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Young Jesus Deliver An Epic Album Closer With ‘Magicians’

Those of you subscribed to our newsletter might have already heard the new track from Young Jesus, which we made available exclusively to subscribers earlier today. Back in 2018, we called Young Jesus “one of the best and most adventurous indie rock bands” of that year. Now, two years removed from the release of 2018’s The Whole Thing Is Just There, the Los Angeles quartet is back with Welcome To Conceptual Beach, an eight-track effort that invites listeners into vocalist/guitarist John Rossiter’s personal mental refuge, an idyllic spot where all of his needs are met, that exists only in his imagination

“Magicians” is the final track on Welcome To Conceptual Beach is a ten-minute epic that takes you on a journey through genre boundaries, blending post-rock and emo and math rock to create something vibrant and beautiful. It meanders with wandering riffs before locking into pristine build-ups that hammer home the strength of Young Jesus and declares the band’s newest as one of the best of the year so far.

Welcome To Conceptual Beach is out August 14 on Saddle Creek. Pre-order it here and don’t forget to subscribe to the weekly Indie Mixtape newsletter below to be the first in line for new music from bands you love, as well as recommendations of bands you don’t know and other special goodies.

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A Writer Accidentally Put A ‘Zelda: Breath Of The Wild’ Recipe Into Their Book

For modern writers, the ability to use a search engine to research subjects is an incredible skill that would make researchers of old insanely jealous. Libraries are important, of course, but in a pinch you can use Google or YouTube to learn something your characters would already know. Unless you aren’t careful and accidentally put monster guts from a video game into your very serious book about dressmaking.

Over the weekend, writer Dana Schwartz noticed a thread on Reddit from user u/nonono_ohhoho about a novel by Irish author John Boyne called A Traveler at the Gates of Wisdom. The thread included a photo of a passage about dressmaking, specifically dying material for it that included some very interesting items.

If you’ve hearing the unmistakable noises of cooking utensils clashing together here, it’s because that recipe is absolutely in Zelda: Breath of the Wild for the Nintendo Switch. One easy way to tell is the inclusion of things that only exist in that universe, like ‘Hylian shrooms’ and an ‘Oktorok eyeball,’ which is something that drops when you kill the monster in the game. Anyone who has played Breath of the Wild would immediately think item drops and cooking food and elixirs, which is why it’s jarring to see it in what’s a very serious book.

And it’s not some sort of viral marketing for the much-hyped but secretive sequel. As it turns out, it was a complete accident. Schwartz’s thread about the passage gained attention and she speculated that Boyne simply googled how to dye something and found instructions from Zelda. And Boyne, who is also on Twitter, confirmed that was likely the case.

As it turns out, the multitude of Polygon guides to doing things in Zelda: Breath of the Wild got incorporated into Google’s search results to the point that when you search for dying recipes on the search engine, you get things from Zelda. And if you’re not careful, well, you might think that’s really the way to make dyes in the real world.

Boyne later tweeted that he would keep it in the book, and he genuinely seems amused that he was duped by some strong SEO. It’s a good lesson for all of us to check their sources, and maybe Boyne will give Zelda a shot for himself. It’s quite a story in its own right.

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PlayStation 4 Controllers Will Work With The PS5, But There’s A Catch

If you’ve been holding off on buying a PlayStation 4 controller for your current system with the next-gen looming, Monday may have given you the answer about whether or not to pull the trigger. Sony revealed on Monday some more details about peripherals and which ones will work with its forthcoming PlayStation 5 console, and while we still don’t have a release date or pricing details for its pair of systems, we do know which controllers will work with what come Holiday 2020.

According to a blog post on the PlayStation website, PS4 controllers will work with the PS5, but there is a considerable catch: they won’t work with PS5-specific games. While Sony did say its DualShock 4 controller and officially licensed third-party controllers will work with PS4 games on the system, the paddles will not work with PS5-specific games.

Will DualShock 4 work with PS5 games?

No, we believe that PS5 games should take advantage of the new capabilities and features we’re bringing to the platform, including the features of DualSense wireless controller.

That’s certainly disappointing news for fans hoping to avoid buying new controllers, but it certainly makes sense given the new features PS5 controllers introduce and the advantages Sony wants to tout for its new console. The good news is it seems a wide swath of other peripherals from the PS4 will work on the new console, so your racing wheels, arcade sticks, and flight sticks should make the transition over to the new console. Once you start playing PS5 exclusives, though, it will be time to buy a new paddle or two if you plan to have friends over.

