ReportWire

Tag: SG Lewis

  • Your Weekend Playlist: New Music To Listen To This Friday

    Your Weekend Playlist: New Music To Listen To This Friday

    [ad_1]

    How is it already August? As we enter the final month of the summer, we’re gearing up for even more new music to come our way. It’s the month of new albums from stars like Sabrina Carpenter, Post Malone, A$AP Rocky, and more…which means singles will be left and right.


    But that’s not all, we’re shifting into the fall releases for new music…and fans are speculating that a certain Taylor Swift will re-release Reputation (Taylor’s Version) very soon. So, there’s a lot to look forward to with the quickest summer ever coming to an end.

    And while we’re still in the middle of a heat wave, I’m looking forward to heading to the beach and getting some much-needed vitamin D…but that means I’m going to need a good playlist filled with new music released this week. Luckily for everyone involved, I create a weekly playlist filled with just that!

    I find the best of the best when it comes to new songs. I listen to new albums, read through every press release, and search every Spotify playlist for what’s actually worth listening to. Plus, the playlists aren’t terribly lengthy…so it’s a really manageable listen too!

    We’ve already wasted enough time here, so I want to get to the point. To enjoy a nice weekend, you need a weekend playlist. Let’s get listening!

    Charli XCX, Billie Eilish- “Guess (Remix)”

    If there’s one thing for certain, it’s that Charli XCX’s BRAT album inspired our summer. You may have heard about having a BRAT Summer, which includes partying as much as humanly possible and living your life…but Charli isn’t finished teaching us how to be a BRAT. Now, she’s partnered up with an unexpected collab: Billie Eilish.

    The remix is sure to be a hit. “Guess” on its own was enough to send Charli into the mainstream, but adding Billie’s flirtatious lyricism to the mix makes it a surefire radio play. It’s both pop and house, which is super timely considering a few popstars are heading to house music. BRAT summer continues, Billie style.

    Jessie Murph ft. Teddy Swims- “Dirty” 

    Two powerhouse vocalists join to create a soulful, cutting breakup anthem about a partner who has cheated on you. It’s every bit as vengeful and catchy as you’d imagine. It fully sums up when you’re done with a partner who’s treated you wrong while showcasing the vocal prowess of Jessie Murph and Teddy Swims.

    With two big names in the music industry whose star power continues to grow exponentially, “Dirty” is an exciting development from the pair. Ahead of Jessie Murph’s debut album, this is just the beginning for two rising stars in the industry.

    Gryffin- PULSE

    With new album, PULSE, Gryffin goes back to his house roots. He gears up with heavy hitter collaborations like John Newman, Rita Ora, Whethan, and more, all while creating catchy dance tracks that fit perfectly with the summer. An album made to be played on the dancefloor while surrounded by friends and music lovers alike, there’s not one song that’s a skip.

    PULSE is a great listen for those who need to start a pregame off the right way. With lots of synths, great beat drops, and strong lyricism, Gryffin continues to blaze his own path in creating pure EDM with his own, fun twist.

    Maren Morris- “Intermission” 

    Maren Morris has a cathartic, lilting voice that carries through her EP, Intermission. Surprisingly honest, a delight to listen to throughout its entirety…Intermission is a loving, honest submission into Morris’ catalogue. She’s impressive, but we already knew that. And that’s what makes her music so easy to listen to. About the EP, Morris states,

    “Here’s my heart journey and gamut of emotions packaged into 5 songs. Covering loss, catharsis, sexuality and gratitude, I hope you hear the light coming back to me in them and somewhere perhaps see it mirrored in you.

    RUFUS DU SOL- “Lately” 

    “Lately” is the first track from legendary EDM group, RUFUS DU SOL, since 2021 when they released “Music is Better.” Now, three years later, they’re here to remind us what makes them an essential group in music. Their sounds are light, sending you straight to a rooftop in the city somewhere.

    A borderline transcendental experience, “Lately” is both calming and upbeat at the same time. Soft in all the right places and explosive in others. If you needed a lesson on how the band can create magic in a song, listen to “Lately.”

    Carlita, SG Lewis- “The Moment” 

    Carlita is on the verge of her big moment. With her debut album coming in November, Sentimental, and a subsequent leading single with SG Lewis to showcase it, there’s no stopping her. “The Moment” is a thrill from the very start, combining every little skill Carlita has learned along the way of her already illustrious career with SG Lewis’ ability to make any song a hit.

