Blink-182 have released some new merchandise for fall, including a rain jacket, sweatpants, and a wall clock.
Taylor Swift Grabs Another Platinum Record
Taylor Swift’s Folklore has gone platinum.
Read More “Taylor Swift Grabs Another Platinum Record”Young the Giant to Celebrate 10-Year Anniversary
Young the Giant will be celebrating the ten year anniversary of their self-titled album will a virtual concert, special digital release, and a new vinyl release. The full press release can be found below.
Read More “Young the Giant to Celebrate 10-Year Anniversary”Harry Styles – “Golden” Video
Harry Styles has released a video for “Golden.”
Read More “Harry Styles – “Golden” Video”Tame Impala – “Why Won’t They Talk to Me?” Video
Tame Impala have shared a performance video for “Why Won’t They Talk to Me?”
Read More “Tame Impala – “Why Won’t They Talk to Me?” Video”The All-American Rejects Announce Something
The All-American Rejects will release something called “Me Vs. The World” on November 20th. No mention if it’s a song or album, but you can pre-save it here.
Read More “The All-American Rejects Announce Something”Spanish Love Songs – “Self-Destruction (As a Sensible Career Choice)” Video
We Are the Union – “You’re Dead / Vampire Ska” Video
We Are the Union have released a video for their covers of “You’re Dead / Vampire Ska.”
Read More “We Are the Union – “You’re Dead / Vampire Ska” Video”Skrillex – “Kliptown Empyrean”
Skrillex’s new song “Kliptown Empyrean” can be streamed below via Soundcloud.
Read More “Skrillex – “Kliptown Empyrean””The War on Drugs Performs on Fallon
The War on Drugs performed the new song “Ocean of Darkness” on Fallon.
Read More “The War on Drugs Performs on Fallon”Mest – “Upside Down” Video
Mest have shared a video for “Upside Down.”
Read More “Mest – “Upside Down” Video”PVRIS – “Thank You”
PVRIS have shared the new song “Thank You” featuring Raye off the new deluxe edition of Use Me.
Read More “PVRIS – “Thank You””10/23/20 (Ten Songs)
Ten songs is a weekly playlist from Jason Tate featuring songs enjoyed over the previous week. It is included in every edition of the Liner Notes newsletter and is free to sign up for via email.
This playlist is available on Spotify and Apple Music.
Read More “10/23/20 (Ten Songs)”Liner Notes (October 23rd, 2020)
This week’s newsletter has early thoughts on Bruce Springsteen, Seaway, and various other things I listened to, watched, read, and consumed this week. There’s also a playlist of ten songs I enjoyed, and this week’s supporter Q&A post can be found here.
If you’d like this newsletter delivered to your inbox each week (it’s free and available to everyone), you can sign up here.
Read More “Liner Notes (October 23rd, 2020)”Review: Bruce Springsteen – Letter to You
At this point, you don’t get a Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band project without questions about it being the last one. That’s actually been the case for years: when Springsteen and company closed out their 1999-2000 reunion tour at Madison Square Garden with a special extended version of “Blood Brothers,” it felt remarkably final. Nine years later, when The Boss concluded the Working on a Dream tour with a full-circle performance of his debut album, 1973’s Greetings from Asbury Park, NJ, a common topic of conversation in the Springsteen fan community was about whether we’d ever get another E Street tour. The band came back in 2012—sans late sideman Clarence Clemons—for a tour supporting Springsteen’s then-new LP Wrecking Ball, and came back again in 2016 to play 1980’s double-LP masterpiece The River in full night after night. At the end of each tour, the question resurfaced: was this the last dance? The ensuing years only gave credence to the idea that it might be, as Springsteen penned his memoir, spent more than year on Broadway, and circled back to old songs for last year’s solo Western Stars. Each of these projects was wrought with ruminations about fading youth, aging, and mortality. Bruce wrote and spoke extensively about Clemons, whose death in 2011 clearly shook him to the core. On Stars, he closed the album with “Moonlight Motel,” his most aching look back at the past, and at the little glories of youthful freedom and young love that can’t quite ever be replicated or recaptured.
Read More “Bruce Springsteen – Letter to You”