Karol G Immerses in Merengue With ‘Si Antes Te Hubiera Conocido’: Stream It Now

Karol G has surprised fans with a new single called “Si Antes Te Hubiera Conocido” (translated to: “If I Had Known You Before”), out Thursday (June 20).

Kicking off the summer season, the Colombian superstar has immersed in the merengue genre for her new track. “What would it have been like if I had met you before? Most probably you’d be dancing this song with me,” says part of the lyric.

In the music video, she switched her baby pink locks for a new blonde look, and is performing the party-starting bop at a tiki bar.

On the eve of the song’s release, Karol performed it for the first time in London, later explaining on her Instagram that the tribute to the merengue genre is because she owes a lot to The Dominican Republic. “I worked on part of ‘Mañana Sera Bonito’ there, and when I need to disconnect from the world and connect with myself I also go there,” she wrote. “Its culture, its music, its colors, the hospitality, the energy… everything feels very authentic and special there. Its people have embraced me in a way that fills my heart and inspires me all the time.”

“Si Antes Te Hubiera Conocido”—which is released in the midst of the European leg of the Mañana Será Bonito Tour—further demonstrates Karol’s ability to experiment outside of the reggaetón realm. Prior to her merengue tune, she’s tapped into bachata (“El Barco”), corrido tumbado (“200 Copas”), cumbia (“Mi Ex Tenía Razón”), and even dropped a salsa version of “Amargura” at the 2024 Billboard Women in Music gala, where she was this year’s Woman of the Year.

The vibrant “Si Antes Te Hubiera Conocido” marks Karol’s second single of the year following the Tiësto-assisted “Contigo,” which peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart dated March 2; reached No. 27 on the Latin Airplay chart dated June 1; and debuted at No. 61 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in March, becoming Karol’s 30th entry on the all-genre chart.

Watch the new music video below:

The Sleepy Hollow Music Festival (A Gallery + Recap)

Photo Credit: Joe Madonna

On Saturday, June 8, the first-ever Sleepy Hollow Music Festival occurred at Kingsland Point Park on the Hudson River in Sleepy Hollow, N.Y. The single-day event was headlined by The Cold War Kids and underscored by the Nightingale All-Stars, an ensemble of performers known for entertaining during the 1980s and ‘90s at the New York City club Nightingale, featuring Jono Manson, John Popper, Joan Osborne, Craig Dreyer, Brett Bass and Eric Kalb. 

Notable, Osborne arrived seven songs into the set. Fellow player Popper responded to her appearance via Facebook, writing, “Joan Osbourne rocked yesterday!! She was THE first person I met at the open mic nights at Abilene’s Blues Bar on 21st&2nd ave….(it’s now a kfc last time I checked)…before Chan Kinchla Brendan Hill & Bobby graduated at PHS…it was Joan who took me to the nitengale’s & introduced me to Jono Manson&the rest from there…It’s been a pleasure ever since jamming w/her ever since lo these past 38yrs…She still radiates so [beautifully] w/her tender bluesy voice.” 

During the aforementioned frame, Blues Traveler material percolated the set, including a crowd-rousing take on “Hook” and Osborne’s appearance on the 1990-released deep-cut, “Warmer Days.” Osborne assisted with back vocals on the LP originator, adding context to her addition during the festival frame. Also included was a take on Bob Dylan’s “Buckets Of Rain,” which Osborne recorded on her 2017-released Dylan tribute LP. 

Scroll down to view more photos from the first-time gathering, including performances from fellow participants Danielle Ponder, Clare Maloney & The Great Escape, and more. 

Joe Madonna generously shared the following images.

The post The Sleepy Hollow Music Festival (A Gallery + Recap) appeared first on Relix Media.

Suki Waterhouse tells us about new album ‘Memoir Of A Sparklemuffin’: “I’m just going to do whatever I want”

Suki Waterhouse has announced details of her second album, ‘Memoir Of A Sparklemuffin’, and shared another track from it in ‘Supersad’. Check it out below, along with our interview with the star.

The new album will be released on September 13 via Sub Pop and follows Waterhouse’s 2022 debut, ‘I Can’t Let Go’. Speaking to NME, she explained how the predecessor saw her “writing a lot about a sort of sadistic love or a love where you’ve been fetishised so you can’t ever be vulnerable because you’re met with punishment through that”.

“This one is when you pick yourself up from being broken for a long time, and you’re like, ‘OK, what are we doing tonight?’,” she continued.

Although ‘Memoir Of A Sparklemuffin’ still contains moments of sadness and tension, across the board, it’s a much happier, brighter and more fun listen. While making the album, the singer-songwriter had an unlikely desire – going back to the first V Festival she attended in the early 2000s.

“I was thinking about a time where you basically wake up submerged in mud and piss, and you’ve probably had the same knickers on for three days,” she said. “You’re going into the trenches, but you’re enjoying yourself so much. It’s almost a part of my life that’s blotted out, and you go, ‘I don’t want to remember who that person was’, but now, I really want to see her and know her again.”

It wasn’t just the experience of that time in the musician’s life that inspired the record, but the music, too. “I was going back and listening to Bloc Party and The Raveonettes and The Teenagers,” she said. “There’s a hungover element element to this record. I love the feeling you get on a Sheryl Crowe record where it’s like, ‘Yeah, all this shit happens, but it’s OK’.”

‘Supersad’ – the latest track to be released from the record following a string of singles like ‘OMG’, ‘Faded’ and ‘To Love’ – encapsulates that irrepressible attitude on the album. Over a fuzzy guitar riff that recalls The Von Bondies draped in crushed velvet, Waterhouse sets the scene of a time when “everything is going wrong”, but she picks herself up and pushes through. “Could be the worst time I ever had / Lose my mind, always get it back,” she sings in the careening chorus. “There’s no point in being super sad.”

“I call it my ‘bed rot era’,” she laughed. “I’ve had to get better now I’ve got a baby, but my internal chaos was always so projected into the external for a long time. I would just basically live in a surrounding of a hotel room or my bedroom where it could really be so cavernous, like in the movie Sunset Boulevard – you’re stepping on makeup, or I’ve actually had the thought of, ‘Will I drown in all these clothes?’ I defend those messy times as me trying to create this world around me.”

She continued: “Something I love about myself that some I guess I’ve forgotten or wanted to rediscover is those silly goofy parts of yourself. Especially when you work in [the music and acting] industries, your ego is constantly under attack, and it’s those sweet things about yourself that you start to wall up.

“This record is a reminder to myself to bring yourself up and have that resilience. I always think of it as putting on a sparkling pink boa and still go out and not get hardened.”

That side of this album is reflected in the titular ‘Sparklemuffin’, a spider that was discovered in Australia in 2015. The arachnid’s lower half is coloured in bright blue and orange markings, and it “does this Bob Fosse razzle-dazzle dance”. “When I saw him, I was like, ‘I’m you; I am the sparklemuffin’,” Waterhouse said. “He also cannibalises his mate if she doesn’t enjoy the male’s dance, and I thought, ‘Yeah, I can cannibalise myself and others be this destructive thing, but I’m also this silly little spider that’s dancing for her life, who wants to wear nice hats and have fun at the party’.”

Suki Waterhouse CREDIT: Emilio Herce

Taking on the character of the sparklemuffin doesn’t just represent two sides of Waterhouse’s nature, but a metamorphosis that could only have happened after she finally pushed herself to let go of her fears and make her debut album.

“The first record I did, I had so much to prove, and I kept it one world specifically because I was just putting my toe in and being like, ‘Is this even acceptable? Am I even allowed to do this?’” she explained. “Putting that record together was the bravest thing I’ve ever done in a lot of ways. Everything since has been like an insane rollercoaster.

“I would have been so happy just making one record – that was the biggest dream ever for a decade. So everything from here just feels like, ‘Fuck it, I’m just going to have fun and do whatever I want’.”

That liberated spirit shines across the tracklist, not least in the number of songs on this record. “I was definitely advised not to put 18 songs [on it] – I wanted to put more!” she said. “You only get to put out a record every couple of years and I’m in such a place where it’s so enjoyable to be in the studio, collaborate with new people and have other new people be interested in working with me. I just want to write as much music as possible, and I think listening to full albums is back, so I believed it was the right thing to do for the fans.”

Waterhouse’s joy around creating didn’t mean that making this album was necessarily smooth sailing, though. Two months before she was due to give birth to her daughter, she had 10 songs that she thought would make up the full record at the time. Then, just before her deadline, she sat down and listened to it through and decided it wasn’t done.

“It felt safe or like we’d be getting something quite similar to before,” she said. “When you’re making an album, you think it has to sound like one thing or one world, but I just decided to throw that all away because there were so many other songs I loved that maybe it doesn’t sound entirely the same the whole way through, but it’s still part of my world.”

So, she went back to the drawing board, the imminent arrival of her baby putting the pressure she needed on her to spur her on and get the album she wanted to make done. At that point, though, Waterhouse was “huge and didn’t really want to be in a studio so much”, so she set up a home studio in her living room and called up friends to come and help her record.

The final results are a glorious, free-spirited album that finds Waterhouse in glittering form, whether she’s trying to resist surrendering to love or paying tribute to all her dreams coming true. She acknowledged that she’s still “right at the beginning” of her journey as an artist but hopes that, even this early on, people can connect with what she’s making.

“Community is what I want more than anything with music,” she said. “My dream is always that one of my songs would become a soundtrack to a moment in somebody’s life.”

Suki Waterhouse announces ‘Memoir Of A SparkleMuffin’

‘Memoir Of A Sparklemuffin’ is out 13 September via Sub Pop. Pre-order it here and check out the full tracklist below.

1. ‘Gateway Drug’
2. ‘Supersad’
3. ‘Blackout Drunk’
4. ‘Faded’
5. ‘Nonchalant’
6. ‘My Fun’
7. ‘Model, Actress, Whatever’
8. ‘To Get You’
9. ‘Lullaby’
10. ‘Big Love’
11. ‘Lawsuit’
12. ‘OMG’
13. ‘Think Twice’
14. ‘Could’ve Been A Star’
15. ‘Legendary’
16. ‘Everybody Breaks Up Anyway’
17. ‘Helpless’
18. ‘To Love’

She performs at London’s All Points East on August 18 alongside Mitski, Beabadoobee, Ethel Cain, and more. Visit here for tickets and more information.

The post Suki Waterhouse tells us about new album ‘Memoir Of A Sparklemuffin’: “I’m just going to do whatever I want” appeared first on NME.

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Several ladies have dominated the rap game over the last few years, and Big Boss Vette knows all about the power of going viral. After her ‘Pretty Girls Walk’ infiltrated the depths of social media and became an online firestorm, Vette is ready for her next big hit. No stranger to making fans stop and pay attention, the Missouri native returned this week with her explicit party single, ‘Ice Me.’ Like many of her raptress peers, Big Boss Vette didn’t hold her tongue in lyrically describing what she wants from her partner. [via HNHH]

Hackney multi-disciplinarian Bree Runway has shared new single ‘Just Like That’. A true all-rounder, Bree Runway has mastered everything she’s touched – an incredible performer, a magnet for fashion designers, she’s reframed British pop music to suit her own desires. Parting ways with EMI last year, Bree is now navigating music as an independent artist. A lightning bolt across a gloomy landscape, she’s back to add a little colour, a little extra flavour to our lives. Out now, ‘Just Like That’ is bold and arresting, the electrifying manner of its execution matching her fastidious creative tendencies. Bree comments… “The beautiful thing about this loud, spiky, destructive reintroduction to the world is that it’s not only a PSA that I’m back and I’m here to stay, but a reminder to myself that no matter how far I fall behind the fierce, confident, version of myself from the inevitable ways of life and this industry, I have the power to piece myself back to together “just like that”.” Backed by some typically incredible visuals, ‘Just That Like’ is Bree Runway’s latest statement – you have no choice but to obey. [via Clash]

ScarLip is an artist who has become known for her aggressive-sounding songs that pack a huge punch. Overall, fans have enjoyed the fact that she is bringing a unique flare to women’s rap. However, she found herself in the midst of controversy with her fans this past week. After sharing a clip from her music video for ‘She’s Hot,’ fans called her out for twerking. Some felt like an executive told her she needed to do that, with others feeling as though it was all out of character. In the end, ScarLip apologized and revealed that the twerking concept was her own. Since then, the song has arrived and it is a banger. Overall, this song is very much in line with Scar’s previous work in terms of both style and substance. The bars are fiery and braggadocious and they are delivered in a commanding way that makes you believe everything Scar says. She is a breath of fresh air in the rap world, and songs like these will continue to ingratiate her with fans. Hopefully, those same fans allow ScarLip to execute her artists vision on her terms, and her terms only. [via HNHH]

Rapper, Malyangapa, Barkindji woman, and the Blak Matriarch of Hip-Hop, BARKAA unleashes the fire within on her anthemic new single and music video, ‘PREACH’, out now via Bad Apples Music. Demanding attention and commanding respect, on ‘PREACH’ BARKAA speaks truth to her power, with a reminder to play it big, and that all of our voices can be forces for change. Inspiring strength and self-assuredness in all who hear the track, full of swagger, she confidently declares “I ain’t going nowhere sis”. The beat, produced by Brisbane producer Nerve, blends rapid snares, drum claps and harmonic keys to create a melodic soundscape that allows BARKAA’s raw authenticity and unapologetic passion to cut through: “Talk is cheap, I’ve talked about it, I’ve got new shit to PREACH!” BARKAA shared: “’Preach’ is a big fuck you to anybody who still doubts you today and doubted you yesterday. It’s about having a voice… that we’re allowed to bignote ourselves and be loud in our successes and achievements. That I don’t have to stay in the bucket the colony put there to drop my people in. I made it out of that bucket so I can come back and kick it over. I got a new team, I turned over a new leaf and got rid of people not only in my personal life, but in my work life, who were doing me wrong. This clip is a reminder that I ain’t done. It’s takeover season for Blak artists in this country and we ain’t getting the wool pulled over our eyes anymore. If they try, they’ll fuck around and find out.” [via Amnplify]

