Tuesday, December 10, 2024

JOHN CALViN ABNEY - SHORTWAViNG EP

ROUTES & BRANCHES
featuring the very best of americana, alt.country and roots music
December 10, 2024
Scott Foley, purveyor of dust


John Calvin Abney is one of those artists we've been following since The Early Days. In addition to serving as a sideman for artists like Wild Child, Samantha Crain, and John Moreland, Abney has also written and released a handful of his own indie-folk LPs, light-handed songs belying emotionally weighty lyrics. Abney took advantage of some recovery time following recent vocal surgery to rethink his approach to his craft, including shifting south from Oklahoma to Austin, and releasing a few instrumental collections speaking to his sharpening melodic sensibilities.

Abney has indicated that his new Shortwaving ep is the first of multiple new projects. This five-song collection finds him working with Lydia Loveless as co-producer, fronting a small ensemble of drummer Sam Brown and guitarist Todd May. Set to tape over one day, the sessions present Abney in as economical a setting as we've heard, forgoing much of his relative studio polish in favor of a more raw, coarse-grained product. 

Always a sharp ear for pop melodicism (a'la Ron Sexsmith or Jeff Tweedy), the multi-instrumentalist leans into his roots-rock tendencies for Shortwaving. Abney has never crowded his songs, but past records have featured a tighter, more mannered vibe. The bluesy electric buzz and heavy drums of "No Place Left" sounds positively primitive in comparison, not unlike a moon-haunted Jason Molina track. The truth of our terrain, he begins, Lives in the space between / The strip malls and the rain / There's no place left. There's a claustrophobia to the song, the intrusive plastic prairie lights dividing and disjointing vistas. The EP's title cut projects this disruption onto an interpersonal sphere, a static that separates us: I'm the static on the state line / I'm collateral debris / I'm a whisper in a hurricane / Are  you listening. Katie Harriman's supporting vocals are a lifeline in the gloom. 

"Arkansas River Bridge" exchanges the electric guitar for acoustic, partnered with searching pedal steel. The mood continues downcast, however, the singer seemingly reaching out for connection: From the bridge I pull my biggest draw / From the tall black Tulsa midnight / Dry me in the dusty Arkansas / Warm me by a dying pilot light. These themes of separation and alienation carry through Abney's new session. Introducing a preliminary acoustic version of "Truckee River Blues" on his socials, Abney commented on the subject briefly, how it feels to grow older and see your geography become something less familiar. Layers of fuzz guitar and hissing ride cymbal crowd the tune, even as the songwriter's melodic verse pushes forward: Shine on sickle blade moon / It's too late to go too soon / I am tired and so are you

John Calvin Abney has opened some recent shows for Hanson (yes, that Hanson), filling in for Matthew Sweet who is recovering from an unfortunate stroke. Like Sweet (and that Hanson), Abney understands melody and resonance. While these new songs hint at an evolution to his typically streamlined folk-pop, there's a real appeal to Shortwaving's unfiltered Abney, a directness that contributes to the EP's air of vulnerability. After years of discovering, then honing his craft, the songwriter recognizes the value of filling in artistic ruts, pushing against crutches, perhaps even leaving the familiar comforts of home. Of course, we find the noise and the sincerity gorgeous, embracing the beauty in the din, grateful for the salvation in the static.   

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Sunday, December 08, 2024

ROUTES-cast December 8, 2024

ROUTES & BRANCHES
featuring the very best of americana, alt.country and roots music
December 8, 2024
Scott Foley, purveyor of dust


This time of year we're used to the relative dregs. We (almost) never present anything in our ROUTES-casts that we can't stand behind. It's just during the holidays we have to dig a bit deeper to find new stuff. This week, however, has been a gift and a present, a playlist overflowing with excellent music. There will be no settling this Episode. Even as we throw furniture on the fire to keep warm while we stay up late preparing our end-of-year assessments. Next on the docket is our favorite songs list, which we'll debut on Friday, December 13 (hint: we're already very close to finishing this). 


