A reaction to "Brexit, Trump, Cambridge Analytica and covert Russian influence"
17.04.2020 - 13:51 / nme.com
'Fetch the Bolt Cutters' is her first LP release since 2012's 'The Idler Wheel...'
Fans of Fiona Apple have been celebrating the release of ‘Fetch The Bolt Cutters’, the artist’s first new album in eight years.
The long-awaited follow-up to 2012’s ‘The Idler Wheel…’ is out today (April 17). You can read the NME review of ‘Fetch The Bolt Cutters’ here.
Apple’s fans have been registering their delight at the arrival of ‘Fetch The Bolt Cutters’ on social media, with the record — which you can hear
A reaction to "Brexit, Trump, Cambridge Analytica and covert Russian influence"
Being a band with some history worked to Dramarama's advantage for Color TV, the Los Angeles group's first new album in 15 years, premiering exclusively below.Mainly, frontman John Easdale tells Billboard, it allowed the quintet to make the record on its own terms."It's not like there's a tremendous demand for new music from old bands, y'know?" Easdale says.
Fetch the remote! Fiona Apple made a rare television appearance Tuesday on Democracy Now! to discuss her new album Fetch the Bolt Cutters.Her first new album in eight years simultaneously conquered the Top Rock Albums and Alternative Albums May 2-dated charts, and its solid footing parallels where she recorded it: on indigenous American soil.Apple teamed up with Eryn Wise -- a Native American activist and the communications/digital director of the indigenous-led collective Seeding Sovereignty --
By Chris Willman
Out of nowhere, legendary L.A. punk band X have released their first new album in almost three decades. Alphabetland, streaming below via Bandcamp, is X's first LP since 1993's Hey Zeus! and the first from the band's original lineup since 1985's Ain't Love Grand!
"Alphabetland," the bulk of which was recorded in sessions early this year, is out now via Bandcamp.
Fiona Apple's fifth studio album, Fetch the Bolt Cutters, has received glowing reviews. It has a perfect 100 score at the review aggregation site Metacritic.com, the highest rating for a studio album in the site's 19-year history. So the question arises: Will Grammy voters also feel the love? Short answer: almost certainly. When the
The staff of Pitchfork listens to a lot of new music. A lot of it.
Every Fiona Apple album offers something a little bit different: her approach to songwriting and production has consistently evolved, finding new prisms in which to refract her inherent genius.
Fiona Apple isn't holding anything back these days.
Fiona Apple, Playboi Carti and Brett Eldredge brought a week of comeback music, and it's bound to hold fans over quite well during quarantine. But which new music release is doing the trick for you?Apple's fifth album, Fetch the Bolt Cutters, bridges the eight-year gap between the art-pop singer-songwriter's last project, with piano crescendos, cymbals crashing and other sonic anomalies only the 42-year-old artist could pull off.
The drought is over. Fiona Apple is back in action with Fetch the Bolt Cutters, her first new album in eight years.
Fiona Apple is back and as great as ever.
Billboard’s First Stream serves as a handy guide to this Friday’s most essential releases — the key music that everyone will be talking about today, and that will be dominating playlists this weekend and beyond.This week, Fiona Apple returns when we need her most, Sam Smith and Demi Lovato are “ready” to take over pop radio, and DaBaby can’t stop and won’t stop.
With so much good music being released all the time, it can be hard to determine what to listen to first. Every week, Pitchfork offers a run-down of significant new releases available on streaming services.
The drought is over.
Fiona Apple has dropped her new album Fetch the Bolt Cutters, which is her first album in eight years!
Fiona Apple has released her first new album in eight years. After a brief announcement video earlier this month, Fetch the Bolt Cutters has arrived as promised. Have a listen below, and check out the album’s full credits.
Hospital chiefs have released a picture of tragic NHS worker Lourdes Campbell who died after a battle with coronavirus.