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Denis Villeneuve Wanted Timothée Chalamet To Star In ‘Dune’ Because Of ‘That Insane Charisma’

Dune is one of the most-anticipated movies of 2020, assuming it comes out in 2020. As for now, director Denis Villeneuve’s follow-up to Blade Runner 2049 starring Rebecca Ferguson, Oscar Isaac, Josh Brolin, Jason Momoa, Dave Bautista, Zendaya, Javier Bardem, and high school locker dreamboat Timothée Chalamet is set to come out on December 18, which should give you enough time to finish Frank Herbert’s book. Maybe.

If you do decide to read it, be sure to picture Chalamet, not Kyle MacLachlan, as protagonist Paul Atreides. Villeneuve knew that the Little Women star was the right choice to play the character for “several reasons,” the Arrival filmmaker said during a chat for the Shanghai International Film Festival. “He is a phenomenal actor. He is someone that has a lot of depth, someone that is very mature for his age because Paul Atreides is an old soul in a young body, and Timothée has that… Also, he has features that remind me of old school Hollywood stars. He’s a real movie star. He has that insane charisma. Insane charisma. You put Timothée in front of a camera and it’s an explosion.”

In other words, Chalamet’s acting is hella tight.

Villeneuve also compared Momoa to a “ballet dancer when he fights,” complimented Ferguson for being a “great artist,” and called Isaac “very hunky.” Oh wait, that was me. Villeneuve said he’s “one of the best actors working today.” Both can be true.

(Via Collider)

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Spotify’s Goal Of A Million Artists Making A Living From Streaming Could Take Nearly 100 Years

The music industry is always changing, but these changes have perhaps never come so rapidly as they have in 2020. The coronavirus pandemic has shut down, or at the very least radically changed, many areas of life, and that includes how musicians do what they do. A lot of artists rely on touring for a substantial portion of their income, so closed venues present a new challenge. How much money artists make (or don’t) from streaming their music on Spotify has long been a heated conversation, and now a new wrinkle has been added.

Spotify issued a quarterly letter to shareholders last week (as is a regular occurrence), and it notes, “Growth in the number of artists making up our top tier — those accounting for the top 90% of streams — is accelerating; that cohort now stands at over 43,000 artists, up 43% from 30,000 one year ago.”

As Music Business Worldwide Tim Ingham founder notes in a new Rolling Stone column, Spotify routinely writes in its annual results that it wants “to unlock the potential of human creativity by giving a million creative artists the opportunity to live off their art.” Based on that information, Ingham did some math, and it turns out Spotify’s goal is a lofty one. As Ingham notes, “if Spotify can sustain its current annual pace of ‘top tier’ growth (+13,000 per year) forever more, it would take the company nearly 74 years to transform the 43,000 Club into the 1,000,000 Club.”

There are some eye-opening takeaways between the thesis and conclusion as well. For example, Ingham says the data “suggests that those 2.96 million ‘bottom tier’ Spotify artists would have earned an average of approximately $47 each in Q2. Or just over $15 per month.”

Check out the full column here.

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Taylor Swift Has Set A New Chart Record Thanks To ‘Cardigan’ Debuting At No. 1 On The Hot 100

Taylor Swift didn’t give much warning before dropping her eighth studio record Folklore last week. Working with musicians like Bon Iver and The National’s Aaron Dessner, many are touting Folklore Swift’s most indie-leaning record yet and fans are clearly loving it.

Upon its release, the record was streamed so many times that it quickly soared to No. 1 on the Billboard album charts in almost no time at all. But Folklore’s impressive reception didn’t stop there. Her track “Cardigan” has also debuted at No. 1 on the Hot 100 charts, making Swift the first musician to ever have an album and a single debut at No. 1 concurrently.

Folklore marks Swift’s seventh consecutive No. 1 album after it garnered 846,000 equivalent album units in its first week. While “Cardigan” reached the top of the charts, it wasn’t the only Folklore song to make the Top 10. Swift’s track “The 1” came in at No. 4, and her Bon Iver collaboration “Exile” debuted at No. 6. That makes “Exile” the first top-10 song for Bon Iver.

In total, this week’s Hot 100 chart featured every single one of the 16 Folklore tracks, meaning she has now charted 113 songs on the Hot 100 in her career history. The number puts her behind Drake, who has had 224 on the Hot 100, the Glee cast, which has had 207, and Lil Wayne, who has had 169 songs on the Hot 100.

Check out this week’s Hot 100 Top 10 charting songs above.

Folklore is out now via Republic. Get it here.