ROUTES-cast December 8, 2024

^ Cody Jinks, "Saginaw, Michigan" Sings Lefty Frizzell  (Late August, 24)  D
- JR Carroll, "Hometown Hero" Dark Cloud  (Carroll, 24)
- Devil Makes Three, "I Love Doing Drugs" Spirit  (New West, Feb 28)
- Ashley McBryde, "Ain't Enough Cowboy Songs" single  (McBryde, 24)  D
- Ruston Kelly, "Sand In My Boots" single  (Rounder, 24)  D
- Sean McConnell, "Take It Easy Darlin'" Skin  (Silent Desert, Feb 28)
- Lucette, "Back In the Blue (ft Mariel Buckley)" Nice Girl From the Suburbs EP  (Prairie Blue, Mar 21)  D
- John Calvin Abney, "Arkansas River Bridge" Shortwaving EP  (JCA, 24)  D
- Denison Whitmer, "Focus Ring (ft Sufjan Stevens)" Anything At All  (Asthmatic Kitty, Feb 14)  D
- Heather Maloney, "Light You Leave Behind" Exploding Star  (Signature Sounds, Jan 31)
- Evan Honer, "High School Reunion" annabelle ep  (Cloverdale, Dec 13)
- JD Clayton, "Arkansas Kid" single  (Rounder, 24)  D
- Yahtzee Brown, "Take It Back" You Got This  (Deko, Jan 24)
- Loose Koozies, "Haworthia" Passing Through You  (Tall Texan, 24)
- Brother Elsey, "Silver Tongue (ft Susto)" Brother Elsey  (River House, Jan 31)  D
- Field Medic, "dandelion dream" Boundless & True  (Field Medic, 24)  D
- Mipso, "Called Out Loaded (Live)" Gas In the Tank: Live Across America  (Mipso, 24)
- Will Stewart, "Cure For Pain" 90 Acre Farm EP  (Stewart, 24)  D
- Larkin Poe, "Little Bit" Bloom  (Trick-Woo, Jan 24)
- Lucinda Williams, "Rain" Sings the Beatles From Abbey Road  (Hwy 20, 24)
- Luther Russell, "Wanna Be Your Lover" Happiness For Beginners  (Curation, Jan 17)
- Sunny War, "Scornful Heart (ft Tre Burt)"  Armageddon In a Summer Dress  (New West, Feb 21)
- Twisted Teens, "Marionette" Twisted Teens  (CPNPC, 24)  D
- White Denim, "Econolining" 12  (Bella Union, 24)
- Why Bonnie, "Rainbows and Ridges" single  (Fire Talk, 24)  D
- David Ramirez, "Music Man" All the Not So Gentle Reminders  (Blue Corn, Mar 21)  D
- Bonnie Prince Billy, "London May" Purple Bird  (No Quarter, Jan 31)
- Thomas Dollbaum, "Do Me a Kindness (ft Kate Teague)" single  (Dollbaum, 24)  D
- Willi Carlisle, "Jubilee" Magnolia Sessions  (Anti-Corp, 24)  D
- Valley James, "Highway Patrolman" single  (Obsidian, 24)  D

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To enjoy any Spotify ROUTES-cast, just open Spotify and search for "routesandbranches" to access this most recent playlist, as well as many others from past months.  Or click here for a preview:


Friday, December 06, 2024

STATE of the GENRE 2024


ROUTES & BRANCHES    
featuring the very best of americana, alt.country and roots music
December 6, 2024
Scott Foley, purveyor of dust


At the end of every year, for the past several years, we have taken a moment to assess the state of our kind of music. What does americana music sound like? Which artists are establishing the frontiers of alt.country? Who is influencing the direction of roots music? Is this entire tangle of sound even relevant anymore? If not, may we leave this dark room and go home?

We'll be identifying our favorite albums and songs in the weeks to come here at R&B HQ, so this list isn't that. Some of the following will definitely appear on those lists, but today is more about some combination of creative vision, promotional success, and the fickle attention of popular consensus. Some of these artists are exerting a pull on our genre from without, while others are pushing from within. A handful have already begun appearing on the year-end lists of typically snobbish blogger types. The greater the engagement of americana with the mainstream and with the more progressive tastemakers, the longer our kind of music remains viable. 

