Welcome to The Shortlist, where we introduce you to new artists we think you need to know.
Jordan Stephens
Let Me Die Inside You, Jordan Stephensâs debut album is provocatively titled, but its meaning is layered. Stephens says he became obsessed with the topic of death after a DMT trip. âWe have our physical death, but we experience a little bit of death when we have sex,â he says, referring to âla petite mort,â the French expression describing post-orgasm sensations. âThe other side of it is that our ideas of people die. Our relationships with people die. Our relationships with ourselves die. I think Iâve died three times in my life.â Stephens is talking about his evolution: In the early â10s, he released music as one half of the hip-hop duo Rizzle Kicks and in 2019, he dropped the solo EP P.I.G. On this project, he moves effortlessly from melodic vocals to raw rapping over shadowy experimental pop and mellow futuristic dance beats that were âmade from scratchâ with his producer friends. The twin themes of defiance and existence tie everything together. The gritty closer, âCanât Close My Heart,â embodies the totality of Stephensâs love for singing, rapping, and poetry. âIn my head,â he says, âthatâs the biggest song in the world, ever.â
âNatelegé Whaley
Carson McHone
Vinyl LP, Compact Disc (CD)
As a touring musician, Carson McHone is used to being constantly on the go. But Still Life, her debut full-length for Merge and third album overall, emerged during a period of enforced stillness. The Texas native wrote most of the songs in Austin prior to the pandemic, in between toursâbut recorded them in fall 2020 while off the road, in the living room of her new home in Canada. âBeing out of the context of where [the songs] were written gave me some very healthy perspective, as far as the sounds that went into crafting the record,â she says. âThings that I thought maybe I wanted to be a part of a songâI was like, âOh, it doesnât need to include all this other stuff.'â The result is an album of thoughtful, dusky folk and Americana, where each instrumentâthe optimistic saxophone and gritty guitars on âHawks Donât Share,â or wistful piano woven through âSweet Magnoliaââadd emotional nuance. âI was very much able to give myself over to the songs, but it was on my own terms,â she says.
âAnnie Zaleski
The Serfs
Vinyl LP, Cassette, Compact Disc (CD)
On their first full-length album Primal Matter, The Serfs offer a feeling of immediacyâand this in-your-face, unrepentant directness is at least in part because of their Ohioan roots. Caught in a lineage of electronic experimental post-punk bands that hail from the same stateânamely Post Industrial Noise and V-3âmember Dakota Carlyle says, âWeâre tied together by the same desperate energy and urgency that comes from living in Ohio.â Alongside Andie Luman and Dylan McCartney, the trio offers bare-boned mania on an album that touches upon a slew of oddball analog sounds, layered with ringing guitars. From the raucous synthpunk of âThe Willows,â to the bellowing beat that cuts through the viscous static of âOutsider (Inside),â the LP emphasizes how The Serfs prefer to remain: undefinable and ever-changing. âPrimal Matter is an alchemical ideaâwhat crawled out of the primordial ooze,â says Carlyle. âAnd it canât be destroyed, because itâs chaos.â
âAndi Harriman
MATTIE
Vinyl LP, Cassette
For Dallas, Texas native MATTIE, her debut EP Jupiterâs Purse is about the duality of humans and the importance of asking existential questions. Those concerns unfurl over chopped and screwed hip-hop beats and psychedelic ambient noise, via a soulful, operatic voice and a lyrical flow that is as beautiful as it is devastating, âFor me, the music has come out of self-inquiry and the desire for freedom,â she says. âI feel like I started [this journey] at a very young age, just surrendering to the higher aspect of me.â Jupiterâs Purse, produced by fellow Dallas native and musical wunderkind Black Taffy, draws on elements from Mattie and her producerâs upbringing as church musicians and youth ministers in the Southâlike their love for gospel and soulâas well as Black Taffyâs classical training and fondness for hip-hop. The result is something the duo call âexperimental soul.â The psychedelic synths and the staccato quality of the percussion give Jupiterâs Purse a dreamy sound, and the fact that Mattie tells her story through an original character called Mhuv who is living a transient life through space makes it feel ethereal. âMhuv represents the act of going to sleepâremembering and then kind of moving through that and acknowledging ourselves as just space,â Mattie says. âYou can tell that she or they is kind of going through this forgetfulness. Jupiter is the planet that expands everything, and Mhuv is from there. She was expanded into the physical world to experience all of the physicality of this place, the five senses, the highs, the lows, and misidentification. And she comes to a point within this EP where she starts to remember herself. As you remember yourself more, you remember that you donât have a borderâyouâre expansive.â