Governors Ball Organizers Are Monitoring New York City’s Dangerous Air Quality, But They Haven’t Canceled The Festival Yet

New Yorkers and most of the Northeast are facing some seriously orange skies today as smoke from some Canadian fires filters down the coast. While most have been encouraged to stay inside and the city’s mayor calling it a “very unhealthy” air quality, it seems one NYC music festival is still hoping to run as scheduled this weekend.

The annual Governors Ball Music Festival is currently set for June 9 to 11 and have confirmed that they’re still hoping to welcome a bunch of fans to the festival grounds to see their favorite artists.

“We’re closely monitoring the air quality with weather experts and are in close contact with city officials,” a Governors Ball representative told Pitchfork. “As always, the health and safety of New Yorkers is our top priority. At this time, the festival is continuing as planned. We are hopeful that conditions will improve in the coming days and are looking forward to a great weekend!”

For reference, here’s a video taken in NYC today (June 7):

This is part of the festival’s pretty rough track record with battling the city’s weather throughout the years. In 2019, the festival had to be evacuated on the final day due to flooding from a storm. Three years prior in 2016, the fest’s Sunday run was outright canceled for a similar storm issue.

While they haven’t encountered poor weather in a few years, here’s hoping the smoke can clear up by then.

Janelle Monáe Vows To ‘Never Sit Back And Be Silent’ About ‘Injustices’ Trans And LGBTQ People Face Amid New Laws

Now is a complicated time for the LGBTQ community. We’re a week into Pride Month, but the celebration comes after the recent passage of laws across the US targeting drag and trans people. As all this is going on, Janelle Monáe does not plan on being silent.

In a recent video interview with NBC4 Washington, Monáe was asked how they respond to the recent legal happenings and they answered, “You respond by fighting back, by speaking out against, standing with our trans community, my siblings. As a nonbinary, queer, pansexual person, I am proud to be in this community. I will never sit back and be silent about the injustices that are happening against our trans community.”

She spoke about similar topics in another recent interview with The Sydney Morning Herald, saying, “There are a lot of laws being put in place around my trans family and the LGBTQI+ communities and even Black folks — you can’t even talk about certain things in school anymore. Those who are trans, they’re literally trying to erase their existence and not treat them with human decency. So, of course we fight, but even in the middle of the fight we take time to find joy.”

When asked if it was difficult to discuss these topics, Monáe responded, “I feel like I’m one of the most vocal, loud and proud, pansexual, queer, non-binary, black folks who have a platform! I feel I’ve said a lot. I don’t feel uncomfortable now, thank God. But I know there are a lot of people who may be uncomfortable with it, who don’t have to feel rushed or forced into talking about something that is private for most folks. There is no right or wrong way to talk about being in the LGBTQI+ community. As long as it’s with love, it’s fine.”

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

Gen-Z Is Drinking Less At Concerts And Venues Are Feeling The Hangover

Millennials have been blamed for killing more than their fair share of legacy industries, but it’s the Zoomers’ turn to take the blame. According to a 2020 study reported by Billboard, gen-Z is drinking so much less at concerts that live venue owners are worried the hangover from the 2020 shutdown is going to keep giving them headaches, three years later.

According to Texas State University psychology professor Ty Schepis, who co-authored the 2020 study, alcohol consumption “has been declining in adolescents and in young adults for the past decade and a half, maybe even two decades.” Additionally, “the amount that people [in this cohort] drink when they do drink tends to be lower than it was in older generations. This is most obvious in Gen Z, but this is a continuation of a trend.”

The result has been a big drop in alcohol sales at clubs like Tucson’s Club Congress, whose owner David Slutes is quoted in Billboard‘s report. According to him, shows aimed at Gen Z brought in as much as 25% less than shows targeting older generations — which is wild when you consider some of the antics that have gone down at shows in the past year. Promoter Dayna Frank reported similar findings, saying, “One of the big trends we’re seeing is that Gen Z doesn’t drink as much. They’re either eating edibles before they come or there’s more of a sober, mental health [focus]… Most of the ticket price goes on to the band, so really what [venues] subsist on is beverages. That’s not going to be a sustainable revenue stream.”

