The 2021 Electric Daisy Carnival Is Happening Surprisingly Soon And Will Be ‘The Full EDC Experience’

There appears to be hope on the horizon in terms of the ongoing pandemic, as more and more people are getting COVID-19 vaccines by the day. While the world is gradually opening back up, events that would draw large crowds are still mostly not happening quite yet. It may seem surprising, then, that Electric Daisy Carnival Las Vegas is going on with its 2021 event. Furthermore, it’s happening surprisingly soon, as the festival is set for May 21 to 23.

Pasquale Rotella — the founder and CEO of Insomniac Events, the company behind EDC — shared the news last night, noting that organizers “are moving forward as planned & will be working closely with local & state officials to make the show as safe as possible” and that “more details on safety protocols & the lineup will be shared soon.” He offered no indication that the event — which usually draws about 125,000 attendees per day, as Billboard notes — will be hosted in a reduced capacity, writing, “You can expect the full EDC experience with no details spared, from the festival grounds to the music, stages, art, performers, artists & fireworks!”

This news arrived shortly after Dr. Anthony Fauci said the number of new COVID-19 cases in the US is currently at a “disturbingly high level” and noted that the country could experience a surge in new cases. He concluded, “Hang in there a bit longer. Now is not the time, as I’ve said so many times, to declare victory prematurely.”

Check out Rotella’s post below.

“Electric Daisy Carnival is finally on the horizon. There were times during the pandemic when many of us lost hope. We were challenged to learn & listen to our hearts & trust that the storm would eventually pass, making way for a bright & sunny future for those in our community & around the world.

With the world being shutdown for over a year, I’m happy to announce we’re on our way to being able to celebrate in person. Book your flights, hotels & shuttles — EDC Las Vegas is on for May 21+22+23!

We are moving forward as planned & will be working closely with local & state officials to make the show as safe as possible. You can expect the full EDC experience with no details spared, from the festival grounds to the music, stages, art, performers, artists & fireworks! I look forward to seeing all your beautiful faces & feeling your incredible energy, and I couldn’t be more excited.

More details on safety protocols & the lineup will be shared soon. If you’re unable to attend in May 2021, no worries, but you’ll be missed. You can go to the link in my bio to transfer your ticket to 2022.

We’re ready to spread our wings & embrace our community who we miss so much. We know there may be challenges in front of us, which we will accept & do our best to overcome. We’ve been apart for a long time & I can’t wait to join you, united, Under the Electric Sky.”

Run The Jewels And Rage Against The Machine Will Finally Tour Together In 2022

Run The Jewels and Rage Against The Machine were supposed to team up for the “Public Service Announcement Tour” in 2020, but naturally, that did not come to pass. Dates were later pushed back to 2021, and now, both groups are set to finally hit the road together in 2022.

The new set of dates begins in Texas in March and features a number of North American stops before wrapping up with a week of Madison Square Garden in August.

Check out the full list of tour dates below and get tickets here.

03/31/2022 — El Paso, TX @ Don Haskins Center
04/02/2022 — Las Cruces, NM @ Pan American Center
04/04/2022 — Glendale, AZ @ Gila River Arena
04/06/2022 — Glendale, AZ @ Gila River Arena
04/26/2022 — Oakland, CA @ Oakland Arena
04/28/2022 — Oakland, CA @ Oakland Arena
04/30/2022 — Tacoma, WA @ Tacoma Dome
05/02/2022 — Portland, OR @ Moda Center
05/05/2022 — Vancouver, BC @ Pacific Coliseum
05/07/2022 — Edmonton, AB @ Rogers Place
05/09/2022 — Calgary, AB @ Scotiabank Saddledome
05/11/2022 — Winnipeg, MB @ Bell MTS Place
05/13/2022 — Sioux Falls, SD @ Denny Sanford Premier Center
05/15/2022 — Minneapolis, MN @ Target Center
05/16/2022 — Minneapolis, MN @ Target Center
05/18/2022 — Kansas City, MO @ T-Mobile Center
05/20/2022 — St Louis, MO @ Enterprise Center
05/22/2022 — Detroit, MI @ Little Caesars Arena
05/23/2022 — Detroit, MI @ Little Caesars Arena
07/09/2022 — East Troy, WI @ Alpine Valley Music Theatre
07/11/2022 — Chicago, IL @ United Center
07/12/2022 — Chicago, IL @ United Center
07/15/2022 — Ottawa, ON @ Ottawa Bluesfest
07/16/2022 — Quebec City, QC @ Festival D’ete de Quebec *
07/19/2022 — Hamilton, ON @ FirstOntario Centre
07/21/2022 — Toronto, ON @ Scotiabank Arena
07/23/2022 — Toronto, ON @ Scotiabank Arena
07/25/2022 — Buffalo, NY @ KeyBank Center
07/27/2022 — Cleveland, OH @ Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse
07/29/2022 — Pittsburgh, PA @ PPG Paints Arena
07/31/2022 — Raleigh, NC @ PNC Arena
08/02/2022 — Washington DC @ Capital One Arena
08/03/2022 — Washington DC @ Capital One Arena
08/08/2022 — New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden
08/09/2022 — New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden
08/11/2022 — New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden
08/12/2022 — New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden
08/14/2022 — New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden

* Run The Jewels not performing

Inside The Impending Return Of Live Music In 2021

Audrey Fix Schaefer remembers all too well the last concert she was able to attend in person: a raucous performance by punk godfathers the Dead Kennedys at 9:30 Club, the D.C. venue where she serves as communications director, on March 11th, 2020.

“I had a lot of tears that night,” she recalled during a recent phone call. “At the time, I thought it was going to be the last show I would see for 20 days. Because D.C. was going to flatten the curve. It was a moment where I was relishing being in the place that brings me so much joy. But there was also so much angst thinking about what happens to our employees. What happens to all the businesses around us? What happens to the bands?”

Over a year later, 9:30 Club, like thousands of venues around the world, remains closed. The bookers for the club have been forced to re-book some shows up to 10 times as they wait for that magical combination of COVID cases dropping, vaccination numbers rising, and the decision makers in the district and the federal government to finally give them the go-ahead to hold shows again.

