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All The Best New Indie Music From This Week

Indie music has grown to include so much. It’s not just music that is released on independent labels but speaks to an aesthetic that deviates from the norm and follows its own weirdo heart. It can come in the form of rock music, pop, or folk. In a sense, it says as much about the people that are drawn to it as it does about the people that make it.

Every week, Uproxx is rounding up the best new indie music from the past seven days. This week we got new music from Sufjan Stevens, Mutual Benefit, The Gaslight Anthem, Sleater-Kinney, and more.

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The Gaslight Anthem – “Autumn”

Jersey alt-rockers The Gaslight Anthem are on the cusp of their first album in nearly a decade, History Books. Back from hiatus and having wrapped up a lengthy tour, The Gaslight Anthem are reunited and reinvigorated; that much is apparent in the music itself, as heard on the latest single, “Autumn,” which is a perfect distillation of the heartfelt lyricism and winsome melodies this band is known for. Springsteenian in scope and earnest in execution, “Autumn” is a pure delight.

Truth Club – Running From The Chase

North Carolina’s indie rock scene is booming right now. From Indigo De Souza to Wednesday, there’s a lot of exciting stuff coming out of its Asheville hub. Over in Raleigh, however, something else is brewing: Truth Club’s sophomore effort, Running From The Chase, buttresses North Carolina’s burgeoning reputation as a new indie rock haven. The post-punk quartet, composed of Travis Harrington, Yvonne Chazal, Elise Jaffe, and Kameron Vann, spans Dinosaur Jr.-esque, discordant alt-rock (“Blue Eternal”), meditative folk (“Uh Oh”), and moody, proggy slowcore (“77x”). As Running From The Chase demonstrates, Truth Club is a compelling shorthand for robust arts regionalism.

Short Fictions – Oblivion Will Own Me And Death Alone Will Love Me (Void Filler)

The Pittsburgh emo band Short Fictions meets the middle point between the arty catharsis of Home Is Where and the jubilant, suburban nostalgia of Origami Angel. With the ever-nebulous taxonomy of emo and its sundry “waves,” claiming Short Fictions as representative of this current fifth wave would be facile. Rather, Short Fictions is an idiosyncratic band forging an exciting path forward for the genre. The group’s third album, Oblivion Will Own Me And Death Alone Will Love Me (Void Filler), is a fitting showcase for why. Take the glockenspiels and sweetness (get it?) of early highlight “Reno Nevada, January 2020,” or the Jeff Rosenstock-indebted, nihilistic hooks all over lead single “Wasting,” or the drop-D fuzz permeating “To Loved Ones Lost in Pursuit Of Foolish Passions.” From start to finish, Short Fictions ride a wave of emo that’s completely their own.

Sufjan Stevens – Javelin

Sufjan Stevens is one of the greatest songwriters of the 21st century; each of his records establishes its own sonic identity without losing sight of Stevens’ undeniable gifts as a composer. Billed as his first “singer-songwriter” record since 2015’s grief-stricken Carrie & Lowell, Stevens’ latest proper studio record, Javelin, is an unequivocal tour de force. From the gentle finger-picking of “A Running Start” to the melodic lamentations of “Will Anybody Ever Love Me?;” from the sprawling penultimate track “Shit Talk” to the mechanistic electronics of opener “Goodbye Evergreen;” the Detroit-born artist once again proves his prowess. But he didn’t even need to.

Laura Jane Grace – “Dysphoria Hoodie”

Laura Jane Grace, the former front-woman of late-aughts punk luminaries Against Me!, is known for her riveting and complex explorations of gender dysphoria, the pitfalls of capitalism, and political vacuousness. Grace’s new single, “Dysphoria Hoodie,” is the first preview of her second album as a solo artist. A 6/8, acoustic guitar-led jaunt, “Dysphoria Hoodie” reckons with rampant bigotry (“Stay away from the city / it’s full of assholes / but out in the country is where fascists roam”) and finding comfort in familiar routines (“On a Saturday morning with weed and coffee / a feeling of safety is blanketing me”).

Fanclubwallet – Small Songs Vol. 1

Naming your sub-10-minute EP Small Songs is incredibly on the nose. The new EP from Fanclubwallet (AKA Hannah Judge), the first volume of the Small Songs collection, comprises five brief tunes, all of which feature almost nothing save for Judge’s hushed murmur and her trusty Casio keyboard. Minimalist in conception, Small Songs Vol. 1 is an endearing example of the Ottawa songwriter embracing her humble origins.

Sleater-Kinney – “Hell”

Returning with their first new album since 2021’s Path Of Wellness, Sleater-Kinney will release their second album without longtime drummer Janet Weiss early next year. The lead single, “Hell,” adopts the classic ’90s alt-rock formula of extraordinarily quiet verses and extraordinarily loud choruses and, somehow, makes that contrast even more extraordinary. “Hell don’t have no worries / Hell don’t have no past,” Corin Tucker sings in the opening moments, barely audible. When the chorus hits, though, she erupts into a snarl, a wall of distorted guitars backing her up: “You ask / Why like there’s no tomorrow.” Assisted by the legendary indie producer John Congleton, the forthcoming Little Rope is shaping up really well.

Babehoven – “Chariot”

Right as they head off on tour with Slow Pulp, the duo composed of Maya Bon and Ryan Albert, otherwise known as Babehoven, have shared a new single. “Chariot” is a mesmerizing swirl that blends the glacial pace of slowcore with the reverb-drenched guitar tones of shoegaze, two subgenres that have recently re-entered the zeitgeist. The Hudson natives, however, go beyond pastiche; it’s an arresting track that’s as face-melting as it is restorative.

