paul Thomas Anderson, shows off their cheeky sense of humor: The sisters stare blankly...
Este, 34 — the eldest Haim sister and the only one who’s turned on her camera for this Zoom call — holds up a laptop-size jigsaw puzzle of the cover art of Women in Music Pt. III, the San Fernando Valley, California, trio’s third album. The image, shot by their friend Paul Thomas Anderson, shows off their cheeky sense of humor: The sisters stare blankly...
- 6/18/2020
- by Claire Shaffer
- Rollingstone.com
Haim are the latest band to perform for NPR’s Tiny Desk concert series from home. The sisters tuned in remotely from their separate Los Angeles abodes to play three tracks from Women in Music Pt. III, their upcoming third album.
Leading off with “The Steps,” Haim jammed out on guitar, bass and bongos before performing “I Know Alone” and the Wimpiii era’s first single, “Summer Girl,” released last July. For the last song, Henry Solomon joined the trio for the song’s signature saxophone line.
Women in Music Pt.
Leading off with “The Steps,” Haim jammed out on guitar, bass and bongos before performing “I Know Alone” and the Wimpiii era’s first single, “Summer Girl,” released last July. For the last song, Henry Solomon joined the trio for the song’s signature saxophone line.
Women in Music Pt.
- 6/17/2020
- by Claire Shaffer
- Rollingstone.com
Haim’s third album, the cheekily titled Women in Music Pt. III, begins like an uncapped fire hydrant spraying water on a scorching summer day. A sax solo from Henry Solomon leads into Danielle Haim begging for a miracle from their hometown on album opener “Los Angeles.” While they love L.A., it’s bringing them down and they’re mulling what to make of their disappointment and disillusionment.
“Hometown of mine/Just got back from the boulevard can’t stop crying,” she sings on the first verse. “The guy...
“Hometown of mine/Just got back from the boulevard can’t stop crying,” she sings on the first verse. “The guy...
- 6/15/2020
- by Brittany Spanos
- Rollingstone.com
Haim try to keep a rocky relationship together on their new song, “Don’t Wanna,” the latest offering from Women in Music Pt. III, out June 26th via Columbia.
The track is another slick bit of pop rock that begins with a rich guitar riff bubbling over a deep drum and bass groove, and eventually builds to a bustling peak packed with overlapping vocals and hornlike fanfare. The song chronicles a tumultuous love affair, but searches for some way to steady the ship in the chorus: “Well we both had...
The track is another slick bit of pop rock that begins with a rich guitar riff bubbling over a deep drum and bass groove, and eventually builds to a bustling peak packed with overlapping vocals and hornlike fanfare. The song chronicles a tumultuous love affair, but searches for some way to steady the ship in the chorus: “Well we both had...
- 5/21/2020
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Ezra Koenig performed a solo medley of songs from Vampire Weekend’s most recent album, Father of the Bride, on The Tonight Show Tuesday.
Koenig set up in his home music room — which was packed with guitars, synthesizers and other equipment — and performed the makeshift, three-song suite with just piano accompaniment. He opened with the swooning refrain of “Flower Moon” before jumping to the rollicking “Stranger,” then closed with a punchy rendition of “Big Blue.”
Vampire Weekend released Father of the Bride last May. At the time, it marked their...
Koenig set up in his home music room — which was packed with guitars, synthesizers and other equipment — and performed the makeshift, three-song suite with just piano accompaniment. He opened with the swooning refrain of “Flower Moon” before jumping to the rollicking “Stranger,” then closed with a punchy rendition of “Big Blue.”
Vampire Weekend released Father of the Bride last May. At the time, it marked their...
- 5/6/2020
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Vampire Weekend shared three songs — including one that features Jude Law reading a 19th century Scottish poem — that were previously only available on the Japanese edition of their 2019 album, Father of the Bride.
Of the three tracks, only “Houston Dubai” is an original, and it is vintage Vampire Weekend. It boasts a peppy guitar strum, stomp-and-clap percussion and lyrics from Ezra Koenig that tackle strained love, sleepless delirium and the ennui of late capitalism as he chronicles the travels of a businessman between the two titular, oil-rich cities.
One of...
Of the three tracks, only “Houston Dubai” is an original, and it is vintage Vampire Weekend. It boasts a peppy guitar strum, stomp-and-clap percussion and lyrics from Ezra Koenig that tackle strained love, sleepless delirium and the ennui of late capitalism as he chronicles the travels of a businessman between the two titular, oil-rich cities.