Meanwhile, other owners or promoters cited by Billboard reported that alcohol sales, in general, have been down, regardless of age, and seemingly owing as much to the shows’ genres as anything else. Meanwhile, there may be a simpler explanation: Concertgoers, on the whole, have much less disposable income as prices for just about everything elseincluding (especially) tickets — go up and wages remain stagnant. There’s no doubt it’s a problem that doesn’t have an obvious or immediate situation. But it’s one that venues will need to solve if they want to remain solvent.

Leon Bridges And Miranda Lambert’s ‘If You Were Mine’ Video Contains A Mystical Veil Of Texas Magic

Everything’s bigger in Texas, including the musicial collaborations. Miranda Lambert’s new single “If You Were Mine” featuring Leon Bridges is the latest example. On the track, the two Texas natives create magic as they blend together elements of country and R&B. Lambert hailing from Longview and Bridges from Fort Worth, the pair pay homage to the Lone Star State.

The Grammy Award-winning songwriter draws metaphors from across the country side, including the Frio River, as heard in the line, “I’d make sure your stars are shining / Sure as the Frio’s winding / I’d bottle you up like lightning / I’d rope the moon for you / A million times / That’s what I’d do / If you were mine.”

In a statement, Lambert gushed about her collaborator, saying, “I have been a big fan of Leon for a while because he is very authentic as an artist and I love his music.”

Later, the singer spoke about the hometown tribute throughout the lyrics, saying, “Since we are both from Texas, we threw in a few Texas references, of course – the Frio River being one. When we finished this song, we sent it to Leon in hopes that he would want to collaborate and we were so glad that he said yes. I have really enjoyed getting to know him and I’m happy to have him as a new friend.”

Watch the video above.

Lizzo Kicked Off Pride Month By Standing Up For Drag Performers In A Big Way On Stage In California

We’re officially a few days into Pride Month, and at the top of it, Lizzo made a statement: At her June 2 performance at Acrisure Arena in Thousand Palms, California, she made it clear she’s all in on supporting the LGBTQ community.

In a video shared on Lizzo’s social media accounts yesterday (June 4), Lizzo waves a pride flag around as she shouts into the mic, “Drag is not a crime,” presumably in reference to recent anti-drag laws. She was surrounded by drag queens Kim Chi, Angeria Paris Van Michaels and Kahanna Montrese, along with drag king Tenderoni (as Billboard notes). Lizzo also captioned her post, “You’ve always had my back, and I’ll always have yours. [transgender flag emoji][rainbow flag emoji] Happy Pride [rainbow flag emoji][transgender flag emoji].”

This is just the latest recent example of Lizzo vocalizing her support for the LGBTQ community. After an anti-drag law was passed in Tennessee, Lizzo said on stage in April, “In light of recent and tragic events — recurring events, I was told by people on the internet, ‘Cancel your shows in Tennessee’ and ‘Don’t go to Tennessee.’ […] Why would I not come to the people that need to hear this message the most? The people that need to feel this release the most. Why would I not create a safe space in Tennessee where we can celebrate drag entertainers and celebrate our differences? And celebrate fat Black women.”

Then, in May, after Nebraska passed a law banning gender-affirming healthcare for transgender, non-binary, and gender non-conforming people under the age of 18, Lizzo said, “It really breaks my heart that there are young people growing up in a world that doesn’t protect them. Let me be your safe space tonight. Young people, don’t let anybody tell you who you are, don’t let any law tell you who you’re not. You are who you are. I see you. You are valid. You deserve to be here in any form. These laws are not real. You are what’s real.”

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

Reddit’s Biggest Communities In Music And Beyond Are Going Dark To Protest A Controversial Policy Change

Reddit was founded in 2005, and since then, the social news and discussion website has become a pillar of the internet. It’s one of the world’s most-visited websites and has been a valuable resource for people interested in pretty much any topic the world has to offer. The platform is well known for its AMAs (“Ask Me Anything”), a Q&A format in which an expert, celebrity, or otherwise notable person answers user-submitted questions. Specifically in regards to music, we’ve gotten some great, insightful, and fun AMAs from people like Paul McCartney, Lucy Dacus, Carly Rae Jepsen, Snoop Dogg, and many, many more.

