WhokilledXIX Deliver A Glitchy Performance Of ‘Spy?’ For ‘UPROXX Sessions’

WhokilledXIX’s glitchy new single “Spy?” is currently a TikTok favorite, reaching Spotify’s Viral 50 USA chart and sparking interest in the experimental duo, so it’s only natural that’s the song they’d play in their first UPROXX Sessions appearance. The track’s a rebellious anthem dedicated to suburban teenage angst, with defiant lines decrying poseurs and praising individuality over conformity.

WhokilledXIX is described as an experimental rap duo from Connecticut consisting of “lifelong best friends” Yung Skayda and Karm The Tool. Their music has become a favorite of TikTok’s influencers like Lele Pons and Charli D’Amelio, with their December 2020 EP 19 spawning “Spy?” and generating buzz for their April 2021 EP Fall Damage. Embracing an anti-establishment punk image and harnessing the antsy, contrarian energy of the more edgy corners of their online haven, the duo was able to parlay their viral success into a label deal with Masked Records.

Watch WhokilledXIX’s glitchy performance of ‘Spy?’ for UPROXX Sessions above.

UPROXX Sessions is Uproxx’s performance show featuring the hottest up-and-coming acts you should keep an eye on. Featuring creative direction from LA promotion collective, Ham On Everything, and taking place on our “bathroom” set designed and painted by Julian Gross, UPROXX Sessions is a showcase of some of our favorite performers, who just might soon be yours, too.

WhokilledXIX is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

Chloe x Halle’s Chloe Bailey Readies Her Solo Music With A Steamy Teaser

R&B sister duo Chloe x Halle dropped their acclaimed sophomore album Ungodly Hour in 2020, an effort that catapulted them into the mainstream. Ever since, the duo have performed at awards shows, contributed to viral challenges, and even earned a cosign from Michelle Obama. But since Halle Bailey is currently in the UK filming her starring role in an upcoming live action remake of The Little Mermaid, Chloe Bailey is making music on her own.

In recent months, Chloe has passed the time without her sister by sharing soaring covers of some of her favorite musicians. She’s taken on songs by Rihanna, Silk Sonic, Nina Simone, Cardi B, and more. But in order to celebrate her 23rd birthday, Chloe is preparing to release an original solo single.

The singer teased her solo debut with a brief, steamy preview of the song’s video. It features Chloe’s swooning voice over a vocal sample saying, “Booty so big / Lord have mercy.” The video itself reflects the sample’s theme, with Chloe twerking on a bed as she fires off boastful lyrics.

Posting the teaser to Twitter, Chloe wrote, “this is 23… HAVE MERCY” alongside a peach emoji.

Watch Bailey’s teaser above.

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

Electronic Artist Dawn Richard Gives Us A Guide To Her Favorite Black-Owned LA Art Spaces

Electronic artist Dawn Richard is one of those creators who seems to never rest. A former member of Danity Kane, the last decade saw Dawn drop four celebrated albums, appear in several films, guest on other artists’ albums, become a curator at Adult Swim, and open up her own successful vegan food truck in New Orleans, Papa Ted’s. When we entered a new decade, no one would’ve blamed the woman for resting on her laurels.

But we all knew that wasn’t happening, right? This year brought Richard’s latest — and greatest — album to date, Second Line, which rightfully debuted at #1 on the iTunes Electronic charts when it released a few months back. The nocturnal, pulsing rhythms throughout the whole run of Second Line harken back to the early days of techno, house, and the electronic genres that Black producers pioneered in the late ’70s and early ’80s, genres that would go on to define the sound and feel of modern music. In that sense, Second Line is both nostalgic and contemporary, with hints of futurism via the album’s imagery and production that point to where music might be in another five to ten years.

As the pandemic continues to wane, we hit up Dawn for a travel guide. We told her she could pick anyplace to focus on that she wanted and she hit us back with a guide to her five favorite Black-owned art spaces in Los Angeles. Before you jump into the guide, be sure to give Second Line a spin and watch the animated video for “Voodoo (Intermission)” below.

California African American Museum, Los Angeles

The inspiration I get walking into this place moves me. When I want to sketch, I always go there to get inspired. There is so much history in this place; it’s one of the popular Black Museums in Los Angeles. This was the first museum I visited when I moved to LA… I was just blown away.

Another fun visual is the interior design of the museum; I love the way the museum is designed and mapped. The flow feels good. I know most people wouldn’t look at that but I do, lol!