    If this gives us a taste of the new album, then we’re in good hands. “The Moment” is everything we’ve been wanting in a song so far.

    David Guetta, AFROJACK- “Raving”

    Two titans in the industry: David Guetta and AFROJACK have united to release their highly anticipated new single, “Raving.” The song title is a little self-explanatory, but it makes you want to go rave. It’s fun, and specifically in time for BRAT Summer. We’re loving the hard house music lately, and this track is made by some of the best in the EDM industry.

    “Raving” is what we needed to close out the summer: an electric single that gets you moving. It’s a fun track that just keeps getting better as time goes on.

    Sonny Fodera, Jazzy, D.O.D- “Somedays” 

    Sonny Fodera has already made many hits, but this song proves he can do it time and time again. It’s no shock that his production is borderline seamless and his collaborative efforts are always a success. “Somedays” is no different. It’s fun-filled and captivating, replay worthy even.

    Alongside Jazzy and D.O.D, Sonny Fodera pairs vocal talent with bass-heavy beats. A summer anthem without a doubt, “Somedays” will be a great addition to any playlist.

    [ad_2]

    Jai Phillips

    Source link

  • Hot in Herre: Tove Lo and SG Lewis Unsurprisingly Bring the Heat 

    Hot in Herre: Tove Lo and SG Lewis Unsurprisingly Bring the Heat 

    [ad_1]

    Like many LGBTQIA+ allies, Tove Lo wasn’t about to let the month of June pass without honoring Pride in some way. So she decided to do what she does best: make the kind of music you can sweat to. Hence, the title of her new four-track EP: Heat (though some will always associate that with the 1995 Michael Mann movie of the same name). That moniker, too, can also bear an alternate political meaning in terms of referring to climate change. After all, we’ll all be sweating our tits off regardless of whether we’re dancing or not once the Earth heats up another two-ish degrees. 

    In any case, Tove wastes no time in getting asses on the dance floor as she and Lewis kick things off with the eponymous “Heat,” for which there is an accompanying music video directed by David Wilson. The video, like the rest of the album, is intended to be what Tove called “an ode to queer dance floors around the world.” As such, the concept centers on Tove Lo working late ‘cause she’s a singer, taking center stage at a bondage-friendly (as Tove exhibits with her very specific necklace) nightclub while the pulsing, 90s-inspired dance rhythm gets the crowd even hotter and sweatier than they already are. Things become sexual real quick (Tove is a Scorpio, after all) as bodies and mouths collide against each other, with Tove as their sex-positive satyr. With her confident lyrics, “I know you want me, obviously/I already know you can’t take the heat/You’re staring at me, staring is free/I already know you can’t take the heat [again, so global warming-coded],” she urges them to take chances they might not ordinarily dare to in the outside world. A world that can hardly be considered a “safe space.” 

    In this Tove Lo-anointed club, however, everyone is free—accented by the braggadocio of Tove also flexing, “Want my body, but my body’s much too much for your touch/Think you’re ready?/You’re not ready for the power of love/Want my body, but my body’s got too lush for your stuff/I already know you can’t take the heat.” And yet, patrons of the club seem to have no trouble “taking the heat” of each other as additional “performers” bum-rush the stage like it’s an impromptu vogue ball. 

    Tits and asses out, the party doesn’t seem likely to stop until well into the early hours of the morning. And when the video concludes with a new addition to the club (Tove Lo in a wig), it’s clear their “lost lamb” vibe is about to be jettisoned in favor of joining these lions of lasciviousness. Let’s just say it leaves things on a cliffhanger, opening up the potential for other videos that will arise out of this EP. 

    In the spirit of having the freedom to explore as many sexual avenues as possible, the sentiment of “Let Me Go Oh Oh” is one that insists on being allowed that kind of liberty if the person one is in a relationship (or even just an early flirtation) with isn’t truly committed. In Tove’s case, the stage of the relationship is merely in the flirtation “era.” So it is that she demands, “Oh, don’t treat me cold, I know that you’re sweet on me/Want you to be mine, but don’t waste my time.” It seems that this “boy,” however, is only comfortable expressing his feelings toward Tove within the safe confines of a dark dance floor (“Rush to my heart when we kiss in the dark all night”). This, too, speaks to the queer canon, with many LGBTQIA+ folks still conditioned to not feel safe enough to express physical signs of their love in a public, heteronormative space. But with the help of Lewis’ throbbing beat and Tove’s looming threat, “Give me your love or let me go, oh-oh,” it could very well be time for this scared little boy to come out into the light. 

