Stream: Singles from Livingmore, Hazel English, Polyglam and Joy Downer

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Livingmore

Straight from our Bureau of Catchy Things comes this singles roundup, featuring the latest from Livingmore, Hazel English, Polyglam and Joy Downer


LIVINGMORE, “No Vacation”

After introducing their forthcoming Jeff Schroeder-produced album, “The Garden,” with dream-pop excursions (“At Ease” and “Places”), Livingmore are back with a song that has a little more bounce to the ounce. “No Vacation” finds Alex Moore and Spencer Livingston, along with drummer/co-writer Mike Schadel, dispensing a brisk new waver. The stylistic shifts over the nine-year Moore/Livingston collaboration — they began as a folk duo — have never come at the expense of their songs finding the melodic pocket. “The Garden,” their fourth full-length, figures to be no different. Catch Livingmore on Feb. 2 at the Echo.


HAZEL ENGLISH, “Real Life”

“Real Life” is the latest single (counting a nifty version of the La’s “There She Goes”) from Hazel English, who released her “Summer Nights” EP last summer and continues to work with her go-to collaborator, Jackson Phillips of Day Wave. The follow-up to “Heartbreaker,” the new single is a dreamy lament about a relationship on the precipice of ending. “I don’t know you anymore / Is this a real life,” English wonders, and that’s never good, but at least there’s this song to fall apart to.


POLYGLAM, “Loss”

Speaking of break-up tales, Polyglam’s third single “Loss” ricochets through all the emotions. The indie-pop trio of Allie Stamler, Rachel White and John Sinclair will release their debut EP next year. Of the new single, Stamler says: “As you pick up the pieces, you find yourself rewriting your last chapter, holding on to the possibility this story isn’t over. Was it a loss after all?”


JOY DOWNER, “Alright”

Joy Downer released her solo album, “Paper Moon,” in 2020, and since she’s released “Chain Reaction” (a collaboration with Beck) and gotten a boost from the single “In the Water” (from Netflix’s series “Spinning Out”). “Alright,” like her other music made with her husband Jeffrey, motors merrily through indie-pop’s past, contemplating all the “maybes” about forging one’s own identity. “I don’t know who I am / If I’m not holding his hand / I don’t know yet who I am,” Downer sings airily, ultimately deciding that it’s “Alright” to not know … yet.