SAY ANYTHING... dir. Cameron Crowe

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SAY ANYTHING... dir. Cameron Crowe
# 4,038
Omega Radio for April 9th, 2022; #303.
Still Corners: “The Trip”
Jeanines: “You Were Mine”
Peel Dream Magazine: “Up And Up”
Long Beard: “Sweetheart”
Crumb: “M.R.”
Shower Curtain: “All That U Do”
Corey Flood: “Down The Hill”
Fawns Of Love: “Horoscope”
Gentle Heat: “In Between”
Julia Shapiro: “Shape”
Citrus Clouds: “Whoa”
Young Prisms: “Feel Fine”
Dummy: “Slacker Mask”
Soft Blue Shimmer: “Coca-Cola Abyss”
Deeper In: “Sicayda”
Trillion: “Sure”
Chrome Waves: “Aspiring Death”
Poppy Jean Crawford: “Same Old Tricks”
Criminal World: “Mox Jet”
Youngest: “Slow Fade”
Slow Crush: “Hush”
Kestrels: “Octavio”
Nadja: “Starres”
Gemma Ray: “Acta Non Verba”
Wand: “Airplane”
Mr. Elevator: “Brobdingag”
Shoegaze, alternative, dream-pop, and jangle.
APRIL 9, 2022 (#303)
Still Corners: "The Trip" Jeanines: "You Were Mine" Peel Dream Magazine: "Up And Up" Long Beard: "Sweetheart" Crumb: "M.R." Shower Curtain: "All That U Do" Corey Flood: "Down The Hill" Fawns Of Love: "Horoscope" Gentle Heat: "In Between" Julia Shapiro: "Shape" Citrus Clouds: "Whoa" Young Prisms: "Feel Fine" Dummy: "Slacker Mask" Soft Blue Shimmer: "Coca-Cola Abyss" Deeper In: "Sicayda" Trillion: "Sure" Chrome Waves: "Aspiring Death" Poppy Jean Crawford: "Same Old Tricks" Criminal World: "Mox Jet" Youngest: "Slow Fade" Slow Crush: "Hush" Kestrels: "Octavio" Nadja: "Starres" Gemma Ray: "Acta Non Verba" Wand: "Airplane" Mr. Elevator: "Brobdingag"
Warmer temperatures are now here and so is our latest broadcast. Shoegaze has been mostly absent on Omega Radio save for one deluxe summer broadcast, and this week it finally returns. Two hours of new, current, and recent ear-splitting sounds from the world of shoegaze, dream-pop, alternative, and jangle to supplement the soundtrack for white April sunshine, green grass, blue skies, cotton clouds and rainbows.
No shortage of sounds to be found on Omega and we have no plans on stopping. See you in two weeks.
April 23, 2022 (10PM New York City): deluxe Omega
April 25, 2022 (midnight New York City): bonus Omega
I can’t stop thinking about the line in say anything when young John cusack is just starting to go out with Diane and his friends are talking about if she actually likes him and Corey asks “if you were Diane Court would you honestly fall for Lloyd?” And they both look at each other and answer so earnestly “yeah”. Idk man. That’s what love feels like. no other line has come close.
ive officially decided that if Honey were a teen in the 80s she would be exactly like Corey Flood from Say Anthing, including the horrible songs about heartbreak. ESPECIALLY the horrible songs about heartbreak
# 3,783
Omega Radio for July 10, 2021; #272.
Corey Flood: “Honey”
Slow Pulp: “Idaho”
Mia Joy: “See Us”
Kindling: “Can’t Hardly Wait”
DIIV: “Blankenship”
Grave Flowers Bongo Band: “Smile”
Gaadge: “Holy Formers”
Lazy Legs: “Wax”
Living Hour: “Miss Emerald Green”
Long Beard: “Snow Globe”
Mint Field: “Delicadeza”
Net: “Running Red”
Beach House: “Last Ride”
Cigarettes After Sex: “Sweet”
Cremation Lily: “Lovers Against The Rocks”
Milly: “Star Thistle Blossom”
Nine Zillion: “Over Again”
White Flowers: “Daylight”
BDRMM: “A Reason To Celebrate”
Only Sibling: “And I Hate It”
Vicious Blossom: “Slowdown”
Citrus Clouds: “In A Daydream”
Bleary Eyed: “*Bonus Track”
Pardoner: “Donna Said”
Smile Machine: “Shit Apple”
Water Buildings: “A Brief, Mid-Day Death”
Winter: ”Here I Am Existing”
Laveda: “CNS”
Bonus Omega; shoegaze, alternative, dreampop.