The past month has shown some glimmers of hope that music fans hungry might be able to feel the waves of a PA rumbling through their systems before 2021 is over. Artists such as psych-grunge mainstays Dinosaur Jr. and pop-country duo SixForty1 recently announced tour dates. Bonnaroo, the outdoor festival held yearly since 2002 in Manchester, Tennessee, dropped the lineup for their 2021 edition (set for the weekend of September 2nd) that includes Foo Fighters, Megan Thee Stallion, Tame Impala, and Lizzo. Other festivals, like the roots-oriented DelFest and Americanafest, and the EDM-centric Electric Zoo, followed suit with their own lineup announcements.

Even 9:30 Club has dates listed on their calendar for as soon as May 25th of this year. It’s a positive sign but one that Schaefer and all the other bookers and venue operators around the world is approaching cautiously.

“One of these days we’re hoping that we’re going to get to open,” she said. “And we will. We just don’t know when it is.”

Concert venues, big and small, were some of the first places to close when the pandemic started spiraling out of control last year — and rightfully so, as, for most people, the need to protect themselves and others far outweighed any desires to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with their fellow music fans. And those same clubs and theaters will likely be the last to reopen even as more people are vaccinated and infection numbers start to drop.

The impact of this global shutdown has been enormous. According to Pollstar, ticket sales in the first quarter of 2021 are down 99% from the year before. And that’s not even counting the loss of revenue still being felt by everyone from musicians to booking agents to bartenders. So the excitement about the prospect of shows, tours, and festivals happening again soon is understandable. But thankfully, most of the people involved with these events are being very careful and downright suspicious as they set about opening their doors and gates to fans again.

“We’ve got to get the ecosystem rebooted by the end of the summer or I’ll be out,” said Jim Brunberg, owner of three venues in Portland, Oregon, including Mississippi Studios, and the founder of the advocacy group Independent Venues Coalition. “And I’m one of the most solid and optimistic people out there. There has to be a rational and science-based approach to reopening. We can’t be fear-based and throwing darts at a moving target.”

The biggest challenge with that is that every state has their own protocols with regards to the pandemic. In New York, for example, Governor Andrew Cuomo is allowing venues to reopen at either 33% capacity or 100 patrons, whichever is highest, while in Texas and Florida, the restrictions have been completely lifted and venues can operate at 100% capacity if they so choose.

While that still does leave open plenty of possibilities for artists to perform, the spotty landscape for reopening presents challenges for anyone hoping to tour the U.S. any time soon.

“It’s a really long planning process in our business,” says Schaefer, who also serves as communications director for the advocacy group National Independent Venue Association. “You have thousands of bands trying to make their way to thousands of venues across the country. You’re not going to go to one town and then skip seven states to get to the next.”

It’s all still a bit of a mess, but there are plenty of positive signs out there that forecast a slow return to normal for the concert industry. Last weekend, City Winery NYC held their first shows in over a year—two performances by Old 97s leader Rhett Miller — with attendees safely socially distanced and mask mandates in place. And their concert calendar is filling up quickly with names like Patti Smith, Stephin Merritt, and Rufus Wainwright.

The Basement East in Nashville also reopened its doors this past weekend after a year that saw the venue hit not only with the pandemic but also a tornado that ripped a hole in the building last March. With repairs done and safety restrictions in place, the club welcomed 132 people for a sold-out show by local rockers Goodbye June, with future weekend shows already booked. Exciting, yes, but to hear co-owner Mike Grimes talk about, still a little bittersweet.

“To be transparent, doing shows in this context is rewarding but it’s not the same,” he said. “It’s rewarding and fun but not great for the people that can’t get up and go talk to somebody in another pod or hug a friend sitting at another table because all these protocols are in place.”

As well, nearly 2,000 tickets have been sold for Moon Crush, a five-day festival headlined by Sheryl Crow and Jason Isbell being held at the end of April in Miramar Beach, Florida. The event is almost like the experience of a cruise ship on land. Concertgoers are expected to rent a house or condo within walking distance of the venue and, with only three acts every night, there’s ample time for other activities in the area.

“We like to use the term ‘music vacation,’” said Andy Levine, the creator of the event. “We want you to get up and have your perfect day, whatever it is. And then we’re going to have five hours of music waiting for you.”

There are still plenty of restrictions in place. Anyone in attendance must have proof of a negative COVID test or vaccination, and they’re expected to keep to their designated viewing area at the venue every night.

That alone is an indication that we’re not nearly clear of this pandemic. Maybe we are only six months away from thousands of people being safe to bounce between stages at the farm where Bonnaroo is held every year. But for smaller spaces like Nashville’s hub for bluegrass and traditional country The Station Inn, there is no guarantee that they’ll be back in business any time soon.

“We’re not in the clear yet,” said Jeff Brown, the Station Inn’s marketing director. “As much as there’s optimism at the moment that it feels like we’re coming out of this thing, we’re not out yet.”

All The New Albums Coming Out In April 2021

Keeping track of all the new albums coming out in a given month is a big job, but we’re up for it: Below is a comprehensive list of the major releases you can look forward to in April. If you’re not trying to potentially miss out on anything, it might be a good idea to keep reading.