Health – “Children Of Sorrow”

Alongside the announcement of their upcoming record Rat Wars, industrial rockers Health have shared two new singles, “Children Of Sorrow” and “Sicko.” The former aptly highlights why industrial figurehead Trent Reznor gave them a cosign. Although this band leans heavier (literally) into metal sonics and aesthetics than Nine Inch Nails ever has, the group’s combination of grueling riffs and punishing electronic beats places them at the vanguard of industrial’s latest iteration.

Mutual Benefit – Growing At The Edges

Bucolic, disarming, and downright enchanting, Jordan Lee’s fourth album under the moniker Mutual Benefit signals a period of immense growth. Fittingly titled Growing At The Edges, it’s easy to understand why Lee took five years to toil away at it. The tranquil piano that grounds this record allows the Brooklynite’s musicianship to blossom and flourish on standouts like “Season Of Flame” and “Wasteland Companions.”

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Jamila Woods Announces Her 2024 Tour Dates With An NSFW ‘Practice’ Video Featuring Saba

Jamila Woods’ third album Water Made Us is coming out this Friday, but before its release, she has one more video to share. This one is for “Practice” featuring Saba, an uptempo dance-pop song with a chorus inspired by Allen Iverson’s famous press conference rant. The video is borderline NSFW, opening with a nude Woods singing the first verse as a conversation between her hands before displaying a variety of different body parts in closeup accompanied by numerous hands all forming different faces.

In addition to the latest Water Made Us single, Woods also shared her tour dates for 2024. The Water Made Us Tour kicks off February 1 in Seattle and runs through April 30 in Copenhagen. You can see the full schedule below and get more info here.

Water Made Us is out 10/13 via Jagjaguwar. Check out the previous singles, “Tiny Garden,” “Boomerang,” and “Good News.”

02/01 – Seattle, WA @ Neumos
02/02 – Portland, OR @ Wonder Ballroom
02/04 – San Francisco, CA @ August Hall
02/06 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Fonda Theatre
02/07 – Phoenix, AZ @ Crescent Ballroom
02/10 – Austin, TX @ Emo’s
02/11 – Dallas, TX @ The Studio at The Factory
02/13 – Atlanta, GA @ Terminal West
02/16 – Washington, DC @ Howard Theatre
02/17 – Philadelphia, PA @ Theatre of Living Arts
02/18 – New York, NY @ Webster Hall
02/20 – Cambridge, MA @ The Sinclair
02/23 – Chicago, IL @ The Vic Theatre
04/23 – London, England @ Islington Assembly Hall
04/25 – Amsterdam, Netherlands @ Melkweg OZ
04/26 – Brussels, Belgium @ Nuits Botanique
04/27 – Paris, France @ La Bellevilloise
04/29 – Berlin, Germany @ Lido
04/30 – Copenhagen, Denmark @ Lille Vega

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Every Sufjan Stevens Studio Album, Ranked

On the most recent episode of Indiecast, Steven Hyden asked how I reconciled my love for Sufjan Stevens with a professed antagonism towards centrist, NPR-approved indie rock. For example, the recent output of legacy artists like The National, Wilco, and Animal Collective or even tasteful, contemporary A-listers like Boygenius and Big Thief. It’s a fair question coming from someone with a professed ambivalence towards Sufjan Stevens, since very little about the sound of his music is abrasive or antagonistic. Throughout nearly his entire career, most of Stevens’ songs could be stripped to a chassis of his plaintive vocals and a handful of banjo chords. There is nothing in his early years as raw and ragged as, say, Alligator, nor has he even appeared on any rap records a la Justin Vernon (though Mac Miller did sample The Age Of Adz’s “Vesuvius” on a song called “Donald Trump”…that came out in 2011). He’s dabbled in ballet and modern classical, while playing a massive role in 2009’s Dark Was the Night, still the most monolithic time capsule of tasteful, Obama-era indie rock.

Indeed, over the past month, I’ve struggled to find a throughline within Sufjan Stevens’ sprawling and always fascinating catalog; how does one square toting a banjo and Bible on 2004’s Seven Swans with the cynical, lockdown synth-pop of 2020’s The Ascension, the Boy Scout outfits of Illinois with the naked heartache of Carrie & Lowell, the abstract noise of Year Of The Rabbit with the urbane aspirations of The BQE? Turns out that focusing on the sound of Sufjan Stevens’ music obscures the bigger picture. In a recent Pitchfork interview, Kazu Makino of Blonde Redhead described Stevens as an Icarus figure a la Frank Ocean, Ryuichi Sakamoto, and Terry Riley, “flying too close to the sun,” capable of absorbing the pain, suffering, and joy of the world and expressing it as their own. “I always feel so sad for them. Like, why them?,” Makino queried. “Why do they have to bear that role of witnessing so much hardship and the difficulty of just being alive in this world and then translate it through music?”

This happened several days before the release of Stevens’ most recent album, Javelin; the most recent single was titled “Will Anybody Ever Love Me?” and, in lieu of any interviews, Stevens opened up about his battle with Guillane-Barré syndrome, an autoimmune disorder that has required him to undergo strenuous physical therapy to learn how to walk again. These were all posted on Tumblr, still his preferred method of mass communication. This is what I, and most others assumed Makino was referring to when she said, “I hope he’s doing alright, I hope he’s happy, and I hope he’s gonna manage.” Maybe she was, or maybe she was foreshadowing the heartbreakingly beautiful essay Stevens published on the release date of Javelin, dedicating it to Evans Richardson IV, his partner who died this past April. “Be kind, be strong, be patient, be forgiving, be vigorous, be wise, and be yourself,” Stevens wrote. “Live every day as if it is your last, with fullness and grace, with reverence and love, with gratitude and joy. This is the day the Lord has made. Let us rejoice and be glad in it.”