Fall traditionally tends to be a monster as a new release onslaught. There are weeks where so much new music comes out that’s justifiably worth diving into that you could easily fill up any year-end list of best albums based around a three-week period alone. Volume V of Listen to These. takes all of that into account and wants to give golden light to those listens big and small who have stood out amidst the rest of autumn's new music rustle. Be sure to keep up to date with the latest full album reviews, and revisit anything you may have missed previous volumes of Listen to These as well.
Corey Flood - Hanging Garden [Fire Talk Records]
Our first introduction to Corey Flood was their 2017 EP Wish You Were Here and the four morbid post-punk / indie rock knots it included. The dark cloak from that listen may have been lifted on the Philadelphia trio’s debut full-length Hanging Garden in the form of bassist Ivy Gray-Klein’s gently rippling rhythms and Juliette Rando’s toed drumming laying up against Em Boltz’ warm, daybreak guitars, but there’s still a trepid emotion carrying its way through the listen that makes Gray-Klein and Boltz’ tandem vocals pause to the sunlight when confronted by their own anxious existentialism. Though our own nature may flourish, Corey Flood’s Hanging Garden ponders just how long for...
Hanging Garden by corey flood
Deftones - Ohms [Warner Records]
Ohms, the ninth studio effort from Deftones, is a masterful display of the sheer sonic velocity which the metal-gazing hydra-heads still have the power to conduct through the atmosphere, even 25 years after they broke new ground with their definitive album White Pony. It could be, in parts, due to the fact that Ohms reunites the Chino Moreno’s atmosphere-defying vocals and guitarist Stephen Carpenter’s monochromatic electricity with classic era producer Terry Date, but there’s a newfound wisdom on balance (”balance, balance, balanace!...”) heard in their alternative rock innovations that turns Ohms into an infinite current every future heavy artist will be keen to draw from.
Fleet Foxes - Shore [ANTI-]
In year where every turn has taken more out of us than given back, Fleet Foxes’ Shore crashes onto us with gentle hands of restoration. Over the years, leader Robin Pecknold has been expanding the grandeur behind his ornate folkwork, and as the follow-up to 2017′s wonderfully beguiling Crack-Up, the band’s fourth full-length reconnects their sound with pieces of clarity, even if Pecknold remains lyrically skeptical and unsure of what awaits him. Still, he and his cast of collaborators -- including Grizzly Bear’s Daniel Rossen and Christopher Bear as well as Kevin Morby and members of the Leithauser family -- create an ensemble of much-needed warmth in this season as we come to accept that the peace we find is oft that which we create for ourselves.
Shore by Fleet Foxes
Mary Lattimore - Silver Ladders [Ghostly International]
Harpist Mary Lattimore and her prolific experimental compositions have made her the go-to string extraordinaire across the independent scene and many a genre over the years, but Silver Ladders, her fourth proper studio effort, hears cosmic karma make its way into her work in return. Recording alongside Neil Halstead of shoegaze legends Slowdive, Silver Ladders discovers entry into new worlds with her music, and perhaps even more powerfully at that given Lattimore’s wordless compositions invite a closer ear to listen. Halstead’s studio direction expand the energy fields by which Lattimore’s silver threads travel through space and time. In doing so, Lattimore’s connection with solitude and our delicate physical nature is felt with an even greater gravity.
Silver Ladders by Mary Lattimore
METZ - Atlas Vending [Sub Pop]
Being loud can make for exciting music, but being loud alone does not make music better. METZ have never ceased to take artistry into account with their brand of noise-rock where as many of their peers have fallen by the wayside for relying too, er, heavily on their ability to make the room shake and bowl over listeners. Atlas Vending, the Toronto trio’s third full-length effort, is what noise-rock sounds like when all of its moving parts work as one well-oiled machine. Here, guitarist and vocalist Alex Edkins, bassist Chris Slorach and drummer Hayden Menzies have not only refined their sound by pushing it even further into the sky, but they do so by delivering their hookiest material yet without disregarding their innate ability to rattle through any surface, be it in the flesh or through the speakers.
Atlas Vending by METZ