Lil Nas X Calls Out The BET Awards For Giving Him ‘An Outstanding Zero Nominations’ For Its 2022 Show

The BET Award nominations for 2022 were revealed today and fans had plenty of thoughts about who was selected for the upcoming show. Noticeably missing from the nominees was Lil Nas X, who had two Billboard chart-topping hits last year with “Montero (Call Me By Your Name)” and “Industry Baby,” which featured Jack Harlow. He also had another top-10 hit with “That’s What I Want.”

Fans noticed that Harlow, who received his first No. 1 single with “Industry Baby,” received a nomination for Best Male Hip-Hop Artist, and they immediately called out BET. “Jack Harlow got a BET award nom and Lil Nas X didn’t? During pride month? During Black Music History month? Is that what I’m seeing?,” said Twitter user @Tendurag.

Lil Nas X responded to the nominations in the most Lil Nas X way possible. “Thank you bet awards,” he said in a now-deleted tweet. “An outstanding zero nominations again. black excellence!”

lil nas x tweet thank you bet
via twitter

He later clarified that it wasn’t the lack of nominations that peeved him, but rather the lack of representation of Black and queer artists.

“I just feel like black gay ppl have to fight to be seen in this world,” he said in another deleted tweet, “and even when we make it to the top mfs try to pretend we are invisible.”

lil nas x tweet invisible
via Twitter

The 2022 BET Awards will air Sunday, June 26 at 8 p.m. EST / 7 p.m. CST on BET.

Jack Harlow is a Warner Music Artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

Normani Celebrates Her Birthday With A Golden Bikini Photo Shoot In Cabo


Normani seems to have a knack for timing her new music drops with racy photo shoots on her Instagram feed. Back in March, the “Wild Side” singer posed completely naked on a couch while explaining the inspiration behind her single “Fair,” which came out four days later. “This song really captures me in one of my most vulnerable moments,” she commented back then.

Now just two days after indicating that her next single is called “Candy Paint,” Normani donned a golden bikini in idyllic Palmilla, Los Cabos, Mexico for a series of photos on Instagram. Pretty smart marketing? Sure. But we’ll give her a pass, because Normani’s post was in celebration of her 26th birthday. “Just feeling sooooo grateful today,” she commented. “Thank you lord for twenty six years around the sun. it’s y’all favorite bad bitch birthdaaaaaaaaay.” The shoot moved from a swank pad, to a boat, to a beachside hut.

Meanwhile Normani and Sam Smith recently came under fire when a copyright infringement claim was filed over their mega hit “Dancing With A Stranger.” The songwriters behind Jordan Vincent’s largely unknown electropop song “Dancing With Strangers alleged that, “The hook/chorus in both songs — the most significant part and artistic aspect of these works — contains the lyrics ‘dancing with a stranger’ being sung over a nearly identical melody and musical composition.”

BTS Hung Out With H.E.R. At Dave & Busters After Their White House Visit

It’s been a busy week for the Bangtan Boys as they visited the White House to close out Asian American and Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander (AANHPI) Heritage Month. The visit with Joe Biden was to discuss the rise of anti-Asian hate in the US and the importance of Asian representation in business, media, politics, and pop culture. And while the visit drew some predictable derision from conservative circles, BTS themselves were far too busy doing more important things to notice — things like taking R&B star and fellow Asian heritage representer H.E.R. on a group outing to Dave & Busters.

J-Hope caught much of the fun on his Instagram Story, which found the group shooting hoops — H.E.R. and Jungkook tied, according to the R&B star’s own Instagram Story — and Jungkook giving H.E.R. some friendly advice on protecting her wrist on the arcade’s boxing machine. It looks like everybody had a blast, even with the language barrier.

The outing was also likely a chance for H.E.R. to get a much-needed break from her day job opening for Coldplay on their Music Of The Spheres Tour. Considering how much effort she puts into her live performances — playing multiple instruments while belting out virtuoso vocals on songs like “We Made It” — the chance to relax and unwind appears to have been much appreciated. Having great company is just icing on the cake.

