“all these memories run my mind in slow motion” | best new tracks of august 2021

“all these memories run my mind in slow motion” | best new tracks of august 2021

If you thought that new music hit a plateau this summer while you were taking some time off and really trying to find a self-healing routine… I’m sorry, but you’re wrong. Gritty, raw, beautiful music has continued to be created and released at a clip we almost can’t keep up with. So check back all August long to hear our favorite new releases of August, and be sure to “like,” “follow,” and “add” your favorites!

matthew azrieli wraps you in thoughtful lyrics with “i thought i saw you the other day”

matthew azrieli wraps you in thoughtful lyrics with “i thought i saw you the other day”

If you’ve ever been to Montreal, you might remember the water. To fly over the city is to look at a maze of tiny tributaries and substantial streams – the water sleepwalking beside bustling streets to St. Lawrence river. Montrealer Matthew Azrieli captures this movement in his new song “I Thought I Saw You the Other Day.” 

With a voice like a country road, Azrieli sings of a broken bond with an old friend or lover. The track runs for just over a minute and thirty seconds, but feels longer. In the brief time he has you, Azrieli wraps you in warm guitar and thoughtful lyrics, gently leading you along each turn of phrase. It’s a simple tune, but “I Thought I Saw You the Other Day” is the kind of song that leaves its door open for revisiting again and again. It wants you to sit with it and it wants to stay with you.

“I Thought I Saw You the Other Day” holds itself with certainty – capturing its sentiment with confidence. The memories revisited in it are reminiscent of the water, steady as it drifts away. Azrieli doesn’t mourn this, but rather accepts it. “I’m not quite sure if it was you, but even if it were there’s not a lot I would say,” he admits. The track is one of bereavement without grief.

The instrumental of the tune dances easily with the lyrics. Nothing but a guitar weaves around the words. This simplicity gives the track its charm. It also creates a stronger sense of intimacy with the listener. At times, you have the sense Azrieli is talking to himself. Others, it seems he’s reaching to hold your hand.

On both this record and his others, Azrieli feels like an old friend. The wit and vulnerability of his lyrics resemble that of Bob Dylan or Nick Drake. Perhaps this parallel to the cherished folk tunes of the ‘70s is what makes Azrieli appear so familiar. Listening to him croon through his buried thoughts makes being alone your own thoughts more bearable. Clearly, his songs are best suited for long drives and longer nights.

As you listen to “I Thought I Saw You the Other Day,” think of the waters of Montreal, the same waters Azrieli grew up singing to. There, you can see the memories drifting away, without resentment or pain, but simply with the inevitable passing of time. There, you, too, may see someone you used to know.

conan gray’s “this song” feels like watching an old love on tape

conan gray’s “this song” feels like watching an old love on tape

Conan Gray has always made heartbreak sound cinematic, but in the music video for “This Song,” he leans fully into visual poetry, backdropped by small-town Texas skies, the nostalgia of youth, and the ache of something left unsaid. Shot on film and directed by Moon Shynin, the video stars Gray and actor Corey Fogelmanis, both playing lovers locked in a quiet, unresolved orbit. From stolen glances across dimly lit diners to an emotionally loaded first on-screen kiss, it’s a haunting introduction to Wishbone, Gray’s upcoming album, due out August 15.

The music video doesn’t tell a story in linear terms. It floats. Much like the song itself, the visual narrative exists in memory and metaphor more than clear chronology. It’s nostalgic without being kitschy, romantic without requiring words. The intimacy between the two characters feels lived-in… gentle, familiar, and quietly devastating in its mundanity. These aren’t grand cinematic lovers; they’re real people in the in-between, suspended in the echo of something that might have already ended.

Then, the kiss. A moment fans have buzzed about as Gray’s first on-screen kiss, it lands with more sadness than celebration. It’s not a moment of passion, but one of acceptance. A soft surrender to everything left unsaid. That’s the power of “This Song.” Nothing explodes. Nothing resolves. It just lingers.

Produced by Ethan Gruska, “This Song” doesn’t rely on sonic spectacle to hit hard. It simmers in longing, filled with slow, pulsing instrumentation and restrained vocals that unravel like a late-night journal entry. The lyrics linger in that liminal space when memories start looping louder than reality. Fans are already calling it Gray’s first true love song, and in many ways, it is. It’s vulnerable without being self-pitying, romantic without being grandiose, and devastatingly honest in how it captures the feeling of being left behind.