It’d be cheap and reductive and incorrect to say that Stevens’ music generates its power from quantifiable, real-life suffering. In the hours that passed between the release of Javelin and Stevens’ dedication, fans were already gearing up to be ripped apart and ready to call in a sick day, because that’s what we’ve come to expect from the guy. Whether he was telling other people’s stories throughout the aughts or his own from The Age Of Adz going forward, Stevens has tapped into a superhuman level of empathy and insight that imbues every song with a dizzying sense of stakes; there is no such thing as a Sufjan Stevens record that qualifies as “easy listening” or “Sufjan doing Sufjan as a bit,” the latter which prompted the original debate, as I’ve used it for pretty much every the National album over the past decade. But while Makino’s take helped clarify things in the present day, I feel like the best answer to my co-host’s question leads me back to something Stevens said leading up to the release of 2015’s stunning Carrie & Lowell, an album largely inspired by the death of his birth mother – “This is not my art project; this is my life.”

A disclaimer on what qualifies for a “best Sufjan Stevens albums” list is in order, as his catalog is rife with collaborative works, soundtracks, live recordings remix albums, album-length EPs, and “mixtapes” – to the point where even I forgot that he made a Christmas-themed hip-hop tape featuring Kitty Pryde, Busdriver, and Heems from Das Racist. Believe me, I’d love to hash out where Chopped And Scrooged deserves to rank relative to Seven Swans, but I also didn’t want this project to last another two months. For now, let’s just keep it to the thirteen studio albums credited by Wikipedia, the compilations, and the soundtracks.

18. Convocations [2021]

If it hasn’t already happened, one day we’ll get “Best Pandemic Albums” lists that truly drive home what a catastrophic and residual effect 2020 had on our collective psyche. This won’t encompass “albums that were released between 2020 and 2021,” or, “albums inspired by lockdown” (i.e., pretty much every album released from 2021-2023) but rather the humming subgenre of the actual “pandemic album,” where artists use their unfortunate surplus of time to purchase synths, download recording apps, and gin up an interest in ambient music. Such a pursuit was nothing new for Sufjan Stevens, nor was exploring the relationship with his birth father, yet Convocations is unmistakably a “pandemic album,” a massive 5-LP collection of soft synth drones begun after the death of Rasjid Stevens, which occurred two days after the release of The Ascension. Putting aside its tragic genesis, even in 2021, music critics were unwilling to carve out the time required to give Convocation an honest assessment, as it’s pretty much the only Sufjan Stevens project from the past 20 years to not get reviewed by Pitchfork; try not to think about the hourly rate of the four souls (according to Metacritic) who did tackle this 150-minute behemoth.

17. Year Of The Rabbit [2001]

I’m no expert on noise music, so it’s hard to recommend Year Of The Rabbit as anything other than a noise album only of note because Sufjan Stevens made it; in 2001, it was notable for being a noise album made by someone from Danielson Famile, which now feels as charmingly antiquated as St. Vincent once being known as “that woman from Polyphonic Spree.” The title is misleading, though – rather than trying to make noise albums for each individual animal of the Chinese Zodiac, Sufjan knocked it out in one try. Work smarter, not harder.

16. The Decalogue [2019]

In the decade between The Age Of Adz and The Ascension, Sufjan Stevens made two ballet soundtracks and one proper studio album. I can’t think of anyone this excited about the ballet since Homer Simpson assumed it was a bear riding around on a cart. Anyways, of all the ballet soundtracks inspired by the Ten Commandments, I’d say that The Decalogue has a good claim as the best of the bunch.

15. A Beginner’s Mind [2021]

If you start rattling off a list of adjectives that describe Sufjan Stevens’ music, how long would it take to get to “fun”? There’s certainly a streak of humor that comes through in his Christmas albums or the Illinois extended universe, but it’s been largely crowded out by the devastating emotional payload that surrounds the creation of (and engagement with) his 2010s output. A Beginner’s Mind, Stevens’ joint LP with protegé Angelo de Augustine, seems like an intention to reconnect with a more playful side, a quasi-concept album where each song is inspired by a specific film, ranging from cinematic classics for snobs and/or slobs (Wings Of Desire, Point Break) to pure late-night TV junk (Hellraiser III: Hell On Earth, Bring It On Again). Yet, this low-stakes endeavor ran into controversy on the Silence Of The Lambs-indebted “Cimmerian Shade” with a lyric about “autogynephilia,” a term frequently adopted by anti-trans bigots. It’s a frankly shocking lapse of judgment from an artist who otherwise has otherwise been a beacon of light and hope for queer listeners, and almost certainly not one made with ill intention; it’s an unfortunate reminder of the mistakes that can be made in a beginner’s mindset and the reason most people fear that state as they age.

14. A Sun Came [2000]

A Sun Came fits squarely into the subgenre of “albums before The Album” – specifically in the early aughts, think Sad Songs For Dirty Lovers, M83, Von, Feel Good Lost, and such. There’s something truly uncanny about hearing a legacy band in their formative stage, particularly when all of these “albums before The Album” have been virtually written out of their respective creators’ history. The later work allows you to hear genius in chrysalis as opposed to “potential,” while also pondering an alternate scenario where the artist takes the public indifference to heart and never makes the next step, robbing us of, say, Boxer or Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming years down the road. Seriously, the next Sufjan Stevens might have just released their 3-star/B-/6.4-type debut.

But more than any of the aforementioned, A Sun Came is odd for how different it isn’t than what came after; even with Sufjan recording to a 4-track, A Sun Came finds a lot of his stylistic tics intact – the flute trills, the effusive song titles and bulky song lengths, boasts of the man playing several dozen instruments. Plus there’s the added bonus of Sufjan dabbling in genres he wouldn’t dare touch going forward,” such as the sludgy guitar freakout of “Demetrius,” which more or less predicts …And You Will Know Us By the Trail of Dead’s future endeavors in proggy art-rock. Also, a Sufjan Stevens song called “Super Sexy Woman” with the following lyrics: “She is super-duper smart / I like her for her mind / She’ll shoot a super fart / The deadly silent kind.” Though I have to admire the existence of the only Sufjan Stevens album that could reasonably be compared to early Ween, A Sun Came ultimately suffers the fate of all “albums before The Album,” having the sound in place but not the vision.