All The New Albums Coming Out In June 2022

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 June. If you’re not trying to potentially miss out on anything, it might be a good idea to keep reading.

Friday, June 3

  • 070 Shake — You Can’t Kill Me (GOOD Music)
  • Al Riggs — Themselves (Horse Complex Records)
  • Andrew Bird — Inside Problems (Loma Vista / Concord)
  • Angel Olsen — Big Time (Jagjaguwar)
  • Astronoid — Radiant Bloom (3Dot Recordings)
  • Ben Zaidi — Acre of Salt (Nettwerk Records)
  • Chelsea Rose — Truth or Consequences (Paul Is Dead Records)
  • Drive-By Truckers — Welcome 2 Club XIII (ATO Records)
  • Fantastic Negrito — White Jesus Black Problems (Storefront Records)
  • Farees — Galactic Africa (Rez’Arts Prod)
  • The Fixx — Every Five Seconds (BFD/The Orchard)
  • Flaccid Mojo — Flaccid Mojo (Castle Face)
  • Forgiveness — Next Time Could Be Your Last Time (Gondwana Records)
  • Frank Zappa — Zappa/Erie (Zappa Records/UMe)
  • Gene On Earth — Time On The Vine (Limousine Dream)
  • T. Gowdy — Miracles (Constellation)
  • GWAR– The New Dark Ages (Pit Records)
  • Have You Ever Seen The Jane Fonda Aerobic VHS? — Maine Coon (Vild Recordings)
  • Horsegirl — Versions of Modern Performance (Matador)
  • iamamiwhoami — Be Here Soon (To whom it may concern)
  • Jasmyn — In the Wild (ANTI- & Royal Mountain)
  • Jelly Crystal — ILY EP (Smuggler Music/PIAS)
  • Ken Yates — Cerulean (Ken Yates)
  • Killswitch Engage — Live At The Palladium (Metal Blade Records)
  • L’Objectif — We Aren’t Getting Out But Tonight We Might EP (Chess Club Records)
  • Las Cruces — Cosmic Tears (Ripple Music)
  • Mary Gauthier — Dark Enough To See The Stars (Thirty Tigers)
  • Memphis May Fire — Remade in Misery (Rise Records)
  • Michael Franti & Spearhead — Follow Your Heart (Boo Boo Wax)
  • Mr Little Jeans — Better Days (Nettwerk)
  • Namir Blade — Metropolis (Mello Music Group)
  • Oklahoma Kid — Tangerine Tragic (Arising Empire)
  • Poliça — Madness (Memphis Industries)
  • Post Malone — Twelve Carat Toothache (Mercury Records/Republic Records)
  • Purity Ring — Graves EP (The Fellowship)
  • Queen of Jeans — Hiding in Place EP (Memory Music)
  • S.G. Goodman — Teeth Marks (Verve Forecast)
  • Saajtak — For the Makers (American Dreams)
  • Sub Urban — Hive (Warner Records)
  • The Suffers — It Starts with Love (Missing Piece Records)
  • Tedeschi Trucks Band — I Am The Moon: I. Crescent (Fantasy Records)
  • Tove Styrke — Hard (Records/Columbia)
  • Tuff Bear — Tuff Bear’s Picnic (Acrophase Records)
  • Ural Thomas and The Pain — Dancing Dimensions (Bella Union)
  • The Zells — Ant Farm (Crafted Sounds)