One of...
- 2/28/2020
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Haim have released a new song “Hallelujah,” and no, it’s not a Leonard Cohen cover. The sister trio dropped the song accompanied by a video directed by their frequent collaborator, Paul Thomas Anderson.
The stripped-down track was co-written by Tobias Jesso Jr. and produced by Ariel Rechtshaid, Rostam Batmanglij and Danielle Haim. The video opens with Danielle alone on a dark stage, playing acoustic guitar. “I met two angels but they were in disguise,” she sings, before she tosses a chair to Este, who takes over on lead vocals.
The stripped-down track was co-written by Tobias Jesso Jr. and produced by Ariel Rechtshaid, Rostam Batmanglij and Danielle Haim. The video opens with Danielle alone on a dark stage, playing acoustic guitar. “I met two angels but they were in disguise,” she sings, before she tosses a chair to Este, who takes over on lead vocals.
- 11/18/2019
- by Angie Martoccio
- Rollingstone.com
Clairo performed a track from her debut album Immunity, called “I Wouldn’t Ask You,” on Jimmy Kimmel Live! Thursday night. The vulnerable rendition began with the 21-year-old artist leading a group of children in singing the song’s chorus, over a stark piano: “I wouldn’t ask you to take care of me/Oh, and I wouldn’t ask you to take care of me.” Opening the song up to keyboard, guitar and drums, Clairo still channeled her trademark “bedroom pop” and delivered an introspective performance of the track.
- 9/6/2019
- by Claire Shaffer
- Rollingstone.com
“I was 15 when I first felt loneliness/Cut my hair, only listened to Loveless,” sings Clairo on “White Flag.” Who can’t relate? My Bloody Valentine’s ur-shoegaze landmark — a deep sonic cave that remains one of the best hiding-from-the-world listening experiences ever — is a fitting namecheck on this beautiful debut, which sounds nothing whatsoever like it. But Immunity does recall the sweet ‘90s moment when the line dividing Diy indie-rock and mainstream pop was wildly blurred, a moment that empowered lots of great art, even as the alt-culture street-cred cops were taking names.
- 8/2/2019
- by Will Hermes
- Rollingstone.com
Philippe Zdar, a member of French electronic duo Cassius and a prominent producer, has died, Pitchfork reports and his management confirmed to Rolling Stone. He was 52. His management said in a statement to Rolling Stone that the musician died after a tragic “accident at his home in Paris” on Wednesday night.
Born Philippe Cerboneschi, he and his longtime musical partner Boom Bass (given name Hubert Blanc-Francard) first began releasing tracks under the moniker La Funk Mob in the mid-Nineties before landing on the name that would earn them dance music fame.
Born Philippe Cerboneschi, he and his longtime musical partner Boom Bass (given name Hubert Blanc-Francard) first began releasing tracks under the moniker La Funk Mob in the mid-Nineties before landing on the name that would earn them dance music fame.
- 6/20/2019
- by Althea Legaspi
- Rollingstone.com
“You have to promise you won’t think I’m a maniac,” Carly Rae Jepsen says, sitting in the living room of her Spanish-style home on L.A.’s east side. A devilish grin spreads across her face, which these days is framed by a short, blond bob instead of her signature mahogany hair. She sets down her tea, jumps off her plush blue couch and runs to the dining room. When she returns, she’s clutching a few large, sturdy poster boards.
On the largest — scrawled in different colors...
On the largest — scrawled in different colors...
- 5/1/2019
- by Brittany Spanos
- Rollingstone.com
At 18 songs in under an hour, Vampire Weekend’s first album in six years sounds at first like a manic effort to make up lost time. Singer-guitarist Ezra Koenig, the band’s composer-lyricist and a co-producer on virtually every track, has stuffed his hooks and bridges with so many change-ups in rhythm, guitar tone and dramatic instrumental flourish that, by the finish, you feel like you’ve been whipped through a modern-pop homage to the Beatles’ Abbey Road medley – twice over.
Father of the Bride is so zealously detailed and...
Father of the Bride is so zealously detailed and...