13. All Delighted People [2010]

Artists of Sufjan Stevens’ stature, longevity and, let’s just say distinct artistic sensibilities tend to endure at least some kind of significant backlash along the way. All Delighted People is Stevens’ most critically derided work and probably the only one. Despite surprise-releasing 60 minutes of music for $5 on Bandcamp – in a year where surprise releases were genuine shocks to the system and Bandcamp was still novel – All Delighted People was perceived as an act of hostility, an actualization of Stevens’ increasingly dour look on the traditional album cycle. Hence, the decision to call an hourlong work an “EP” and distract from the rollout for the feverishly anticipated The Age Of Adz, which was already announced and still a month away. There is essential music to be had here, such as the aching, minimal ballads “Arnika” and “Heirloom,” but they’re ultimately overshadowed by what most considered a bridge too far in Stevens’ already extra artistry, i.e., the interminable guitar soloing and aimless largesse that pushed “Djohariah” to 17 minutes and made the “classic rock” version of the title track feel twice as long as its 11-minute original. Oddly enough, the beloved, 25-minute song that came shortly thereafter only confirmed All Delighted People as more of a data dump than a burst of true inspiration.

12. Aporia [2022]

Stepfathers are one of the more reliably villainized roles in artist biographies, but consider the unusual case of Lowell Brams – Sufjan Stevens’ adoptive father encouraged his musical development from the age of 5, making him mixtapes, introducing him to Bob Dylan, buying his first keyboard and, also, co-founding the Asthmatic Kitty label that has released nearly every Sufjan Stevens project to this day. Pretty good return on investment, so we can’t begrudge an album like Aporia functioning as a literal retirement gift, a 40-minute, collaborative project between Stevens and Brams that’s largely jamming on analog synthesizers but is likely the most uplifting work in his catalog; the mere existence of Aporia makes you wish you had a dad like Lowell Brams, or better, the capacity to be more like him.

11. Planetarium [2017]

So this dude can just churn out a 75-minute pop-classical project about the planets but not a 40-minute folk album about Wisconsin? So it is with Planetarium, Stevens’ collaborative work with the most literal and figurative star power, created alongside Bryce Dessner of The National, another guy that long abandoned their Rust Belt roots with an aim to imprint themselves in New York City’s avant-garde composer scene (exemplified by co-headliner Nico Muhly). As a piece of music, it’s just fine, but Planetarium strikes me as a more fascinating document of the ambition and envy that informs the Midwestern drive to either reject or embrace the coastal elite.

10. The BQE [2009]

I’ll just quote the All Music Guide review here – “a ‘symphonic and cinematic exploration of New York City’s infamous Brooklyn-Queens Expressway’ that included a self-made Super 8 mm film, a full orchestra, and a small army of hula hoopers performing live in front of a sold-out Brooklyn Academy of Music.” Obviously, this is nowhere near Sufjan Stevens’ most essential works, but it’s all the more remarkable for being “business as usual” for the guy.

9. The Ascension [2022]

Thinking back on September 2020 – no more Tiger King or The Last Dance, no more applause for essential workers at 7 PM, no real end in sight – there seemed to be an equal split on what type of art was deemed necessary for all of us to press forward. It was a boom time for disco and hardcore, two genres almost entirely reliant on a physical, communal presence, which lent credence to the belief that people wanted the exact opposite of what they were currently experiencing. Others deemed demanding art like The Ascension as “the album we need right now,” an 80-minute, downtempo synth-pop opus about Sufjan Stevens’ loss of faith in a wide array of mass institutions. I suppose my initial reaction to The Ascension put me in the former camp, as I gravitated towards a few spectacular songs (such as the title track) and found the rest to be punishingly repetitive, the first time that such a notoriously religious writer actually felt preachy and cynical.

But that’s why I was more excited to revisit The Ascension than any other album on this list; like most popular culture from that time that was likely created before the pandemic, it begs to be divorced from an immediate context when there was only one lens through which art could be evaluated. Three years later, it’s no less of a chore to actually listen to, but I’ve developed a kind of grudging respect for its goals – from its adoption of pop music’s didacticism (i.e., song titles like “Run Away With Me,” “America,” “Tell Me You Love Me”) to a complete overhaul of instrumentation (I hear that you and your hand have sold your banjo and bought Prophet synthesizers), The Ascension was a necessary overhaul for an artist that had grown weary of his god, his country, and, most crucially, the persona of “Sufjan Stevens.” “I don’t wanna be your personal Jesus,” he snarled on “Video Game,” an essential reminder for anyone who hears Javelin or Carrie & Lowell and sees Stevens as an artist doomed to suffer for our sins.

8. Songs For Christmas / Silver And Gold [2006 / 2012]

As of this writing, I’m 43 years old and the average life expectancy for a male in California is 76. Let’s assume that the things I’m currently doing that tend to prolong one’s life (regular exercise, no drinking or smoking) and the things that work against it (eating approximately two pounds of candy corn every October, regular consumption of Diet Mountain Dew) are a wash. Since I met my wife in 2019, we have listened to one or both Sufjan Stevens’ massive Christmas albums every single time we’ve decorated a tree and/or had the in-laws over for dinner. So while, say, “Lumberjack Christmas” or “I Am Santa’s Helper” or “Come on! Let’s Boogey to the Elf Dance” might not reach the artistic heights of “Chicago” or “Death With Dignity,” I’m virtually guaranteed to hear them at least 33 more times in my life. I can’t confidently say that about Illinois.