Here at R&B HQ, we champion those who might challenge our conceptions, even as we strive also to represent the mainstream of americana. We understand and even respect those who work to keep tradition front and center, who embrace artists who express a more conservative (or preservative) strain of roots music. And while we represent those artists regularly on our weekly Spotify ROUTES-casts, the heart of Routes & Branches is located in a tangle of weeds out in a field somewhere off a dirt road. We welcome any and all who wish to join us here, on account of it's pretty lonely and we're frankly worried about the wild dogs. 


STATE of the GENRE 2024
listed in order of appearance

- Sarah Jarosz, Polaroid Lovers  (Rounder, Jan 26)
- Willi Carlisle, Critterland  (Signature Sounds, Jan 26)
- Hurray For the Riff Raff, Past Is Still Alive  (Nonesuch, Feb 23)
- Kacey Musgraves, Deeper Well  (Interscope, Mar 15)
- Kelly Willis, Melissa Carper, Brennan Leigh, Wonder Women Of Country EP  (Bismeaux, Mar 15)
- Waxahatchee, Tigers Blood  (Anti, Mar 22)
- Adrianne Lenker, Bright Future  (4AD, Mar 22)
- Sierra Ferrell, Trail Of Flowers  (Rounder, Mar 22)
- Sarah Shook & the Disarmers, Revelations  (Abeyance, Mar 29)
- Katie Pruitt, Mantras  (Rounder, Apr 5)
- Nicolette & the Nobodies, Long Way  (ArtHaus, Apr 12)
- Charlie Crockett, $10 Cowboy/Visions Of Dallas  (Son Of Davy, Apr 26/Jul 22)
- Emily Nenni, Drive & Cry  (New West, May 3)
- Adeem the Artist, Anniversary  (Four Quarters, May 3)
- Kaia Kater, Strange Medicine  (Free Dirt, May 17)
- Jesse Daniel, Countin' the Miles  (Lightning Rod, Jun 7)
- Hermanos Gutierrez, Sonido Cosmico  (Easy Eye, Jun 14)
- Silverada, Silverada  (Prairie Rose, Jun 28)
- Kaitlin Butts, Roadrunner!  (Butts, Jun 28)
^ Zach Bryan, Great American Bar Scene  (Belting Bronco, Jul 4)
- Jesse Welles, Hells Welles/Patchwork  (Welles, Jul 4/Sep 20)
- AJ Lee & Blue Summitt, City Of Glass  (Signature Sounds, Jun 19)
- Red Clay Strays, Made By These Moments  (RCA, Jul 26)
- 49 Winchester, Leavin' This Holler  (New West, Aug 2)
- Gillian Welch & David Rawlings, Woodland  (Acony, Aug 23)
- MJ Lenderman, Manning Fireworks  (Anti, Sep 6)
- Billy Strings, Highway Prayers  (Reprise, Sep 27)
- Noeline Hofmann, Purple Gas EP  (La Honda, Oct 4)
- Wyatt Flores, Welcome To the Plains  (Island, Oct 18)
- Amythyst Kiah, Still + Bright  (Rounder, Oct 25)


... and just a reminder of what remains of our monthlong analysis of The Year In Americana:

Nov 29: Covers Covers Covers
Dec 6: State Of Americana
Dec 13: Favorite Songs
Dec 20: Christmas Christmas
Dec 27: Favorite Albums
Jan 3: Quarter Century

We ask that you plan your holiday celebrations accordingly. 

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Thursday, December 05, 2024

A ROUTES & BRANCHES GUiDE to FEEDiNG YOUR MONSTER (December 5, 2024)

ROUTES & BRANCHES
featuring the very best of americana, alt.country and roots music
December 5, 2024
Scott Foley, purveyor of dust


As we prepare our own R&B year-end favorites lists (they're suitable for framing), a big part of the holiday involves watching other bloggers do the same. For this Episode, we're showcasing a handful of these with which to feed your monster. While some barely touch on our kind of music, others are all over it. But no other rivals R&B for our award-winning blend of the familiar and the fringe. 

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At Glide, they call it their Twenty Best Albums

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Saving Country Music carries out their list in three categories, soliciting readers for their input.  View 'n vote for Album Of the Year, Song Of the Year, and/or Single Of the Year. Special points for scrolling to the bottom of each page for the fisticuffs that inevitably ensues in their Comments. 

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At R&B, we feel thirty is a magic number for lists. Consequence Of Sound does us twenty better with their Fifty Best Albums Of 2024.  

