New Video: GUM Shares Cinematic “Celluloid”

Over the course of his career, JOVM mainstay and acclaimed Aussie singer/songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and producer Jay Watson has developed a reputation as one of his homeland’s most prolific and exploratory artists, and as arguably one of the country’s busiest musicians: He currently splits his time between JOVM mainstay acts, Tame Impala, POND and his own project GUM.

Watson recently signed to King Gizz‘s p(doom) records, who will be releasing his self-produced seventh album Blue Gum Way. The album’s title reference Australia’s blue gum eucalyptus trees, while subtly nodding to melancholy, place and atmosphere.

Slated for a March 6, 2022 release, Blue Gum Way follows 2023’s GUM effort Saturnia and his 2024 collaboration with King Gizz’s and The Murlocs‘ Ambrose Kenny-Smith, Ill Times.

The JOVM mainstay’s seventh album reportedly marks a deliberate shift in approach. While his previous releases embraced restless experimentation and stylistic left turns, Blue Gum Way finds Watson focusing on a singular mood and sonic identity, allowing atmosphere, emotion and restraint to take center stage.

The nine-song album inhabits a widescreen, jazz-influenced psychedelic soundscape, drawing from Talk Talk, John Martyn and Radiohead. Elegant, patient and quietly melancholy, the album showcases an artist comfortable with vulnerability and clarity of expression, unburdened by the desire to prove anything. Interestingly, the album emerged in complete contrast to his concurrent work with POND and his collaboration with Kenny-Smith, and sees him favoring harmonic density and unhurried ambience over immediacy or roots-driven simplicity.

Written largely in insolation, the album allowed Watson to lean into deeply personal thoughts and emotions. Lyrics, which were one secondary in his creative process, now play a much more central role, exploring anxiety, adaptation and life’s pivotal moments with an impressionistic touch.

Blue Gum Way will feature the previously released “Expanding Blue” and the album’s second and latest single “Celluloid.” Beginning with a lush and dreamy string arrangement and quivering feedback, “Celluloid” quickly turns into a broodingly cinematic tune that captures the creeping unease and dread of our seemingly unending techno-fascist hellscape, fueled by doom scrolling and rage-bait.

“Everything feels worse in the middle of the night, it’s where peak worry and catastrophizing happens,” Watson says. “Exacerbated by a slow death from blue screen light and brain rot. 

Directed by Kristofski, the accompanying cinematically shot video for “Celluloid,” was filmed in a lush park just outside what appears to be Melbourne. The camera slowly zooms in on a figure on a hill in the horizon playing guitar.

New Audio: Parlor Greens Return with Slow-Burning “Drop Top”

Organ trio Parlor Greens features a collection of grizzled veterans and incredibly accomplished musicians: 

The trio’s highly-anticipated sophomore album Emeralds is slated a March 27, 2026 release through Colemine Records. Their sophomore album reportedly sees the acclaimed trio upping the ante while capturing the band in top form: tour tight and more confident than ever in who they are and where they’re going. Though the results are stronger than ever, the overall mood of the recording sessions was much different. 

The first time the trio met in Colemine’s Loveland, OH-based Portage Lounge Studio, the meeting was marked by a certain sense of freshness: It was the first time they had all played together. Understandably, it was exciting and unknown territory. But the sessions were underlined by the heaviness each of the individual members were going through at the time. With each member dealing with personal tragedies in their individual lives, the sessions serves as a genuine moment of joy. Just three talented musicians, writing and playing music, now as friends, in a familiar environment. 

Emeralds will feature the previously released, album opening “Eat Your Greens,” a strutting and rollicking groover of a tune, and the album’s latest single “Drop Top.” “Drop Top” is anchored around a slow-burning, sultry Quiet Storm-like strut of a tune completed by Scone’s shimmering bass organ and James’ bluesy guitar melody. While arguably being one of the more mellow soul jazz compositions of their growing catalog together, “Drop Top” continues to showcase both their seemingly effortless simpatico and their unerring knack for pairing tight groove with improvisation and old-fashioned songcraft.