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Ryan Pollie Introduces His New Project Total Revenge With The Distortion-Heavy ‘The Fair’

Ryan Pollie isn’t afraid to shake things up. After earning acclaim performing as Los Angeles Police Department, he made a solo pivot and released an excellent self-titled album under his own name last year. Now his creative restlessness is on display again: Today, Pollie introduces his latest musical endeavor, a new project called Total Revenge.

The self-titled debut Total Revenge album is set for release on September 4, and today, Pollie has shared a video (which was filmed in an abandoned Six Flags) for “The Fair.” Press materials describe the song, “It recalls a failed summer romance, a deserted fairground where the rides are being torn down, and a giant field is littered with trash and half eaten corn dogs.”

The single serves as a declaration that Total Revenge will be a different beast than Ryan Pollie. Press materials contrasted the two projects well: “There is nothing on the record that isn’t dirty, crunchy, or f*cked up. ​Pollie’s​ last album recalled the 70’s songwriting of Graham Nash or Jackson Browne. This is closer to MXPX or The Ataris.”

Press materials also note of Pollie’s new endeavor, “​Pollie ​recorded the album himself to a four track cassette recorder using the same Distortion Pedal on every instrument. Betwixt delicious four chord summer anthems are fuzzed out acapella arrangements sung in round. Total Revenge​ is unlike anything ​Pollie ​has done before. The production is Lo-Fi to the point of sounding like a blown out speaker.”

Pollie sat down with Uproxx for an Indie Mixtape 20 interview last year, and when asked for four words that describe his music, he said, “Very Ryan, happy sad, honest, vulnerable.” Hopefully Pollie carries that spirit on to his new Total Revenge endeavors (even if the style is radically different), because the solo work he used those words to describe was a delight.

Watch the video for “The Fair” above and check out the Total Revenge art and tracklist below.

Forged Artifacts

1. “The Lawn”
2. “Surgery”
3. “Cherry Red”
4. “Smog”
5. “Chalk”
6. “Upper Saddle River”
7. “The Fair”
8. “Birthday”
9. “Willow Tree”
10. “Jeep Cherokee”

Total Revenge is out 9/4 via Forged Artifacts. Pre-order it here.

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Odell Beckham Jr. On NFL Restart: ‘I Just Feel Like The Season Shouldn’t Happen’

The NFL is beginning training camps around the country as it looks to start its season on time and in all 32 home markets in spite of the COVID-19 pandemic that continues to see tens of thousands of cases per day in the United States.

The league has all but admitted that they accept and understand that there will be positive tests from players, coaches, and staffers, but they seem to believe they can somehow manage to avoid the outbreaks that have already caused major disruption to the MLB season a week in. Like in all of the other major sports, players have the option to play or not, with the only penalty being losing their salary for the season, and some teams, like the Patriots, have been impacted by opt outs more than others.

Odell Beckham Jr. of the Cleveland Browns isn’t planning on opting out of the season, but he also recognizes the pitfalls of the NFL’s plan and can very much see a scenario in which the league has to shut down the season. As Beckham Jr. told Lane Florsheim of WSJ Magazine recently, it’s hard for him to understand how the league can safely pull this off and he’s prepared for it to be called off eventually.

“Obviously with everything that’s going on, it doesn’t make sense why we’re trying to do this,” Beckham said. “I can understand basketball was already in the playoffs. Five-on-five basketball in an arena is going to be more intense than regular-season games. Hooping is different than playing an eleven-on-eleven contact sport where there’s 80 people in a locker room. We’re not ready for football season. So why are we trying to push forward? It’s obviously for their money. And that bothers me because there’s always been this—and I hate saying it like that—but the owners’ [attitude is], ‘Oh we own you guys,’ and just kind of that unfairness going on that they don’t see us as human. I just feel like the season shouldn’t happen and I’m prepared for it to not happen and I wouldn’t mind not having it.”

The issue the NFL faces is that there’s not really a good way to bring football back without risking significant spread within the locker room. A bubble for 32 teams with 80-man rosters plus massive coaching and training staffs, not to mention broadcast people and other necessary staffers, would have to be able to hold and regularly test upwards of 5,000 people — which would be a logistical nightmare if not an impossibility. But as we’ve seen with baseball, attempts at a sporting season in a team sport outside of a bubble is riddled with danger of an outbreak among teams that inevitably causes delays in the schedule — which in a 16-game season and a sport where double-headers are impossible, is hard to deal with.