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Paste is as mainstream a page as we'll present here. They're gifting readers with 100 Best Albums Of 2024. Once you reach past thirty on a list like this, it's pretty relative. 

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God bless NPR and their Fifty Best Albums list. Can you genuinely force together stuff from such disparate genres? Can we showcase the jazz alongside the metal? It's all lions and lambs as far as we're concerned. 

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New York Times is celebrating this holiday season by apparently lowering the paywall for their Best Albums Of 2024 list. 

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Stereogum lays out a lovely buffet, with just enough obscurity to earn their snobbery badge. Check out their smorgasbord of Fifty Best Albums and Best Songs of the year. 

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As we've mentioned previously, books are as important a part of our lives as music. This time of year, Largehearted Boy labors admirably to compile a List Of Essential and Interesting 'Best Books Of 2024' Lists

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Bandcamp has an entire page of their year-end superlatives. They're adding new Best Of 2024 lists just about everyday. 

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Pitchfork is a daily visit for us, even if only to humble us with the awareness of how little we really know about music. Let's count how many of their Best Albums Of 2024 we actually recognize. They're piling their 2024 lists here, in case you'd like to sample their favorite electronica. 

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Maybe somewhat closer to home, albeit much closer to mainstream country, Holler finishes us off for this Episode with their Best Country Music Albums Of 2024.

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Wednesday, December 04, 2024

LOOKBACK MACHiNE: KASEY CHAMBERS

ROUTES & BRANCHES
featuring the very best of americana, alt.country and roots music
December 4, 2024
Scott Foley, purveyor of dust

Kasey Chambers should be mentioned among the foremost songwriters in our kind of music, responsible for a handful of the strongest songs and albums of the 2000s. Just in her early twenties upon the release of her debut, The Captain, she came out of her native Australia with a family pedigree and a voice seemingly handpicked by the country music deities. 2006's Carnival proved Chambers' ability to stretch beyond her chosen genre, though she has rarely needed to do so, releasing a pair of watermark records with her husband at the time, Shane Nicholson. While her last few albums haven't been embraced by the americana mainstream, we would make a case that both Bittersweet and this year's Backbone are as worthy as her early catalog. While we flirted shamelessly with the thought of including her groundbreaking live take on Enimem's "Lose Yourself", we didn't want to lessen the impact of Kasey Chambers' own writing as heard across the thirty (30) stellar examples that follow: 


KASEY CHAMBERS: thirty favorites

- "Cry Like a Baby" The Captain  (EMI, Jun 00)
- "The Captain" The Captain
- "Southern Kind Of Life" The Captain
- "Last Hard Bible" The Captain
- "Barricades and Brickwalls" Barricades & Brick Walls  (EMI, Oct 01)
- "Not Pretty Enough" Barricades & Brick Walls
- "A Little Bit Lonesome" Barricades & Brick Walls
- "Pony" Wayward Angel  (EMI, Sep 04)
- "Bluebird" Wayward Angel
- "Like a River" Wayward Angel
- "Sign On the Door" Carnival  (Warner, Aug 06)
- "Rattlin' Bones" Rattlin' Bones (w/Shane Nicholson)  (Liberation, Apr 08)
- "Sweetest Waste Of Time" Rattlin' Bones
- "Someone Like Me" Little Bird  (Liberation, Sep 10)
- "Beautiful Mess" Little Bird
- "Devil On Your Back" Little Bird
- "Little Bird" Little Bird
- "Wreck and Ruin" Wreck & Ruin (w/Shane Nicholson)  (Sugar Hill, Sep 12)
- "Familiar Strangers" Wreck & Ruin
- "Have Mercy On Me" Wreck & Ruin
- "Is God Real" Bittersweet  (Essence, Jul 15)
- "Wheelbarrow (ft Ashleigh Dallas)" Bittersweet
- "Bittersweet (ft Bernard Fanning)" Bittersweet
- "Too Late To Save Me" Bittersweet
- "Ain't No Little Girl" Dragonfly  (Essence, Jan 17)
- "Satellite" Dragonfly
- "If We Had a Child (ft Keith Urban)" Dragonfly
- "Harvest & the Seed (ft Emmylou Harris)" Campfire  (Essence, May 18)
- "Backbone (Desert Child)" Backbone  (Essence, Oct 24)
- "Love Like Springsteen" Backbone