Friday, June 10

  • A Little Farther West — Vaya Con Dios (Town & Country Records)
  • Adrian Quesada — Boleros Psicodélicos (ATO Records)
  • Allison Ponthier — Shaking Hands with Elvis EP (Interscope Records)
  • American Aquarium — Chicamacomico (Thirty Tigers)
  • André Bratten — Picture Music (Smalltown Supersound)
  • Between Friends — Cutie EP (10K Projects)
  • Big Gigantic — Brighter Future 2 (self-released)
  • Billy Howerdel — What Normal Was (Alchemy Recordings/Rise Records/BMG)
  • Bloomsday — Place to Land (Bayonet Records)
  • Bobby Oroza — Get On The Otherside (Big Crown Records)
  • Carrie Underwood — Denim & Rhinestones (Capitol Records Nashville)
  • Chase & Status — What Came Before (MTA Records)
  • Cold Showers — Strength In Numbers EP (Dais Records)
  • David Newbould — Power Up! (Blackbird Record Label)
  • Deau Eyes — Legacies (Tone Tree Music)
  • Dion Lunadon — Beyond Everything (In the Red Records)
  • Erin Anne — Do Your Worst (Discrepancy Records)
  • FKJ — Vincent (Mom+Pop)
  • Future Palace — Run (Arising Empire)
  • George Ezra — Gold Rush Kid (Columbia Records)
  • Grace Ives — Janky Star (True Panther/Harvest)
  • Jack Flanagan — Rides the Sky (Imports)
  • Jamie Drake — New Girl (AntiFragile Music)
  • Jenny Owen Youngs — It’s Dangerous To Go Alone EP (Nettwerk Records)
  • Joyce Manor — 40 Oz. To Fresno (Epitaph)
  • Judah & the Lion — Revival (Cletus the Van/Virgin Music)
  • Julius Rodriguez — Let Sound Tell All (Verve)
  • LIFE — North East Coastal Town (The Liquid Label)
  • Liss — I Guess Nothing Will Be The Same (Escho / In Real Life)
  • Mapache — Roscoe’s Dream (Innovative Leisure / Calico Discos)
  • The March Divide — Lost Causes (Slow Start Records)
  • Marco Benevento — Benevento (RPF)
  • Michael Monroe — I Live Too Fast To Die Young (Silver Lining Music)
  • Michael Rault — Michael Rault (Daptone Records)
  • Michaela Anne — Oh To Be That Free (Yep Roc Records)
  • Moonchild Sanelly — Phases (Transgressive Records)
  • Museum Of Light — Horizon (Spartan Records)
  • Neneh Cherry — The Versions (Republic Records)
  • Nick Mulvey — New Mythology (Verve Forecast)
  • Riley Pearce — The Water & The Rough (Nettwerk)
  • Rufus Wainwright — Rufus Does Judy At Capitol Studios (BMG)
  • Sinead O’Brien — Time Bend and Break the Bower (Chess Club)
  • Spacey Jane — Here Comes Everybody (Spacey Jane/AWAL)
  • Vance Joy — In Our Own Sweet Time (Liberation Music)
  • Vieux Farka Touré — Les Racines (World Circuit Records)
  • The Wrecks — Sonder (Big Noise Music Group)
  • Wylderness — Big Plan For A Blue World (Succulent Recordings)