Now, though, there’s some drama happening on the platform and the site’s biggest communities, in music and beyond, are getting involved.

It all started a few days ago, with a post from the developer of Apollo, a third-party mobile app used to access Reddit, in the Apollo subreddit. The post currently has over 154,000 upvotes (which is a lot) and is titled, “Had a call with Reddit to discuss pricing. Bad news for third-party apps, their announced pricing is close to Twitter’s pricing, and Apollo would have to pay Reddit $20 million per year to keep running as-is.” The post goes into greater detail and notes that Apollo would likely cease to exist under this model, which would be prohibitively expensive. Developers of other third-party Reddit apps have shared similar posts.

Since then, there has been a movement to protest this. A June 2 post from the newly formed r/Save3rdPartyApps subreddit is leading the charge and it does a great job at summarizing the situation. It states:

“A recent Reddit policy change threatens to kill many beloved third-party mobile apps, making a great many quality-of-life features not seen in the official mobile app permanently inaccessible to users.

On May 31, 2023, Reddit announced they were raising the price to make calls to their API from being free to a level that will kill every third party app on Reddit, from Apollo to Reddit is Fun to Narwhal to BaconReader.

Even if you’re not a mobile user and don’t use any of those apps, this is a step toward killing other ways of customizing Reddit, such as Reddit Enhancement Suite or the use of the old.reddit.com desktop interface .

This isn’t only a problem on the user level: many subreddit moderators depend on tools only available outside the official app to keep their communities on-topic and spam-free.”

The post then lays out a plan for a protest: “On June 12th, many subreddits will be going dark to protest this policy. Some will return after 48 hours: others will go away permanently unless the issue is adequately addressed, since many moderators aren’t able to put in the work they do with the poor tools available through the official app. This isn’t something any of us do lightly: we do what we do because we love Reddit, and we truly believe this change will make it impossible to keep doing what we love. The two-day blackout isn’t the goal, and it isn’t the end. Should things reach the 14th with no sign of Reddit choosing to fix what they’ve broken, we’ll use the community and buzz we’ve built between then and now as a tool for further action.”

Since this post, a number of major subreddits have either shared similar posts or linked to that one, to declare that they too will be participating in the protest. That includes r/Music, which has over 32 million members and is the fifth-largest community on all of Reddit. Notable genre-specific communities like r/hiphopheads and r/indieheads, which have around 2.5 million members each, have also vowed to join the protest.

A list of other significant subreddits getting involved in the protest, some of which have tens of millions of members, can be found here.

The Weeknd Really Wants To ‘Create A Classic Madonna Album’ Alongside The Pop Icon

Madonna is one of the most important figures in pop music history, while The Weeknd is one of the biggest modern pop stars. Now, the pair and Playboi Carti have teamed up on “Popular,” a new single from the soundtrack of The Idol. If The Weeknd has his way, this will be the first of many collaborations between the two.

In an interview with Apple Music’s Zane Lowe, The Weeknd spoke about how he’d like to make a full album with Madonna, saying:

“The thing is, I’ve always wanted to work with her. I’ve always wanted to write and produce a Madonna album… well, co-produce with her, of course […] because she’s a visionary and she has such a singular vision, and I just want to come into her world and create a classic Madonna album. That was always my dream. So this can be… hopefully this is the appetizer for that.”

He also said of “Popular,” “I’m proud of it. I’m definitely proud of it. Me and Carti had this… I mean, we’ve jammed out before. We’ve had a different version of this song prior. So I’ve had these vocals for a while and I’ve kind of just worked around it, and then kind of kept it in the tuck. But now it felt like it was time. It was time. And it felt right and it felt cohesive with this album that I’m working on right now. Or that I just actually finished. The Idol soundtrack, yeah. And so I’ve been producing the song for a while. And then Madonna, Madge. She’s the ultimate co-sign for this song, for this album, and for this TV show. And you’ll hear more of her in the show as well, too. She is the ultimate pop star.”