- 4/30/2019
- by David Fricke
- Rollingstone.com
A week ago, every 2020 candidate filed their first-quarter financial reports with the Federal Election Commission. The reports track every dollar a candidate raised and spent, offering the first inside glimpse of the election and how the candidates are stacking up. President Trump, who held his first 2020 campaign rally less than a month after he was inaugurated, has the largest war chest of anyone in the field. But the candidate with the highest percentage of small-dollar donors — a key indicator of broad-based public support — is Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, followed closely...
- 4/23/2019
- by Tessa Stuart
- Rollingstone.com
Vampire Weekend will promote their upcoming fourth LP, Father of the Bride, with a massive North American tour. The 35-date trek kicks off May 17th with a slot at Alabama’s Hangout Music Festival and launches in full on June 5th in Toronto, Ontario; after a month-plus break in July, the second leg begins August 16th in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma and concludes October 8th in Denver, Colorado.
Tickets go on sale to the general public starting Friday, February 8th at noon local time via Live Nation. Registration for a Ticketmaster...
Tickets go on sale to the general public starting Friday, February 8th at noon local time via Live Nation. Registration for a Ticketmaster...
- 1/30/2019
- by Ryan Reed
- Rollingstone.com
Last fall, Ezra Koenig experienced a brief moment of panic regarding Post Malone’s hit single “Sunflower.” “We have a song on this record called ‘Sunflower,'” the Vampire Weekend frontman, 34, recalls thinking. “‘God, we have to get this out!'”
The album he’s talking about is Father of the Bride, the band’s first new release in six years, due out this spring. Koenig spent so long writing and recording the new LP that he started noticing coincidences everywhere — even wondering if the cover art, which he’d chosen nearly three years ago,...
The album he’s talking about is Father of the Bride, the band’s first new release in six years, due out this spring. Koenig spent so long writing and recording the new LP that he started noticing coincidences everywhere — even wondering if the cover art, which he’d chosen nearly three years ago,...
- 1/24/2019
- by Simon Vozick-Levinson
- Rollingstone.com
Vampire Weekend unveiled their first new songs in nearly six years, “Harmony Hall” and “2021,” which will appear on their forthcoming album, Father of the Bride.
“Harmony Hall” is a swooning tune packed with kind vibes that opens with a tumbling acoustic guitar lick before settling into a groove reminiscent of the Grateful Dead. “And the stone walls of Harmony Hall bear witness,” frontman Ezra Koenig sings, “Anybody with a holy mind can never forgive the sight/Of wicked snakes inside a place you thought was dignified/I don’t wanna live like this,...
“Harmony Hall” is a swooning tune packed with kind vibes that opens with a tumbling acoustic guitar lick before settling into a groove reminiscent of the Grateful Dead. “And the stone walls of Harmony Hall bear witness,” frontman Ezra Koenig sings, “Anybody with a holy mind can never forgive the sight/Of wicked snakes inside a place you thought was dignified/I don’t wanna live like this,...
- 1/24/2019
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Maggie Rogers made her Saturday Night Live debut on the show’s latest Jonah Hill-hosted episode, joining Kanye West, Paul Simon and Travis Scott as musical guests on the 44th season.
The high-profile appearance was likely the first time many SNL viewers had heard of Rogers, who first popped up on music fans’ radars with her 2016 single “Alaska.”
While she didn’t perform “Alaska” on the show, Rogers did provide a preview of her upcoming debut LP Heard It in a Past Life with a stripped-down version of her...
The high-profile appearance was likely the first time many SNL viewers had heard of Rogers, who first popped up on music fans’ radars with her 2016 single “Alaska.”
While she didn’t perform “Alaska” on the show, Rogers did provide a preview of her upcoming debut LP Heard It in a Past Life with a stripped-down version of her...
- 11/4/2018
- by Ilana Kaplan
- Rollingstone.com
Four years after the release of her most recent album “I Never Learn,” Swedish songstress Lykke Li dropped two new songs, “Deep End” and “Hard Rain.” The songs are the first tracks to emerge from her long-percolating fourth album “So Sad So Sexy”. The album is due on June 8 on RCA Records — Li’s first release with the label.
“Hard Rain,” which is being promoted as the single, was produced by 2016 Grammy producer of the year Jeff Bhasker, Malay and T-Minus. “Hard Rain” was produced by Vampire Weekend’s Rostam Batmanglij.
The songs mark a stylistic departure for the singer, incorporating elements of the Swedish-pop sound of her previous albums with a more hip-hop/alt-r&B-leaning production.