Gray’s reflections on the track (shared via Instagram) make the video all the more poignant. He compares relationships to a wishbone ritual: two people making a wish, pulling until something breaks, and only one person walking away with the long end. That metaphor shapes the emotional palette of “This Song.” There’s no revenge arc here, no triumphant solo glow-up. Just the ache of an ending you didn’t see coming until it shattered in your hands.  

What makes this video stand out in Gray’s visual catalog is how understated it is. There’s no high-concept drama, no surreal worldbuilding like in some of his previous videos. Instead, it’s the color of Corey’s sweatshirt, the distant look in Gray’s eyes, the awkward space between their hands in the car. Director Moon Shynin lets us sit in the discomfort of things unsaid. Combined with the grain of the film and the dusky, warm palette, the video feels like something found in a box years later, watched with a lump in the throat.

“This Song” marks the beginning of Gray’s Wishbone era! An album born from 300 unreleased tracks, written in basements and between tour stops, in hotel sheets and long cab rides. And if this single is any indication, Wishbone might be his most personal work yet: disillusioned, self-aware, and softly soul-searching. A story of choosing people who are already halfway out the door and finally asking why.

Watch the video and prepare yourself for the August heartbreak. This is Conan Gray not as the heartbroken teen pop star, but as a young adult sifting through what it means to trust, to lose, and to love anyway.

jensen mcrae’s “I don’t know how but they found me!” is heartbreaking, validating, and transformative

jensen mcrae’s “I don’t know how but they found me!” is heartbreaking, validating, and transformative

While I have listened to folk artist Jensen McRae’s sophomore album – which dropped in its entirety on Friday, April 25th – I Don’t Know How But They Found Me! in part a few times at this point, I have yet to sit down with the body of work from beginning to end. The album’s title itself is a Back to the Future quote, perhaps the standalone lighthearted aspect of this sonic adventure.

Here, my unapologetic thoughts as I experienced this heavy, beautiful 11-track masterpiece.

To note, the album was born from a period of time in McRae’s life and is semi-autobiographical. “More than anything, I am grateful to have made this album as a record of my transition into real womanhood,” she explains. “It’s me processing girlhood, with all its attendant naïveté and guilelessness and resistance to change, and emerging as an adult who is capable of forgiveness and transformation and measured optimism.”

The work begins with 2 minute, 48 second track “The Rearranger,” which effortlessly gives voice to the feeling of emptiness in a relationship (or, for some, situationship) that does not make plans. To me, this song is about a relationship that seems to have most everything you want, but feels slightly off.

“I Can Change Him” hit me the hardest on first listen. The song tells a story of a smitten relationship that can only get so far without forward momentum and change. We have all been in a relationship (or several) that presents its issues to work on together and through. The hope in McRae’s voice as the chorus comes in:

Maybe I, maybe I just love him
Maybe I, maybe I just think
All he needs is a little something
Maybe that little something’s me
Maybe I’ll be his exception
And I’ll never be the same
Maybe I, maybe I could change him
Unless he doesn’t want to change

But you can’t expect yourself to be the change someone else needs in their life. They have to be willing to change, which is why the “Unless he doesn’t want to change” is so heartbreaking. It is almost as though, over the duration of the song, the narrator is coming to a slow realization that the only true thing she has change over is herself.

More heartbreak comes in third track “Savannah,” which was released alongside a Rena Johnson directed and produced video. The song – and its accompanying video – questions alternate life outcomes based on boundaries and how you make decisions in your life. You can acknowledge what once was and what could have been while also creating a life of your own design, and this song really drives that truth home.

Fourth track “Daffodils” examines a relationship plagued with substance abuse, the push and pull of the life that supports. From one line to the next, this dichotomy keeps the narrator in this cycle of bad to good on repeat, when everyone deserves better.

Anyone who has ever been a rule follower may identify with the lyrics of “Let Me Be Wrong,” which feels a bit revolutionary and positive when compared to its predecessors. The rasp in McRae’s vocals hits correctly at the end of the verses, as she encourages people to let her learn her own way. This song has Top 40 potential written all over it, something we can all get behind at the level of The Chicks or Shania Twain.

The cadence to this song is absolutely magnetic, as Jensen McRae sings “Novelty” with her velvety vocals. She tells it like it is in this track, fully aware that some people are into the novelty of a person, environment, or otherwise. And, worse off, she has been in this place before. Having any type of relationship with someone who isn’t invested in you as a human being can subdue the entire thrill of dating, and you can feel the ice and indifference as it comes to its conclusion.

