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  • King Krule gives us yet another peak at the forthcoming 6 Feet Beneath the Moon. The UK singer-songwriter was teased us with one forlorn song after another, fronted by his deep, emotive, melancholy vocals. This particular track feels a little less minimal than some of what we’ve heard thus

  • Singer and producer Active Child has a new instrumental track that’s just dropped on SoundCloud with little warning. While the song doesn’t feature the emotive lead vocals we’d usually expect from a song out of this project, we are getting some angelic background singing against some plucked

  • With the release of Doris only a couple of weeks away, Earl Sweatshirt is keeping the hype train going full speed ahead with the Pharrell-produced “Burgundy.” The two-minute-long anxiety-ridden track manages to come off as remarkably triumphant thanks to its substantial, soaring, and jazzy instrumental. Check it out above! Doris

  • UK electronic music producer Mark Pritchard has a new track out simply titled “1234.” The beat has a nice choppiness to it, but guest act Ragga Twins lends the instrumental a pretty smooth, groovy jungle esthetic, as well. Enjoy! “1234” will be featured on Pritchard’s upcoming EP Lock Off,

  • Volume Two by perhaps Boston “stargaze” trio Perhaps has just made its sophomore effort, aptly named Volume Two, available to stream and buy for name your price on Bandcamp. The album quickly became the best-selling experimental album on the site, and is comprised of only one track, which nears the

  • Pleasantville-based musical project Porches. pioneers the hitherto unexplored genre of “bootyclapping” with the new single from its upcoming debut full-length Slow Dance in the Cosmos. Really, with “Skinny Trees” the group (fronted by multi-instrumentalist Aaron Maine) has pulled together a taut, fuzzed-out, somewhat psychedelic trudge that manages to feel breezy

  • Ab-Soul lays down some incredibly hard-hitting verses on his new single, “Christopher DRONEr.” The track features a beat laden with foreboding bells, over which the MC delivers a scathing commentary on US militarism. His flow is bold and is perhaps even more fiery than the apocalyptic instrumental. Ab-Soul also teases