Brockman Gallery, Leimert Park

As soon as you walk into this Gallery you can feel its pulse. It’s small, boutique even. And that’s part of its charm. I’m someone who prefers light crowds and I feel like I can admire the art in such a better way at a gallery like this. Los Angeles can be massive, so finding a small gem that feels like it’s all for you is perfection.

I recommend all creatives check this slice of heaven out.

The Museum of African American Art, Los Angeles

I love the outreach that this museum does for artists in the community. Coming from New Orleans, community outreach was crucial for artists like me who had limited resources. I think the appeal of this museum for me is at any given time you can find local artists being supported or highlighted.

Not many museums showcase local talent like this space.

The Crenshaw Dairy Mart, Los Angeles

A lot of incredible artists can be found here! I try to go on Wednesdays because I find new intriguing artists every time. I like that it was founded by a collective of creatives, which makes it a haven for people like me. You get a sense of local support and community. When I was recording my album Goldenheart, I would come to the Mart for artistic stimulation.

Galerie Lakaye, Los Angeles

I love this space because they celebrate and showcase Haitian, Cuban, and contemporary ethnic art. Fabius, who was born in Port-au-Prince, came to the US when she was eight years old and runs the space along with her partner, Giacomini, a French American sculptor and artist. Being of Haitian decent it was something that felt close to home. Six years ago, I discovered my Haitian culture and have been learning and delving into my heritage ever since.

This modern space shows the best of Haitian art and its artists. I learn new visual stories every time I visit, and feel closer to Haiti artistically when I visit. I grab a cup of coffee and just experience the beauty!

Njomza Once Found Herself Deep In ‘Limbo,’ But Now She’s Emerged With A New Sense Of Direction

According to the singer herself, Njomza means “a fresh bud of a flower, before it blooms.” She shared this during a 2019 interview with FOMO Blog before adding, “It’s the new bud, so it means something fresh, something new, something youthful.” At just 27 years old, Njomza embodies the full meaning of her name. She’s still young and her music and presence in the industry could be considered new and fresh to many. With just two EPs and a mixtape under her belt, Njomza is just getting started.

That brings us to the release of her third EP, Limbo. The quarantine-made project captures the lengthy moment of uncertainty that Njomza experienced over the past fifteen months, one that those who listen to the project will surely relate to. Its seven songs deliver what is the Chicago-raised artist’s most collaborative affair yet as it boasts contributions from Russ, Ari Lennox, Metro Mars, and WurID. However, make no mistake, Njomza has plenty of experience working with other artists like Ariana Grande for example and she helped penned the pop sensation’s “7 Rings” and “Thank U, Next” singles.

Fresh off the release of Limbo, Uproxx caught up with the singer to talk about the EP, how she dealt with her own period of uncertainty last year, and what she hopes listeners take away from Limbo.

It seems like the theme of this project, Limbo, is isolation with self or isolation with someone, confiding with them in a sense. What inspired this?

Being in quarantine, I feel like we were in a place that we were kind of in limbo. Also, I kind of noticed while I was writing the songs that they were kind of manifesting themselves into this project. I had initially finished my album first, and then Limbo came to be once I was already done with my album. So I was like, this needs to come up first before the album because I wanted it to be an EP. I didn’t see it as an album, even though I ended up treating it that way, but it’s really just like that back and forth of a relationship. That in-between space where you don’t know what direction y’all are headed, you don’t know if it’s the right thing for you, and the relationship really being in limbo.

Do you feel like you’ve broken out of limbo? If you have, what was the moment where you were like, “Okay, I’m free from this moment of uncertainty?”

I feel like I’m definitely coming out of it. The moment, I would just say, for me, is just choosing myself and getting to know myself first rather than falling into all those little traps to be in limbo. I really took time while being in that position to get to know myself and kind of figure out what I want for my life and my own self. So that was really the moment, just choosing me first before anything else.

With this period of uncertainty, are you someone that rides it out until it goes away? Or do you look for a way out of it as quickly as possible when it arrives?

I feel like I’m definitely the person that once I realized what’s going on, I have to pivot, I have to figure out a new direction. Especially if I’m seeing that it’s not serving me well. Obviously, we all fall back into stuff that we don’t want to fall back into sometimes, but I would definitely say I’m the second option definitely, as soon as I realize it I’m like, I gotta get out of here.