“I Don’t Do Drugs” slows things down and simplifies them a bit. Singing of how healing isn’t linear, patterns permeate, and the familiar can be addictive, this is an eye-opening piece of art at just 2 minutes and 19 seconds in length.

After hearing “Tuesday,” I was wondering how Jensen could have possibly survived a one-sided relationship as severe is this — how anyone could. But this song also stirs up feelings in people who have felt unseen in their families, friendships, or romantic partnerships. With such conviction, this ballad is specific, intense, and relatable. Unkempt in some ways, it is tinged with fire from her emotions and the rasp in her vocals.

“Mother Wound” hits pivotal aspects of successful relationships — communication and expectation management (which, to its credit, comes from communication). For an artist who has referenced Biblical text and Jesus in other songs on this record, her ability to “read your cards right” and tap into intuition in other lines throughout this album encourages open-minded spirituality and trust, almost. This song is one of those times.

“Praying For Your Downfall” could be a take down track, as vindictive as I would be given the circumstances. However, the beauty in it is that she reads him for trash in the lyrics. Lines like “keep whistling, boy, I was never your dog” hit with an unrelenting attitude that she has more than earned. She repeats “I don’t need to see you fall down” as she releases her energy from the negativity. The bridge brings us out light as a feather, layered in a way you would almost expect from HAIM.

She ends the album with fan favorite “Massachusetts,” a track that gave her a little bit more momentum with listeners. The immediate reference to Batman hooked me when I saw her perform it on Kimmel (directly after Ben Affleck was a guest), but the idea of affiliating an entire place with a person is what kept my attention. As someone who has had the fortune of living in and traveling to many places, I associate these places with people and memories.

Every young relationship leaves stamps on your heart. Marks on your memory. But that doesn’t mean you have to keep it. You can keep the good, and release yourself from what belittled you and told you that you didn’t meet its expectations. This entire album is both a testament to the pain that so many people go through while they learn themselves and their partners, and a beacon for people who are nostalgic for sweet memories that didn’t necessarily pan out.

I Don’t Know How But They Found Me! is a massive feat of strength… for McRae and all of her collaborators. Listen to it dancing around your room on a rainy day, in an air conditioned metro car on your way to a weekend spot, or with the windows down in the sunshine. It will deliver an exuberance to your nervous system that outweighs the empathic, heavy nature of it all — and validates anything you have been through or are currently experiencing.

bowling for soup hits kcmo as second stop on 20th anniversary tour of “a hangover you don’t deserve”

bowling for soup hits kcmo as second stop on 20th anniversary tour of “a hangover you don’t deserve”

On Thursday, July 18th, pop-punk outfit Bowling For Soup hit up The Truman in Kansas City, Missouri to an eagerly-awaiting, sold-out crowd for the second stop on the 20th Anniversary tour of A Hangover You Don’t Deserve. The band is expertly comprised of original members Jaret Reddick, Chris Burney, and Gary Wiseman, joined by Rob Felicetti of The Ataris fame. Noting that it was the first time they’ve completely sold out a show in Kansas City ever, the band seemed very down-to-earth and super grateful, as always. Jaret recounted some great memories around the city from previous passings through and launched us right into the madness of A Hangover You Don’t Deserve.

To note, Chris Burney is currently out of the live lineup to heal from a leg/foot injury. They added his jersey to a mannequin for the duration of the set, which was wildly decorated to call back to the bright, funky ambiance of the album for which the tour exists.

The venue staffed multiple ASL interpreters for the performance, and their presence at the corner of the stage distracted the guys multiple times. They engaged in conversation as best they could, and asked some absurd questions while they took some time to remember the track list and keep a pace for the evening.

While Bowling For Soup aimed to play the 17 songs from the album in order, they did blank a couple of times and got things slightly out of order. Not enough for the crowd to fault them, and it made the set even more charming. With the help of a big wheel on stage, they chose “My Wena” as a mid-set track to shake it up a bit. And once they finished the album in its entirety, they encored with three fan favorites.