7. The Avalanche [2006]

I imagine that even the most devout “50 States Project” truther wouldn’t argue that Illinois left them wanting more of the same in 2005; surely, Ohio or Indiana would be subject to diminishing returns if they were given a similar, 70-minute slate of florid, flute-filled theatrical pop. But here we have the aughts’ The Aeroplane Flies High, a treasure trove of B-sides and alternate takes from an artist with seemingly no limit to their generosity (or confidence). I’m not sure what I’d cut to make room for the title track or “Springfield, Or Bobby Got A Shadfly Caught In His Hair” or any of the other gems that compensate for pure filler like the three extra versions of “Chicago,” nor is it clear that Illinois might’ve benefitted from being a double album. But The Avalanche is the most bittersweet album to revisit on this list, something that seemingly promised Stevens being hard at work on his next all-American masterpiece, when it was actually the end of an era.

6. The Age Of Adz [2010]

A colleague expressed how excited he was for Javelin based on its “quick turnaround,” and mind you, The Ascension dropped in 2020. He’s not really wrong, though. Since Illinois, proper Sufjan Stevens albums have reliably appeared every five years, leading each one to feel like its own contained universe rather than connected dots on an artistic trajectory. But in retrospect, Sufjan Stevens’ most divisive album is actually the only one that feels like a transitional work, amplifying both the maximalism of Illinois and the personal disclosure of Carrie & Lowell with all the messiness such a description entails. That very messiness leads The Age Of Adz to be considered a kind of Contrarian’s Choice amongst Sufjan Stevens diehards, and trust me, I appeared on a podcast where we talked about this album for nearly two hours. Despite some of the most explosive arrangements of his career (the title track represents the first time his orchestral largesse truly toppled over since A Sun Came), The Age Of Adz is easily the darkest, most disturbing Sufjan album, inspired by the schizophrenic, self-proclaimed prophet Royal Robertson, whose artwork graces the cover. Sure, Carrie & Lowell also tackled “death, disease, illness, anxiety, and suicide” (as Sufjan described the themes here), but they were expressed with grace and dignity. “Vesuvius” likens his creative process to falling into a volcano, a fitting metaphor for an album that still feels too hot to touch.

5. Javelin [2023]

The early word on Javelin was “return to form,” which filled me with ambivalence, even as someone who was cool on The Ascension. Putting aside his Christmas specials, Sufjan Stevens had never repeated himself or really ever made an artistic move to satisfy anything other than his own artistic whims. “Return to form” brought to mind late-period R.E.M. or U2 or, in the current day, bands like The National or Interpol who have more or less evolved into fan service.

But while Javelin doesn’t really do anything new, it’s a Sufjan Stevens album without precedent, one that satisfies both the “quiet” and “maximalist” factions by paring back the indulgences of The Ascension while honoring the orchestral grandeur that he presumably shelved after The Age Of Adz. If not a masterpiece on the level of Carrie & Lowell or Illinois, Javelin is a masterful work that could very well be the best introduction for newcomers; just about everything Sufjan Stevens has ever done well, he does here.

4. Seven Swans [2004]

Minimal and overtly based in scripture, Seven Swans is the type of album that almost always appears in the UPROXX lists made by Steven Hyden (i.e., ones involving artists whose career started before 1995) – an outlier dabbling in religion and/or mysticism, typically popping up in their “wilderness phase.” Such is the nature of Sufjan Stevens’ inimitable career he not only released Seven Swans immediately after his critical breakthrough, but it was actually more acclaimed than Michigan. Besides being one of the best “dawn of springtime” albums of the 21st century, Seven Swans served as an unexpected liaison between proper indie rock and the more alt-leaning kids in Christian youth group; whereas the Cohen family allowed me to see The O.C. as a document of Jewish excellence, its soundtrack included “To Be Alone With You,” a whispered banjo ballad that’s pretty explicitly about Jesus and could just as easily be dropped on a mix CD for your crush.

3. Michigan [2003]

The early days of the Trump presidency were going to be profoundly demoralizing anyway, but the fiction of journalistic neutrality wasn’t helping. I’m not even talking about Fox News or Alex Jones or what have you, but rather the “MAGA safari” that became mandatory in 2017. You know, a journalist from the Washington Post or New York Times would parachute into some city in the Midwest devastated by deindustrialization and offshoring and try to figure out how the Blue Wall turned Red. There would inevitably be a solemn picture of a husband and wife in their 60s staring towards the window of their local greasy spoon, sympathetic and generally decent people until they let slip some dog whistle stuff about immigration. Very rarely did anyone willing to reckon with the Democratic policies that led to NAFTA and prolonged union busting that ultimately gutted these places; most of the time, you’d be left with the sense that the strategy going forward was on some Dril shit, figuring how to leverage just the right amount of allowable racism to win back this type of voter.

Compare this to Michigan, Sufjan Stevens’ critical breakthrough and one of the most empathetic and devastating accounts of Midwestern decline ever put to tape. Lyrically, the references to K-Mart and Payless Shoe Stores situated Stevens along the lines of Magnolia Electric Co. or Ghosts Of The Great Highway in 2003, but rather than emulating the former’s rough-hewed heartland rock, Michigan curiously leaned on the egghead minimalism and post-rock that was also sprouting up throughout the greater Chicago area. Who knew you could honor the widows of Flint with a glockenspiel and a banjo? This would be a crowning achievement for basically any artist, except for the fact that Stevens did the same thing on an even grander scale two years later. But for many, Michigan is the album closest to their heart because it resembles Roger And Me more than musical theater and evokes the broken dreams of people who lived in Vermont or California or Kentucky, hoping that their lives could be documented as beautifully as it is on Michigan.