That brings me back to the pandemic. I can only imagine that if that’s an innate and natural feeling to you, it must’ve been hard for you to accept that breaking out of the pandemic world and its weirdness was hard.

During quarantine, I mean, it was so depressing, obviously, with everything going on in the world. Then, my whole career stopped, it was at a halt. I was supposed to drop my album, I was just planning to do so much. So coping with that, I really just leaned towards recording myself. I spent a lot of time recording myself at the house and trying to stay safe, but still being creative. The song “Honestly” on my project, on Limbo, I recorded at home and wrote it at home in my bedroom. That’s one of the songs on Limbo that I felt was birthed in quarantine. I was just trying to stay creative, trying to keep myself sane, while not freaking out every day.

What does this phrase, “finding comfort in discomfort,” mean to you? Especially now that we’re breaking out of pandemic life and getting back to a world that we once knew?

Finding comfort and discomfort, I feel like that phrase is my whole life in a nutshell. I feel like being an artist, for me, is exciting, but it’s also uncomfortable, like having to constantly present myself and be perceived to the world. I think the biggest thing for me recently has been being okay with being uncomfortable and being perceived all the time and having to constantly put my foot forward as an artist and show who I really am. I feel like releasing music is such a vulnerable process in all forms, when it comes to videos, the songs, [and] performing them. It’s just kind of finding comfort with that. That’s what it means to be at least, when I hear that that’s what I think about.

Have you ever found yourself trying to change how you create music so that it gets perceived in the way you want it to? Or do you just put it out and accept that everyone will receive it in their own way because that’s sort of the beauty of art?

I guess if I’m being completely honest, it’s got to be a little bit of both because as a songwriter, I feel like I can write any genre I want. I feel comfortable doing that and I listened to so many different genres, so in a way, I almost have to kind of think about what it’s going to be perceived as when I’m making a project. For Limbo, there’s a sound with Limbo and it kind of stays in this world. With my upcoming album, it’s the same thing. I feel like it’s different than Limbo, obviously, there are notes that are the same, like I’m singing all of this, so it’s still in that realm, but when I make projects, they become their own world. I think about what it means to me, but I also think about how my fans are going to perceive it or how the listeners are going to perceive it, I definitely think about that. But you can only think about it so much, because like you said, people are going to take it and run with it however they want. My hope is just that people feel it in a similar way that I do or at least they feel my intention behind it though.

Heading back to the music on the project, with the title track, “Limbo,” you mention money, fame, and pride as things that would interfere with a relationship. Are there any other things that get in the way whether it be through your doing or from your partners?

I guess pride is the best word out of those three, just covering all those bases, as something that can get in the way with not only romantic relationships, but friendships [and] all sorts of relationships. I definitely have dealt with that in my relationships and ego can definitely get in the way. There’s just a lot of paranoia all across the board when it comes to the music industry and especially living in LA. You just question people’s intentions and I think when you can put that aside and just realize we’re all human, we can prosper. I feel like those things definitely get in the way.

Moving onto “Over And Done,” you’re hit with the unexpected end of a relationship. How do you personally try and cope with things ending out of the blue?

You just have to realize that it’s just life at the end of the day. You can’t control people, all you can control is the way you react to situations. That’s just something that, personally, I just try to do in the best way possible. My new thing is that I’m trying not to take everything personally, that’s my new thing right now. My new motto is don’t take anything personally Because a lot of the times it’s not, everyone’s dealing with their own sh*t. I think that’s how I cope with it.

Contrary to your other projects, you worked with a lot of people on Limbo. There’s Russ, WurID, Metro Mars, and Ari Lennox. Why did you decide to incorporate so many new acts into this project?

I love collaborating and I’m excited that I’m finally just starting to do it. I’ve always just focused on writing my own music and getting my own sound figured out. I feel like I’m in a space now where I know what I’m bringing to the table, so I feel comfortable working with other artists and writers. I’m excited to see what other collaborations I’ll do in the future. I’m so open to it, so I guess we’ll see.

What’s the best advice you can give to someone who feels like they’re in limbo?

My best advice is to go inward and get to know yourself because I feel like we’ve finally kind of had the time and space to do so. Put yourself first as much as you can and just strive for the better. That’s the best advice I could give in this situation.

I don’t want to dive too far into this, but how might Limbo go hand in hand with your next body of work? In terms of how the journey from Limbo to your next album might go?

I think Limbo is leading me to a place where I really am finding myself and focusing less on my relationships, I guess, and — still focusing on my relationships — but putting more focus on me and dealing with my emotions. That’s what I would say Limbo is leading me to.

