
Kadhja Bonet - The Watch
Nearly five months after the initial release of her second album, Kadhja Bonet has put out into the world a collection of outtakes from the making of Childqueen. “The Watch” — a soft spoken ballad of questions — is apart of the Childqueen Outtakes EP, a set of songs that the California-based singer/songwriter believed “deserved to have a life of their own.” Bonet’s voice sails along a subtle, but undeniably psychedelic-pop undercurrent, “Bring on the sun / bring on the sun.” And as the temperature shifts, fall progressing into winter, “The Watch” has a timing that could not be better. But, we have a feeling that the song is speaking to more than a change in weather, but to the way life passes us by season to season, year to year. Bonet asks us, “Does anybody know what happened to yesterday? / It was gone before I noticed” and we relate, we understand exactly what she is asking — even if we don’t know the answer ourselves. A song that carries itself with grace through a sea of existential uncertainty, “The Watch” exists in a space of its own, ringing with emotional resonance.
— Tiffany Hernandez on October 24, 2018
Moses Sumney - Plastic
Los Angeles genre-bending artist Moses Sumney released his gorgeous and ethereal debut album Aromanticism into the world this September. Sumney has made a big impression on artists like Solange and Sufjan Stevens for good reason. His infusion of soul and folk come together on this album in a way that leaves us begging for more. A prime example of this heavenly blend is found on the third song of the album, “Plastic.” A previous version of the song can be heard on the first season of Issa Rae’s HBO series, Insecure. This new version serves as one of the more simplistic songs on the album, featuring just a fingerpicked electric guitar, a synth and Sumney’s captivating voice. The hook of the song repeats the line “my wings are made of plastic,” each time sung in a slightly different way than it was before, continuing to imbue the phrase with new meaning. This song of vulnerability, self-awareness and secret-spilling is the kind that you can leave on repeat and get lost in for hours.
— Dara Bankole on October 22, 2017