A rather confusing line in the press release announcing the songs reads “Prior to recording this album, Lykke was busy nurturing liv, her love-child with Andrew Wyatt, Björn Yttling, Pontus Winnberg and Jeff Bhasker,...
“Hard Rain,” which is being promoted as the single, was produced by 2016 Grammy producer of the year Jeff Bhasker, Malay and T-Minus. “Hard Rain” was produced by Vampire Weekend’s Rostam Batmanglij.
The songs mark a stylistic departure for the singer, incorporating elements of the Swedish-pop sound of her previous albums with a more hip-hop/alt-r&B-leaning production.
A rather confusing line in the press release announcing the songs reads “Prior to recording this album, Lykke was busy nurturing liv, her love-child with Andrew Wyatt, Björn Yttling, Pontus Winnberg and Jeff Bhasker,...
- 4/19/2018
- by Jem Aswad
- Variety Film + TV
“When I used to go out, I would know everyone I saw / Now I go out alone, if I go out at all.”
That’s one of the lines Hamilton Leithauser caustically howled in The Walkmen’s defining hit, “The Rat.” But invective aside, as part of that group, Leithauser built one of indie rock’s sturdiest discographies, with each release — before their good-natured but “pretty extreme” hiatus, announced in 2013 — providing a textbook example of how a band could continue to evolve and push boundaries with each release. So it comes as no surprise that Leithauser has continued to do...
That’s one of the lines Hamilton Leithauser caustically howled in The Walkmen’s defining hit, “The Rat.” But invective aside, as part of that group, Leithauser built one of indie rock’s sturdiest discographies, with each release — before their good-natured but “pretty extreme” hiatus, announced in 2013 — providing a textbook example of how a band could continue to evolve and push boundaries with each release. So it comes as no surprise that Leithauser has continued to do...
- 1/15/2018
- by Alex Heigl
- PEOPLE.com
Rostam Batmanglij left Vampire Weekend last year, but he didn’t head for the beach to relax: The multi-instrumentalist, producer, and songwriter had already released some solo material, formed a duo with the singer of Ra Ra Riot called Discovery, collaborated with The Walkmen’s Hamilton Leithauser on an excellent…
Read more...
Read more...
- 9/14/2017
- by Josh Modell
- avclub.com
After leaving Vampire Weekend and moving across the country, Rostam Batmanglij created Half-Light, a chronicle of life and love in the city he left.
- 9/13/2017
- by Alex Frank
- Vulture
Charli Xcx dropped an instant summer smash on Wednesday with her “Boys” music video, which features a whole host of the songstress’ most swoonworthy musical crushes.
Directed by Charli herself and Sarah McColgan, the video is a pastel-pink dreamscape of boys of all flavors showing off for the camera, from Joe Jonas eating pancakes to Khalid cuddling neon-painted puppies to a soaking-wet Tom Daley, and back again.
Watch: Charli Xcx's Star-Studded 'Boys' Video Features Joe Jonas, will.i.am and So Many More Male Stars Being Cute
"They're doing all the sexy things that girls usually do in music videos,” Charli recently told BBC Radio. “I just kind of want to flip the male gaze on its head."
And in case you missed anyone while flipping through this video yearbook of your biggest 2017 crushes, check out our list below for the who’s who of “Boys.”
1. Joe Jonas trades his “Cake by the Ocean” in for...
Directed by Charli herself and Sarah McColgan, the video is a pastel-pink dreamscape of boys of all flavors showing off for the camera, from Joe Jonas eating pancakes to Khalid cuddling neon-painted puppies to a soaking-wet Tom Daley, and back again.
Watch: Charli Xcx's Star-Studded 'Boys' Video Features Joe Jonas, will.i.am and So Many More Male Stars Being Cute
"They're doing all the sexy things that girls usually do in music videos,” Charli recently told BBC Radio. “I just kind of want to flip the male gaze on its head."
And in case you missed anyone while flipping through this video yearbook of your biggest 2017 crushes, check out our list below for the who’s who of “Boys.”
1. Joe Jonas trades his “Cake by the Ocean” in for...
- 7/27/2017
- Entertainment Tonight
Catherine Pearson Jan 3, 2017
If you've been wondering whether to check out Netflix's new sci-fi series The Oa, here's why you should give it a try...