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

Lizzo Wanted To ‘Quit Music And Just Disappear,’ But Beyoncé’s ‘Renaissance’ Helped After Seeing ‘Mean Sh*t’ About Herself Online

Yesterday (May 31), Lizzo shared her frustrations about people online commenting about her size, specifically in response to one person who wrote, “How is Lizzo still THIS fat when she’s constantly moving this much on stage?! I wonder what she must be eating.” Now, she’s spoken more on the matter via TikTok.

A new video from Lizzo shared yesterday (May 31) starts with her walking on a treadmill as songs from Beyoncé’s Renaissance album play. After that, Lizzo says, “Today was one of those days where I was very angry, very angry at the world. Saw a lot of mean sh*t about me on the internet, and I wanted to give up. There are days where the hate outweighs the love so badly that I want to quit music and just disappear. I definitely have enough money to go and buy a farm and just never f*ck with anybody ever again, because f*ck everybody. Then, I reminded myself to get up, get out, and get some sun, and I put on Renaissance.”

@lizzo

Get Up, Get Out, Get sum Sun: RELEASE THE WIGGLE

♬ CHURCH GIRL – Beyoncé

After citing some of her favorite lyrics from the album that she feels apply to her current situation, she continued by saying that as soon as she heard those songs, “I decided to get up, and get out, and get some sun, and you can, too. Love you.”

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

All The New Albums Coming Out In June 2023

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 2

  • The Aces — I’ve Loved You For So Long (Red Bull Records)
  • American Nightmare — Dedicated to the Next World EP (Heartworm Press)
  • Ashnikko — WEEDKILLER (WB/Parlophone)
  • Avenged Sevenfold — Life Is But a Dream… (Warner)
  • Baxter Dury — I Thought I Was Better Than You (Piccadilly Records)
  • Beach Fossils — Bunny (Bayonet Records)
  • Ben Folds — What Matters Most (New West Records)
  • Ben Harper — WIDE OPEN LIGHT (Chrysalis Records)
  • Big Time Rush — Another Life (Bought The Rights)
  • Bob Dylan — Shadow Kingdom (Columbia)
  • Body Type — Expired Candy (Poison City)
  • Bongzilla — Dab City (Heavy Psych Sounds Records)
  • Brandt Brauer Frick — Multi Faith Prayer Room (Because Music)
  • Buckcherry — Vol. 10 (Round Hill Music)
  • Bully — Lucky For You (Sub Pop)
  • Corey Kent — Blacktop (RCA Nashville/Sony Music Nashville)
  • Cowboy Junkies — Such Ferocious Beauty (Latent Recordings)
  • Craig Strickland — Lost in the Rewind EP (MNRK Music Group)