Friday, April 2

  • Alex Little & The Suspicious Minds — Waiting To Get Paid (Light Organ Records)
  • Bambounou — Cascade EP (Bambe)
  • The Beat Farmers — Tales Of The New West (Deluxe) (Rhino)
  • Blacklist Royals — Doomsday Girl (Paper + Plastick)
  • Bryce Dessner And Australian String Quartet — Impermanence/Disintegration (37d03d)
  • Cha Wa — My People (Single Lock Records)
  • Chaz Knapp — Organ Drunes (figureight)
  • Cristina Vane — Nowhere Sounds Lovely (Blue Tip Records)
  • Demi Lovato — Dancing With The Devil… The Art Of Starting Over (Island Records)
  • Dopolarians — The Bond (Mahakala Music)
  • The Drums — Mommy Don’t Spank Me (Island/UMC)
  • Dry Cleaning — New Long Leg (4AD)
  • Du Blonde — Homecoming (Daemon T.V.)
  • Everson Poe — Grief (Trepanation Recordings)
  • Flock Of Dimes — Head Of Roses (Sub Pop Records)
  • Godspeed You! Black Emperor — G_d’s Pee AT STATE’S END! (Constellation)
  • Haunted Shed — Faltering Light (Strolling Bones Records)
  • Helstar — Clad In Black (Massacre Records)
  • January Jane — Your Drug EP (BMG)
  • Keith Kenny — Lifetime Ago Motel (iNtuRecords)
  • Kishi Bashi — Emigrant EP (Joyful Noise)
  • Kolby Knickerbocker — Over And Over EP (self-released)
  • La Femme — Paradigmes (Disque Pointu)
  • Leslie Jordan — Company’s Comin’ (PLATOON)
  • Lil Tjay — Destined 2 Win (Columbia)
  • Major Murphy — Access (Off White Records)
  • Mark Bryan — Midlife Priceless (Slow Start Records)
  • Mo3 — Shottaz 4 Eva (H$M Music/EMPIRE)
  • Mountain Bird — Once We Were Present EP (Nettwerk)
  • Mythic Sunship — Wildfire (Tee Pee Records)
  • Nasty Cherry — The Movie EP (Vroom Vroom Recordings)
  • The Natvral — Tethers (Dirty Bingo)
  • Noah Preminger And Kim Cass — Thunda (self-released)
  • Odd Circus — Mantha EP (Good Idea Music)
  • Patrick Belaga — Blutt (PAN)
  • Paul Bergmann — The Other Side (self-released)
  • Quelly Woo — Tactical Pressure EP (Equity Distribution)
  • No-No Boy — 1975 (Smithsonian Folkways)
  • Rosie Darling — Coping EP (Nettwerk)
  • Ryley Walker — Course In Fable (Husky Pants)
  • Shakey Graves — Roll The Bones X (Dualtone Records)
  • Whitehall — Swordfish Catcher (Common Ground Collective)
  • YaSi — Coexist With Chaos EP (Royal Rhythm Records)
  • Zach Person — Zach Person (BlackDenim Records)

Friday, April 9

  • Andy Bell — The Indica Gallery EP (Sonic Cathedral)
  • Ari Herstand — Like Home (Ari’s Take)
  • Benny Sings — Music (Stones Throw Records)
  • Bill MacKay And Nathan Bowles — Keys (Drag City Records)
  • The Blips — The Blips (Cornelius Chapel Records)
  • Blue Lab Beats — We Will Rise EP (Blue Note Records)
  • Briston Maroney — Sunflower (Atlantic)
  • Brockhampton — Roadrunner: New Light, New Machine (Question Everything/RCA Records)
  • CFCF — Memoryland (BGM Solutions)
  • Charlotte Cardin — Phoenix (Cult Nation)
  • Charlotte Spiral — New Light EP (Higher Plain Music)
  • Cheap Trick — In Another World (BMG)
  • Chris Cain — Raisin’ Cain (Alligator Records)
  • Christine Ott — Time To Die (Gizeh Records)
  • CJ — Loyalty Over Royalty Deluxe (CJ Music Group/Warner)
  • Clafrica — Never Not Balling EP (DRWX)
  • Courting — Grand National EP (Nice Swan Recordings)
  • Daniel Santiago — Song For Tomorrow (Heartcore Records)
  • Elephant Micah — Vague Tidings (Western Vinyl)
  • Emily Kinney — The Supporting Character (Jullian Records)
  • Ex-Olympian — Afterlife Remixed EP (Dot Dash / Remote Control Records)
  • Fake Dad — Old Baby EP (Baby’s TV)
  • Flyte — This Is Really Going To Hurt (Island Records)
  • Franz Kirmann & Roberto Grosso — In Waves EP (Days Of Being)
  • The Fratellis — Half Drunk Under A Full Moon (Cooking Vinyl)
  • Gilligan Moss — Gilligan Moss (Foreign Family)
  • Grand Soleil — Human Error (Nowadays Records)
  • Heavy Feather — Mountain Of Sugar (The Sign Records)
  • Hot Breath — Rubbery Lips (The Sign Records)
  • Indubious — The Bridge (Easy Star Records)
  • Jean-Michel Jarre — Amazônia (Sony Music Entertainment)
  • Kevo Muney — Lucille’s Grandson (self-released)
  • Lapêche — Blood In The Water (New Granada)
  • The Lion’s Daughter — Skin Show (Season of Mist)
  • The Living Pins — Freaky Little Monster Children (self-released)
  • Lxst — Famous EP (Paper Route Empire)
  • Mako — Fable Remix (Ultra Music)
  • Mark Mallman — Happiness (Eagle’s Golden Tooth)
  • Max Richter — Voices 2 (Decca Records)
  • The Medea Project — Southern Echoes (self-released)
  • Merk — Infinite Youth (Humblebrag Records)
  • MF Tomlinson — Strange Time (self-released)
  • Miguel — Art Dealer Chic Vol. 4 EP (ByStorm/RCA Records)
  • Milly — Wish Goes On EP (Dangerbird Records)
  • Nelson Beer — Orlando EP (PIAS)
  • Nick Waterhouse — Promenade Blue (Innovative Leisure)
  • Onyx — Onyx 4 Life (Cleopatra Records)
  • Orions Belte — Villa Amorini (Terrorbird)
  • Overmono — Pieces Of 8/Echo Rush EP (XL Recordings)
  • Parker Millsap — Be Here Instead (Okrahoma Records)
  • Peggy Seeger — First Farewell (Red Grape Records)
  • The Pink Stones — Introducing…The Pink Stones (Normaltown Records)
  • Quiet Marauder — The Gift (Bubblewrap Collective)
  • Rachel Chinouriri — Four° In Winter EP (Atlas Artists Recordings)
  • Raf Rundell — O.M. Days (Heavenly)
  • The Reds, Pinks & Purples — Uncommon Weather (Slumberland Records)
  • Requin Chagrin — Bye Bye Baby (Sony Music)
  • Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band — Dance Songs for Hard Times (Thirty Tigers)
  • Rhiannon Giddens with Francesco Turrisi — They’re Calling Me Home (Nonesuch)
  • Ross Gay — Dilate Your Heart (Dead Oceans)
  • The Routes — Mesmerised (Action Weekend Records)
  • Samantha Crain — I Guess We Live Here Now EP (Real Kind Records)
  • Sarah Cicero — Cold Immaculate Opposite EP (Orchard)
  • Sharkula x Mukqs — Take Caution On The Beach (Hausu Mountain)
  • Silver Synthetic — Silver Synthetic (Third Man Records)
  • Skullcrusher — Storm In Summer EP (Secretly Canadian)
  • Slow Dance — Moth & The Dove EP (Slow Dance Records)
  • Small Black — Cheap Dreams (100% Electronica)
  • Sook-Yin Lee & Adam Litovitz — jooj two (Mint Records)
  • Spirit Of The Beehive — Entertainment, Death (Saddle Creek)
  • Steiger — The New Lady Llama (SDBAN ULTRA)
  • Storm Gordon — The Lie I Love The Best (Wonderlust)
  • Sweet Oblivion — Relentless (Frontiers Music)
  • Wheel — Preserved In Time (Cruz Del Sur Music)
  • Yaya Bey — The Things I Can’t Take With Me EP (Big Dada)

