logo
Doechii's Victory Lap, and 10 More New Songs

Doechii's Victory Lap, and 10 More New Songs

New York Times07-02-2025

Every Friday, pop critics for The New York Times weigh in on the week's most notable new tracks. Listen to the Playlist on Spotify here (or find our profile: nytimes) and at Apple Music here, and sign up for The Amplifier, a twice-weekly guide to new and old songs.
Doechii was tearful and emotional — but primed with facts — when she became the third woman to win a Grammy for best rap album. She was also prepared; 'Nosebleeds' was released almost immediately. Over stark, pushy, bare-bones electronic sounds, she gloats, 'Will she ever lose? Man I guess we'll never know' and declares her readiness for arena concerts: 'I look good from the nosebleeds.' The track is barely over two minutes, but its last stretch segues into an entirely different sound: a double-time beat with Doechii cooing that she needs no advice from anyone who's 'never suffered.' The moment was hers to seize. JON PARELES
She's overheard your theory that nostalgia's for geeks — and she couldn't care less. Lady Gaga mines the sonic and aesthetic shards of her own past on the insistent 'Abracadabra,' the third single from her upcoming album, 'Mayhem.' Fashioning an anthemic chorus out of self-referential nonsense syllables ('abracadabra, morta oo Gaga') is so 'Bad Romance,' but the verse's thumping house piano refines the more recent sound of her mixed-bag 2020 release 'Chromatica' into something sharper and more urgent. Gaga's not forging new ground here so much as she's remixing her former selves, reminding her many imitators who they learned their strangest moves from and grasping so strongly at dance-or-die self-seriousness that she somehow ends up doubling back into absurdist fun. LINDSAY ZOLADZ
The resolutely upbeat Valerie June insists that everyone can find 'that joy joy in your soul,' no matter what. Her twangy, wavery voice, doubletracked in not-quite-unison, rises over a brawny two-chord vamp that gets buttressed by saxophones, cymbals, cranked-up lead guitar and a string section, massing to overpower any doubts. PARELES
'Thought that if I put you first enough / we would last for sure,' Giveon laments, with neat wordplay, in a vintage-style soul ballad complete with strings and electric sitar. The reminiscences quickly lead into recriminations over 'six years gone down the drain,' and none of the retro trappings cushion the pain. PARELES
Moses Sumney has revamped 'Hey Girl,' a slow-jam come-on from his 2024 album 'Sophcore,' to make it more gender-fluid by handing over verses to guests. Syd teases, 'You say you ain't done this before,' and Meshell Ndegeocello moves evolutionary goal posts, intoning, 'I am not a woman, I am not a man / I am a water- and carbon-based life form you'll never comprehend.' The track's easy-rolling syncopation and suavely supportive horn arrangement welcome them all. PARELES
Coi Leray is equal parts tearful and enraged in 'Keep It,' her indictment of a cheater: 'Should've kept it real but you were fraudulent / Everything you said you did the opposite.' Her only accompaniment is calm piano chords and wisps of her own voice. She almost breaks down, wondering, 'Why, why, why, why, why?' But then she summons her dignity and ends things. PARELES
What happens to a relationship that survives a betrayal? Blaine Teppema, the songwriter for the Chicago duo Sleeper's Bell, captures the lingering wounds, self-doubt and distrust in 'Bad Word' from the new album 'Clover.' Her voice is breathy and tentative over modestly strummed acoustic guitar and drums, as she sings 'We got right back together / Now you treat her name like a bad word.' For the moment, she's willing to go along. 'One day I might know what it is you think,' she shrugs. 'Till then I'll laugh it off.' PARELES
Katie Crutchfield, the songwriter behind Waxahatchee, rarely escapes ambivalence. The cozy, countryish, banjo-picking march of 'Mud' has MJ Lenderman and Spencer Tweedy singing along with Crutchfield as she tries to sever a guardian-angel relationship where 'I might beam with empty virtue / but I'm a feather blowing in your storm.' The problem is that the 'girl suffering' might be herself. PARELES
The latest single from Destroyer's forthcoming album 'Dan's Boogie' is Dan Bejar's version of a beachy summertime bop, released, with his typical contrarian's air, in the dead of winter. Atop shimmering synths and sing-songy backing vocals, he talks to the wind ('Hey, breeze, where you going?') and indulges in some zany observational spoken-word ('A priest mistakes me for a priest'), all while delivering the sort of wry, quotable bons mots for which he's become known. 'Fools rush in,' goes one of the best of them, 'but they're the only ones with guts.' ZOLADZ
It's impossible to say when Mekons wrote this jagged, violin-topped post-punk song, probably the first to denounce 'supernatural financialization.' It's one of the tracks that the tenacious punk-era band has released to preview its next album, 'Horror.' But the telegraphic lyrics that Tom Greenhalgh spits out sound all too applicable right now. PARELES
Macie Stewart, a classical composer who has also written arrangements for SZA and Mannequin Pussy, has her own album, a suite titled 'When the Distance Is Blue,' due March 21. The track 'Spring Becomes New, Spring Becomes You,' unfolds as a minimalistic waltz for prepared piano and string trio. Clanking piano motifs dissolve into pizzicato strings, while high violin harmonics hover far above; it's at once lulling and eerie. PARELES