Friday, June 17

  • Alice Merton — S.I.D.E.S. (Mom+Pop)
  • Anteloper — Pink Dolphins (International Anthem)
  • Bartees Strange — Farm to Table (4AD)
  • Calum Scott — Bridges (Capitol Records)
  • Charlie Griffiths — Tiktaalika (InsideOut)
  • Chillin Villain Empire (CVE) — We Represent Billions (Nyege Nyege)
  • Dan Reed Network — Let’s Hear It For The King (Drakkar Entertainment)
  • Dylan Moon — Option Explore (RVNG Intl.)
  • Flasher — Love Is Yours (Domino)
  • Foals — Life Is Yours (Warner)
  • girlfriends — (e)motion sickness (Big Noise)
  • Hank Williams Jr. — Rich White Honky Blues (Easy Eye Sound)
  • Harken — Honeymoon Suite (Hand Mirror)
  • Hazel English — Summer Nights EP (P-VINE)
  • Hercules & Love Affair — In Amber (Skint/BMG)
  • Horse Jumper of Love — Natural Part (Run For Cover Records)
  • Infinity Knives & Brian Ennals — King Cobra (Phantom Limb)
  • IV And The Strange Band — Southern Circus (Black Country Rock)
  • Joey Badass — 2000 (Columbia Records)
  • Kevin Gates — KHAZA (Atlantic Records)
  • Lionel Boy — Down at 8 EP (Innovative Leisure)
  • Lit — Tastes Like Gold (Round Hill Records)
  • Logic — Vinyl Days (Def Jam)
  • Making Movies — XOPA (Cosmica Artists)
  • ME REX — Plesiosaur EP (Big Scary Monsters)
  • Mt. Joy — Orange Blood (Dualtone)
  • Nova Twins — Supernova (Marshall)
  • Nick Cave — Seven Psalms (Goliath)
  • Patty Griffin — Tape (Thirty Tigers)
  • Perfume Genius — Ugly Season (Matador)
  • Pet Fox — A Face In Your Life (Exploding in Sound)
  • Tim Bowness — Butterfly Mind (InsideOutMusic)
  • Tungsten — Bliss (Arising Empire)
  • TV Priest — My Other People (Sub Pop)
  • UB40 Featuring Ali Campbell & Astro — Unprecedented (UMe)
  • Violet Skies — If I Saw You Again (Artium)
  • Yaya Bey — Remember Your North Star (Big Dada)

Friday, June 24

  • Alexisonfire — Otherness (Dine Alone Records)
  • Art d’Ecco — After The Head Rush (Paper Bag Records)
  • The Brian Jonestown Massacre — Fire Doesn’t Grow On Trees (A Recordings)
  • Bryan Senti — Manu (Naïve Records)
  • Caamp — Lavender Days (Mom + Pop Music)
  • Candy — Heaven is Here (Relapse Records)
  • Christine McVie — Songbird (A Solo Collection) (Rhino Records)
  • Conan Gray — Superache (Republic)
  • Damien Jurado — Reggae Film Star (Maraqopa Records)
  • Day Wave — Pastlife (PIAS)
  • Dune Rats — Real Rare Whale (Ratbag Records/BMG)
  • Emery — Rub Some Dirt On It (Tooth & Nail Records)
  • Empress Of — Save Me EP (Major Arcana)
  • ENPHIN — End Cut (Pelagic Records)
  • G. Love — Philadelphia Mississippi (Philadelphonic Records/Thirty Tigers)
  • Glenn Jones — Vade Mecum (Thrill Jockey)
  • Goose — Dripfield (No Coincidence Records)
  • Hackensaw Boys — Hackensaw Boys (Nettwerk)
  • Hollie Cook — Happy Hour (Merge Records)
  • Jack Johnson — Meet The Moonlight (Brushfire/Republic)
  • James Vincent McMorrow — The Less I Knew (Faction)
  • Jimmie Allen — Tulip Drive (Stoney Creek Records/BBR Music Group)
  • Joan Shelley — The Spur (No Quarter)
  • Katie Alice Greer — Barbarism (FourFour Records)
  • Katrina Ford — Katrina Ford EP (Violin Films)
  • Limbs — Coma Year EP (UNFD)
  • Linda Hoover — I Mean To Shine (Omnivore Records)
  • Lindsay Clark — Carpe Noctem (Audiosport Records)
  • Luke Combs — Growin’ Up (Sony Music Nashville)
  • Luminous Beings — Horrors (XL)
  • Lupe Fiasco — Drill Music In Zion (1st & 15th)
  • Martin Courtney — Magic Sign (Domino)
  • Mikey Erg — Love At Leeds (Don Giovanni Records)
  • Motherhood — Winded (Forward Music Group)
  • Muna — Muna (Saddest Factory Records)
  • Peter Rowan — Calling You From My Mountain (Rebel Records)
  • Petrol Girls — Baby (Hassle Records)
  • Porcupine Tree — CLOSURE / CONTINUATION (Music For Nations)
  • Soccer Mommy — Sometimes, Forever (Loma Vista)
  • Tijuana Panthers — Halfway to Eighty (Innovative Leisure)
  • Tim Heidecker — High School (Spacebomb)
  • Wire — Not About To Die (pinkflag)
  • Young Guv — GUV IV (Run For Cover)

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

NYC’s Governors Ball Is Still Growing Alongside An Ever-Changing City

While the average festival attendee might not recognize the names of Jordan Wolowitz, Tom Russell, and Yoni Reisman, they have proven to be pivotal to New York City’s history. After founding the production company Founders Entertainment as 20-somethings with an immense passion for live music, they also crafted the idea to host a music festival on Governors Island in 2011.

