Marc Masters
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A breathy voice floats over insistent beats in a mesmerizng collection of first takes. Singer Anika asks, "Can't you let me fly far and wide / Up to where I can reach the sky?"
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Listening to the music of Canadian singer and composer Ian William Craig is like watching a classic black-and-white movie slowly fade, decay and disintegrate.
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New music from the Scottish rock instrumentalists is familiarly cinematic, full of mountainous waves that build momentum more through patience than velocity.
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The American Primitive-style acoustic guitarist makes albums that fit together beautifully, working together rather than merely occupying the same piece of vinyl.
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Watch the new video from the underground supergroup featuring Richard Bishop (Sun City Girls) and Ben Chasny (Six Organs of Admittance).
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A brief, richly suggestive drone piece that conjures chilly atmospheres and faded family memories.
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The grand instrumental music that Wolf Eyes founder Mike Connelly now makes with his wife Tara sounds like lost scores in search of epic films.
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Like the car for which it's named, the retro-futurist band is built for comfort and speed. The bulk of Rehumanizer is sleek, pedal-to-the-metal rock, executed with a sly wink.
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The Australian band's soulful, Motown-worthy punk poetry sounds simple and direct on its second album, whose innate momentum makes even the calmest moments feel tense.
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The English band's first album in 15 years lives in the crevices between abstract noise and melodic atmospheres. It feels outside of time, as if its songs began eons ago and could last forever.