  • Cowboys in the Campfire — Wronger (Cobraside)
  • Drew Parker — At the End of the Dirt Road EP (Warner Music Nashville)
  • Foo Fighters — But Here We Are (Roswell/RCA)
  • Generationals — Heatherhead (Polyvinyl)
  • Gringo Star — On And On And Gone (My Anxious Mouth)
  • Half Moon Run — Salt (BMG)
  • Hallan — The Noise of a Firing Gun EP (Nice Swan Records)
  • The Hollywood Vampires — Live In Rio (Ear Music)
  • Jack Johnson — In Between Dub (Republic Records)
  • Jake Shears — Last Man Dancing (Piccadilly Records)
  • Jelly Roll — WHITSITT CHAPEL (BMG/Stoney Creek Records)
  • John Mellencamp — Orpheus Descending (Republic Records)
  • Joshua Radin — though the world will tell me so, volume 2 EP (Nettwerk)
  • Juan Wauters — Wandering Rebel (Captured Tracks)
  • Kenny Rogers — Life Is Like a Song (UMe)
  • Lanterns on the Lake — Versions of Us (Bella Union)
  • Laura Wolf — Shelf Life (Whatever’s Clever)
  • Linda Gail Lewis — A Tribute to Jerry Lee Lewis (Cleopatra)
  • Lonestar — Ten To 1 (Legacy Recordings)
  • Louise Post — Sleepwalker (El Camino Media)
  • McKinley Dixon — Beloved! Paradise! Jazz!? (City Slang)
  • Metro Boomin — Metro Boomin Presents Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse Soundtrack from and Inspired by the Motion Picture (Sony)
  • Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats — What If I EP (Stax)
  • Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds — Council Skies (Sour Mash Records)
  • Old Crow Medicine Show — Live At Third Man Records (Third Man Records)
  • Protomartyr — Formal Growth in the Desert (Domino)
  • Purr — Who Is Afraid of Blue? (ANTI-)
  • Rancid — Tomorrow Never Comes (Epitaph)
  • The Revivalists — Pour It Out Into the Night (Concord Records)
  • The Royston Club — Shaking Hips and Crashing Cars (Modern Sky/Run On Records)
  • Rival Sons — Darkfighter (Atlantic)
  • Ron Pope — Inside Voices (Brooklyn Basement Records)
  • RVG — Brain Worms (Fire Records)
  • Ruen Brothers — Ten Paces (Yep Roc Records)
  • Rufus Wainwright — Folkocracy (BMG)
  • Sam Blasucci — Off My Stars (Innovative Leisure)
  • SAMWOY — Awkward Party (Hidden Ship Records)
  • Speakers Corner Quartet — Further Out Than The Edge (OTIH Records)
  • Tanya Tucker — Sweet Western Sound (Fantasy Records)
  • Terry Ohms — Rock Songs (Skybucket Records)
  • Tigercub — The Perfume of Decay (Loosegroove Records)
  • Toosii — Naujour (South Coast Music)
  • Wicca Phase Springs Eternal — Wicca Phase Springs Eternal (Run for Cover Records/Summersteps Records)
  • WITCH — Zango (Partisan Records)
  • Young the Giant — Both Sides EP (Jungle Youth Publishing)