    Because, if not, well, Tove has plenty of other options. This much is made clear as the pace ramps up even more on “Busy Girl.” With its stabbing, assaulting rhythm that matches the self-vaunting nature of the lyrics, Tove wastes no time in asserting, “Every second, minute, hour/I am good at what I do/Bitch, I’m better than you/I got brains, I got body/Both parts a little naughty.” Sure to be a drag anthem, Tove also channels equal parts sex worker and pre-fame Madonna in New York as she declares, “I push, I work, I’m such a busy girl/I’m lush [that word again]/I’m first/I get what I deserve.” And what Tove obviously feels she deserves, if this record is anything to go by, is an orgasm. But if she can’t quite achieve one, at least she can help others succeed in that area by making an album such as this. And when she says, “I’m good at what I do,” listeners know she’s referring not to giving head, but to making people come together on the dance floor. As she puts it, “Expert in my field, I can cut a deal/Experience is key, you wanna be like me.” 

    But for many, the desire to be like Tove will remain just that. So it’s fitting that she should conclude the all-too-brief record with a track called, what else, “Desire.” For, in many ways, that’s what being on the dance floor is all about. Moving one’s body to attract and allure the object of their desire, while themselves also becoming one. The longest of the four bops on Heat, it drips with yearning to a danceable beat (one that, at times, sounds like it’s in the same intonation as Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello’s “Señorita), with Tove Lo unabashedly admitting, “All I want, it is one night with you/You are my desire/Every time we kiss, I can’t deny it/Tell me do you feel the way I do?” 

    Even if they don’t, surely they can pretend for just one night. For that’s all anyone really has in this life, especially when they’re so often limited by the constraints of the day. Perhaps Tove Lo phrases that reality best when she pronounces on “Desire,” “I just need to let it out and dance till my body’s free.” Because, with the government constantly trying to put limitations on it, it’s no wonder people feel obliged to let it loose in the dark. With Heat, it becomes that much easier to do so.

    [ad_2]

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link

  • Your Weekend Playlist: New Music To Listen To This Friday

    Your Weekend Playlist: New Music To Listen To This Friday

    [ad_1]

    How are we halfway through June already? It actually seems illegal how fast the summer passes by, there’s so much I want to accomplish in no time whatsoever. But enough about me, the main point here is that we’re looking at the weekend once again.


    Whether this was the best or worst week of your life, there’s one thing we can all agree on: music will help any situation. Yes, there’s a song out there that will make you forget about everything else in life while it’s playing…you just have to find it.

    And you may be wondering: yeah, but why do you care? Well, dear reader, you’ve actually stumbled upon the place for new music released today. Every Friday, hundreds of new songs are released…and sure, you can comb through every New Music Friday playlist curated on your Spotify or Apple Music. But wouldn’t it be easier if one place made a playlist with the best-of-the-best on it?

    Yes. It would. And that’s why we’re all here: I make a weekly playlist with the best new songs released so you don’t have to do all that aimless searching and listening on your own. It’s okay to be lazy when you’re listening to my Weekend Playlists!

    This week, we have a bunch of fresh new tracks that can easily get you through the weekend. Without further ado, let’s get listening!

    R3HAB, Don Diablo, NEEKA- “Disco Marathon” 

    Welcome back to the 70’s…because it’s a disco summer! The EDM/house world is fully leaning into the club disco track, which is why R3HAB, Don Diablo, and NEEKA teamed up for “Disco Marathon.” If you want a feel good track that gets you and your friends dancing, this is a great start to your playlist.

    “Disco Marathon” is captivating from the very start- a sonic shift for both R3HAB and Don Diablo that blends their sounds perfectly.

    Ashton Irwin- “Straight To Your Heart” 

    We recently got the chance to sit down with Ashton ahead of his sophomore solo album release, Blood on the Drums. After speaking a bit about “Straight To Your Heart” I learned that Ashton was really inspired by the bands of the 80’s who leaned heavily into synths. Now, as he releases the first part of Blood on the Drums, “Straight To Your Heart” is here for the world.