Friday, April 16

  • Alex Henry Foster — Standing Under Bright Lights (Hopeful Tragedy)
  • Amigo The Devil — Born Against (Liars Club)
  • Andy Stott — Never The Right Time (Modern Love)
  • Apparat — Soundtracks (It’s Complicated Records)
  • The Armed — Ultrapop (Sargent House)
  • Arthur King — Changing Landscapes (Isle Of Eigg) (AKP Recordings)
  • August Burns Red — Guardians Sessions EP (Fearless Records)
  • Autogramm — No Rules (Nevado Records)
  • Babygirl — Losers Weepers EP (Sandlot Records)
  • Benedikt — Balcony Dream (Koke Plate)
  • Benjamin Belinska — Lost Illusions (1879550 Records DK2)
  • Bewitcher — Cursed Be Thy Kingdom (Century Media Records)
  • Big Scarr — Big Grim Reaper (Atlantic)
  • Bill Kwan — No Ordinary Love: The Music Of Sade (Ikeda Music)
  • Bob Mould — Distortion: 2008-2019 (DMON)
  • The Brother Brothers — Calla Lily (Compass Records)
  • Bushido Code — The Ronin (Upstate Records)
  • Cale Sexton — Sustain (Heavy Machinery Records)
  • Cannibal Corpse — Violence Unimagined (Metal Blade Records)
  • Caroline Kingsbury — Heaven’s Just A Flight (Fortune Tellers)
  • Caroline Polachek — Standing At The Gate: Remix Collection (self-released)
  • Childe — Childe EP (Prolifica Inc.)
  • Clicks — G.O.T.H. (Dependent Records)
  • Crown — The End Of All Things (Pelagic Records)
  • Deine Lakaien — Dual (Prophecy Productions)
  • Drongo — 1 (eBird)
  • Elise Davis — Anxious. Happy. Chill. (Tone Tree)
  • Eric Church — Heart (UMG Nashville)
  • Francesca Ter-Berg — In Eynem (Phantom Limb)
  • Garage A Trois — Calm Down Cologne (Royal Potato Family)
  • Greta Van Fleet — The Battle At Garden’s Gate (Lava/Republic)
  • Holding Absence — The Greatest Mistake Of My Life (SharpTone Records)
  • Holly Macve — Not The Girl (Modern Sky)
  • Imelda May — 11 Past The Hour (Decca)
  • Jaguar Jonze — Antihero EP (Nettwerk)
  • Jakob Mind — The One Who Got Away (Lovely Records)
  • James Holvay — Sweet Soul Song EP (MOB Town)
  • Jeffery Silverstein — Torii Gates (Arrowhawk)
  • jess joy — Patreeachry (Joyful Noise Recordings)
  • Jo Below — No Control EP (Inverse Records)
  • John Pizzarelli — Better Days Ahead (Ghostlight Deluxe)
  • John Moods — So Sweet EP (Arbutus Records)
  • Josh Radnor — One More Than I’ll Let You Go EP (Flower Moon Records)
  • Julia Stone — Sixty Summers (BMG)
  • Kenny Mason — Angelic Hoodrat: Supercut (Alamo/Geffen)
  • Lea Bertucci — A Visible Length Of Light (Cibachrome Editions)
  • Low Island — If You Could Have It All Again (Emotional Interference)
  • Lyke — Stay With Me EP (Armada Electronic Elements)
  • Miles Gannett — Meridian (self-released)
  • NEEDTOBREATHE — Live From The Woods Vol. 2 (Elektra Records)
  • Nick Hakim And Roy Nathanson — Small Things (NYXO)
  • Norah Jones — ‘Till We Meet Again (Capitol Records)
  • The Offspring — Let The Bad Times Roll (Concord)
  • Paul McCartney — McCartney III Imagined (Capitol Records)
  • Robin Trower, Maxi Priest, And Livingstone Brown — United State Of Mind (Manhaton Records)
  • Saint Raymond — We Forgot We Were Dreaming (Cooking Vinyl)
  • Sam Eagle — She’s So Nice EP (Cooking Vinyl)
  • Sasha And The Valentines — So You Think You Found Love? (Oof Records)
  • Shaed — No Other Way (Photo Finish Records)
  • SKAAR — Waiting (WM Norway)
  • Son Lux — Tomorrows III (City Slang)
  • Steve Bug & Cle — Gentle Push EP (Poker Flat)
  • Syna So Pro — Chill/Hype (FPE Records)
  • T Bear — Fresh Bear Tracks (Quarto Valley Records)
  • Talib Kweli & Diamond D — Gotham (Dymond Mine Records)
  • Triston Marez — Triston Marez (Torrez Music Group)
  • Two Feet — Max Maco Is Dead Right? (AWAL)
  • The Vintage Caravan — Monuments (Napalm Records)
  • Vision Video — Inked In Red (Kool Rock)
  • Vladislav Delay — Rakka II (Cosmo Rhythmatic)
  • Waxflower — We Might Be Alright EP (Rude Records)
  • The Workday Release — Like The Light Of Stars (Enci Records)