Still, Beckham seems ready to see through the NFL’s attempt at a restart, and according to Cleveland.com’s Mary Kay Cabot, he’s been impressed with the Browns policies in their facility and will not be opting out, noting the interview was two weeks ago.

While teams may be doing their best in their facilities to limit the spread and keep players safe, the issue is simply that football is a sport where, if someone has it, it will easily spread given the contact people have on the field. As such, the problem arises with being able to keep players from getting it while at home, where unless they are completely limiting their movement from facility to home — and that of their families — there will be risk of exposure.

Eagles coach Doug Pederson is currently at home quarantining after testing positive for the virus over the weekend, which illustrated the precarious position the NFL season is in. They’ll try to press forward, and while Beckham may be changing his tune now from when he did this interview, his initial comments may be prescient.

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Uncle Nearest’s Victoria Eady Butler Talks About Breaking Into The Whiskey Industry

If it wasn’t for Nathan “Nearest” Green, what we slow sip in a dram of Tennessee whiskey would be totally different today. The “head stiller” (a title which would now be “master distiller”) perfected the Lincoln County Process, a charcoal filtration method that would come to define the output of his mentee — Jack Daniel. Nearly lost to history, Green’s legacy has been revived by Fawn Weaver, CEO and Founder of Uncle Nearest Whiskey, and head blender (and great-great-granddaughter of Green), Victoria Eady Butler.

Together, Weaver and Butler also provide space for Black voices — and black female voices — to enter the whiskey conversation. As Butler puts it, “Our mission is much greater than just people enjoying our fabulous whiskey. Our desire as a brand is not the whiskey necessarily — it’s cementing Nearest Green’s name in history so that hundreds of years from now it will never be forgotten.”

Butler’s initial appreciation for whiskey came with a bottle of Maker’s Mark 46 Bourbon. At the time, she worked as an analytical manager for the government, before briefly retiring and immediately being approached by Weaver to work at Uncle Nearest. What started as an administrative role soon transitioned into head blender after Butler successfully curated a batch of whiskey for the award-winning startup.

“Whiskey is truly in my bloodline,” she says. “It’s who I am now. It’s what I love to do. It’s my passion. So, looking back at my great-great-grandfather and what he did — I’m continuing to do much the same.”

We chatted with Butler about her journey from spirits industry outsider to head blender, her famous whiskey heritage, and why now is a better time than ever to launch the Nearest & Jack Advancement Initiative — focused on creating opportunities for Black people and other marginalized groups in the business.

You worked as the analytical manager at the Regional Organized Crime Info Center in Nashville for more than 20 years. At what point did you decide to take a step into the whiskey industry?

I was thinking about retiring. Fawn Weaver, our CEO and Founder of the distillery, and I talked. She knew that I was considering retirement. It just kind of unfolded. I retired from one job and started the next in days.

How challenging was that learning curve going from being this analytical manager to being head blender?

Oddly enough, it wasn’t huge. When I left the government, I left that thought process behind me. I was fortunate to have a career that I really enjoyed for all those years, but I was ready to retire. So when I came on with the distillery, I came on as the director of administration — not knowing that distilling would be down the road. I didn’t know that when I first came aboard.

Before Fawn even established the distillery, she had put in place a foundation, the Nearest Green Foundation, and that foundation affords any descendant of Nearest Green to go to college on a full-ride scholarship — tuition and books. So I knew I’d be overseeing our foundation. Then Fawn approached me to be the first descendant of Nearest Green to curate the 1884 bottle. That bottle was really to pay homage to the family in regard to having more family involvement. The thought process was to have a descendant to curate each batch of the 1884 that we put out on the market. My first bottle hit the market in July of last year. It was so well-received by the public that I curated the next batch. We won several awards and it was just elevated right up there with our ’56. People were liking it as much as our flagship 1856 that we launched the brand with.

Fawn decided that I was good at this thing and elevated me to the first female Black master blender. The learning curve wasn’t a stretch to learn and the reason why is because I had a lot of support from team members and I started researching myself, then realized after that first batch that I’m good at it. It was a natural process.

I’m always so fascinated when I hear of someone becoming a head distiller or blender coming from a completely different field. I love how humble you are about receiving advice from team members about how to blend or distill, along with research. That says a lot about your character. What have you come to appreciate even more about this unique heritage you have since operating as the head blender?