Friday, June 9

  • aja monet — when poems do what they do (Secretly Canadian)
  • Amaarae — Fountain Baby (Interscope)
  • Andy Stack and Jay Hammond — Inter Personal (Sleepy Cat Records)
  • Ane Díaz — Despechada (LaunchLeft)
  • Anna St. Louis — In the Air (Woodsist)
  • Bendik Giske — Bendik Giske (Smalltown Supersound)
  • Benny Sings — Southern Skies (Excelsior)
  • Big Blood — First Aid Kit (Ba Da Bing Records)
  • The Boo Radleys — EIGHT (Boostr)
  • Chase Matthew — Come Get Your Memory (Warner Music Nashville)
  • Christine and the Queens — PARANOÏA, ANGELS, TRUE LOVE (Because Music)
  • Christopher Bear and Daniel Rossen — Past Lives (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) (A24 Music)
  • Colby Acuff — Western White Pines (Sony Music)
  • Conor Maynard — +11 Hours (self-released)
  • Cooper Wolken — Chapters (Earth Libraries)
  • Crashing Wayward — Listen! (RFK Media)
  • Curtis Waters — Bad Son (BMG)
  • Dead Quiet — IV (Artoffact Records)
  • decker. — Ouroboros (Royal Potato Family)
  • The Defiants — Drive (Frontiers Music Srl)
  • Dominic Sen — Apparition (Grind Select)
  • Dream Wife — Social Lubrication (Lucky Number)
  • Dudu Tassa and Jonny Greenwood — Jarak Qaribak (World Circuit Records/BMG)
  • Emotional Oranges — Still Emo (Avant Garden)
  • Extreme — Six (earMUSIC)
  • feeble little horse — Girl with Fish (Saddle Creek)
  • Flawes — One Step Back, Two Steps Forward (Red Bull Records)
  • Future Utopia — We Were We Still Are EP (The Orchard/70Hz)
  • GELD — Currency // Castration (Relapse)
  • George FitzGerald — Not As I EP (Domino)
  • Hak Baker — Worlds End FM (Hak Attack Records)
  • headboy — Was It What You Thought (Blitzcat Records)
  • The High Water Marks — Your Next Wolf (Minty Fresh)
  • J Hacha De Zola — Without A Tribe (Caballo Negro)
  • Janelle Monaé — The Age of Pleasure (Atlantic Records)
  • Jason Isbell and The 400 Unit — Weathervanes (Southeastern Records)
  • Jayda G — Guy (Ninja Tune)
  • Jeff Clarke — Locust (Bretford Records)
  • Jenny Lewis — Joy’All (Blue Note/Capitol Records)
  • Jess Williamson — Time Ain’t Accidental (Mexican Summer)
  • Jimmy Whispers — The Search For God (Carpark Records)
  • Keaton Henson — House Party (PIAS Recordings)
  • King Krule — Space Heavy (XL Recordings/Matador Records)
  • Lightning Dust — Nostalgia Killer (Western Vinyl)
  • lophiile — The Good Days Between (Bluewerks)
  • Lontalius — Life on the Edge of You (Kartel Music)
  • Love and Rockets — My Sweet Twin (Beggars Arkive)
  • Luke Sital-Singh — Strange Weather EP (Nettwerk)
  • Maps — Counter Mixes (Mute)
  • Michael David — Talking Book World EP (Cascine)
  • My Morning Jacket — MMJ Live Vol. 3: Bonnaroo 2004 (Return to Thunderdome) (ATO Records)
  • Niall Horan — The Show (Neon Haze Capitol)
  • Nicholas Allbrook — Manganese (Sub Pop)
  • Noah Kahan — Stick Season (We’ll All Be Here Forever) (Mercury Records/Republic Records)
  • Nora Stanley & Benny Bock — Assembling (Colorfield Records)
  • Odonis Odonis — Icon EP (Felte Records)
  • Olof Dreijer + Mt Sims — Souvenir (Rabid Records)
  • Pantayo — Ang Pagdaloy (Sub Pop)
  • Public Body — Big Mess (Fat Cat)
  • Queen of Swords — Year 8 (Get Better Records)
  • Ray Adler — II (InsideOut Music)
  • Rob Grant — Lost At Sea (‎Interscope)
  • Sarah Kinsley — Ascension EP (Verve Forecast/Decca Records UK)
  • SB19 — PAGTATAG! EP (Sony Music Philippines)
  • Sivu — Wild Horse Running (Square Leg Records)
  • Squid — O Monolith (Warp)
  • TEKE::TEKE — Hagata (Kill Rock Stars)
  • This Is The Kit — Careful of Your Keepers (Rough Trade Records)
  • The View — Exorcism of Youth (Cooking Vinyl)
  • Wombo — Slab EP (Fire Talk Records)
  • Youth Lagoon — Heaven Is a Junkyard (Fat Possum)
  • Zylva — Poems from the Dark (Squama)