“High School Never Ends,” “Today Is Gonna Be a Great Day,” and “Girl All the Bad Guys Want” were the last songs echoing in our heads as elder millennial after elder millennial exited The Truman, joints popping and earplugs falling out. The evening was temperate and beautiful, keeping us in a cozy cocoon of nostalgia as we drifted home.

bootsy collins is still irresistible on “album of the year #1 funkateer”

bootsy collins is still irresistible on “album of the year #1 funkateer”

It’s Bootsy, baby! If you don’t know who Bootsy Collins is, you absolutely need to get the funk out of this site and do your research. (Actually, stay to read the review, then do some listening.) Funk legend, bass player extraordinaire, fashion icon, and outrageous personality Bootsy Collins has just released a new single, the title track of his upcoming 23rd LP, Album of the Year #1 Funkateer. As you can tell, I’m a huge fan of Bootsy’s work, from his time in the Parliament-Funkadelic collective during the 70s, his solo career, and his contributions to The J.B.’s, the backing band of funk godfather James Brown. Yet despite his six-decade-long career, he’s still collaborated with newer artists inspired by his work, such as Silk Sonic (Bruno Mars and Anderson .Paak), Childish Gambino, and Kali Uchis. 

Admittedly, I had some reservations about going into the new single. Many legacy artists, when releasing a new project, get cold feet about their current abilities and try too hard to update their sound. Whether it’s through auto-tune or trying too hard to capture a more modern style out of their comfort zone, there are lots of pitfalls that many older musicians willingly jump into when recording new material. Thankfully, I could rest assured as soon as the song started, as it led into a funk jam worthy of anything from the genre’s golden age. Musically, it fit right into the same sort of P-Funk bangers that made albums like Mothership Connection so tight.

All great funk depends on the band’s chemistry in keeping the groove and rhythm going. Obviously, Bootsy would know this as a genre pioneer, and the new single totally exemplifies this idea. The bass playing is squelchy and wobbly in a way that keeps the music bouncing, and the horn section is killer throughout. Admittedly, the production can have a bit too much of a pop-music sheen to it, and it prevents the synthesizers from getting freaky in a way that Parliament’s synth solos did, but it’s only a mere nitpick. I’m glad that Bootsy himself doesn’t sound too overproduced, with some minor polishes to his voice. His infectious personality still gets to shine through. However, he takes a backseat to let the backing vocalists and musicians shine, and the song is all the better for it. I especially liked guest vocalist Myra Washington, with her voice and personality bringing up memories of classic female funk vocalists like Betty Davis or Chaka Khan.

If you have the slightest bit of a taste for classic funk, this single is a total no-brainer. Bootsy Collins shows that, even at 72, he can still bring down the house with a funky jam like “Album of the Year #1 Funkateer”. Even if the upcoming LP isn’t our “album of the year”, he remains one of the most legendary funkateers. Album of the Year #1 Funkateer is out Oct. 25 via Bootzilla Records/Equity Distribution.

oliver hazard delights a young audience in kansas city

oliver hazard delights a young audience in kansas city

Ohio-bred indie folk outfit Oliver Hazard swooped through Kansas City last night, lighting up the stage at recordBar — quite literally, with their backdrop and Edison bulbs. The trio brought their melodic magic to a captivated crowd.

To note, it was an audience of mostly Gen Z, carrying Nikon point-and-shoot cameras to capture their memories in a wholesome, “old-fashioned” way. It was a delightful way to spend an otherwise uncomfortably warm Wednesday evening, as the band rolled through their catalog and spoke of singing the national anthem at a Royals MLB game. (You know, as one does.)

Catch Oliver Hazard on one of the upcoming tour dates!

Oliver Hazard Tour Dates:
Headline dates
June 27 – St. Louis, MO – Blueberry Hill
Jul 26 – Jul 28, 2024 – Newport Folk Festival*
August 2 – Bozeman, MT – Sweet Pea Festival*
August 16 – Huber Heights, OH – Rose Music Center^
Aug 17 – Waterville, OH – Oliver Hazard Day*

w/the 502s
Sept 3 – Burlington, VT – Higher Ground
Sept 5 – Huntington, NY – The Paramount
Sept 6 – Portland, ME – Aura
Sept 7 – Baltimore, MD – Baltimore Soundstage
Sept 8 – Cleveland, OH – House of Blues
Sept 10 – Louisville, KY – Mercury Ballroom
Sept 14 – Charleston, SC – The Riviera Theater
Sept 15 – Charleston, SC – The Riviera Theater
Sept 16 – Asheville, NC – The Orange Peel
Sept 18 – Athens, GA – 40 Watt Club
Sept 19 – Raleigh, NC – The Ritz