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bob Dylan, 83, Sends Hilarious 80th Birthday Message to Fellow Rock Legend
Bob Dylan, 83, Sends Hilarious 80th Birthday Message to Fellow Rock Legend

Yahoo

time9 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Bob Dylan, 83, Sends Hilarious 80th Birthday Message to Fellow Rock Legend

When iconic guitarist for The Who, Pete Townshend, turned 83 this week, there was another legendary rocker waiting to welcome him to his ninth decade on the planet: 83-year-old Bob Dylan. Dylan took to X to wish his fellow Grammy winner a happy birthday on Monday, May 19, writing, "Happy birthday Pete. Who's the new boss? Is he like the old boss? Have you met him yet? Say hello to Roger.' As fans the world over know, Dylan's message was a witty reference to the iconic Who song 'Won't Get Fooled Again" — written by Townshend — which features Roger Daltrey singing the lyrics, 'Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.' Music lovers knew exactly what Dylan was talking about, with one person quoting "The Seeker," a song by The Who that name-checks the "Like a Rolling Stone" singer: "I asked Bobby Dylan, I asked the Beatles, I asked Timothy Leary, but he could not help me either." Another fan shared a pic of Townshend and Dylan posing from what appeared to be the '80s writing: "Fashion icons." Townshend and Dylan have praised each other's talents over the years, with Townshend even crediting Dylan for helping to inspire the classic Who song "My Generation." '(He) definitely created a new style of writing," Townshend said, per Far Out Magazine. "Dylan was the one who I think got the message across to The Beatles. (That) was that you can write songs about subjects other than falling in love.'

‘Wicked' Star Cynthia Erivo Fires Back at MAGA Hate for Playing Jesus
‘Wicked' Star Cynthia Erivo Fires Back at MAGA Hate for Playing Jesus