    It’s a testament to his prowess as a songwriter and singer, a multi-instrumentalist who has years’ experience under his belt. “Straight To Your Heart” is pure fun all the way through.

    Jelly Roll- “I Am Not Okay” 

    Just in time for Men’s Mental Health Awareness Month, Jelly Roll releases “I Am Not Okay”- an introspective track about needing help but not wanting to talk about it. With lyrics like “I woke up today/I almost stayed in bed/Had the devil on my back”, it’s a prevalent reminder that although we all have our dark moments, have have to keep going.

    Jelly Roll has been a longtime advocate for mental health awareness through his music, and his mission continues by spreading the word in “I Am Not Okay.”

    Benjamin Ingrosso- “Look Who’s Laughing Now”

    Benjamin Ingrosso’s vocal ability shines through in his new single, “Look Who’s Laughing Now.” The song almost was made for live performances, with big sounds building to a crescendo throughout the entire song. It’s an easy listen, both uplifting and confident all in one. Ingrosso says,

    Look who’s laughing now is about announcing to yourself and the world you can be whoever you want to be in all of your imperfections and still have the best time of your life and come out winning.”

    Tove Lo, SG Lewis- “HEAT”

    What makes a collaboration successful is the ability for both artists to blend their sounds in a way that makes sense, that makes people want to hear more from them. It doesn’t work every time, but with Tove Lo and SG Lewis, the four tracks that make their EP, HEAT, it works tremendously. The energy is palpable throughout each and every song, and you never want it to end.

    The four tracks- title track “HEAT”, “Let me go OH OH”, “Busy Girl”, and “Desire”- are equally exciting across the board. They find a way to combine sex appeal with synths and bass, and then you add in Tove Lo’s crooning vocals and you have yourself a hit collection of songs.

    Listen to our playlist on Spotify! 

    [ad_2]

    Jai Phillips

    Source link

  • Nelly Furtado, Tove Lo and SG Lewis Want You To Know That It Hurts So Good When “Love Bites”

    Nelly Furtado, Tove Lo and SG Lewis Want You To Know That It Hurts So Good When “Love Bites”

    [ad_1]

    Of all the collaborative duos one might have anticipated to come together in 2024, Nelly Furtado and Tove Lo probably weren’t on anyone’s bingo card. Sure, SG Lewis is in the mix too, but he often is whenever Tove Lo appears (hear: Dirt Femme’s “Call On Me” and “Pineapple Slice”). As for Furtado, “Love Bites” marks the first single from her forthcoming seventh album, which is promised to have plenty of “club bangers.” It would seem “Love Bites” is among them, with an opening beat that immediately reels the listener in as Tove Lo urges, “Go ahead, go ahead now.” And with that instruction, we’re off on an escapist journey. 

    Escapism is, in fact, the keyword for Furtado right now, for, as she explained of creating new music this time around, “I realized how much people like to dance and escape to my music. It’s the healthiest vice you can have, and I love the opportunity to write music that lets people escape more than anything.” “Love Bites” is no exception to Furtado’s rule. And in the accompanying “visualizer” (which looks like a pretty legit music video that even has a director—Gemma Warren—attached…but who knows, maybe they’ll make a “real” one later), Nelly and Tove appear at ease against a vibrant red backdrop as they lounge on a couch and the top of a car, respectively, before then standing up in the next scenes (these ones contrasted by black backdrops) to bump and grind against each other. 

    Oozing with sensuality, Furtado delivers the first verse, “​​And I can tell it from your mouth that you’re/Real good at working with your mouth and you’re/Not really tryna fuck with my mind and/Good at pretending that you could be mine.” Because, as Dua Lipa points out on Radical Optimism’s “Illusion,” “I really like the way you’re movin’/Yeah, I just wanna dance with the illusion.” In other words, it’s easier to be attracted to the, let’s say, two-dimensional persona presented by someone you initially encounter on a dance floor than it is to be by whoever they really are behind that false projection. Thus, as Lewis ramps up the beat, it reaches its climaxing crescendo when Tove Lo sings the chorus, “I want your body all mine/Boy, you’re looking too fine/The way your love bites/Got me dreamin’ ‘bout that/Time left your mark on my mind/Give me more of that kind/The way your love bites/Got me dreamin’ ’bout ‘cha.” Yes, it’s definitely the perfect song to soundtrack any sexually-charged vampire movie. 