Headline dates
Oct 16 – Toronto, ON – Horseshoe Tavern
Oct 17 – Syracuse, NY – Funk ‘n Waffles
Oct 18 – Concord, NH – Sound and Color Festival*
Oct 19 – Hamden, CT – Space Ballroom
Oct 20 – Cambridge, MA – The Sinclair
Oct 22 – Philadelphia, PA – World Cafe Live
Oct 23 – Brooklyn, NY – Music Hall of Williamsburg
Oct 24 – Washington, DC – Union Stage
Oct 26 – Lexington, KY – The Burl

*festival dates
^show w/Trampled By Turtles

“heaven” by culture wars: a raw and intimate musical embrace

“heaven” by culture wars: a raw and intimate musical embrace

With their latest single, “Heaven,” Austin-based trio Culture Wars plunges listeners into the dizzying rapture of all-consuming love. Blending raw energy with heartfelt intimacy, the track’s smooth guitars, propulsive basslines, and pulsing rhythms mirror love’s intoxicating rush.

“All I have is your love,” frontman Alex Dugan chants over a hypnotic bassline, his voice—reminiscent of Julian Casablancas and Matt Berninger—carrying both desperation and reverence. This refrain becomes the song’s heartbeat, a mantra born from Dugan’s real-life period of isolation while living abroad, where these words took on literal significance.

Lyrically, “Heaven” reads like fevered journal entries, snapshots of a heart so full it might burst. “Fill my head up / Cold and broken down (I need it now) / Heat my heart and / Heat my heartache out,” Dugan pleads, framing love not just as desire, but as a salve for deep wounds. It’s a sentiment that hits even harder when contrasted with the band’s earlier, more detached writing. Here, vulnerability isn’t just on display—it’s a force of nature.

The beauty of “Heaven” lies in its ability to immerse you in the feeling of being utterly consumed by love. The outside world fades away, replaced by a swirling vortex of you and your person. Verses simmer with restrained longing before exploding into choruses that swell with tidal waves of affection. Dynamic shifts aren’t just heard; they’re felt, carrying the listener through love’s peaks and valleys. A bridge near the song’s end strips things back to little more than voice and heartbeat-like percussion—a musical inhale before the final, cathartic release.

While “Heaven” explores well-worn thematic territory, Culture Wars avoids cliché by grounding universal feelings in vivid specificity. The result is at once highly personal and widely resonant. It’s a track that feels vitally current in an era of digital disconnection as the band reminds us how earth-shattering human connection can be.

Don’t just listen to “Heaven.” Let it envelop you. Let Alex Dugan’s lovesick pleas unlock your own memories of consuming passion. Let the pulsing instrumentals sweep you off your feet until you, too, are standing in that transcendent place where love is all that exists. Then, once you’ve caught your breath, join the growing chorus of voices eager to see where Culture Wars heads next. Because if “Heaven” is any indication, this ascent is just beginning!

byland’s “two circles” video is a blend of artfully hopeful and haunting

byland’s “two circles” video is a blend of artfully hopeful and haunting

In March, indie darling duo Byland – comprised of husband/wife talents Alie and Jake Byland – released their entrancing, 10-track full-length Heavy For A While. One of our favorites was a very emotional track for Alie, titled “Two Circles.” The music video was released today, and we are massive fans of the use of color to tell a story with the artful visuals.

Alie wanted to explore the idea of post-death limbo with this music video, which explains the stark contrast and richness in the colors chosen. “Chris Cunningham did a phenomenal job of imagining a weird, compelling visual concept and putting together an amazing team to bring it to life,” Alie says.

“As the protagonist (Alie) explores her home, she starts breaking through into this larger space that’s a little bit unfamiliar, but still populated with memories and objects from her past,” explains Cunningham. “She finds herself naturally searching for an exit, no longer content with just existing alone in her old familiar environment (perhaps unconsciously preparing to move on). Eventually, she finds an exit door that leads… well, somewhere else. Where the hell that is, I have no idea. Absolute death? A DMT fever dream in the final firework show of neurons in the brain? An afterlife? Who knows.”

The video has a haunting feeling to it, much like the song it was created to accompany. Check it out in full below.

VIDEO CREDITS: Music video for the Byland song, “Two Circles” off of the record “Heavy for a While.”
Director: Dark Details
Director of Photography: Dylan Priest
Producer: Paul Breslin
Gaffer: Matt Lindberg
Photographer: Nick Ward
Production Assistants: Ayla Cole, Brantley Duke, Marcus Chavez Special thanks to Kate Becker and Harbor Island Studios, as well as Chris Mosson and Retro Camera.