Friday, April 23

  • Ade — Midnight Pizza (Trickwork)
  • Alan Vega — Mutator (Sacred Bones Records)
  • Art d’Ecco — In Standard Definition (Paper Bag Records)
  • Ben Cosgrove — The Trouble With Wilderness (self-released)
  • Birthday Ass — Head Of The Household (Ramp Local)
  • Black Orchid Empire — Live In The Studio EP (Long Branch Records)
  • Black Wail — Born On Fire EP (Rhyme & Reason)
  • Carla Geneve — Learn To Like It (Dot Dash)
  • Chapel — Room Service EP (Rise Records)
  • Charlie Houston — I Hate Spring EP (Arts & Crafts)
  • Chicane — Everything We Had To Leave Behind (Modena Records)
  • The Cush — Riders In The Stardust Gold (Mad Bunny Records)
  • Danny Golden — Changes EP (Carry On Music)
  • Dans Dans — Zink (Unday Records)
  • Dan Wilson — Vessels Of Wood And Earth (Mack Avenue Records)
  • Dinosaur Jr. — Sweep It Into Space (Jagjaguwar)
  • Dirty Honey — Dirty Honey (self-released)
  • Dumpstaphunk — Where Do We Go From Here (Mascot Label Group/The Funk Garage)
  • Eli West — Tapered Point Of Stone (Tender And Mild)
  • Eric Church — Soul (UMG Nashville)
  • E.R. Jurken — I Stand Corrected (Country Thyme)
  • Ethel Cain — Inbred EP (Daughters of Cain)
  • Field Music — Flat White Moon (Memphis Industries)
  • Fog Lake — Tragedy Reel (Orchid Tapes)
  • Gilby Clarke — The Gospel Truth (Golden Robot Records)
  • Glimmers — Worlds Apart EP (Common Ground Collective)
  • Graywave — Planetary Shift EP (False Peak Records)
  • Hannah Jadagu — What Is Going On? EP (Sub Pop Records)
  • The Jeff Carlson Band — Yesterday’s Gone (RFL Records)
  • John Splithoff — All In (self-released)
  • Jupiter & Okwess — Na Kazonga (Everloving Records)
  • Justin Moore — Straight Outta The Country (Virgin)
  • Ki Oni — Stay Indoors And Swim (Sound As Language)
  • Lucid Den — Ice Storm X (Lucid Trax)
  • The March Divide — cinq (Slow Start Records)
  • The Mars Volta — La Realidad De Los Sueños (Clouds Hill)
  • The Mars Volta — Landscape Tantrums (Clouds Hill)
  • Moon Vs Sun — I’m Going To Break Your Heart (Wea)
  • The Pale White — Infinite Pleasure (Illegal Cinema Records)
  • The Peter Frampton Band — Frampton Forgets The Words (UMe)
  • PJ Harding And Noah Cyrus — People Don’t Change EP (RCA Records)
  • Polly Paulusma — Invisible Music (Wild Sound)
  • Porter Robinson — Nurture (Mom + Pop Music)
  • Rag’n’Bone Man — Life By Misadventure (High Focus Records)
  • Remember Sports — Like A Stone (Father/Daughter Records)
  • Satomimagae — Hanazono (RVNG Intl.)
  • Sindy — Horror Head (PNKSLM Recordings)
  • Sir Sly — The Rise & Fall Of Loverboy (Interscope)
  • Sonic Boom — Almost Nothing Is Nearly Enough (Carpark Records)
  • Sour Widows — Crossing Over EP (Exploding In Sound Records)
  • Steve Cropper — Fire It Up (Provogue Records)
  • Summer Sleeves — In The Throes Of Woes (Jigsaw Records)
  • Tashaki Miyaki — Castaway (Metropolis Records)
  • Tilian — Factory Reset (Rise Records)
  • Tom Jones — Surrounded By Time (S-Curve Records)
  • Trace Kotik — Everything Has Been Done By Now, So Now, Everything Is Possible… (IMU Records)
  • Tristan Kasten-Krause — Potential Landscapes (Whatever’s Clever)
  • WarCall — Dead End Pt. 1 EP (Plan B Music)
  • WheelUp — Good Love (Tru Thoughts)

Friday, April 30

  • Adrian Crowley — The Watchful Eye Of The Stars (Chemikal Underground)
  • Ali Barter — Chocolate Cake EP ([PIAS])
  • Amy Shark — Cry Forever (Sony)
  • Amy Speace with The Orphan Brigade — There Used To Be Horses Here (Wind Bone Records)
  • Arts Fishing Club — The Show EP (Arts Fishing Club)
  • Ashley Monroe — Rosegold (Warner Music Nashville)
  • Ben Seretan — Cicada Waves (NNA Tapes)
  • Birdy — Young Heart (Atlantic)
  • Cadence Weapon — Parallel World (eOne Music)
  • Dawn Richard — Second Line: An Electro Revival (Merge Records)
  • Del Amitri — Fatal Mistakes (Cooking Vinyl)
  • Dree Leer — Throw Hands (Bettamax Records)
  • Dropkick Murphys — Turn Up That Dial (PIAS Cooperative)
  • Elsa Hewitt — Lupa (ERH)
  • Enumclaw — Jimbo Demos EP (Youth Riot Records)
  • Far Lands — There Be Monsters (Get Loud Recordings)
  • Girl In Red — If I Could Make It Go Quiet (World in Red)
  • Glüme — The Internet (Italians Do It Better)
  • Gojira — Fortitude (Travelling the Groove Records)
  • Guided By Voices — Earth Man Blues (Rockathon Records)
  • Hadda Be — Another Life (Last Night From Glasgow)
  • Joe Kaplow — Sending Money And Stems (Fluff & Gravy Records)
  • Joseph Shabason — The Fellowship (Western Vinyl)
  • Juan Wauters — Real Life Situations (Captured Tracks)
  • Kohsuke Mine — First (Barely Breaking Even)
  • Laufey — Typical Of Me EP (Transgressive Records)
  • Leon Vynehall — Rare, Forever (Ninja Tune)
  • Manchester Orchestra — The Million Masks Of God (Loma Vista Recordings)
  • Marianne Faithfull with Warren Ellis — She Walks In Beauty (BMG)
  • Moderate Rebels — If You See Something That Doesn’t Look Right (Moshi Moshi)
  • Myd — Born A Loser (Ed Banger Records)
  • Paper Beat Scissors — La Mitad (Seayou Records)
  • Paul Jacobs — Pink Dogs On The Green Grass (Blow the Fuse)
  • Rochelle Jordan — Play With The Changes (Young Art)
  • Rosie Tucker — Sucker Supreme (Epitaph Records)
  • Royal Blood — Typhoons (Warner)
  • Rural Tapes — Rural Tapes (Smuggler Music)
  • Sarah Louise — Earth Bow (self-released)
  • The Shootouts — Bullseye (Soundly Music)
  • Teenage Fanclub — Endless Arcade (Merge)
  • Telex — This Is Telex (Mute)
  • Tetrarch — Unstable (Napalm Records)
  • Thomas Rhett — Country Again: Side A (Virgin)
  • Tobias Meinhart — The Painter (Sunnyside Records)
  • Tony Allen — There Is No End (Blue Note Records)
  • Tōth — You And Me And Everything (Northern Spy Records)
  • Vacation Manor — Vacation Manor (Nettwerk)
  • Vincent Herring — Preaching To The Choir (Smoke Sessions Records)
  • Vreid — Wild North West (Season of Mist)
  • Will Graefe — Marine Life (11A Records)
  • Zhu — Dreamland 2021 (Astralwerks)