Friday, June 16

  • Amnesia Scanner & Freeka Tet — STROBE.RIP (PAN)
  • Asake — Work of Art (YBNL Nation/EMPIRE)
  • Balmorhea — Pendant World (Deutsche Grammophon)
  • Ben Chasny & Rick Tomlinson — WAVES (VOIX)
  • Ben Howard — Is It? (Island Records)
  • binki — Antennae EP (The Fader Label)
  • Bonny Doon — Let There Be Music (ANTI‐)
  • Bright Eyes — Cassadaga: A Companion EP (Dead Oceans)
  • Bright Eyes — Noise Floor (Rarities 1998 — 2005): A Companion EP (Dead Oceans)
  • Bright Eyes — The People’s Key: A Companion EP (Dead Oceans)
  • Chocolate Hills — Yarns from the Chocolate Triangle (Cooking Vinyl)
  • Cole Blue — Crushed! EP (Chess Club)
  • Damian Lewis — Mission Creep (Decca)
  • Deer Tick — Emotional Contracts (ATO Records)
  • Django Django — Off Planet (Because Music)
  • Donna Missal — Revel (ADA Worldwide)
  • The Drive-By Truckers — The Complete Dirty South (New West Records)
  • Ellie Dixon — In Case of Emergency EP (Decca)
  • Ezra Williams — Supernumeraries (AWAL)
  • Far From Saints — Far From Saints (Ignition)
  • Five Finger Death Punch — Greatest Hits (Prospect Park)
  • The Flaming Lips — Hypnotist EP (Warner Records)
  • Gov’t Mule — Peace… Like a River (Fantasy Records)
  • Gracie Addams — Good Riddance Deluxe (Interscope Records)
  • Hand Habits — Sugar the Bruise (Fat Possum)
  • Home is Where — the whaler (Wax Bodega)
  • J.E. Sunde — Alice, Gloria and Jon (Vietnam Records)
  • Jack River — Endless Summer (Nettwerk)
  • Joel Hoekstra’s 13 — Crash of Life (Frontiers Music Srl)
  • Killer Mike — Michael (Loma Vista)
  • King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard — PetroDragonic Apocalypse; or, Dawn of Eternal Night: An Annihilation of Planet Earth and the Beginning of Merciless Damnation (KGLW)
  • Kool Keith — Black Elvis 2 (Mello Music Group)
  • La Sécurité — Stay Safe! (Mothland)
  • Lorelle Meets the Obsolete — Datura (Sonic Cathedral)
  • Maisie Peters — The Good Witch (Gingerbread Man Records/Asylum)
  • Max Drazen — Someday EP (Field Trip Recordings/Capitol Records)
  • May Rio — French Bath (Dots Per Inch)
  • Meshell Ndegeocello — The Omnichord Real Book (Blue Note Records)
  • Modern Tales — Stars Align (Rose Avenue)
  • Monograms — A Fine Commitment (PaperCup Music)
  • Origami Angel — The Brightest Days (Counter Intuitive Records)
  • Pelicanman — Planet Chernobyl (Org Music)
  • Peter Lewis — Imagination (OMAD Records)
  • Pickle Darling — Laundromat (Father/Daughter Records)
  • PJ Harding — To Fall Asleep EP (RCA Records)
  • The Poison Arrows — Crime and Soda (Solid Brass Records)
  • Queens of the Stone Age — In Times New Roman… (Matador Records)
  • Rodeo Boys — Home Movies (Don Giovanni Records)
  • Son Volt — Day of the Doug (Transmit Sound)
  • SunYears — Fetch My Soul! (Yep Roc Records)
  • The Teskey Brothers — The Winding Way (Decca)
  • Tom Grennan — What Ifs & Maybes (Sony)
  • waterbaby — Foam EP (Sub Pop)
  • Willie Jones — Something To Dance To (Sony Music Nashville)
  • Youth Sector — Quarrels EP (Dance To The Radio)
  • Yusuf / Cat Stevens — King of a Land (Dark Horse)