There was a strange, other-worldly promotional picture on Netflix the day The Oa was released. Brit Marling was lying in a pool of celestial light, her hair wild and eyes vacant; there was something eerie and uncanny about the image. It’s not often the first trailer of a show is released only a week before airing and it was impossible to get a read of the plot or tone from the short synopsis provided. I was intrigued. I hit play.
See related Iron Fist: see some images from Marvel's next Netflix show Jessica Jones season 2: female directors will helm all the episodes Luke Cage smashed Marvel's 2016 Netflix ratings Daredevil season 2: examining Jon Bernthal's Punisher
Hours later I emerged. What had I just seen?...
If you've been wondering whether to check out Netflix's new sci-fi series The Oa, here's why you should give it a try...
There was a strange, other-worldly promotional picture on Netflix the day The Oa was released. Brit Marling was lying in a pool of celestial light, her hair wild and eyes vacant; there was something eerie and uncanny about the image. It’s not often the first trailer of a show is released only a week before airing and it was impossible to get a read of the plot or tone from the short synopsis provided. I was intrigued. I hit play.
See related Iron Fist: see some images from Marvel's next Netflix show Jessica Jones season 2: female directors will helm all the episodes Luke Cage smashed Marvel's 2016 Netflix ratings Daredevil season 2: examining Jon Bernthal's Punisher
Hours later I emerged. What had I just seen?...
- 1/2/2017
- Den of Geek
Many critics and fans are enamored with Damien Chazelle’s musical “La La Land,” starring Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling. But one artist in particular has raised concerns about the film.
In a series of tweets, singer/songwriter Rostam, formerly of indie rock band Vampire Weekend, expressed his disappointment with the roles that minority actors had in the movie and the film’s narrative. “The people of color written into the script were not really important to the story,” Rostam tweeted. “John Legend gave a great performance but his character was what? A sellout? Who made uncool pop music?”
…his character was what? a sellout? who made uncool pop music?
— Rostam Batmanglij (@matsoR) December 21, 2016
Read More: Golden Globes 2017 Full Film Nominations List, ‘La La Land’ Leads Nominations With Seven Nods
In the film Legend portrays Keith, an old schoolmate of Gosling’s character Sebastian, who asks him if he wants...
In a series of tweets, singer/songwriter Rostam, formerly of indie rock band Vampire Weekend, expressed his disappointment with the roles that minority actors had in the movie and the film’s narrative. “The people of color written into the script were not really important to the story,” Rostam tweeted. “John Legend gave a great performance but his character was what? A sellout? Who made uncool pop music?”
…his character was what? a sellout? who made uncool pop music?
— Rostam Batmanglij (@matsoR) December 21, 2016
Read More: Golden Globes 2017 Full Film Nominations List, ‘La La Land’ Leads Nominations With Seven Nods
In the film Legend portrays Keith, an old schoolmate of Gosling’s character Sebastian, who asks him if he wants...
- 12/22/2016
- by Liz Calvario
- Indiewire
Known for crafting infectious club-bumping pop numbers, UK songstress Charli Xcx shows off her eclectic side by lending her vocals to a remix of Jim-e Stack’s latest single, “Deadstream.” Premiering on Beats 1, the remix is a collaboration with former Vampire Weekend member Rostam Batmanglij, and the combination of the two results in something that’s worth much more than just a couple of listens.
Charli Xcx’s vocals instantly help make the electronic track more accessible, but it doesn’t overdo it. Meanwhile, Rostam’s vocals kick in to bring the down the song’s blood pressure, and it isn’t until the two voices combine that we witness “Deadstream” at its apex. Though the track is atmospheric in nature, this new version brings it back down to Earth in all of the best ways.
Whether she’s linking up with Rostam for an ethereal pop remix or with...
Charli Xcx’s vocals instantly help make the electronic track more accessible, but it doesn’t overdo it. Meanwhile, Rostam’s vocals kick in to bring the down the song’s blood pressure, and it isn’t until the two voices combine that we witness “Deadstream” at its apex. Though the track is atmospheric in nature, this new version brings it back down to Earth in all of the best ways.
Whether she’s linking up with Rostam for an ethereal pop remix or with...