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

Tayla Parx And Other Songwriters Call On Artists To Stop Demanding Credit On Songs They Didn’t Write

Songwriters are an invaluable part of the music industry, but some of them feel like they aren’t getting a fair deal. Now, a group of songwriters have formed The Pact and are calling on artists to drop demanding credit on and publishing rights of songs that they didn’t help write.

The group has shared a letter, which asserts:

“Over the last few years, there has been a growing number of artists that are demanding publishing on songs they did not write. These artists will go on to collect revenue from touring, merchandise, brand partnerships, and many other revenue streams, while the songwriters have only their publishing revenue as a means of income. This demand for publishing is often able to happen because the artist and/or their representation abuse leverage, use bully tactics and threats, and prey upon writers who may choose to give up some of their assets rather than lose the opportunity completely. Over time, this practice of artists taking publishing has become normalized; and until now, there has been no real unity within the songwriting community to fight back.”

It goes on to declare, “This body of songwriters will not give publishing or songwriting credit to anyone who did not create or change the lyric or melody or otherwise contribute to the composition without a reasonably equivalent/meaningful exchange for all the writers on the song.”

The Pact’s website has a list of artists involved and it includes Tayla Parx, Justin Tranter, Tobias Jesso Jr., Emily Warren, Toss Golan, Amy Allen, Lennon Stella, Shae Jacobs, Sam Harris, Deza, and Joel Little. The aforementioned artists have had a huge impact on the music industry in recent years, as they have collaborated with big names like Ariana Grande, Khalid, Normani, Mariah Carey, Jennifer Lopez, Alicia Keys, Demi Lovato, Chloe x Halle, Janelle Monáe, Anderson .Paak, Megan Thee Stallion, Dua Lipa, Britney Spears, Gwen Stefani, Linkin Park, Justin Bieber, Selena Gomez, Lady Gaga, Kygo, Kacey Musgraves, John Legend, Maroon 5, Halsey, Cardi B, Imagine Dragons, Jonas Brothers, Sia, Adele, Shawn Mendes, Charlie Puth, Florence And The Machine, Haim, Niall Horan, King Princess, and Ellie Goulding. All those credits, by the way, are for just Parx, Tranter, and Jesso.

Read the full letter below and learn more about The Pact here.

“The beauty of the music industry is that it operates at its best as an ecosystem. Behind most songs, there is a story of collaboration. By the time of release, a song has been touched not just by the artist, but by songwriters, producers, mixers, engineers, record labels, publishers, managers and more.

Over the last few years, there has been a growing number of artists that are demanding publishing on songs they did not write. These artists will go on to collect revenue from touring, merchandise, brand partnerships, and many other revenue streams, while the songwriters have only their publishing revenue as a means of income. This demand for publishing is often able to happen because the artist and/or their representation abuse leverage, use bully tactics and threats, and prey upon writers who may choose to give up some of their assets rather than lose the opportunity completely. Over time, this practice of artists taking publishing has become normalized; and until now, there has been no real unity within the songwriting community to fight back.

That is why we have decided to join together, in support of each other, and make a change. What we are saying is this:

This body of songwriters will not give publishing or songwriting credit to anyone who did not create or change the lyric or melody or otherwise contribute to the composition without a reasonably equivalent/meaningful exchange for all the writers on the song.

To be clear – this action is being taken for two main purposes. First and foremost, we hope that this action will protect the future ‘us’, the next generation of songwriters — those who believe they have no leverage and no choice but to give up something that is rightly theirs. The second purpose is to shift the rhetoric and perspective surrounding the role of a songwriter. As songwriters, we are fully aware of the importance of the artist who goes on to perform and promote the songs we write, the role of the producer who takes the song to the finish line, and the role of the label that finances the project and plans for strategy and promotion. In light of that, we are not suggesting we dip into those revenue streams, we are not asking for something we don’t deserve. We are simply asking for that respect in return. We are simply asking that the ecosystem stay in balance; we are simply asking that we not be put in positions where we are forced to give up all we have in exchange for nothing; we are simply asking that we give credit where credit is due and only take credit where credit is earned.

If we take the song out of the music industry, there is no music industry. As of today, we will no longer accept being treated like we are at the bottom of the totem pole, or be bullied into thinking that we should be making sacrifices to sit at the table. We are all in this together, and we all need each other for this wheel to keep turning. So let’s start acting like it.

