Rolling Stone - USA (2020-02)

(Antfer) #1

PLAYLIST


OUR FAVORITE
SONGS AND VIDEOS
RIGHT NOW

18 | Rolling Stone | February 2020


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The Mix


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  1. Caroline Rose
    “Feel the Way I Want”
    “I’m so in love with myself,”
    Rose sings, walking a fine,
    funny line between em-
    bodying and parodying
    Kanye-size arrogance. The
    song’s springy, synth-y
    track (recalling classic
    Madonna and recent
    Carly Rae Jepsen) helps
    the loopy irony go down
    buttery smooth.

  2. Neon Indian
    “Toyota Man”
    Neon Indian came up as
    part of the hipster boom-
    let “chillwave” in the early
    2010s. But the band’s
    leader, Alan Palomo, takes
    a new turn here, tapping
    his Mexican roots as he
    sings in Spanish over an
    enjoyably playful low-fi,
    Latin-tinged pop tune that
    takes a Beck-ish path to
    borderless good times.

  3. Squirrel
    Flower
    “Red Shoulder”
    Fans of self-emptying
    young rockers like Lucy
    Dacus and Snail Mail will
    love this slow-burn guitar
    exorcism from Squirrel
    Flower (a.k.a. 23-year-old
    Ella O’Connor Williams).
    She sings about intimacy
    as a kind of torment,
    erecting a huge wall of
    noise against her angst.

  4. Drive-By
    Tru c ke r s
    “Thoughts and Prayers”
    Patterson Hood of the
    Drive-By Truckers has
    become one of finest
    chroniclers of Trump’s
    America. Here, he offers a
    gun-violence lament with
    a happy ending: Politicians
    paying for their crimes
    in perp-walk parades
    down the Capitol steps.


GOT A QUESTION
FOR CROZ?
Email AskCroz@
Rollingstone.com

I used to be very
civic-minded, but the
election of Trump and
my family’s belief that
everything you say can
be used against you
has worn me down to
the point that I became
afraid of the fight. How
do I find that fire again?
—James, NY
Look at the situation
we’re in. We have
global warming and a
president who doesn’t
believe in it or anything
that doesn’t provide
a personal profit to
himself. The guy running
the Senate, Mitch Mc-
Connell, also only cares
about profit. We can’t
not fight them. I can’t
conceive of rolling over
and putting my paws
up. We must fight.

I love your music,
and I think your recent
run of four albums in
five years are up there
with your best work.
The thing is, my wife
will only listen to Rick
Astley and George
Michael. How can I
get her to appreciate
your music?
—Richie, WI
It’s hopeless. Give it
up. Get another wife.
How can she resist
the magnificence of
my music? It’s so stun-
ning. But some people
don’t like it. Maybe try
smoking a joint with
your wife and then see
if she likes my music
better. Somehow those
two things work togeth-
er: my music and joints.
Try that. But maybe you
need to get remarried.

Real-life advice
from a guy who’s
seen, done, and
survived just about
everything

CROZ


ASK

9



  1. Jelani Aryeh
    “Patagonia”
    Aryeh makes dolefully
    tripped-out R&B with the
    free-form joy of Frank
    Ocean. On “Patagonia,”
    he literally calls himself
    “a diamond from the Y2K”
    while still managing to
    sound cute and innocent.

  2. Rat Boy
    “Victim of a System”
    Mixing rap, reggae, and
    rock, U.K. troubadour Rat
    Boy fights his nation’s
    “brain-dead” post-Brexit at-
    rophy, and big ups Public
    Enemy, the Beasties, and
    Black Flag in the process.

  3. Margaret
    Glaspy
    “Killing What Keeps
    Us Alive”
    A starkly beautiful image
    of a fading relationship.
    Glaspy carefully goes
    from chilly vocoder ballad
    to lovely piano crescendo,
    building something
    tender in love’s ashes.

  4. Roddy Ricch
    “Gods Eyes”
    The Compton rapper’s
    breakout LP, Please Excuse
    Me for Being Antisocial,
    made it to the top of the
    RS album charts thanks
    to his liquid flow and
    radiantly catchy songs,
    like this ode to the head-
    spinning spoils of his
    freshly minted stardom.

  5. Frances
    Quinlan
    “Your Reply”
    Quinlan, frontwoman in
    the great Philly indie rock
    band Hop Along, just
    released her solo debut,
    Likewise, full of songs
    that evoke the lyrical and
    melodic invention of Elvis
    Costello and Courtney
    Barnett. Just check out
    the standout “Your Reply.”

  6. Tyler, the
    Creator
    “Best Interest”
    The L.A. rap renegade
    showed some surprising
    warmth on his 2019 album
    IGOR, and he keeps the
    vibe going here, delivering
    a lovely slice of openheart-
    ed chipmunk soul.


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