Tracks Of The Week: Adult Mom, W. H. Lung and more


Adult Mom by Daniel Dorsa

Adult Mom by Daniel Dorsa

Click here to follow Live4ever’s Spotify playlist to keep up with Adult Mom and all of our favourite new tracks.

Adult Mom are streaming 91, a B-side from the 2021 era of Driver.

“91 was one of the first songs I intentionally wrote for Driver,” Stevie Knipe explains. “It’s a song that details escape in the most literal sense.”




“The feeling of getting into the car, speeding down the highway at 2:00 am, and feeling the weight of what you’re leaving behind lifted. To me, it’s one of our most cathartic songs, and I’m glad to finally have it out in the world.”

Tidal River is the latest offering from Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, who will release their new album Endless Rooms on May 6th.

“If there were a complacency Olympics, Australia would win gold by a mile,” Tom Russo explains.

“In the ‘lucky country’, the luckiest ones jealously guard their fortune, as if it will disappear if they share it around. There is so much potential to do better, but it sometimes seems like progress is two steps forward, two steps back.

W. H. Lung have shared the promo for their new single Kaya.

“The original thought behind any creative venture begins life as a feeling, a sensation, which the artist then fumbles into the physical world,” Joe Evans says.

“Original inspiration for this video came from David Hockney’s timelapse iPad paintings. The creature who is chased into the studio is inspired by the Japanese movement art of Butoh.”

Sharon Van Etten has unveiled her new track Used To It with a video directed by bandmate Charley Damski and featuring dancer/choreographer Hayden J Frederick.

The song first appeared during Van Etten’s work on the score for the HBO documentary Baby God, when she challenged herself to write about, ‘the concept of family, connection through blood, nature vs. nurture, while attempting to incorporate ideas of love and the complexities of science and technology’:

“I am grateful for this song to be able to have a new life, relating more to the times we have all been living through and redefining the meaning of this song by focusing on the positives of seeking connection and understanding what family means to the individual.”

Ezra Furman has released a new single.

Point Me Toward The Real features backing vocals from Shannon Lay and Debbie Neigher, and was recorded with Angel Olsen, Future Islands and Sharon Van Etten cohort John Congleton.

“This is a neo-soul song about getting released from a psychiatric hospital, which has never happened to me,” Furman says. “But really it’s a song about what you do right after abuse, imprisonment, a brush with death. Who do you call when it’s supposedly over? Where do you go? How do you know what you want?”

LIFE have confirmed their new album North East Coastal Town is to be released on June 10th.

As with much of the band’s past output, the landscape and people of their hometown are front and centre on the new record, which is being previewed first with Big Moon Lake.

“Hull and the surrounding area runs through our DNA and has shaped us, weathered us, empowered us, embraced us and made us feel accepted,” Mez Green says.

Wet Leg are streaming their new track Angelica ahead of the release of their self-titled debut album on April 8th.

The build-up to the LP’s release will see the duo playing in-store gigs around England before a full tour of the UK visits cities such as Edinburgh, Leeds, Manchester and Portsmouth later that month.

Festival appearances are also booked at Neighbourhood Weekender, Isle Of Wight and TRNSMT.


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