For someone who might be new to your music or even someone who’s been a fan, once they finish Limbo, what’s something that you hope they take away with it?

I just hope that you can feel me as a human on these songs and that you just get something positive out of it. Whether it’s literally just being able to ride home from work and listen to the project and vibe out or it hits you a little deeper and taps into what you’re actually going through in life, I just hope it hits a heartstring in one way or another.

Limbo is out now via SinceThe80s/Motown. Get it here.

Njomza is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

Common Lays Out An Optimistic Vision Of The Future In His Carefree ‘Imagine’ Video

After a year and a half of lockdown, Common is ready to reenter the world with a new perspective. Following up on the release of his 2020 album A Beautiful Revolution Pt 1, Common looks forward to a brighter future with his inspiring “Imagine” video featuring LA-based singer PJ.

Directed by Emmanuel Afolabi, the visual was filmed as LA began to lift lockdown restrictions across the city. It sees Common hitting the streets in his community, meeting with fans and preaching the importance of connecting to one another.

About the track, Common said he wrote the song during a difficult time, so he wrote the song to serve as inspiration for making it through:

“I wrote ‘Imagine’ at a time when we were all going through a lot. But something kept telling me to focus on the good and the things I wanted to see in the world. For me, music is one of the things that gives me hope and happiness throughout these times, whether I am creating it or listening to it. So I wanted ‘Imagine’ to create that feeling of how you can play a song and feel inspired. How a song can make you move and also move your spirit. Essentially, I want us all to feel like days are getting better and that great times are ours for the taking. And the first step in feeling that way is imagining it.”

Listen to Common’s “Imagine” above.

David Geffen Is Donating $150 Million To Yale So Drama Students Can Attend Tuition-Free

In addition to being a giant in the entertainment world, mega-magnate David Geffen—founder of DreamWorks, Geffen Records, Asylum Records, and more—is equally well known for his philanthropic efforts. Particularly when it comes to the arts and investing in the talent of the future, as evidenced by premier cultural centers like UCLA’s Geffen Playhouse and Lincoln Center’s David Geffen Hall.

While UCLA has been the recipient of hundreds of millions of Geffen’s dollars over the years, he’s now sending some of that same generosity to the east coast with a $150 million donation to the Yale School of Drama, which Deadline reports will allow approximately 200 students per year to attend the prestigious training ground—tuition-free.

“By reducing the debt burden of the average student, we create more resilient artists and managers who are able to make braver artistic choices—they’re able to take that downtown play and they don’t have to have a career selling real estate on the side,” said drama school dean James Bundy. “Not every artist is going to break through at the age of 25 or 26 or 27. Certain kinds of careers take time to build, and entering the professions with less debt is going to make for more interesting and more resounding choices in the long run.”

Yale offers one of the most competitive drama schools in the world and its alumni include the best of the best: Meryl Streep, Paul Newman, Frances McDormand, Angela Bassett, Tony Shalhoub, Patricia Clarkson, and Lupita Nyong’o are just some of the school’s acting alumni. But its programs include design, directing, and playwrighting, too, so they’ve got plenty of past students to boast about behind the camera and stage scenes, too.

Deadline reports that Geffen’s gift is the largest donation in the history of American theater. Appropriately, the school will now be renamed the David Geffen School of Drama at Yale University.

(Via Deadline)

All The New Albums Coming Out In July 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 July. If you’re not trying to potentially miss out on anything, it might be a good idea to keep reading.