Sincerely,

The Pact”

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

The Best Vinyl Releases Of March 2021

Anybody who thought the vinyl resurgence was just a fad was mistaken: The industry has experienced a legitimate revival. As a result, music fans are interested in physical media in ways they may not have if the decades-old medium hasn’t made a comeback. That doesn’t mean everybody is listening to just their parents’ old music, though. That’s part of it, sure, thanks to rereleases that present classic albums in new ways. A vital part of the renewed vinyl wave, though, is new projects being released as records, of which there are plenty.

Whatever you might be into, each month brings a new slew of vinyl releases that has something for everybody. Some stand out above the rest, naturally, so check out some of our favorite vinyl releases of March below.

Neil Young — After The Gold Rush (50th Anniversary Edition)

Warner/Reprise

It’s been over 50 years since the release of one of Young’s most classic albums, and following an anniversary release in 2020 was a deluxe vinyl box set this month. Aside from the storied album itself, the set also includes goodies like a 7-inch single featuring two versions of album outtake “Wonderin’” and a litho print of the album art. If After The Gold Rush is somehow missing from your vinyl collection, here’s a chance to own perhaps the definitive version of it.

Get it here.

Chet Baker — (Chet Baker Sings) It Could Happen To You, Chet Baker In New York, Chet, and Chet Baker Plays The Best Of Lerner And Loewe

Craft Recordings

Chet Baker was one of the most respected jazz artists of the ’50s, and now a quartet of his beloved albums are available on new vinyl rereleases. The albums featured in this collection were originally released between 1958 and 1959, which is a lesson in productivity at a high level. For these reissues, the albums were cut from their original analog master tapes, so this is as high quality a listening experience as possible.

Get them here.

Tokyo Police Club — Champ (10th Anniversary Edition)

Mom+Pop

Tokyo Police Club broke through in the mid-2000s with their debut EP A Lesson In Crime and their debut album, Elephant Shell. They followed that run with their most commercially successful release, the sophomore album Champ, which turned ten in 2020 and is getting a COVID-delayed rerelease this year. The new edition of the album (the first time it has been pressed on vinyl) includes goodies like the previously unreleased track “Hundred Dollar Day.”

Get it here.

The Clean — Unknown Country and Mister Pop (reissues)

Merge Records

The New Zealand group was an inspirational force behind many beloved indie musicians, and now a pair of highlights from their discography are getting fresh rereleases via Merge Records. The albums — originally released in 1996 and 2009, respectively — are now available on vinyl in the US for the first time, and Merge also offers a t-shirt bundle to let fans rep the band on both their turntables and torsos.

Get Unknown Country here. Get Mister Pop here.

First Aid Kit — Who By Fire

Columbia

Leonard Cohen left behind a legacy as profound as that of perhaps any artist who has left too soon in recent years. First Aid Kit have decided to honor that with Who By Fire, a live tribute album released in honor of the late legend. The album was recorded over two performances and the duo says of those shows, “We recently listened back to this concert and realized that this was something out of the ordinary for us. […] Dwelling deeply into Cohen’s world was a pleasure, he was so prolific as both a poet and a songwriter, and everything he ever put out held a very strong standard. He cared immensely for his work.”

Get it here.

Meow Mix — Meow ReMix: The Meow Remix Sessions

Meow Mix

The Meow Mix jingle was first introduced in television ads in the ’70s, and after all those years, the iconic tune is still one of the most recognizable jingles in all of marketing. Now the brand has celebrated the song’s legacy with a vinyl release that features modern reinterpretations of the song in varying styles. Participating in the project are Luna (delivering a pop rendition of the track), Heart & Paws (country), Gatocito (Latin), Endless Hiss (black metal), and Sweet Teddy Pepperpaw (jazz).

Get it here.

Green Day — Insomniac (20th Anniversary Edition)

Warner Records

It’s been 25 years since Green Day dropped their fourth full-length album, an anniversary they’re celebrating with a fancy new vinyl reissue. It’s available on gorgeous translucent orange vinyl as a double LP, and aside from looking fantastic, the album has been remastered and is accompanied by eight new live tracks.

Get it here.

MIA — Kala (Vinyl Me, Please reissue)

Vinyl Me, Please

Vinyl Me, Please is delivering a huge release as one of their records of the month for April: MIA’s most enduring and commercially successful album, her sophomore effort Kala. This exclusive variation of the album is pressed on vibrant neon purple and green vinyl as a 2-LP release, has been remastered, and comes with a booklet of listening notes to further enhance the experience of the album. VMP also put out special pressings on two other MIA albums this month, but those have already sold out.

Get it here.

Arcade Fire and Owen Pallett — Her (Original Score)

Sony

The Joaquin Phoenix- and Scarlett Johansson-starring film Her came out way back in 2013, but it took about eight years for Arcade Fire and Owen Pallett’s score of the film to get a standalone release. The music here earned a nomination for Best Original Score at the 2014 Academy Awards and Win Butler says of it, “There is a mysterious alchemy in the way sound and picture work together, notes and moods shifting and reacting to one another like a kaleidoscope… And even in the absence of visuals, the emotional landscape still remains.”

Get it here.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

Bonnaroo Festival’s Star-Studded 2021 Lineup Includes Lizzo, Tame Impala, And Megan Thee Stallion

After a year of canceling all US music festivals, organizers are feeling optimistic about the return of large, in-person events this summer. A handful of music festivals are setting their sights for late summer dates, and Bonnaroo is the latest to unveil their hopeful 2021 lineup. Celebrating their 20th anniversary, Bonnaroo has booked acts like Lizzo, Tame Impala, Megan Thee Stallion, and many more.

The Manchester, Tennessee festival has historically taken place in June, but organizers have opted to push the date back to the weekend of September 2-September 5 to be safe. Along with Lizzo, Tame Impala, and Megan Thee Stallion, Bonnaroo invited countless big-name acts to take the stage. Some of the names include Foo Fighters, Run The Jewels, Janelle Monáe, Glass Animals, Deftones, Young Thug, Jack Harlow, Grace Potter, Orville Peck, Kim Petras, Omar Apollo, Waxahatchee, My Morning Jacket, G-Eazy, Jason Isbell & The 400 Unit, Phoebe Bridgers, Tyler The Creator, Lana Del Rey, Lil Baby, Leon Bridges, Young the Giant, and Brittany Howard.