- 11/9/2016
- by Joe DeAndrea
- We Got This Covered
For Carly Rae Jepsen, career moves are all about trusting one's instincts. In 2012, when her brain freeze-inducing single "Call Me Maybe" slingshotted her to the top of the charts, the Canadian pop star rush-released her breakthrough sophomore album Kiss, heading on her international "Summer Kiss" tour the following year and wrapping in the fall. As the hectic promotional cycle for Kiss finished, Jepsen took a hard left. While others might head back to the studio, Jepsen satisfied her musical theater sweet tooth by assuming the title role in Broadway's Cinderella,...
- 1/29/2016
- Rollingstone.com
Vampire Weekend co-founder Rostam Batmanglij has officially quit the band. He announced the news on Twitter on Tuesday, saying that while he'll still be around to "collaborate" on future Vampire Weekend songs with Ezra Koenig, his "identity as a songwriter and producer ... needs to stand on its own." "There is so much amazing music — all of it dear to me — on its way to you," he writes. If you're already spiraling into a panic thinking Vw just lost its Mvp, there is slight cause for concern. Batmanglij did, after all, write a large part of Vw's music and lyrics, along with Koenig, and either produced or co-produced all three of their albums. But his suggestion that this isn't a divorce should calm your nerves; his presence will likely still be felt on future Vw records. Also, get excited! Now that Batmanglij is creating for himself, he has...
- 1/26/2016
- by Dee Lockett
- Vulture
Carly Rae Jepsen just dropped a new disc, "Emotion," that has our fourm posters, many of whom are music insiders, buzzing. They think that this album, her third, could be the charm that wins over Grammy voters. Jepsen contended at music's top awards in 2013 for her smash hit "Call Me Maybe." The singer/songwriter lost Best Pop Solo Performance to Adele ("Set Fire to the Rain") and Song of the Year to the quartet that crafted "We Are Young" for Fun. Check out a sample of what our posters have to say below and then jump into the debate, if you dare, Here. -Break- Longoria: She's doing what Taylor Swift wanted (but failed) to do by creating a throwback 80's Pop album. I can't stop listening to the seven songs she's released via her Vevo page but "Warm Blood" co-written and produced by Vampire Weekend's Rostam Batmanglij is my absolute favorite right now.
- 8/21/2015
- Gold Derby
Every week, members of the Vulture staff will highlight their favorite new songs. They might be loud, quiet, long, short, dance-y, rawkin', hip, square, rap, punk, jazz, some sort of jazz-punk-rap fusion — whatever works for the given person in that given week. Read our picks below and please tell us yours in the comments. (Also, read music critic Lindsay Zoladz's The Pinkprint.)Anna of the North, “Oslo” Writing an ode to your hometown is nothing new, but still this song by Norway’s Anna of the North feels just so warm and enchanting, like a winter holed up in a Scandinavian cabin, that I had to share it. Extra points for being a subtle Christmas song —Marcus Jones (@MJinMD) Charli Xcx, “Need Ur Love” Charli wrote “Need Ur Love” with Vampire Weekend’s Rostam Batmanglij, and the song’s layered Motown vocals and catchy bass line is much lighter fare than the rest of Sucker,...
- 12/16/2014
- by Vulture Editors
- Vulture
The Mad Decent commander-in-chief has just released a new track that sees him going down the indie route. Titled “Long Way Home,” this low-key song from Diplo is a collaboration between the celebrated producer, Grizzly Bear’s Ed Droste and Vampire Weekend’s Rostam Batmanglij.
A far departure from what we’re used to hearing with not only his solo efforts, but from Jack Ü and Major Lazer as well, the track is a soothing and relaxed song that shows us Diplo isn’t confined to just a single genre, and that when he wants to, he can distance himself from all the twerking, trap, moombahton and everything else he’s known for.
If some of the song sounds familiar, it’s because it’s mostly a re-imagining of Ty Dolla $ign’s “Stand For.” It works well, though, and should prove to be a hit with both indie and mainstream audiences.
A far departure from what we’re used to hearing with not only his solo efforts, but from Jack Ü and Major Lazer as well, the track is a soothing and relaxed song that shows us Diplo isn’t confined to just a single genre, and that when he wants to, he can distance himself from all the twerking, trap, moombahton and everything else he’s known for.
If some of the song sounds familiar, it’s because it’s mostly a re-imagining of Ty Dolla $ign’s “Stand For.” It works well, though, and should prove to be a hit with both indie and mainstream audiences.