Friday, July 2

  • Attawalpa — Patterns EP (White Label Collective)
  • Bobby Gillespie And Jehnny Beth — Utopian Ashes (Third Man Records)
  • Broken Fires — New Friends EP (Phwoar & Peace Records)
  • Caitlin Mae — Perspective EP (Monstercat)
  • Chinatown Slalom — Meet The Parents EP (September Recordings)
  • Cloudland — Where We Meet (HeyHey Studios)
  • Cub Scout Bowling Pins — Clang Clang Ho (Rockathon Records)
  • Dennis Lloyd — Some Days (Arista Records)
  • Desperate Journalist — Maximum Sorrow! (Fierce Panda)
  • Earl Slick — Fist Full Of Devils (Schnitzel)
  • G Herbo — 25 (Machine Entertainment Group)
  • The Go! Team — Get Up Sequences Part One (Memphis Industries Records)
  • Izzy True — Our Beautiful Baby World (Don Giovanni Records)
  • Laura Mvula — Pink Noise (Atlantic Records)
  • Molly Lewis — The Forgotten Edge EP (Jagjaguwar)
  • Mr Jukes & Barney Artist — The Locket (The Locket Records/Virgin Music)
  • The Quireboys — A Bit Of What You Fancy 2 (EMI)
  • Risely — Meantime Fades (self-released)
  • Sebastian Plano — Save Me Not (Decca Records)
  • Snapped Ankles — Forest Of Your Problems (The Leaf Label)
  • Steve Marriner — Hope Dies Last (Stony Plain Records)
  • Stone Giants — West Coast Love Stories (Nomark)
  • Sun Crow — Quest for Oblivion (Ripple Music)
  • Supermilk — Four by Three (Specialist Subject Records)
  • Vince Mendoza — Freedom Over Everything (Modern Recordings)

Sunday, July 4

  • Lana Del Rey — Blue Bannisters (Interscope/Polydor)

Friday, July 9

  • The Academic — Community Spirit EP (Capitol Records)
  • Arushi Jain — Under The Lilac Sky (Leaving Records)
  • Attacca Quartet — Real Life (Sony Classical)
  • Charlotte Day Wilson — Alpha (Stone Woman Music)
  • Dylan Cartlidge — Hope Above Adversity (Glassnote Records)
  • DZ Deathrays — Positive Rising: Part 2 (Alcopop! Records)
  • Eden James — All The Good Blank Are Taken (Dandy Ram Records)
  • The Flatlanders — Treasure Of Love (Rack’em Records/Thirty Tigers)
  • Foodman — Yasuragi Land (Hyperdub)
  • Half Waif — Mythopoetics (Anti-)
  • Hannah Dasher — The Half Record (Sony Music Nashville)
  • Hardline — Heart, Mind And Soul (Frontiers)
  • IDK — USEE4YOURSELF (Warner Records)
  • Jahvillani — Dirt To Bentley (VP Records)
  • Jeremy Ferrara — Everything I Hold (AST Records)
  • Jerome Thomas — That Secret Sauce EP (Rhythm Section)
  • Jimmy Jam And Terry Lewis — Jam & Lewis Volume One (Flyte Tyme Records)
  • JOON — Dream Again (Italians Do It Better)
  • Junaco — Blue Room EP (Side Hustle Records)
  • Justin Pierre Courtney — The Price Of Salt EP (Epitaph Records)
  • LA Guns — Cocked & Loaded Live (Frontiers)
  • Lords Of Altamont — Tune In, Turn On, Electrify! (Heavy Psych Sounds)
  • Mads Christensen — 5212 Helvete (Edged Circle Productions)
  • The Maine — XOXO: From Love And Anxiety In Real Time (Photo Finish Records/8123)
  • Meggie Lennon — Sounds From Your Lips (Mothland)
  • Murray McLauchlan — Hourglass (True North Records)
  • Museum Of Love — Life Of Mammals (DFA Records)
  • Real Sickies — Love Is for Lovers (Stomp Records)
  • Serj Tankian — Cool Gardens Poetry Suite (Serjical Strike Records)
  • Soda Blonde — Small Talk (Velveteen Records)
  • Soul Asylum — Stand Up And Be Strong EP (Legacy)
  • Spice Girls — Wannabe25 EP (UMe/Virgin)
  • Thought Leaders — In Wastelands (King of Sticks Records)
  • Tkay Maidza — Last Year Was Weird, Vol. 3 EP (4AD/Dew Process)
  • Toni Sauna — Denise (Def Pressé)
  • Twin Shadow — Twin Shadow (Cheree Cheree)
  • Typical Sisters — Love Beam (Joyful Noise Recordings)
  • Various Artists — Space Jam: A New Legacy Official Soundtrack (Republic Records/WaterTower Music)
  • Vince Staples — Vince Staples (Def Jam)
  • The Wallflowers — Exit Wounds (New West Records)