The sounds of the city were still drawn to the Indie Sleaze movement, and so, the festival’s single-day lineup reflected that — with electronic artists Girl Talk, Pretty Lights, and Empire OF The Sun headlining that year. That decision to cater to a generation of fellow early adults paid off immensely, as the aptly-titled Governors Ball’s debut drew the highest attendance for any event on Governors Island. “As many area festival attempts often fall flat due to poor execution, the Governors Ball was a pleasant exception to the rule, leaving us looking forward to its return next year,” Flavorwire wrote about the festival.

Building upon their success, the founders expanded Governors Ball to a two-day festival the following year, moving the location to Randall’s Island to better accommodate the growth — which included popular city food vendors (Luke’s Lobster, Wafels & Dinges) and a variety of outdoor games. Beck, Kid Cudi, Passion Pit, and Modest Mouse were on 2012’s top billing.

Despite the momentum, the third year was not a charm for Governors Ball, as disaster struck in the form of Tropical Storm Andrea on day one — the start of weather that would prove to be a common struggle for the founders in years to come. By 9 pm, the entire festival was canceled, with local paper Gothamist publishing a slideshow of the conditions. Crowds in colorful ponchos dispersed, just trying to avoid being drenched in mud.

“It was a heck of a storm: a lot of rain and high winds. When you have 40,000 people on your festival site, which is grass, and you have five to six inches of water descend upon that site within an eight-hour period, the result is a field of mud,” Russell told INC about that year. “There’s not much you can really do to combat that. We laid down plywood, sand, and landscaper’s hay, but everything just sank. Around 8 p.m. on Friday, when we started getting 40 mph wind gusts, we knew we had to cut the show.”

Throughout the years, weather complications have continued to be a common theme affecting Governors Ball. In 2019, Sunday attendees were stuck on Randall’s Island, until an 8:30 pm announcement officially canceled The Strokes and SZA’s nighttime performances. With severe thunderstorms, ticket buyers walked back across the RFK bridge to get home.

Still, Governors Ball planned to get back to normal. The original 2020 lineup continued the cross-generational appeal by featuring Tame Impala, Missy Elliott, Flume, and Vampire Weekend as headliners; it was eventually canceled due to the pandemic. After taking a-year-and-a-half hiatus until returning in September 2021, much like the rest of the world, the festival made some major changes. As for whether these will prove for better or for worse is to be determined.

Upon their return, Governors Ball announced they would be moving the permanent location to Citi Field — with stages set up just outside of the Mets stadium. Last year marked my first time attending the festival, so it’s difficult to compare to past locations. However, crowd control seemed to be a significant issue. Given the stages are spaced quite closely together, a lot of the audiences blended into one giant crowd, with very minimal lamp posts or clear exit signs. About six months later and in the wake of Astroworld, it seems to be a potential safety issue.

Still, Governors Ball has the opportunity to smooth out any roadblocks for their second year at Citi Field. At the very least, they have an all-star lineup — one that leans heavily into aiming for a younger demographic instead of keeping one headliner your Gen X mother might recognize.

Saturday’s headliner, Halsey, is one of the most exciting artists on the bill. They sought out their musical heroes — Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross of Nine Inch Nails — to eventually began crafting an industrial-inspired pop record together. The result was their cinematic fourth studio album, If I Can’t Have Love, I Want Power. While the writing process began before Halsey’s pregnancy (and first child), it conceptually began to wrap around all the various aspects of motherhood.

