1. 'Staring At The Sun' - Straw Man Army
In among the band's intriguing selection of (predominantly) jazz and electronica for their episode of Amoeba's What's In My Bag?, Squid's Ollie Judge picked Straw Man Army's 2024 LP Earthworks, which has proven to be right up my street. Tightly coiled, politically charged (often bluntly), ambitious weirdo punk like a mash-up of Parquet Courts and No Age, and not a million miles from last year's Lifeguard record.
The title track of Gordon's third solo album finds her exploring hitherto uncharted territory. Who could have guessed that the Sonic Youth lynchpin would ever go on to record a horn-heavy slow jam - albeit one that skewers Spotify's ludicrous mood playlists.
3. 'Ugly Thing' - Edwin R Stevens
Even if I hadn't had a pub tip-off about A Plague Of Gimps, its release on Wrong Speed would have been recommendation enough. Looking forward to spending time in Stevens' company and hearing lines like "You made me Norman Bates' mother" when he comes to Cardiff's Paradise Garden next month.
4. 'Journey In Satchindananda' - Alice Coltrane
Listening to Work Money Death's 2001 album The Space In Which The Uncontrollable Unknown Resides, Can Be The Place From Which Creation Arises (quite the mouthful) led me to revisit Journey In Satchindananda - and very welcome it was too. Richard Russell of XL Recordings rightly refers to the LP as "a proper mind expander" in this recent Guardian article on her critical rehabilitation, compiled to coincide with White Rabbit's publication of a biography by Andy Beta, Cosmic Music.
5. 'Rip The God' - Melvins and Napalm Death
For fans of abrasive heaviosity, these two legends of the game simply teaming up for the Savage Imperial Death March tour was exciting enough - so the prospect of a collaborative record of the same name, out on 10th April, may lead to incidences of spontaneous combustion. 'Rip The God' suggests there won't be any disappointment.
6. 'Forces At Work' - The Feelies
Another What's In My Bag? tip-off, this time courtesy of Horsegirl. Not a band I can recall having heard before, but the motoric persistence of this track in particular helps to explain how Yo La Tengo's Ira Kaplan and Georgia Hubley met at a Feelies gig.
It's a mystery to me why Rid Of Me largely passed beneath my radar at the time of its release. Likewise why I hadn't previously noticed that the opening of 'Missed' sounds very like Slint (and not just because of Steve Albini's production).
8. 'Stimulus For Living' - Drahla
Anyone hankering for what Kim Gordon used to get up to should give Drahla a try - starting with this song (and its amusingly pretentious video).
A classic late-period Deerhunter pop song from 2015's Fading Frontier, after the weirdness and experimentalism of its predecessor Monomania.
10. 'Processed By The Boys' - Protomartyr
The nefarious activities of ICE agents may have become major international news in the last year or so, but Protomartyr's Joe Casey was calling them out back in 2019.