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To enjoy any Spotify ROUTES-cast, just open Spotify and search for "routesandbranches" to access this most recent playlist, as well as many others from past months.  Or click here for a preview:


Tuesday, December 03, 2024

iNNOCENCE MiSSiON - MiDWiNTER SWiMMERS

ROUTES & BRANCHES
featuring the very best of americana, alt.country and roots music
December 3, 2024
Scott Foley, purveyor of reverie


Karen and Don Peris released their first record as Innocence Mission more than thirty-five years ago. In so many ways the world is not the same today, though Innocence Mission's thirteenth studio project sounds quite a bit like their 1989 self-titled debut. In those days, the Pennsylvania Perises were regarded 'neath the same umbrella as indie-folk acts like 10,000 Maniacs and the Sundays. In the ensuing years, the duo have released hymns, lullabies, nursery rhymes, standards, and traditionals, each of which sound entirely at home alongside Innocence Mission's originals. 

It's not a slight to say that Midwinter Swimmers follows in the tradition of earlier collections. The duo, along with longtime bassist Mike Bitts, settled into their sound early on, music that is both expansive and intimate, almost existing outside of time in all the most complimentary ways. Built to house Karen Peris' often exquisite poetry, delivered in her trademark coo, Innocence Mission's songs are like snow globes - not for their fragility or preciousness but for their perfectly contained economy of song. "A Hundred Flowers" features a busily fingerpicked acoustic guitar and an indefinite piano, eventually introducing a tambourine and flute: Some linden trees watched us drive off in a hurry / Sometimes life doesn't happen like you plan. There's a lo-fi quality to the project, with Peris' voice treated with echo or lightly layered. There's a cafe jazz swing to "Your Saturday Picture", with its more prominent bass and brushed drums. Even the electric strings are soft as a breeze through branches. The arrangements are thoughtful as horns enter the session and the singer describes a walk down a Philadelphia street: And the trees arch over now / Their protecting arms / And the streetlight blinks to cross / Love is the ON the ON the ON

Innocence Mission's feathered sound and dreamy studio treatment often obscure Karen Peris' lyrics, an effect that's likely not unintended. Like Cocteau Twins (in 2017 Peris worked with Simon Raymonde), her delivery remains evocative, the rise fall and hush of her voice conveying plenty of emotion. A read through the lyric sheet for Midwinter Swimmers can be a revelation. More than a capable lyricist, Peris' is a true poet: This is you and I / When we said we think we can get there again / Golden languages of mosses and sunlight / The edge of the world that is not the end. "Camera Divides the Coast Of Maine" is almost heartbreaking in its conspiratorial beauty, scratched guitar and weeping strings. Much of Swimmers, and much of Karen Peris' poetry, focuses on the small gestures of nature in an urban setting. Petals fall, colors glow, and light dapples, each a mirror of human sentiment. Even when a lyric's story is opaque, the meaning is clear. On "John Williams": I was not staring at the ceiling / I'm just between some thoughts / It is the blankness of a new page / It is the possibly new place / I haven't seen it all.  

Across thirteen LPs, Karen and Don Peris have produced this remarkably consistent, decidedly simple music. From 1995's breakthrough Glow through Small Planes and My Room In the Trees, to 2020's gorgeous See You Tomorrow, Innocence Mission make songs that suggest colors and convey emotions. On the new "Sisters and Brothers", she discloses: I lost something I used to be before / I don't know why I'm crying, in the meantime / I will hold these things in my heart. "This Thread Is a Green Street" balances strummed acoustic, layered vocals, strings, then drums, each like petals curled in towards one another. The individual parts cite the jangle of 60s folk, the soft blur of shoegaze, the expressive restraint of chamber jazz. The whole is so recognizably Innocence Mission. 