Rapper J. Cole will close out the festival as Sunday’s headlining performer. Last year, he released his Grammy-nominated sixth album, The Off-Season. “The Off-Season symbolizes the work that it takes to get to the highest height,” he told Slam magazine last year. “The Off-Season represents the many hours and months and years it took to get to top form. Just like in basketball, what you see him do in the court, that shit was worked on in the summertime.”

Hip-hop continues to play a heavy part in Governors Ball’s main acts: Friday headliner Kid Cudi, Jack Harlow, British MC Skepta, Coi Leray, Roddy Ricch, and many more. As a fun surprise, basketball player Shaquille O’Neal is scheduled to perform on Saturday under the stage name DJ Diesel.

For those looking for rising indie acts, Samia is one of the solo artists not to miss. The singer-songwriter released her first full-length record, The Baby, in 2020. She has since followed that with a handful of equally strong singles, from the somber, piano-driven “Desperado” to capturing feelings of love, and acceptance on “As You Are.” Last year, Samia also teamed up with a handful of prominent indie artists to reimagine songs from her debut album, including Bartees Strange, Christian Lee Hutson, Palehound, and many more.

The past year has also been a record-breaking one for Michelle Zauner, who fronts the Philly-based indie band, Japanese Breakfast. Between releasing a Grammy-nominated album, Jubilee, and becoming a New York Times bestselling author with her debut memoir, Crying In H Mart, Zauner has continuously distinguished herself as a talented artist — no matter what the medium is.

In all, Governors Ball has the chance to redefine itself for this new decade, evolving as necessary, and representing its city as the flagship festival offering.

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

Doja Cat’s Racy New Bikini Photos Bring Out The Thirst In Fans On Twitter

Doja Cat‘s mischievous ways have always been known to get Twitter all riled up, but her latest posts are living up to the lyrics of her breakout 2018 viral hit “Mooo!” Her milkshake is bringing all the boys to the yard, and they’re bringing their thirstiest comment with them.

The Planet Her rapper/singer shared a pair of racy bikini photos on Twitter, where they’re getting plenty of attention. In the first photo, Doja rocks a pink string bikini while pulling a silly face, and in the second, she offers a rear view of just how skimpy the piece actually is. Let’s just say she probably won’t be wearing that anywhere children are present — Twitter’s growing population of under-18s notwithstanding.

Naturally, upon seeing both photos — especially the second one — Doja’s followers turned out in force to voice their approval.

Unfortunately, fans won’t be able to do so live for a while. Doja recently dropped out of The Weeknd’s After Hours Til Dawn Tour due to having surgery on her tonsils. “I feel horrible about this,” she wrote, “but can’t wait for this to heal and get back to making music and create an experience for y’all.” Until then, it looks like she just might have more free time for viral shenanigans as she recovers.

The Best Vinyl Releases Of May 2022

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, Vinyl Me, Please has a new vinyl-adjacent offering for the connoisseurs among us: The Abbey, a new knife made in partnership with The James Brand that was designed specifically for opening new vinyl records.

Each month brings a new slew of vinyl releases that has something for everybody and naturally, some stand out above the rest. So, check out some of our favorite vinyl releases of May below.

Olivia Rodrigo — Sour

Olivia Rodrigo Sour vinyl
Geffen

Olivia Rodrigo is perhaps pop’s biggest vinyl supporter (she even got the Jack White stamp of approval on that front). So, as her debut album Sour turns a year old, it’s not surprising Rodrigo is celebrating with fresh vinyl: For the anniversary, Rodrigo has re-issued the album in some new colored pressings, including the light blue version pictured above.

Get it here.

Taking Back Sunday — Tell All Your Friends (20th Anniversary Edition)

taking back sunday vinyl
Craft Recordings

Taking Back Sunday’s 2002 debut album is one of the most esteemed emo releases ever and it turns 20 years old this year. To celebrate, Craft Recordings has dropped a reissued version of the album, which includes newly remastered audio and four previously unreleased demos of “Mutual Head Club,” “Bike Scene,” “The Blue Channel,” and “Great Romances Of The 20th Century.” On the vinyl version, those demos comes on a bonus etched 10-inch disc.