Friday, June 23

  • Albert Hammond Jr. — Melodies on Hiatus (Red Bull Records)
  • Amanda Shires and Bobbie Nelson — Loving You (ATO Records)
  • Andy Grammer — Behind My Smile (S-Curve Records)
  • Andy Hall — Squareneck Soul (Americana Vibes)
  • Anna Shoemaker — Hey Anna EP (+1 Records)
  • Ayron Jones — Chronicles of the Kid (Big Machine)
  • Bear’s Den — First Loves EP (Communion Records)
  • Big Freedia — Central City (Qween Beat)
  • Cable Ties — All Her Plans (Merge Records)
  • Candlebox — Live at the Neptune (Pavement Music)
  • Casey Neill & The Norway Rats — Sending Up Flares (Fluff & Gravy Records)
  • Coi Leray — Coi (Republic)
  • Elijah Wolf — Forgiving Season (Mtn Laurel Recording Co.)
  • Emily James — Grey EP (Nettwerk)
  • Eric Clapton — The Definitive 24 Nights (Warner Music)
  • Geese — 3D Country (Partisan Records/Play It Again Sam)
  • Hause Plants — Field Trip to Coney Island EP (Spirit Goth)
  • High Priest — Invocation (Magnetic Eye)
  • Jason Mraz — Mystical Magical Rhythmical Radical Ride (BMG)
  • JeGong — The Complex Inbetween (Pelagic Records)
  • Johanna Samuels — Bystander (Jealous Butcher)
  • Joyhauser — In Memoro (Terminal M)
  • Kelly Clarkson — chemistry (Atlantic Records)
  • Kim Petras — Feed the Beast (Republic)
  • Lastlings — Perfect World (Rose Avenue)
  • Lloyd Cole — On Pain (earMUSIC)
  • The Lloyds — Attitude Check (Liberation Hall)
  • Lunice — Open (LuckyMe)
  • M. Ward — Supernatural Thing (Anti)
  • Martin Frawley — The Wannabe (Trouble In Mind)
  • Militarie Gun — Life Under the Gun (Loma Vista)
  • Nat Myers — Yellow Peril (Easy Eye Sound)
  • Nickodemus — Soul & Science (Wonderwheel)
  • Pardoner — Peace Loving People (Bar/None Records)
  • Portugal. the Man — Chris Black Changed My Life (Atlantic)
  • Pyramaze — Bloodlines (AFM Records)
  • Sabina Sciubba — Sleeping Dragon (Fluff & Gravy Records)
  • Sid Simons — Beneath the Brightest Smiles (Jullian Records)
  • Skating Polly — Chaos County Line (El Camino Media)
  • Sleepy Gonzales — Mercy Kill EP (Light Organ Records)
  • Straight No Chaser — Yacht on the Rocks (Arts Music)
  • Swans — The Beggar (Young God Records)
  • The Soft Moon — Exister Remixed EP (Sacred Bones)
  • Tommy Prine — This Far South (Thirty Tigers)
  • Trophy Eyes — Suicide and Sunshine (Hopeless Records)
  • The Watson Twins — HOLLER (Bloodshot)
  • Valley — Lost in Translation (Capitol Records/Universal Music Canada)
  • Wallice — Mr Big Shot EP (Dirty Hit)
  • Wye Oak — Every Day Like the Last (Merge)

Friday, June 30

  • 49th & Main — B.O.A.T.S (Counter Records)
  • Alex G — Live from Union Transfer (Domino)
  • Angelo De Augustine — Toil and Trouble (Asthmatic Kitty Records)
  • The Baseball Project — Grand Salami Time! (Omnivore Recordings)
  • bdrmm — I Don’t Know (Rock Action)
  • THE BLSSM — INFINITY H(OURS) EP (Fueled By Ramen)
  • Body of Light — Bitter Reflection (Dais Records)
  • Charlie Watts — Anthology (BMG)
  • Frank Zappa — Funky Nothingness (Zappa/UMe)
  • Grian Chatten — Chaos for the Fly (Partisan Records)
  • Hayden Pedigo — The Happiest Times I Ever Ignored (Mexican Summer)
  • The Hu — Rumble of Thunder: Deluxe Album (Better Noise Music)
  • The Japanese House — In the End It Always Does (Dirty Hit)
  • JD Pinkus & Tall Tall Trees — Ponder Machine (Shimmy-Disc)
  • The Jins — It’s A Life (604 Records)
  • Joanna Sternberg — I’ve Got Me (Fat Possum)
  • John Carroll Kirby — Blowout (Stones Throw Records)
  • Klara Lewis and Nik Colk Void — Full-On (ALTER)
  • Lucinda Williams — Stories from a Rock n Roll Heart (Thirty Tigers)
  • Mong Tong 夢東 — Tao Fire (Guruguru Brain)
  • Pierre Kwenders — Jose Louis And The Paradox Of Love Deluxe (Arts & Crafts)
  • The Pink Stones — You Know Who (Normaltown Records)
  • Shady Bug — What’s the Use? EP (Exploding in Sound Records)
  • Suzie True — Sentimental Scum (Get Better Records)
  • Sweeping Promises — Good Living Is Coming For You (Sub Pop)
  • Tiberius b — DIN EP (Zelig Music)
  • tofusmell — Humor (Hardly Art)

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