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Sunday, December 01, 2024

ROUTES-cast December 1, 2024


ROUTES & BRANCHES
featuring the very best of americana, alt.country and roots music
December 1, 2024
Scott Foley, purveyor of dust


This time of year can sometimes be both challenging and fun to build our weekly Spotify ROUTES-casts. Higher profile releases will slow around the holidays, leaving us space to include stuff that might otherwise have been left on the cutting room floor, or to dig deeper into an album once it's released. While some blogs take advantage of the relative lull to step away from the keyboard, it's our plan to continue with most of our regular, recurring stuff, with just a few adjustments. With fewer albums to review, we'll leave Mondays open, continuing to share a review or two on Tuesdays. Wednesdays will continue our popular Lookback Machine series, and Thursdays will feature our Routes & Branches Guide To Feeding Your Monster, as long as we can harvest enough stories and links to share. We've begun our year-end series with Friday's playlist of our favorite cover songs. Between now and the end of the year, we'll use Fridays to feature more favorites and notables from 2024. Saturdays will remain open, and we'll dedicate Sundays to our award-winning ROUTES-casts, much like this one!


ROUTES-cast December 1, 2024

- Phil Cook, "I Made a Lover's Prayer" single  (Psychic Hotline, 24)  D
- Brigid Mae Power, "Walk On Out Of My Mind" Songs For You  (BMP, Dec 20)  D
- Ron Pope, "In the Morning With the Coffee On" American Man American Music  (Brooklyn Basement, Feb 14)
- Innocence Mission, "Camera Divides the Coast Of Maine" Midwinter Swimmers  (Bella Union, 24)
- David Wax Museum, "Out Of My Mind" Secret Creature  (Mark Of the Leopard, Dec 24)
- Matt Pond PA, "Korea" Ballad Of the Natural Lines  (Sonder House, Jan 7)  D
- Joe Pug, "Crescent Bridge (live)" Live At the Old Town School Of Folk Music  (Pug, Apr 18)  D
- Echolalia, "Odd Energy" Echolalia  (Full Time Hobby, Feb 28)  D
- Hand Habits, "Deeper Understanding (ft Bill Callahan)" TRANSA  (Red Hot, 24)
- Mipso, "Do You Want Me (Live)" Gas In the Tank: Live Across America  (Mipso, Dec 6)  D
- Arny Margaret, "Happy New Year" I Miss You I Do  (One Little Independent, Mar 7)  D
- Will Johnson, "Frame It" Sleuthed/Full Cuts EP  (Keeled Scales, 24)
- Nick Gusman, "Sound Of a Broken Heart" Lifting Heavy Things  (Gusman, Dec 7)  D
^ Justin Wells, "Counting Days" single  (August, 24)  D
- Yahtzee Brown, "I Guess I'm Sorry" You Got This  (Deko, Jan 24)  D
- Ryan Necci & Buffalo Gospel, "You" The Letting Go: Pt 1 EP  (Necci, Jan 17)  D
- JR Carroll, "Shame" Dark Cloud  (Carroll, Dec 6)  D
- Ags Connolly, "Men Like Me Can Fly" Your Pal Slim: Songs Of James Hand  (James Hand, 24)
- Sean Barna, "Jack Rabbit Hill" Internal Trembling EP  (Kill Rock Stars, 24)
- Sacred Paws, "Another Day" single  (Merge, 24)  D
- Odie Leigh, "All Star Breakfast (ft Field Medic)" single  (Mom + Pop, 24)  D
- Lenny Kaye, "Time" Let's Go Dancing: Songs Of Kevn Kinney  (Tasty Goody ,24)
- Dead Gowns, "In the Haze" It's Summer I Love You and I'm Surrounded By Snow  (Mtn Laurel, Feb 14)  D
- Des Demonas, "Miles Davis Headwound Blues" Apocalyptic Boom Boom  (In the Red, 24)
- Wilco, "Handshake Drugs (11/13/03 Sear Sound - NYC Version)" Ghost Is Born (Expanded Edition)  (Nonesuch, Feb 7)  D
- Michael Kiwanuka, "Lowdown (part i)" Small Changes  (Polydor, 24)
- Billy Allen + the Pollies, "It's Okay" single  (Single Lock, 24)  D
- Simon Joyner, "Port Of Call" Coyote Butterfly  (Grapefruit, 24)
- Wussy, "The Ghosts Keep Me Alive" Cincinnati Ohio  (Wussy, 24)

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To enjoy any Spotify ROUTES-cast, just open Spotify and search for "routesandbranches" to access this most recent playlist, as well as many others from past months.  Or click here for a preview: