if it be your will
Jun 12, 2025
Death Culture at Sea Playlist • 2025
Jun 10, 2025
ifitbeyourwill S05E21 • Hallelujah The Hills
https://www.hallelujahthehills.com/
Jun 8, 2025
Marble Sounds • Core Memory • 2025
Blondshell • The SoCal Sound Session • 2025
Jun 6, 2025
Rapt • Natural Light • 2025
Jun 5, 2025
ifitbeyourwill S05E20 • Nick Bendzsa
Jun 4, 2025
Mo Lowda & the Humble • Canary • 2025
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Jun 3, 2025
ifitbeyourwill S05E19 • Super XX Man
Jun 1, 2025
RxHx • Star FKD • 2025
May 28, 2025
ifitbeyourwill S05E18 • Delivery
https://heavenlyrecordings.com/artist/delivery/
Force Majeure - rarely does a title so aptly describe the contents - opens with the controlled explosion of recent single Digging The Hole. The track is three and a half minutes of precise forward motion that's heavy enough to do serious damage, brilliantly breaking down into a percussive middle eight before one final burst of fireworks that feels powerful enough that it could propel the listener through a brick wall.
May 26, 2025
Super XX Man • Rusted Hues • 2025
Super XX Man marks 30 years with Rusted Hues, their 19th album, co-produced by Adam Selzer (Peter Buck, M. Ward). Founder Scott Garred reunited with former bandmates, blending home and studio recordings. NPR’s All Songs Considered once featured the band, with host Bob Boilen saying, “If we’re going to choose 10 songs every week, let it be Super XX Man,” and later inviting them for a Tiny Desk Concert. The album explores themes of decay and renewal, with standout tracks like “Rusted Hues” and “Hold On to Me,” showcasing heartfelt lyrics and lush arrangements.
May 25, 2025
ifitbeyourwill S05E17 • liz uninvited
May 24, 2025
Blondshell • Event of a Fire (live at 3voor12 Radio) • 2025
May 21, 2025
M Ross Perkins • What's the Matter, M Ross? • 2025
May 20, 2025
ifitbeyourwill S05E16 • Darksoft
May 19, 2025
DIIV • Return of Youth • 2025
SHOPFIRES • We Are Not There But We Are Here • 2025
May 15, 2025
Avery Friedman • Flowers Fell • 2025
"If you're into intense, dreamy, subtly imaginative singer-songwriter-ly pop, people like Squirrel Flower or maybe the softer moments of Big Thief, don't miss the debut album by the Brooklyn singer Avery Friedman. Her songs are a cocktail of anxiety and uneasy beauty with chiming, ringing arrangements that really get under your skin." – NPR MUSIC (All Songs Considered)
“Her full-length debut, New Thing, is a work of raw singer/songwriter confessionalism, evoking the knotted melodies, homespun arrangements, and searing edges of musicians like Squirrel Flower, Babehoven, or Adrienne Lenker.“ – UNDER THE RADAR MAGAZINE
“The promise you are left with as a listener, that there is a beauty in uncertainty and becoming, that flowers that die will surely grow again.” – THE LINE OF BEST FIT
"Damn, I adored this record. I loved the writing. So image-rich and vidi, each song feels like its own universe. This is to say nothing of the diversity of soundscape – truly felt like a Writers Album." – HANIF ABDURRAQIB
“New Thing, the scarily accomplished debut album from Avery Friedman, is all about change and growth…Friedman inhabits a complex emotional realm where nervousness can coexist with (and inform) ideas of sexiness, sadness, tenderness. Her world is fragile but appears to have arrived fully-formed.” – KLOF MAG
“New Thing is as much about community as it is Friedman’s individual journey. The album will thrill those who yearn for the days of sad indie bands in Williamsburg clubs. While Friedman and her band might be further along on the L train, they’ve moved past the detached melancholy of that cohort and instead utilize the same musical strains to confront and move beyond the pain that holds them back.” – NO DEPRESSION
“New Thing is a conduit for emotions too frenetic to hold on your own. This record is a collection of the first songs I’ve ever written, after many years of orbiting the music world but denying myself my own musicianship. Many of these tracks were born of anxiety—from my turning to a guitar to externalize (and organize) a sense of chaos that otherwise felt trapped inside me. We recorded the bulk of it with a live band as a means to maintain the raw energy at the center of the record. What results is a time capsule for a year of intense personal expansion in my life—and the layers of warmth, wonder, sensitivity, and sharpness that come with growing.” – Avery Friedman