if it be your will
Jan 29, 2026
ifitbeyourwill S06E27 • Hand Gestures
Jan 27, 2026
Dutch Interior • Ground Scores • 2026

— Rolling Stone, “Artist You Need to Know”
“There’s something about [Dutch Interior’s] music that can’t be copied – a sense of character, an evocative-ness of atmosphere.” — Clash
“It’s easy to get caught up in the fun [Dutch Interior] whips up.” — Pitchfork
“Rustic music that is romantic but not sickly, earnest without becoming cringe, and completely free of ego.” — The FADER
Susan O'Neill & Valerie June • 'For What It's Worth’ • 2026
Jan 26, 2026
Marta Del Grandi • Alpha Centauri feat. Guinevere & Gaia Morelli • 2026
Jan 24, 2026
Jan 23, 2026
ifitbeyourwill S06E26 • 54-40
There’s a moment when a band stops trying to prove anything and starts trying to feel again. Porto is that moment for 54-40—a record less interested in declaring relevance than in reclaiming risk. Tracked live in Portugal, cut lean and close to the bone, it sounds like four musicians standing in a circle and daring the songs to blink first.
The story that trails Porto—tiny vintage amps, minimal overdubs, the hum of a Supro against a Gretsch—matters only insofar as it explains the album’s gravity. These songs don’t rush toward resolution. They settle. They hover. They let space do the heavy lifting. That patience feels deliberate, a quiet rebuke to an era that rewards immediacy over resonance.
At the center is Neil Osborne, whose voice has shifted from declaration to observation. The lyrics on Porto often arrive as fragments—sung before they’re written—leaving meaning porous by design. The Jungian framework Osborne has cited (shadow work, descent and return, Dante’s Virgil hovering at the edges) isn’t academic garnish; it’s structural. These songs hold contradiction without ranking it, beauty and ache sharing the same room.
Tracks like “Wail” and “Beautiful All of It” refuse the tidy release of a chorus that explains itself. They work by accumulation—repetition, restraint, the slow confidence of a band that trusts tension more than payoff. It’s the same instinct that once let “I Go Blind” slip sideways into anthem status: an openness that invites listeners to bring their own weather.
What Porto ultimately captures is a band choosing imperfection as method. The songs were road-tested, learned in rooms, sharpened by the kind of danger one gig can teach better than twenty rehearsals. Producer Warren Livesey keeps the frame tight, bottling the immediacy of four players committed to the take you can’t overthink.
Porto doesn’t sound like a comeback. It sounds like continuity rediscovered—longevity understood not as survival, but as tone control. In leaving space, 54-40 make room for us to step in, and the songs linger long after the last chord precisely because they refuse to tell us what to feel.
Jan 20, 2026
54-40 • I Go Blind • 2021
Jan 18, 2026
ifitbeyourwill S06E25 • Jason P. Woodbury
Jan 16, 2026
Lucinda Williams • "The World's Gone Wrong” • 2026
Local Weatherman • Right One • 2026
“Meshing the contemplative nature of shoegaze with a buzzy garage rock sound… simultaneously timely and nostalgic.”
- THE LINE OF BEST FIT
“Ridiculously hooky bones and unfettered vocals.”
- THE UGLY HUG
“A jagged, cathartic burst of energy that captures the spiraling rush of anxiety and the strange beauty found in trying to keep it all together.”
- AUDIOFUZZ
Jan 12, 2026
Hand Gestures • Once it Starts to Kick In • 2025
Jan 9, 2026
Jan 8, 2026
ifitbeyourwill S06E24 • The Barr Brothers
A melody looping in a hospital hallway. A chorus that took six years to learn its own name. Sitting down with Brad Barr, we talk about writing when life insists on co-author credit—kindness traded for drum lessons, heartbreak turned into breath, and a city that lets a voice arrive on its own time. From Providence to Montreal, Brad and Andrew built a shared language—first as The Slip, then as The Barr Brothers—rooted in groove, generosity, and patience.
The focus is Let It Hiss, their first record in eight years, and the clarity that came only after the songs could stand on their own. Jim James adds a spectral lift to “English Harbor.” Elizabeth Powell and Ariel Engle color the margins. KlĂ´ Pelgag reframes a verse in French, returning harmonies that feel like a second producer’s hand.
There’s tactile joy—cassettes, handheld recorders, chord voicings shared online—and a clear ethic: measure success by honesty, not algorithms. Ahead: Let It Hiss outtakes, North American and European dates, Sleeping Operator finally stirring, and Brad’s first vocal solo record as he learns which songs belong to which home.