Bonnaroo

To celebrate their return, Bonnaroo aims to commemorate their 20th anniversary with exclusive NFT art. They’re selling their original digital 2021 lineup poster as an NFT, marking the first time a festival has dipped their toes into the cryptocurrency art market.

While music fans are getting excited about the idea of festivals returning, Tennessee’s governor shares the same sentiment. “It’s exciting to see Tennessee stages come back to life in time to celebrate the 20th anniversary of this internationally acclaimed festival,” Gov. Bill Lee said. “Fans are ready to gather together and celebrate their shared love of music once again. We welcome them back for a full Bonnaroo and what is sure to be a truly unforgettable event.”

See Bonnaroo’s full lineup above.

Tickets go on sale 3/31 at 10 am PST. Get them here.

Some of the artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

Glastonbury Is Hosting A Big Livestream Concert With Coldplay, Damon Albarn, And Others

It was announced at the top of 2021 that Glastonbury will not be hosting a festival this year (for the second year in a row) due to the pandemic. So, while thousands of people won’t be taking to the festival grounds this summer, they can enjoy a newly announced livestream concert that organizers are hosting.

“Live At Worthy Farm” is a ticketed livestream event that is set for May 22. As the name suggests, the show will take place at Worthy Farm and will feature Coldplay, Gorillaz’s Damon Albarn, Haim, Idles, Wolf Alice, Jorja Smith, Kano, Michael Kiwanuka, DJ Honey Dijon, and other currently unannounced performers.

This news shouldn’t surprise fans who have been following Glastonbury’s goings-on in recent months. In January, festival founder Michael Eavis said he wanted to do something to mark the festival’s anniversary: I would like to do something smaller somewhere around the anniversary date of when we started, which was the 18th of September 1970. I would like to consider possibly doing something around that time.” In December, Emily Eavis also noted, “We’re actually looking into the possibility of streaming some things from here if we can’t run the full show next year. We really want to get busy with planning some gigs — even if they’re to be streamed!”

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

FKA Twigs Fans Think Lil Nas X Ripped Her Off With His New ‘Montero (Call Me By Your Name)’ Video

Last night, after months of Hype, Lil Nas X finally released his “Montero (Call Me By Your Name)” video. Ahead of the premiere, he excitedly tweeted, “bro i wrote this song myself, co-directed the video, and had to step way out of my comfort zone for this moment to take place tonight! i hope you guys love it! F*CKK I CANT WAIT!!!” He later added, “can’t wait for you to see the video tonight! ITS AN EXPERIENCE!”

For some music fans, though, it was an experience they felt like they had seen before. Following the video’s debut, FKA Twigs became a trending topic on Twitter as people started point out perceived similarities between Nas’ new video and Twigs’ 2019 visual for “Cellophane.”

Twigs famously learned how to pole dance for her video and does so in mystical-looking environments, which is not unlike what Nas does in his clip. Some shared screenshots of frames from both videos that are strikingly similar. One user pointed out that Nas’s “Old Town Road” video won a Grammy over Twigs, which they felt added another layer of insult to Nas’ alleged plagiarism.

Check out some other reactions to Nas’ new “Montero (Call Me By Your Name)” video below.

Works By Nas, Janet Jackson, And Kermit The Frog Have Been Inducted Into The Library Of Congress

Having a work preserved in the National Recording Registry of the Library Of Congress is a significant honor, and now that feat is something a handful of artists can add to their resume. Today, the Library Of Congress announced its 2020 selections for the registry and among the highlights from the world of modern music are Nas’ 1994 album Illmatic and Janet Jackson’s 1989 album Rhythm Nation 1814.

Some other notable works include one of the oldest known audio recordings via Thomas Edison, Kermit The Frog’s “The Rainbow Connection,” Israel Kamakawiwo’ole’s “Over The Rainbow/What A Wonderful World,” Kool & The Gang’s “Celebration,” Jackson Browne’s Late For The Sky, and the This American Life episode “The Giant Pool Of Money,” which is the first podcast recording to be included in the National Recording Registry.

Librarian Of Congress Carla Hayden said, “The National Recording Registry will preserve our history through these vibrant recordings of music and voices that have reflected our humanity and shaped our culture from the past 143 years. We received about 900 public nominations this year for recordings to add to the registry, and we welcome the public’s input as the Library Of Congress and its partners preserve the diverse sounds of history and culture.”

Check out the full list of recordings from the 2020 class below.

1. “St. Louis Tinfoil” — Thomas Edison (1878)
2. “Nikolina” — Hjalmar Peterson (1917) (single)
3. “Smyrneikos Balos” — Marika Papagika (1928) (single)
4. “When The Saints Go Marching In” — Louis Armstrong (1938) (single)
5. Christmas Eve Broadcast — FDR & Winston Churchill (Dec. 24, 1941)
6. “The Guiding Light” — Nov. 22, 1945
7. Odetta Sings Ballads And Blues — Odetta (1957) (album)
8. “Lord, Keep Me Day by Day” — Albertina Walker And The Caravans (1959) (single)
9. Roger Maris hits his 61st home run (October 1, 1961)
10. Aida — Leontyne Price, et.al. (1962) (album)
11. “Once A Day” — Connie Smith (1964) (single)
12. Born Under A Bad Sign — Albert King (1967) (album)
13. Free To Be…You & Me — Marlo Thomas And Friends (1972) (album)
14. The Harder They Come — Jimmy Cliff (1972) (album)
15. “Lady Marmalade” — Labelle (1974) (single)
16. Late For The Sky — Jackson Browne (1974) (album)
17. Bright Size Life — Pat Metheny (1976) (album)
18. “The Rainbow Connection” — Kermit The Frog (1979) (single)
19. “Celebration” — Kool & The Gang (1980) (single)
20. Richard Strauss: Four Last Songs — Jessye Norman (1983) (album)
21. Rhythm Nation 1814 — Janet Jackson (1989) (album)
22. Partners — Flaco Jiménez (1992) (album)
23. “Over The Rainbow / What A Wonderful World” — Israel Kamakawiwo’ole (1993) (single)
24. Illmatic — Nas (1994) (album)
25. “This American Life: The Giant Pool Of Money” (May 9, 2008)