2. Carrie & Lowell [2015]

For all of the effort critics put into figuring out why certain music resonates and endures, it’s probably understandable that they avoid the most obvious and, therefore, boring question – how old were you when this album came out? But before I talk about Carrie & Lowell, let’s discuss Radiohead. Every now and again, someone on Twitter will ask, “is it just me or is In Rainbows low key underrated?” And it will get a ton of traffic because, to a certain extent, In Rainbows kinda is underrated – at least in how it’s rarely considered The Greatest Album Ever Made (OK Computer) or a revolutionary work of art that completely transformed rock music, ushered in the 21st century and inspired a book that you should certainly buy right this moment (Kid A). There are plenty of acceptable reasons why In Rainbows could be considered Radiohead’s greatest album – I’ve read that it’s their sexiest album (what’s No. 2?), it’s their leanest, etc. But the anecdotal evidence strongly suggests that In Rainbows is the millennial choice for the best Radiohead album, the one where they had the ability to sculpt its legacy in real time, freed from the received wisdom of their elder siblings. This is not an isolated phenomenon and the difference between people who think Boxer or Trouble Will Find Me is The National’s masterpiece, or Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not or AM for Arctic Monkeys.

So it is with Carrie & Lowell, an album that not only arrived a decade after Illinois but more or less eradicated everything that had tied the latter to a long past era of indie rock; no more cheerleading outfits, no more extravagant song titles, no flutes, no choirs. Whether it’s the peak of Stevens’ catalog, “Death With Dignity” nonetheless announced a dividing line between his theatrical razzle-dazzle aughts and the cinematic devastation that would define his second phase (especially his contributions to Call Me By Your Name). But while Carrie & Lowell is Stevens’ most powerful work, it’s also the least versatile. Has anyone ever been able to finish a work day or clean their house after hearing “Fourth of July”? Yet even amidst a mid-decade mini-boom for legacy artists reinventing themselves as raw documentarians of tragedy (Benji, A Crow Looked At Me), Carrie & Lowell is the one whose songs have managed to outlast the initial shock value, providing solace and guidance when nothing else can possibly serve as a substitute.

1. Illinois [2005]

For the past 20 years, Sufjan Stevens has mostly maintained an enviable, comet-like presence: returning every so often to bless us with a flash of brilliance, never staying in the same place long enough to serve as the light around which all things orbit. Illinois, of course, is the exception. Coming off Michigan and Seven Swans, 2005 was Stevens’ capital-M Moment and Illinois was operating on a summer blockbuster scale; it was even released on the 4th of July. Pitchfork chose it as their album of the year, whereas Paste named it the best album of the entire decade. It’s nigh impossible to think of any other time during the 21st century – hell, even the past 50 years – where an album like Illinois could double as zeitgeist.

And I don’t blame anyone for hearing “2005” when revisiting Illinois, or at least the indie-coded mass culture that thrived during that time – The O.C., McSweeney’s, Wes Anderson, Little Miss Sunshine, freak-folk, banjo-core, blog-rock. But I also hear John Wayne Gacy and Abraham Lincoln, young love and slow deaths, indigenous land acknowledgments and tributes to Chicago’s skyline, zombie disco and The Music Man, people crying in vans, crying in hospital wards, crying tears of joy. Maybe the 50 States Project was a gimmick all along, or maybe Illinois captured the whole of American life so vividly that any follow-up was doomed to be redundant.

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Oh No, Donald Trump Played An Unwitting Role In The Creation Of The Marvel Cinematic Universe

Donald Trump has already left an indelible stain on the office of presidency, and according to a new book, he apparently left his mark on the Marvel Cinematic Universe before it was even formed.

In an excerpt from MCU: The Reign of Marvel Studios, writers Joanna Robinson, Dave Gonzales, and Gavin Edwards reveal how a lunch meeting at Mar-a-Lago ignited the spark that would form one of the largest blockbuster franchises of all time. However, the meeting taking place at Trump’s golf club shouldn’t come as a total surprise. Trump’s presidency would reveal that he was tight with then-Marvel CEO Ike Perlmutter, a notorious penny-pincher who would later reportedly advise the MAGA administration on Veteran Affairs.

Via Rolling Stone:

Trump wasn’t familiar with Perlmutter’s lunch companion. David Maisel wasn’t socially adept by anyone’s measure, including his own. Tall and lanky, he seemed much younger than his forty years. His mind was always spinning with business plans and financial schemes. Sometimes Maisel came up with ideas faster than he could get words out of his mouth; he spoke quickly and enthusiastically, and with an occasional stammer. Now, in Donald Trump’s dining room, he was eagerly trying to talk his way into a dream job.

Perlmutter had taken Maisel to Mar-a-Lago for a meal that would help chip away at the club’s annual $2,000 dining minimum. Before the appetizers arrived, Maisel launched into his pitch. What if Perl- mutter and Marvel could keep the money from blockbuster super-hero movies, instead of most of it going to studios like Fox (for X-Men) and Sony (for Spider-Man)? What if Marvel Studios was a real studio, not just a glorified production company? And what if he, David Maisel, could make that happen without Perlmutter having to contribute his own money?

While Trump was present for the 2003 lunch meeting, it was strictly in a glad-handing owner schmoozing with his rich buddies capacity. We doubt the former president could name a single comic book character if asked.

However, he has been the inspiration for several villains over the years.

(Via Rolling Stone)

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Adele’s Partner Rich Paul Dodged The Marriage Rumors (But Certainly Didn’t Deny Them) In A New Interview

Just a few weeks after Adele had fans wondering if she had married her longtime boyfriend, Rich Paul, the sports agent appeared for a new interview on CBS Mornings. During the episode, Paul was asked about the rumors — but he typically doesn’t speak about his private life.

“She’s been great, I think she would agree that we’ve definitely helped each other,” Paul did reveal to Gayle King. “I’m in a good space, we’re in a good space. Happy. She’s superb… She’s been great for me. We’ve been great for each other.”

King then asked whether or not she should call Adele “Mrs. Paul” next. However, he still kept his answer cryptic — as not to reveal whether the two secretly tied the knot. “You can say whatever you want,” he replied, noting that their relationship is “not for the media.”