Friday, July 16

  • Ampersounds feat. Rufus Wainwright — West End EP (West End Records)
  • Anya Hinkle — Eden And Her Borderlands (Organic Records)
  • Bacao Rhythm & Steel Band — Expansions (Big Crown Records)
  • Barenaked Ladies — Detour De Force (Vanguard)
  • Big City — Testify X (Frontiers)
  • Charli Adams — Bullseye (Color Study)
  • Charlie Worsham — Sugarcane EP (Warner)
  • Chet Faker — Hotel Surrender (Detail Records/BMG)
  • Clairo — Sling (Fader/Republic/Interscope)
  • Dave McMurray — Grateful Dedication (Blue Note)
  • Dave Mullen — Solace (Mullsoul Music)
  • Felicity — Dear Universe (Adventure Cat Records)
  • The Flaming Lips — The Soft Bulletin Companion (Warner Bros.)
  • GOAD — La Belle Dame (My Kingdom Music)
  • Hollie Kenniff — The Quiet Drift (Western Vinyl)
  • The Hornets — Heavier Than A Stone (Go Down Records)
  • Ida Mae — Click Click Domino (Thirty Tigers)
  • Inhaler — It Won’t Always Be Like This (Polydor Records)
  • James Vickery — Songs That Made Me Feel (Th3rd Brain Records)
  • James Vincent McMorrow — Grapefruit Season (Sony Music UK/RCA Records)
  • Jayla Kai — Epitome EP (Everybody’s Music)
  • John R. Miller — Depreciated (Rounder Records)
  • Johnny Lloyd — La La La (Xtra Mile)
  • Kate Vargas — Rumpumpo (Big Machine)
  • Kenneth Whalum — Broken Land 2 (Secretly Canadian/Broken Land Records)
  • KSI — All Over The Place (RBC Records/BMG)
  • Lawrence Rothman — Good Morning, America (KRO)
  • Leila Abdul-Rauf — Phantasiai (Cyclic Law)
  • Lovelorn — What’s Yr Damage (6131)
  • Lou Price — Parkside Grooming EP (Hand In Hive)
  • Marc Ribler — The Whole World Awaits You (Wicked Cool Records)
  • Nathaniel Rateliff — Red Rocks 2020 (Stax Records)
  • Nene H — Ali (Incienso)
  • Oscar Lang — Chew The Scenery (Dirty Hit)
  • Rodrigo Amarante — Drama (Polyvinyl)
  • Runnner — Always Repeating (Run For Cover Records)
  • Smile Machine — Bye For Now (Exploding In Sound Records)
  • Stephen Fretwell — Busy Guy (Speedy Wunderground)
  • Thadeus Gonzalez — Opposite Faces (Ripple Music)
  • Toby Hitchcock — Changes (Frontiers)
  • Tommy Ward — From This Moment On EP (Le Coq Records)
  • Tones And I — Welcome To The Madhouse (Bad Batch Records)
  • Trampolene — Love No Less Than A Queen (Strap Originals)
  • Umphrey’s Mcgee — You Walked Up Shaking In Your Boots But You Stood Tall And Left A Raging Bull (Nothing Too Fancy Music)
  • U-Roy — Solid Gold U-Roy (Trojan Jamaica/BMG)
  • Velvet Insane — Rock n’ Roll Glitter Suit (Wild Kingdom Records)
  • Wavves — Hideaway (Fat Possum)
  • Willow — Lately I Feel Everything (MSFTSMusic/Roc Nation/Polydor)
  • The Zolas — Come Back To Life (Light Organ Records)

Friday, July 23

  • Alexis Marshall — House Of Lull, House Of When (Sargent House)
  • Anne-Marie — Therapy (Asylum)
  • Bardo — Everywhere Reminds Me Of Space (Yemayá Sol Records)
  • Chiiild — Hope For Sale (Avant Garden Records)
  • Clay Melton — Back To Blue EP (Cheree Cheree)
  • Dallas Burrow — Dallas Burrow (Subliminal Hymnal)
  • Darkside — Spiral (Matador)
  • David Crosby — For Free (BMG)
  • Descendents — 9th & Walnut (Epitaph Records)
  • Jackson Browne — Downhill From Everywhere (Inside Recordings)
  • Jazzparty — Nobody Gets Away (Remote Control)
  • Joshua Radin — The Ghost And The Wall (Nettwerk)
  • The Jungle Giants — Love Signs (Amplifire Music)
  • Krist Rogers And The Dirty Gems — Still Dirty (Wicked Cool Records)
  • L Devine — Near Life Experience: Part 1 EP (Warner Bros. Records)
  • Leon Bridges — Gold-Diggers Sound (Columbia)
  • Leslie Winer — When I Hit You You’ll Feel It (Light in the Attic)
  • LOLAA — La Marea (Arts & Crafts)
  • Maya Beiser — Maya Beiser x Philip Glass (Islandia Music Records)
  • Mega Bog — Life And Another (Paradise of Bachelors)
  • Molly Burch — Romantic Images (Captured Tracks)
  • Montezuma’s Revenge — S.W.I.M. (DTH Records)
  • Oh Baby — Hey Genius (Burning Witches Records)
  • Rodney Crowell — Triage (RC1)
  • Shiny Joe Ryan — Shiny’s Democracy (Spinning Top)
  • Sleep Waker — Alias (UNFD)
  • Vaines — Electric Blue EP (Hopeless Records)
  • Woods — More Strange (Woodsist)
  • Yngwie Malmsteen — Parabellum (Music Theories Recordings)