What really resonates the most is what Nearest Green did more than 160 years ago is still relevant today. Growing up and knowing what he did in regard to his contribution to Jack Daniel, you know that was just something I always knew and didn’t put a lot of emphasis on that realizing that he was once a slave man. Our people, slaves, did not get credit for anything. I accepted that. I’m realizing now as an adult female that what he gave to the spirits industry and perfected all those years ago is still relevant today. Tennessee whiskey cannot be labeled with “Tennessee whiskey” without it going through the charcoal mellowing process that my great-great-grandfather perfected.

That’s a big deal to know what he did then is still relevant in 2020. It lives on.

That’s amazing. That key feature of Tennessee whiskey coming from your great-great-grandfather speaks volumes. On a side note, I’m looking forward to the outcome of the Nearest & Jack Advancement Initiative.

How exciting is that!

I have an idea of the inner workings of the effort, but from your perspective, why do you think now is the right time for this initiative to be launched?

Well, given the state of our world today with so much going on in regard to Black Lives Matters – which the brand and I definitely support – seeing two companies come together, one that is led by a strong Black female and one that is still basically run by a team of white men, to see us come together to form an initiative in the honor of a once enslaved man, there is no better time to do that than now. This was the brainchild of Fawn and she’s been thinking of it for a while and had been working with the folks at Motlow State Community College to get it rolling in regard to the School of Distillation. So I think getting Jack Daniel’s involved with it is an awesome thing to happen. There’s no better time than now.

To your point, race relations right now around the globe, particularly in the States, are not too good.

And here we are in Tennessee, in the South, so there’s no better time than now. It also furthers the relationship that Jack and Nearest shared. Those two men were 28 years apart in age, one was a slave when they met, but they fostered a friendship that was unheard of. Now for that too to kind of live on, I think that’s a beautiful thing.

We love Uncle Nearest Whiskey, what are some of your recommendations outside of the brand?

I still enjoy Maker’s Mark 46. I like Weller. Fawn introduced me to E.H. Taylor, so I like that. I don’t venture out a whole lot. I have tasted a whole lot of different whiskeys since I’ve been with the distillery in the last year and a half, but those are the ones I really enjoy outside of Uncle Nearest. To be honest, there’s only been a few times since I’ve been with Uncle Nearest that I’ve had a full glass of something.

Understandable, considering you’re around whiskey all the time. What advice would you give an outsider of the spirits industry that wants in?

A lot of people, especially Black women, their hesitation is not knowing enough. If that is something you really have an interest in and a passion for, I think you just have to go for it. And this is why I say just go for it: Fawn Weaver didn’t know a thing about making whiskey. She was not in the industry prior to Uncle Nearest. She enjoyed a glass of whiskey, but she didn’t know anything about distilling and look at where our brand is today. You have to be committed, dedicated, eager to learn, and put everything you hold dear into it. You’ve got to surround yourself with people who are knowledgeable, patient, and in my case, those who are very kind.

My team members embraced me knowing that I was not in the spirits industry. They’ve shown me so much grace and patience. I have learned so much from them. The biggest thing is setting aside your fear of failure and going for it.

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Noname Gets Backlash From Beyonce Fans Over Her ‘Black Is King’ Comments

The Beyhive is once again upset with Noname after she offered her assessment of Beyonce’s visual album Black Is King on Friday. The notoriously protective Beyonce fans flooded Twitter with derogatory comments for the Chicago rapper, who they feel was disrespectful in pointing out her opinion that the film — a visual accompaniment to Beyonce’s Lion King tie-in album The Gift, aired exclusively on Disney+ — celebrated capitalism as much as Blackness or Africa.

On Friday, after the release of Black Is King, Noname tweeted, “We love an African aesthetic draped in capitalism. Hope we remember the Black folks on the continent whose daily lives are impacted by US imperialism. If we can uplift the imagery, I hope we can uplift those who will never be able to access it. Black liberation is a global struggle.”

Some interpreted this as an attack on Beyonce and sour grapes on Noname’s part, prompting many fans to criticize the outspoken activist/rapper. For some, Noname’s comments characterized her as a “hater” who just looked for the negative in other artists’ work. A few commenters recalled the previous tiff between Noname and fans of J. Cole, noting that Noname has been attached to multiple contentious Twitter debates.

However, others came to Noname’s defense. While many did view Noname’s comments as “overstepping,” they pointed out how the anger against her seemed misdirected and misogynistic, while others admitted she might have a point about the film.

Meanwhile, Noname herself retweeted a few articles further explaining her position, choosing to stay above the fray. Beyonce has yet to respond to the controversy, once again leaving the din of social media to focus on the business that pays her.

Check out the responses to Noname’s original tweet above.