The rumors started during a show of Adele’s Las Vegas residency, when a moment of a fan asking if they could marry her went viral.

“You can’t marry me, I’m straight my love,” Adele responded. “And my husband’s here tonight.” Her particular word choice was the thing that raised eyebrows. Paul and Adele have been together since 2021.

Check out Rich Paul‘s interview with CBS Mornings below. (The Adele conversation starts around six minutes.)

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Oh No, Donald Trump Played An Unwitting Role In The Creation Of The Marvel Cinematic Universe

Donald Trump has already left an indelible stain on the office of presidency, and according to a new book, he apparently left his mark on the Marvel Cinematic Universe before it was even formed.

In an excerpt from MCU: The Reign of Marvel Studios, writers Joanna Robinson, Dave Gonzales, and Gavin Edwards reveal how a lunch meeting at Mar-a-Lago ignited the spark that would form one of the largest blockbuster franchises of all time. However, the meeting taking place at Trump’s golf club shouldn’t come as a total surprise. Trump’s presidency would reveal that he was tight with then-Marvel CEO Ike Perlmutter, a notorious penny-pincher who would later reportedly advise the MAGA administration on Veteran Affairs.

Via Rolling Stone:

Trump wasn’t familiar with Perlmutter’s lunch companion. David Maisel wasn’t socially adept by anyone’s measure, including his own. Tall and lanky, he seemed much younger than his forty years. His mind was always spinning with business plans and financial schemes. Sometimes Maisel came up with ideas faster than he could get words out of his mouth; he spoke quickly and enthusiastically, and with an occasional stammer. Now, in Donald Trump’s dining room, he was eagerly trying to talk his way into a dream job.

Perlmutter had taken Maisel to Mar-a-Lago for a meal that would help chip away at the club’s annual $2,000 dining minimum. Before the appetizers arrived, Maisel launched into his pitch. What if Perl- mutter and Marvel could keep the money from blockbuster super-hero movies, instead of most of it going to studios like Fox (for X-Men) and Sony (for Spider-Man)? What if Marvel Studios was a real studio, not just a glorified production company? And what if he, David Maisel, could make that happen without Perlmutter having to contribute his own money?

While Trump was present for the 2003 lunch meeting, it was strictly in a glad-handing owner schmoozing with his rich buddies capacity. We doubt the former president could name a single comic book character if asked.

However, he has been the inspiration for several villains over the years.

(Via Rolling Stone)

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Jerry Seinfeld Teased That ‘Something Is Going To Happen’ With The Divisive ‘Seinfeld’ Finale, Possibly Including Larry David

Is Jerry Seinfeld working on a George Lucas-like special edition of the divisive Seinfeld finale? Maybe! As long as Jerry doesn’t step on Newman’s tail.

During the question and answer portion of a comedy show at Boston’s Wang Theatre on Saturday, an audience member asked Seinfeld whether he likes “The Finale,” the sitcom’s series finale. “Well, I have a little secret for you about the ending. But I can’t really tell it because it is a secret,” the comedian responded. “Here’s what I’ll tell you, OK, but you can’t tell anybody. Something is going to happen that has to do with that ending. Hasn’t happened yet.” Seinfeld added, “And just what you are thinking about, Larry and I have also been thinking about it,” presumably referring to co-creator Larry David (probably not Larry Charles). “So you’ll see, we’ll see.”

I’m a fan of the finale, but not everyone wanted to see Jerry, George, Elaine, and Kramer get their comeuppance after nine seasons and almost 200 episodes of selfish behavior. Seinfeld offered no further details, so it’s unclear what he’s planning, or whether he considers the Seinfeld season of Curb Your Enthusiasm to be canon. Maybe when he teased “you’ll see, you’ll see,” he meant to say, “You’ll bee, you’ll bee.” Coming summer 2024: Bee Movie 2.

(Via the Guardian)

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Safety first: how Troomi Wireless is redefining cellphones for kids

In a world where smartphones are nearly as common as backpacks for kids, parents’ concern for a safe digital experience is growing. Smartphones are amazing tools for education and connection, but they come with risks that can’t be ignored. It’s getting harder and harder to keep up with the rapid pace of technology, and the thought of their young ones stumbling upon inappropriate content or chatting with strangers is nothing short of nightmarish. Luckily,
Troomi Wireless is stepping up to the plate with a mission to provide a safe, educational, and fun smartphone experience for kids.

Troomi Wireless has crafted a solution akin to having a digital guardian for your child. By intertwining advanced safety features with the technology kids crave, Troomi is not just handing over a gadget but a learning companion enveloped in a shell of safety.

It’s more than just a phone; it’s an intelligent approach to introducing the digital world to young minds. With Troomi, it’s about nurturing a safe and educational digital environment that allows children to explore, learn, and grow while giving parents the peace of mind they desperately seek in today’s tech-driven society.

Troomi’s Unique Approach to Safety

Safety isn’t just a buzzword for Troomi Wireless; it’s a promise. Thanks to its safety features, parental controls take the front seat, making it easier than ever to manage what kids can access on their phones.

Want to block certain websites or apps? It’s a breeze with Troomi. And it’s not just about blocking the bad stuff; parents can also highlight the good stuff. Troomi has a special marketplace filled with apps that are not only fun but safe and educational too. It’s like a digital candy store with all the sweet learning tools and zero cavities!

Now, handing over a smartphone to a kid is easy, but teaching them to use it responsibly is the real deal. Troomi gets that. Through their platform, kids learn the ropes of digital citizenship. They learn that with freedom comes responsibility, even in the digital world. Every swipe, click, and app download is a step towards becoming a smart digital citizen, and Troomi is there to guide them through each step.