Friday, July 30

  • Alan Vega — Alan Vega After Dark (In the Red)
  • Alex Rex — Paradise (Neolithic Recordings)
  • Big Big Train — Common Ground (English Electric)
  • Billie Eilish — Happier Than Ever (Darkroom/Interscope Records)
  • Bleachers — Take The Sadness Out Of Saturday Night (RCA Records)
  • Blues Traveler — Traveler’s Blues (Loud & Proud)
  • Chunk! No, Captain Chunk! — Gone Are The Good Days (Fearless Records)
  • Clay Walker — Texas To Tennessee (Show Dog Nashville)
  • Dee Snider — Leave A Scar (Napalm Records)
  • Dot Allison — Heart-Shaped Scars (SA Recordings)
  • The Effens — Eventually EP (Hidden Pony)
  • Erasure — The Neon Remixed (Mute Records)
  • Grizfolk — Grizfolk (Virgin)
  • The Halluci Nation — One More Saturday Night (Radicalized Records)
  • Jelani Aryeh — I’ve Got Some Living To Do (Imperial/No Matter)
  • Jeremy Squires — Unravel (Blackbird Record Label)
  • King Woman — Celestial Blues (Relapse)
  • Lantlos — Wildhund (Prophecy Productions)
  • Leela James — See Me (BMG)
  • Los Lobos — Native Sons (New West Records)
  • Lump — Animal (Partisan Records)
  • My Idea — That’s My Idea EP (Hardly Art)
  • Naia Izumi — A Residency In The Los Angeles Area (Sony)
  • Prince — Welcome 2 America (Legacy Recordings)
  • Ric Robertson — Carolina Child (Big Machine)
  • Seether — Wasteland — The Purgatory EP (Fantasy Records)
  • Skirts — Great Big Wild Oak (Double Double Whammy)
  • Sleep Moscow — Of The Sun (Majestic Mountain Records)
  • Son Volt — Electro Melodier (Transmit Sound)
  • Sonny & The Sunsets — New Day With New Possibilities (Rocks In Your Head Records)
  • Sycco — Sycco’s First EP (Future Classic)
  • Torres — Thirstier (Merge Records)
  • The Tubs — Names EP (Prefect Records)
  • Tush — Fantast (Do Right! Music)
  • The Wandering Hearts — The Wandering Hearts (Decca Records)
  • William Cashion — Postcard Music Remixes EP (Ideas For Housecrafts)
  • Yola — Stand For Myself (Easy Eye Sound)
  • ZRL — Our Savings (American Dreams Records)

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

Iggy Azalea Claims She Had A Shady Encounter With Britney Spears’ Father

After Britney Spears spoke about her conservatorship in court recently, some of her peers in music came forward with messages of support for the pop star. Now, Iggy Azalea — who collaborated with Spears on the 2015 single “Pretty Girls” and performed with her at at 2015 Billboard Music Awards — shared some experiences she had with Spears, her father, and her team.

In a tweet she tagged #FreeBritney, Azalea showed support for Spears and wrote that she “personally witnessed the same behavior Britney detailed in regards to her father last week.” One example she noted was, “I saw her restricted from even the most bizarre & trivial things: like how many sodas she was allowed to drink.” She also wrote, “Her father conveniently waited until literally moments before our BMAs performance when I was backstage in the dressing room & told me if I did not sign an NDA he would not allow me on stage.”

Azalea concluded her post, “Britney Spears should not be forced to co-exist with that man when she’s made it clear it is negatively impacting her mental health. This is not right at all.”

Find Azalea’s post below.

“Its basic human decency to at the very least remove a person Britney has identified as abusive from her life. This should be illegal.

