Watch: New videos from Miya Folick, Starcrawler and the Garden
Kevin Bronson on
0
For your Friday viewing, new visuals from Miya Folick, Starcrawler and the Garden, all of whom have bigger releases (and L.A. shows) on the horizon.
For your Friday viewing, new visuals from Miya Folick, Starcrawler and the Garden, all of whom have bigger releases (and L.A. shows) on the horizon.
“I Had a Dream That You Died” is the first single from the fifth Field Medic album, “Grow Your Hair Long If You’re Wanting to See Something That You Can Change,” out Oct. 14. See him in November at the Moroccan Lounge.
Inspired by the silent movie era, the video for Skullcrusher’s “Whatever Fits Together” hauntingly suggests there are “monsters in the shadows.” It’s the first single from Skullcrusher’s debut album, “Quiet the Room,” out in October via Secretly Canadian.
Welcome to “East Los Angeles noir.” The Tracks unveil director Dylan Dixon’s dark video for the song “Your Bike” — and announce that their sophomore album, “Paredón Blanco,” will be out July 29. The Boyle Heights rockers celebrate that night with a show at La Zona Rosa.
The video for Finneas’ new single “Mona Lisa, Mona Lisa” co-stars his longtime partner, Claudia Sulewski — with a cameo from the Mona Lisa herself. Ah, Paris.
As the scene changes around him, Taylor Barefoot plays on in the video for “Why So Serious?” It’s one of the highlights on his album “Distressed Signals,” a cinematic long-player of shoegaze and post-rock.
Surf Curse returns with a monstrous new single, “TVI,” and a monster-filled video. But hold your horror: The quartet’s new album, “Magic Hour,” will be out in September.
Steve Lacy and guest vocalist Fousheé take to the air in the video for “Sunshine,” the latest single from what promises to be an exhilarating sophomore album by Lacy, “Gemini Rights.”
On the heels of releasing the 62-track (yes, 62) collection “Pop Rocks,” the Blank Tapes share Sean Olmstead’s effects-laden video for “Electric Spark.” It’s a great entry point to an album loaded with ’60s-inspired nuggets.
Human Barbie returns with the new single “No Worries,” a slo-mo shoegazer that sighs and swells with resignation. It’s the title track of a new EP arriving in October via Poor Man Records.