We’re not quite sure that this collaboration with Willie Nelson and Journey’s Steve Perry works, but, hey, its Wiilie
Category: Of the Day
Song of the Day: Alice Cooper – Black Mamba
Alice Cooper is back for the first time in 50 years with his original band courtesy of his upcoming July 25 album, The Revenge of Alice Cooper. A fitting successor to Love it to Death, Killer, and Billion Dollar Babies, the record brings back the vintage shock-horror of vintage Alice Cooper.
Five Cool Ones: Five New Albums Released This Week (April 4, 2025)

With summer just a few fortnights away, the music scene is already warming up.
Sadly, the far less superior Taking It To The Streets era lineup was chosen for the Doobie Brothers reboot.
The airport 77’s have a new platter scheduled for April 30 with an advance single in “If It’s On, I’m In.”
And, Rock is the New Roll new faves Strawberry Moon are banging us in the eardrums with “Polly Pocket World.”
But, you know the drill by now, here are five new savory nuggets for your ear massage this week.
Elton John and Brandi Carlile – Who Believes In Angels
No stranger to collaborations going back to the Kiki Dee days, Elton John, this time, has teamed up with Brandi Carlile to produce a likable album of pop gems that remind us how great and for-the-times that these respective artists are.
The lead-off single takes the title from Elton’s 2024 documentary Never Too Late, and with standout tracks like “The Rose Of Laura Nyro” and “Little Richards Bible” as well as the Saturday Night swagger of “Swing For The Fences,” it is clear that Sir Elton, even semi-retired, still has an awful lot in his musical tank.
Pug Johnson – El Cabron
El Cabron, the latest from Pug Johnson, one of the lesser known members of the outlaw country movement, draws inspiration from Townes Van Zandt and Terry Allen in creating a deviant landscape that includes gringos, saloon girls, and malcontents all doing business on a bed of Cajun, Texas Swimg, and honky-tonk.
We meet our hero, or villian depending on your point of view, with a thing for Singapore Slings courtesy of the title track as he heads to Mexico to cantinas full of women and song, all the way to last call with “Last Call (With Apologies To Terry Allen) with a side trip to the cathouse with the Doug Sahm worthy “Thanks To The Cathluse (I’m In The Doghouse With You.”)
This one is quite possibly the best outlaw story record since Terry Allen’s Juarez.
Lily Seabird – Trash Mountain
Named after a decommissioned landfill site where she lives with a collective of artists, Vermont’s own Lily Seabird applies her wares on Trash Mountain with an early-era Lucinda Williams esthetic.
The songs on the new record reflect her emergence coming out the other end of dark times following the suicide of her best friend and the travails of an extensive touring schedule.
“Albany” is a remuneration on a broken society, “How Far Away” is the song that directly addresses her grief, and “The Fight” is a piano-based wonderment that puts her Joni Mitchell influences on full display.
Lily Seabird, through her music as well as her ecology-forward agenda, is clearly an artist who is here to make a difference in this world.
The Waterboys – Life, Death, and Dennis Hopper
Having written a song called “Aftermath” in the 80’s that was loosely based on the life of Dennis Hopper, The Waterboys are out with a proper long-player tribute with Life, Death, And Dennis Hopper.
Inspired by the life and ethos of the iconic actor, Mike Scott, drawing from Hopper’s acting as well as his photography, has created a series of conceptual vignettes with a bevy of collaborators including Steve Earle, Fiona Apple, and Bruce Springsteen.
Released on the venerable Sun Records label featuring a song for each of Hopper’s ex-wives, the record is a sprawling 60’s psychedelic era wonderment that should stand the test of time when the end-of-the-year awards season rolls around.
West 22nd – Nowhere To Be
Coming to you from the musical hotbed of Austin, TX, and the West campus at the University of Texas, West 22nd is an Indie Folk group in the Mumford and Sons mold with the occasional bombast of the Lumineers.
From the opener, “Can’t Help It” a song with a certain Fountains of Wayne appeal, to the Wilco-esque “Laugh It All” the band clearly demonstrates that they have the songwriting chops to quickly go from playing frat parties to the stages of SXSW in the very near future.
Song of the Day: The Sha La Lees – In Motion
A blast of 60’s garage rock bombast, the Sha-La-Lees play Underground Garage – worthy Nuggets style rock complete with Harmonica. J Geils meets MC-6 on this one courtesy of the glorious harmonica.
Song of the Day: Ravagers – Razor Love
Ravagers are a punk and roll band from the streets of Baltimore. Blending elements of punk, glam, and lost-punk into their own blend of sneering rock and roll this is a band that demands your ear-time.
Song of the Day: Sorrows – Out Of My Head
If you have ever wondered what a band that featured elements of The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and The Who, all by way of Cheap Trick, would sound like, no need to phone a friend. The answer is “Out Of My Head” courtesy of the sorrows, the leader in the clubhouse for Rock is the New Roll’s 2025 song of the year.
The album Parting Is Such Sweet Sorrow on Big Stir Records is available now.
Song of the Day: Cave Flowers – Garbage And Gold
A smooth blend of Waylon Jennings and Creedence Clearwater country rock from their 2025 release Western Spectre.
Song of the Day: The Delines – Maureen’s Gone Missing
The Delines latest, Mr. luck and Ms. doom, is set to see the light of ear on February 14, and if this latest output is any indication with the opening lines “first, there was a man with missing fingers, and he was in a mood” the record is shaping up to be pure Willy Vlautin noir at its best.
Video of the Day: Creeping Jean – Spice Rack
Named after a Kinks song, Creeping Jean is an Indie Rock bound out of Brighton with a sound that floats somewhere North of Led Zeppelin and South of the 13th Floor Elevators.
Song of the Day: Zach Bryan – Blue Jean Baby
Zach Bryan, with his latest single, “Blue Jean Baby” proves once again that he is incapable of writing a bad song.