Yahoo

time39 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

‘Wicked' Star Cynthia Erivo Fires Back at MAGA Hate for Playing Jesus

Wicked star Cynthia Erivo has some thoughts about the MAGA outrage—fueled by Elon Musk—over her casting as Christ in the Hollywood Bowl's production of Jesus Christ Superstar. 'You can't please everyone,' the Tony, Grammy, and Emmy-winner told Billboard in a new interview. 'It is legitimately a three-day performance at the Hollywood Bowl where I get to sing my face off. So hopefully they will come and realize, 'Oh, it's a musical, the gayest place on Earth.'' The show will run August 1-3. Many MAGA fans slammed Erivo's Christ casting as 'blasphemy' on social media when her role was first announced in February. What seemed lost on several critics was the tone of the show itself. The 1971 Andrew Lloyd Webber rock opera has always been a provocative, at-times critical take on Christ's life, that over time became a cult favorite among queer audiences. Musk seemed to have missed that bit of information as well as he chimed in on X with an eyebrow-raised emoji in reply to an X user who wrote, 'Imagine doing this to any other religion' next to Erivo's casting news. Critics with similar complaints flooded Variety's social media post announcing the casting with one user in the replies called Erivo playing Christ 'anti-Christian bigotry' by 'Hollywood.' But Erivo told Billboard, 'Why not?' as she shrugged off naysayers. 'The more yourself you are, the more you are in front of people who don't necessarily understand, the better understanding starts to happen,' she said. As much as she wants to be 'a person you can get positive things from' since 'that is the only way you can balance this stuff,' she couldn't help getting in a jab at Donald Trump for his takeover of the Kennedy Center, where Erivo played some of the most iconic performances of her career. 'I don't know who gains what from that. I hope that it comes back,' she said. 'It's really sad to have to watch this happen to it. The Kennedy Center is supposed to be a space of creativity and art and music for everyone.' That said, assimilating to appease Trump and his 'anti-woke' mob isn't on the star's to-do list, she added. 'I want to encourage people to not decide to just tuck away and start hiding and not being themselves anymore,' she said, 'because that is exactly what they want.'

'King of the Hill' actor Jonathan Joss shot to death; husband calls it antigay hate crime
'King of the Hill' actor Jonathan Joss shot to death; husband calls it antigay hate crime

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

'King of the Hill' actor Jonathan Joss shot to death; husband calls it antigay hate crime

Jonathan Joss, an actor known for the TV shows King of the Hill and Parks and Recreation, was shot to death Sunday night in what his husband is calling a homophobic hate crime. Keep up with the latest in + news and politics. Joss, 59, was shot at the site of his former San Antonio home, which had burned down in January, according to multiple media outlets. He and his husband, Tristan Kern de Gonzales, had gone there to check their mail, Kern de Gonzales wrote on social media. Once there, 'we discovered the skull of one of our dogs and its harness placed in clear view,' he wrote on Facebook. 'This caused both of us severe emotional distress. We began yelling and crying in response to the pain of what we saw. 'While we were doing this a man approached us. He started yelling violent homophobic slurs at us. He then raised a gun from his lap and fired. Jonathan and I had no weapons. We were not threatening anyone. We were grieving. We were standing side by side. When the man fired Jonathan pushed me out of the way. He saved my life.' Police attempted to revive Joss, but when paramedics arrived, they pronounced him dead, The New York Times reports. A neighbor, Sigfredo Ceja Alvarez, 56, was arrested and is charged with murder. Police have not commented on a motive and said the investigation is continuing. However, Kern de Gonzales wrote that Joss was killed "by someone who could not stand the sight of two men loving each other." Joss, born and raised in San Antonio, was best known as the voice of John Redcorn, a Native American masseur and healer, on the Fox animated series King of the Hill. The actor was of Apache and Comanche heritage. He had already recorded some of his lines for the series' upcoming reboot, Variety notes. The reboot will be available in August on Hulu. He played a Native American chief, Ken Hotate, on five episodes of Parks and Recreation, a situation comedy on NBC that starred Amy Poehler. He appeared on other TV shows, such as Ray Donovan, Friday Night Lights, Tulsa King, and Walker, Texas Ranger, and in films that included the remakes of True Grit and The Magnificent Seven. He also was a musician with the Red Corn Band, the name of which references his King of the Hill character. Kern de Gonzales said in his Facebook post that he and Joss had frequently been harassed and threatened by homophobic neighbors. This included threats to set their house on fire, Kern de Gonzales said. Joss said at the time of the fire that he may have left something on that caused it, but Friday at the ATX TV Festival in Austin, he said, 'My house burned down three months ago because I'm gay,' according to People. He spoke from the audience and said he was disappointed not to have been invited to be in an onstage panel that featured producers Mike Judge and Greg Daniels. Joss and Kern de Gonzales were married on Valentine's Day of this year. 'He gave me more love in our time together than most people ever get,' Kern de Gonzales wrote in his Facebook post.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store