New Video: Bratakus Shares Bruising Ripper “Tonight”

Based near Tomintoul, a small whiskey village in the Scottish Highlands, rising punk duo Bratakus — sisters Brègha Cuinn (guitar, vocals) and Onnagh Cuinn (bass, vocals) — formed back in 2015. And since their formation, they’ve been fiercely DIY. The duo ran their own label Screaming Babies Records and with no music on streaming services and no booking agent, they landed airplay on BBC Scotland and elsewhere, opened for The Hives and toured as far as Japan.

Last year, the band caught the attention of Venn Records, who signed the band and will be releasing their Johan Gustafsson co-produced album Hagridden, which is slated for a Friday release. Recorded at Stockholm-based Studio Gröndahl, the album, which will feature previously released tracks “Final Girls,” “Tokened,” and “Turnstile,” is ten tracks of screaming and cathartic punk.

“Tonight,” Hagridden‘s latest single is a bruising, old school punk ripper anchored around some incendiary guitar work and the duo’s howled lyrics., which focus on the timely subject of media manipulation. “It’s about how everyone is angry about the state of the world, but we are being thrown distractions to get us to hate the wrong people,” Bratakus’ Brègha Cuinn says. “The fact that some people are happy to just look the other way and let it happen if they perceive that it’s not going to affect them, but in reality, we’re all on this planet together, and if we don’t have compassion for each other, and help each other out, we’ll be left with nothing.”

Directed by Alice Black, the accompanying video for “Tonight” is split between the pair performing the song in a grungy, dungeon-like space and the duo walking about their town with creepy baby masks — the same baby masks the are featured on the album’s cover art. This is informed by the fact that the album thematically touches on the uneasy fact that life often feels like a waking nightmare.

“I’m an avid listener of the Blindboy podcast and one of the things he talks about that I find really interesting is how most adults nowadays aren’t really being offered the opportunity to actually grow up due to the current state of the world,” the band’s Onnagh Cuinn says. “The cost of living is so high that a lot of millennials aren’t even able to move out of their parents’ house, so it feels like a lot of the milestones that used to define adulthood are becoming more unattainable, so we’re left in this weird “in between” where technically we’re adults, but we still feel like kids. It’s something I think about a lot, and I think it ties in with the meaning of the song, so I wanted to try and create a kind of visual for that by going around doing a lot of regular day to day things while wearing the baby faces.”

New Audio: French Artist and Producer Monølo Lovingly re-interprets a Classic House Banger

Monølo is a French classically trained pianist and electronic music artist, who has built a career exploring the intersection of acoustic piano and contemporary techno. Throughout his career, his work has seen him crafting a sound where minimalism, rhythmic tension and club-focused energy — with an emphasis on live performance, organic recording method and a raw production aesthetic. The result is a distinct and modern take on techno that’s equally suited to deeply focused listening and the dance floor.

The French artist’s latest single “The Bells Tribute (Piano Techno Mix)” was originally conceived a free, solo piano reinterpretation of Jeff Mills‘ iconic 1996 track “The Bells.” The Monølo re-interpretation turns the original into a percussive and hypnotic tune that’s one-part techno with a decidedly industrial leaning. It’s a club banger but at its core, the song explores an uneasy yet irresistible tension between hypnotic repetition and interpretative freedom.

New Audio: Plain Mister Smith Teams Up with Jordan Klassen on Lush and Shimmering “Dream To Be Free”

Vancouver-based Mark Jowett, the mastermind behind Plain Mister Smith is a Canadian indie scene veteran who has had stints in Moev and Cinderpop, as well as a stint playing cello with the Vancouver Philharmonic Orchestra.

With Plain Mister Smith, the enigmatic Canadian artist draws influence from an eclectic range of artists including The Beatles, Bryce Dessner, Matt Maltese, Led Zeppelin, The Zombies and 20th-century classical composers like Prokofiev, who subtly influences his string-driven arrangements. The result is a sound that seamlessly blends elements of indie pop, baroque folk and psychedelia.

The Vancouver-based artist’s new album is slated for an April release. “Dream To Be Free” feat. Jordan Klassen is a lush, gorgeous tune featuring twinkling keys, strummed guitar and the pair’s remarkably sonorous harmonies. While sonically reminding me a bit of Forever So-era Husky, the track as the Canadian artist explains is a reflection on a trip to Kyoto that took place during Daimonji, a festival where locals light giant bonfires to guide spirits back home.