The Troomi Parent Portal is like mission control for parents, providing a bird’s eye view of their child’s smartphone activity. From here, parents can check in on the apps their kids are using, the websites they’re visiting, and even the calls and texts they’re making. It’s not about spying; it’s about guiding and keeping the digital explorations of young ones on a safe and enlightening path. With the Parent Portal, parents are not just spectators; they’re active participants in their child’s digital adventure, ensuring the journey is safe, educational, and fun!

Educational and Fun Apps

Troomi is packed with educational apps that make learning a fun adventure rather than a chore. Whether it’s mastering math, exploring science, or diving into history, there’s something for every young scholar. The apps are designed to ignite curiosity and fuel a love for learning. They’re like friendly digital tutors that make studying engaging and enjoyable.

Now, all work and no play isn’t the motto at
Troomi. Alongside the educational apps, a collection of entertainment apps provides just the right amount of fun and age-appropriate. It’s like having a digital playground right at your fingertips. Whether it’s games that challenge the mind or apps that tickle the funny bone, Troomi ensures they’re wholesome and safe. Parents won’t have to worry about their kids stumbling upon anything they shouldn’t. It’s all fun and games, the secure way!

The beauty of Troomi lies in the balance. It’s not just about hitting the books or only about having fun. Troomi brings education and entertainment together in a delightful blend. It’s about learning while laughing, solving puzzles while playing, and growing while goofing around. With Troomi, kids get a slice of both worlds, making the smartphone experience enriching and enjoyable. It’s like having a digital companion that knows when it’s time to study and when it’s time to play, making the journey of growing up in the digital age memorable.

Plans and Pricing: An Investment in Safety

When it comes to giving your child a smartphone, Troomimakes it a straightforward affair with its variety of plans and pricing. There’s something for every budget, making it an accessible choice for many families. The plans are designed to provide a service and offer a safe digital haven for kids.

Investing in a Troomi phone isn’t just about buying a gadget; it’s about buying peace of mind. It’s like getting a safety helmet along with a new bike. The value extends beyond just the phone; it trickles down to the safe and educational environment Troomi creates. It’s not merely a phone plan; it’s a plan for your child’s digital safety and growth. The essence is to make the digital world a friend, not a foe, for our young ones.

Learn More

Troomi Wireless has come forward with a mission that resonates with every parent’s concern – creating a safe digital environment for kids. In a world where the internet can be a Wild West, Troomi stands as a safe haven. It’s not just about providing a smartphone; it’s about providing a smarter phone experience that prioritizes safety while not skimping on the fun and learning.

Navigating the digital world can be daunting for young minds, but with a friend like Troomi, it becomes an enlightening adventure. It’s a trusted ally, ensuring that the smartphone experience is as enriching as it is safe. It’s about taking the right step into the digital world with Troomi holding your hand. The digital future for our kids looks bright and safe, with Troomi leading the way.

Click here to learn more

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Julia Fox’s New Memoir Revealed When Kanye West Reportedly Asked Her To Be His Girlfriend And How He Offered Her A ‘Boob Job’

Praise God” rapper Kanye West’s love life and intimate moments with his alleged new wife, Bianca Censori, have produced more than a few NSFW moments in the media. But if you thought it would die down soon, more details about West’s romantic pursuits are resurfacing thanks to his former fling, Julia Fox. In her new book, Down The Drain, the actress outlined her whirlwind relationship with the mogul from when he asked her to be his girl and beyond. So, what does Fox say about West in the memoir?

According to People, although Fox does not explicitly name West in the literal work, the timeline aligns with the period in which they were involved. In one passage, Fox alleged that West almost immediately had his team intervene with her fashion choices. She also accused West of treating her like “a show monkey.” One excerpt highlighted by the outlet suggested that West offered to pay for a “boob job” for Fox.

“His words stick to me like a piece of lint on my clothes. I can’t shake off the uncomfortable feeling,” penned Fox.

Fox also revealed that when asked to be West’s girlfriend, she initially declined the offer, to which he reportedly replied, “If you’re worried about me embarrassing you, I wouldn’t do that. You have a son, and my mom was a single mom.”

Fox began promoting the book as early as March 2022 when she attended the Vanity Fair Oscars after-party. When asked on the red carpet about its then progress, she said, “I don’t want to give too much of it away because I’m very superstitious. So I don’t like to speak of things before they’re finished. It’s so far a masterpiece if I do say so myself… it was a memoir at first, but now it’s just like my first book.”

https://twitter.com/Variety/status/1508642408958885889/video/1

The book also explores other parts of Fox’s life, including her usage of drugs, rebellious childhood, and film career.

Fox’s new book, Down The Drain, is out now. Find more information here.

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Lana Del Rey Fired Back At Witchcraft Accusations From Someone Who She Declared Has ‘Super Gremlin Energy’

Lana Del Rey recently stumbled upon a post made by a Christian influencer who accused her of witchcraft — and had some thoughts of her own. In the video, the user, Traci Coston, tries to claim that, from a video of people falling over in the crowd at Del Rey’s show, it was from supernatural forces. And not just a typical chain stumble.

“This is not normal,” Coston tells people in the video’s voiceover.

Del Rey decided to push back against the witchcraft claims. “B*tch I know the Bible verse for verse better than you do,” she responded to Coston. “PS you’re giving off super gremlin energy. Not in a good way.”

Hilariously, the pop star also liked the post. Del Rey has been open in the past about practicing witchcraft, especially in 2017 when she claimed that she was going to use it against Trump — and encouraged fans online to participate.

“At the stroke of midnight,” she tweeted. “Feb 24, March 26, April 24, May 23… Ingredients can b found online.”

But she has also expressed her place in religion. On Del Rey’s last album, she brought in a pastor named Judah Smith for “Judah Smith Interlude.” Who’s to say she can’t have a little fun with both?

Check out Del Rey’s response to Coston’s video below.