Get it here.

ABBA — Vinyl Album Box Set

Abba Vinyl Album Box Set
POLAR/Universal Music

Abba (who somehow only just picked up their first-ever Grammy nomination, by the way) have a storied discography and now you can own it all thanks to a new box set. It features each of the band’s nine albums — including their latest, last year’s comeback LP Voyage — along with ABBA Tracks, which includes non-album singles and B-sides.

Get it here.

Eddie Vedder — Ukulele Songs (Reissue)

Eddie Vedder Ukulele Songs vinyl
UMe/Republic Records

The Pearl Jam leader dropped a new solo album, Earthling, earlier this year, and in his solo discography, that LP was preceded by 2011’s Ukulele Songs. That album was just reissued in standard and deluxe edition vinyl pressings, the latter of which was pressed on high-grade 180-gram black vinyl and comes with a 16-page booklet and a special lithograph.

Get it here.

Atmosphere — Lucy Ford: The Atmosphere EP’s (20th Anniversary Reissue)

Atmosphere Lucy Ford vinyl
Rhymesayers Entertainment

In 2001, Atmosphere — an institution in the well-respected Minneapolis hip-hop scene — dropped Lucy Ford: The Atmosphere EP’s, which compiled Ford One, Ford Two, and The Lucy EP into one release. That was two decades ago, so now the duo is celebrating with a reissue on vinyl, which actually marks the first time this fan-favorite compilation has been pressed on vinyl.

Get it here.

Rolling Stones — Live At The El Mocambo

Rolling Stones Live At The El Mocambo
UMe

In March 1997, Rolling Stones, at the long-running height of their power, played two secret concerts at Toronto’s The El Mocambo, a 300-capacity club. Now, for the first time, audio from those sets has been released in full — specifically, the full March 5 set and three songs from the previous day’s performance. Previously, just four of the songs had made it onto the band’s Love You Live album. The vinyl edition comes in black and neon pressings, each consisting of four LPs.

Get it here.

The Clash — Combat Rock/The People’s Hall (Special Edition)

The Clash -- Combat Rock/The People's Hall
The Clash

The Clash’s Combat Rock is a classic album for multiple reasons: It’s the final Clash album from the group’s classic lineup — Joe Strummer, Mick Jones, Paul Simonon, and Topper Headon — and it features two iconic singles, “Rock The Casbah” and “Should I Stay Or Should I Go.” Now, 40 years after the album’s original release, it gets a fresh vinyl reissue, alongside a selection of 12 additional tracks (the The People’s Hall part of the reissue’s name).

Get it here.

Roxy Music — Stranded (Reissue) and Country Life (Reissue)

Roxy Music
Virgin

Roxy Music has popped up in this space recently because they’re in the midst of a series of vinyl reissues. The latest albums to get that treatment are two big ones in the Roxy Music oeuvre: 1973’s Stranded was their first No. 1 album in the UK while the next year’s Country Life is often considered to be perhaps the group’s best album.

Get Stranded here. Get Country Life here.

The Cranberries — Stars: The Best Of 1992-2002 (Reissue)

Cranberries Stars
UMe

The Cranberries were one of the toasts of the ’90s thanks to a run of memorable albums and singles. That era was encapsulated in a greatest hits collection, which has now been reissues on vinyl. In addition to hits like “Zombie,” “Dreams,” and “Linger,” the collection also includes two songs not available on other albums: “New New York” and “Stars.”

Get it here.

Justice — (Vinyl Me, Please Reissue)

Justice Cross vinyl
Vinyl Me, Please

Justice came hot out of the gate with their 2007 debut album (also known as Cross), as it was among the year’s most revered albums and it earned the French electronic duo a handful of Grammy nominations. Now, Vinyl Me, Please has a striking reissue of the album, pressed on gorgeous “gold nugget” vinyl.

Get it here.