- 12/11/2014
- by Matt Joseph
- We Got This Covered
No play ever celebrated arrested development quite so amusingly as Kenneth Lonergan’s This Is Our Youth, a shambling off-Broadway hit from 1996 now revived starring Michael Cera, Kieran Culkin and an ingenue named Tavi Gavinson, all making their Broadway debuts. The production is the latest transfer by Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theatre, and as staged by Anna D. Shapiro, it’s typical of that celebrated troupe in its physicality combined with thoughtfulness.
The time is the 1980s and the setting is the apartment of Dennis (Culkin), who passes the time selling weed and coke while waiting for his life to happen. When his equally vacant but much milder friend Warren (Cera, of Juno and Arrested Development) shows up with $15,000 stolen from his possibly mobbed-up father, the boys consider several options: using the money to score a major drug deal and make even more money; return it before Warren’s father discovers...
The time is the 1980s and the setting is the apartment of Dennis (Culkin), who passes the time selling weed and coke while waiting for his life to happen. When his equally vacant but much milder friend Warren (Cera, of Juno and Arrested Development) shows up with $15,000 stolen from his possibly mobbed-up father, the boys consider several options: using the money to score a major drug deal and make even more money; return it before Warren’s father discovers...
- 9/12/2014
- by Jeremy Gerard
- Deadline
Michael Cera and Kieran Culkin are slated to star together on Broadway in Kenneth Lonergan’s play This Is Our Youth, a comedy about the high times and aimless lives of two disaffected young men.
Lonergan said Tuesday that Cera, whose credits include Arrested Development, Juno and Superbad, and Culkin, of Igby Goes Down and Cider House Rules, will bring the play to Broadway in the fall after a stop this summer at Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theatre Company. All three will be making their Broadway debuts.
The woman in the middle of the pair will be played by Tavi Gevinson,...
Lonergan said Tuesday that Cera, whose credits include Arrested Development, Juno and Superbad, and Culkin, of Igby Goes Down and Cider House Rules, will bring the play to Broadway in the fall after a stop this summer at Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theatre Company. All three will be making their Broadway debuts.
The woman in the middle of the pair will be played by Tavi Gevinson,...
- 4/9/2014
- by Associated Press
- EW.com - PopWatch
Hamilton Leithauser, natty singer for The Walkmen, is reportedly working on a solo album with members of Vampire Weekend, Fleet Foxes, and, umm, The Walkmen. Pitchfork is reporting (via Kicking The Habit) that Leithauser is recording with Rostam Batmanglij (Vampire Weekend), Morgan Henderson (Fleet Foxes), and Paul Maroon (The Walkmen)—as well as singer-songwriter Richard Swift, who we'll just go ahead and assume is producing as well, because he does that a lot and also plays in The Shins. With that much talent on board, it's bound to be pretty fantastic. Speaking of fantastic and The Walkmen (segue ...
- 8/22/2013
- avclub.com
The economics graduate, the bin-rummaging freegan, the producer; indie cinema's latest enigma is all of these things
A fortnight before the American opening of The East, its star, co-writer and producer was wandering the streets of New York in her pyjamas. "Can't sleep," tweeted Brit Marling. "Feeling something extreme but on what side of the spectrum?"
It's a typical question from an atypical actor. Two years ago, the then-unheard-of 27-year-old from Chicago stole Sundance with a double whammy of sci-fi mumblecore. Robert Redford saw Marling excel in Sound Of My Voice and Another Earth (which she also co-wrote and produced) and instantly signed her up to star in his directorial return The Company You Keep. She now has six studio features on the go.
"I'm ill-equipped for this interview," admits Marling, her soft hazy wisp of a voice drifting down the line from Bucharest. She's been flown out to Romania...
A fortnight before the American opening of The East, its star, co-writer and producer was wandering the streets of New York in her pyjamas. "Can't sleep," tweeted Brit Marling. "Feeling something extreme but on what side of the spectrum?"
It's a typical question from an atypical actor. Two years ago, the then-unheard-of 27-year-old from Chicago stole Sundance with a double whammy of sci-fi mumblecore. Robert Redford saw Marling excel in Sound Of My Voice and Another Earth (which she also co-wrote and produced) and instantly signed her up to star in his directorial return The Company You Keep. She now has six studio features on the go.
"I'm ill-equipped for this interview," admits Marling, her soft hazy wisp of a voice drifting down the line from Bucharest. She's been flown out to Romania...
- 6/28/2013
- The Guardian - Film News
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