During the time we worked together in 2015, I personally witnessed the same behavior Britney detailed in regards to her father last week and I just want to back her up & tell the world that: She is not exaggerating or lying.

I saw her restricted from even the most bizarre & trivial things: like how many sodas she was allowed to drink. Why is that even Necessary?

Her father conveniently waited until literally moments before our BMAs performance when I was backstage in the dressing room & told me if I did not sign an NDA he would not allow me on stage.

The way he went about getting me to sign a contract, sounded similar to the tactics Britney spoke about last week in regards to her Las Vegas show.

Jamie Spears has a habit of making people sign documents while under Duress it seems, and Britney Spears should not be forced to co-exist with that man when she’s made it clear it is negatively impacting her mental health.

This is not right at all.”

Iggy Azalea Claims She Had A Shady Encounter With Britney Spears’ Father

After Britney Spears spoke about her conservatorship in court recently, some of her peers in music came forward with messages of support for the pop star. Now, Iggy Azalea — who collaborated with Spears on the 2015 single “Pretty Girls” and performed with her at at 2015 Billboard Music Awards — shared some experiences she had with Spears, her father, and her team.

In a tweet she tagged #FreeBritney, Azalea showed support for Spears and wrote that she “personally witnessed the same behavior Britney detailed in regards to her father last week.” One example she noted was, “I saw her restricted from even the most bizarre & trivial things: like how many sodas she was allowed to drink.” She also wrote, “Her father conveniently waited until literally moments before our BMAs performance when I was backstage in the dressing room & told me if I did not sign an NDA he would not allow me on stage.”

Azalea concluded her post, “Britney Spears should not be forced to co-exist with that man when she’s made it clear it is negatively impacting her mental health. This is not right at all.”

Find Azalea’s post below.

“Its basic human decency to at the very least remove a person Britney has identified as abusive from her life. This should be illegal.

During the time we worked together in 2015, I personally witnessed the same behavior Britney detailed in regards to her father last week and I just want to back her up & tell the world that: She is not exaggerating or lying.

I saw her restricted from even the most bizarre & trivial things: like how many sodas she was allowed to drink. Why is that even Necessary?

Her father conveniently waited until literally moments before our BMAs performance when I was backstage in the dressing room & told me if I did not sign an NDA he would not allow me on stage.

The way he went about getting me to sign a contract, sounded similar to the tactics Britney spoke about last week in regards to her Las Vegas show.

Jamie Spears has a habit of making people sign documents while under Duress it seems, and Britney Spears should not be forced to co-exist with that man when she’s made it clear it is negatively impacting her mental health.

This is not right at all.”

Iggy Azalea Claims She Had A Shady Encounter With Britney Spears’ Father

After Britney Spears spoke about her conservatorship in court recently, some of her peers in music came forward with messages of support for the pop star. Now, Iggy Azalea — who collaborated with Spears on the 2015 single “Pretty Girls” and performed with her at at 2015 Billboard Music Awards — shared some experiences she had with Spears, her father, and her team.

In a tweet she tagged #FreeBritney, Azalea showed support for Spears and wrote that she “personally witnessed the same behavior Britney detailed in regards to her father last week.” One example she noted was, “I saw her restricted from even the most bizarre & trivial things: like how many sodas she was allowed to drink.” She also wrote, “Her father conveniently waited until literally moments before our BMAs performance when I was backstage in the dressing room & told me if I did not sign an NDA he would not allow me on stage.”

Azalea concluded her post, “Britney Spears should not be forced to co-exist with that man when she’s made it clear it is negatively impacting her mental health. This is not right at all.”

Find Azalea’s post below.

“Its basic human decency to at the very least remove a person Britney has identified as abusive from her life. This should be illegal.

During the time we worked together in 2015, I personally witnessed the same behavior Britney detailed in regards to her father last week and I just want to back her up & tell the world that: She is not exaggerating or lying.

I saw her restricted from even the most bizarre & trivial things: like how many sodas she was allowed to drink. Why is that even Necessary?

Her father conveniently waited until literally moments before our BMAs performance when I was backstage in the dressing room & told me if I did not sign an NDA he would not allow me on stage.

The way he went about getting me to sign a contract, sounded similar to the tactics Britney spoke about last week in regards to her Las Vegas show.

Jamie Spears has a habit of making people sign documents while under Duress it seems, and Britney Spears should not be forced to co-exist with that man when she’s made it clear it is negatively impacting her mental health.

This is not right at all.”