Flohio returns with new song ‘Juice’. The South London rapper is one of the best in the game, a perpetually under-rated artist who can cut it with some of her more high-profile peers. Fresh from stellar comeback ‘Make It Bang’, Flohio lifts the levels once more on her excellent new single ‘Juice’. Out now, it feels tailor-made for summer – absorbing electronic tropes into its framework, ‘Juice’ feels finessed for club use. Flohio comments… “‘Juice’ is one of those records where I had no plans or intentions in the direction it was going to go. I was feeling nice and in a really good mood that day, this was one of my first sessions with Oscar who produced the track so we were just testing the waters and came out with Juice in my little studio down in Bermondsey.” [via Clash]

The post first appeared on She Makes Music.

Francos de Montréal 2024 | Philippe Brach et Maten

En ce mercredi de canicule, les Francos de Montréal offraient Philippe Brach, Maten, Aliocha Schneider (qu’on a pris en photo) qui faisaient monter la température d’un cran. Photos par Alexanne Brisson Les Francos de Montréal offraient une soirée de concert alors que la canicule bat son plein à Montréal. Cela a peut-être impacté un peu…

L’article Francos de Montréal 2024 | Philippe Brach et Maten est apparu en premier sur Le Canal Auditif.

Survey Shows South Australia Needs A More Connected Music Industry

MusicSA have released the findings from their first annual survey of the South Australian contemporary music industry, conducted to reflect the current state of the local scene as well as “identify the sector’s perceived strengths and weaknesses to better inform and shape the future of MusicSA’s advocacy and industry development programs”.

According to the organisation, the findings (which you can read for yourself here) show that South Australia’s artists and music business professionals have a “strong demand for a better-connected music industry”, pointing out the need for “more professional and industry development, especially among regionally-based musicians and music businesses”.

One particularly striking question in the survey asked whether respondents thought the South Australian government was working well with the local music industry to effectively support it. Only 14.8 percent answered in the affirmative – with just 0.8 percent saying they “strongly agreed” with the sentiment – while 17.5 percent said they “strongly disagreed”, 22 percent said they “disagreed”, and another 22 percent said they “somewhat disagreed”.

Meanwhile, 80 percent of respondents said the financial state of the local industry is worse than it was before the COVID-19 pandemic (compared to 17 percent saying it’s the same, and three percent saying it’s better), with 52 percent saying the industry is suffering because of the rising costs to do business, inflation and the cost of living. A further 46 percent of respondents reported low or decreasing audience numbers, 41 percent reported a lack of potential to generate cash flow or income, and 35 percent reported a lack of paid performance opportunities for local artists.

In a formal statement, MusicSA CEO Christine Schloithe said of the inaugural report: “The outcomes from the 2024 survey paint an uncomfortable picture about the health of contemporary music in South Australia. While we have an extraordinary pool of talent and some very successful artists and businesses, local contemporary music is under-invested in and we see this in the lack of pathways, the lack of employment opportunities and sustainable careers, the decline in touring and live music, and in the business gaps that exist in our local ecosystem.

“The survey results reinforce what we know are the current challenges and opportunities for contemporary music in South Australia. We also know that with the right policy settings and targeted industry development and investment in the right areas, this is an industry that achieves significant cultural, creative and economic outcomes for the state.”

From here, MusicSA will pass the findings of their survey down to “key industry organisations, stakeholders and government”, and the body’s own industry development programs and initiatives, it’s promised, “will be tailored to [meet] the shifting needs of the local sector as highlighted in the survey”.

A rep for MusicSA notes of the effort: “Over time, it is intended that the annual survey will continue to benchmark the health of contemporary music in South Australia and build a longitudinal and comprehensive picture of industry gaps, growth, opportunity and trends.”

Katy Perry To Release First Single From Her New Album Next Month

Katy Perry will kick off an extraordinary new pop era this summer, beginning with the release of her new single, “Woman’s World,” on Thursday, July 11, at 7:00 PM ET/ 4:00 PM PT. The official video will premiere the morning of July 12. Today, the global pop superstar unveiled the single’s bold cover art, which was shot by acclaimed British photographer Jack Bridgland, and a snippet of the song on her social media. “Woman’s World” is the first single from Katy’s forthcoming album.

With a cumulative 115 billion streams alongside worldwide sales of over 70 million adjusted albums and 143 million tracks, Katy is one of the best-selling musical artists of all time. She’s one of only five recording artists in RIAA history to gain entry to the elite 100 Million Certified Songs club.
On Friday, September 20, Katy will headline the sold-out Rock in Rio in Brazil, marking her first performance at the Rio de Janeiro festival since 2015. // Continue to the full article