    As for the phrasing of “about you” into “‘bout ‘cha,” well, it speaks perhaps to Furtado’s continued devotion to 00s musical and language sensibilities. After all, one can’t think of “‘cha” without tying it to The Pussycat Dolls 2004 hit, “Don’t Cha.” As for Furtado’s own musical evolution since her album supremacy (Whoa, Nelly!, Folklore [that’s right, Furtado named her album that before Taylor] and Loose) in the early and mid-00s, it’s clear she’s waited a bit longer this time to release another record because she wants to return to the eclectic, pulsing sounds that made her stand out from the herd in the first place. Tove and SG are the perfect pair to help reintroduce her to a new decade (with Furtado’s last album, The Ride, released in 2017), complementing her naturally dance-oriented style with their own more direct “Eurodance” one. 

    Furtado lends more depth to the average “sweaty dance track,” however, with her unique brand of lyricism continuing in the second verse, “And I can tell it from the signs you show/That you just wanna put me on your wall/So we gonna keep riding this whole wave/Because I know it’s written on each page/Help me, I can’t tame me, you can try/Connect me with your eyes/Can’t even hold me too tight.” This idea of being out of control and untameable yet also wanting someone who will make it seem worthwhile to be “tamed” matches the musical dichotomies presented in the single as well. Elsewhere, Furtado channels “Justify My Love” imagery and sensuality by demanding, “Call me/Taste me/Want me/Need me” as Tove Lo chants, “Go ahead, go ahead now” in between each command.

    The visuals intensify (including Tove Lo writhing more bombastically on the floors of the various backdrops) as the song continues—which, again, gives it a more outright music video feel as opposed to just a “visualizer” one. Complete with Tove Lo and Furtado styled in clothes that can best be described as futuristic yet sophisticated “clubwear.” In short, they’re grown enough now not to be fuckin’ with cheap fare of the Forever 21 variety. And yet, “Love Bites” is the kind of track designed to prove that just because a woman grows older, it doesn’t mean her club-connected spirit dies out. Quite the contrary, as a matter of fact. Kylie Minogue also proved that recently with “Padam Padam,” a song that features lyrics that, once upon a time, no fifty-something woman would have been “allowed” to sing without being laughed at mercilessly (and yes, singers like Minogue and Furtado have Madonna to thank for enduring the most vitriol as she blazed a trail for them by continuing to say such things well past the “accepted period” of her youth). 

    As “Love Bites” comes to a close, Furtado brings it back to the 00s again by declaring the names of the featured artists, sensually telling us, “SG Lewis” before Tove Lo delivers an “oh-oh-oh” type utterance that provides the perfect lead-in for Furtado to then say, “Tove Lo.” It smacks of what Missy Elliott did for the end of 2001’s “Lady Marmalade.” Indeed, Elliott came out of the woodwork to comment favorably on Furtado’s live performance of “Get Ur Freak On” for NPR’s Tiny Desk Concert. It wasn’t totally random, though—Furtado jumped on a remix of “Get Ur Freak On” when it was initially released. Thus, to bring it back now seemed an exercise in reminding people of her diverse musical prowess. Elliott tended to agree, praising, “Those who remember this know this remix was fye. Still izzzzzz. You did dat @NellyFurtado.” With “Love Bites,” she’s also brought a new kind of “fye” to the 2020s that’s been sorely lacking.

    [ad_2]

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link

  • Listen to SG Lewis’ Future-Disco Sophomore Album, “AudioLust & HigherLove” – EDM.com

    Listen to SG Lewis’ Future-Disco Sophomore Album, “AudioLust & HigherLove” – EDM.com

    [ad_1]

    After months of single releases, SG Lewis has finally released his highly anticipated sophomore album, AudioLust & HigherLove.

    Out now via Astralwerks, the double-album spans 15 tracks in a song-cycle that sees the virtuosic singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist reinforce his future-disco domination. The diverse collection of songs, which arrives two years after Lewis’ scintillating debut album, explores lust, love and all the gray areas in-between.

    AudioLust & HigherLove is a kaleidoscopic array of dancefloor-fillers with bubbly, retro-inspired hooks. Lewis tapped an eclectic roster of collaborators for the album—including Channel Tres, Tove Lo, Ty Dolla $ign and Lucky Daye—to help showcase his split storyline between the battle of infatuated, ego-driven lust and genuine feelings of love.

    [ad_2]

    Mikala Lugen

    Source link