
H.C. McEntireโs album Eno Axis comes out on Merge Records August 21, but we got our first taste way back at the start of 2019, though we didnโt know it then. โHouses of the Holyโ seemed like a one-off between the Mount Moriah bandleaderโs 2018 solo debut, LIONHEART, and whatever would come next.ย
Since Merge revealed the tracklist, we know itโs the final song on the new album, and for sure, McEntireโs electric-folk sanctification of Led Zeppelin would be a hard act to follow. But โTIME, ON FIRE,โ the single that dropped with the announcement, is a strong contender and an interesting counterpoint. As an alternate title, โHoly Are the Housesโ would totally work.ย
The new single is a country cruiser with a secret post-punk chassis, as if Loretta Lynn had been sneaking around listening to Shudder to Thinkโor maybe to one of McEntireโs old bands. Some Mount Moriah fans might not remember when she used to bruise and blister in Bellafea, whose dark-mirrored sound ran parallel with Des Arkโs as the Triangleโs post-punk pacesetter in the aughties.ย
Though McEntire has dialed back the dynamic range in her spectral country music, the dark-shrouded atmosphere of those early days still clings like nocturnal dew. At the start of โTime, on Fire,โ a long drone spreads out the stars, which linger over the glass-shard verses and chugging choruses (recalling the stealth-pop of another McEntire band, Un Deux Trois) and then swirl into a stellar guitar solo.ย
McEntireโs distinctively crimped and fluted voice flashes silver, copper, gold. The song catches her in a metaphysical mood, watching the days burn off through a windowpane. The split-screen video looks like three unsquared Instagram posts and mostly captures small household actions, quietly emphasizing the songโs intimation of something mundane and precious constantly slipping awayโnow, and now, and now. ย
Wow, OK, that got kind of dark. Thatโs on me. But we can lighten things right up with the anthemic folk-pop wattage of โLIGHT,โ Autumn Nicholasโs new burst of fresh air. The singer-songwriter from Fort Bragg is no stranger to the Triangle, composing music for Durham company OM Grown Dancers. Recently sheโs been in LA working on her second EP, from which โLightโ is the first single.
The song begins with just Nicholasโs clear, darting voice and an acoustic guitar. Then it incandesces with dramatic Adele-like flourishes: ethereal harmonies, swelling strings, booming drops, a stadium-sized kick drum.ย As the arrangement builds higher and higher, Nicholas is always a step ahead, as if powered by the sheer conviction of her assurances about identity and belonging, which feel hard-won.
Thereโs no doubt lurking in dark corners because thereโs nowhere for them to hide.ย โLightโ is a pure beam of inspiration that dispels shadows. Check out the stripped-down acoustic version from Sofar, too:

If Nicholasโs song is everything under the sun, Jay Bishop’sย โOUTER SPACE LOVE”ย is completely over the moon. The choice cut from the Durham nativeโs new album, Steppers, is a flight test for all its beloved vintage tropesโonly the driest drum machines and the wettest reverbs for Bishop, the funky-robot-est bass arpeggios and the silkiest bright-tinted synthesizers.ย
Really, Steppers is less a spaceship than a time machine, and it lands at a cookout in Durham circa 1990. This is Bishopโs love letter to a rich strand of premillennial Black music that ran from underground to mainstream, from boogie and electro to the Princely heights of pop and R&Bโfrom Vicky D and Leon Sylvers III to titanic teams like Jam and Lewis, L.A. Reid and Babyface, and the architects of new jack swing.ย
Itโs a style of lush, sculpted electro-pop that exists at the nexus of house music, soul music, and funk, and Bishop, a singer of winning simplicity, recreates it down to the last plashing chord and liquid bass. The album even opens with an homage to George Clintonโs spiel at the beginning of Snoopโs barbecue classic Doggystyle. Bishop calls it music for aunties and uncles to two-step to at the family reunion, for backyard cookouts and basement spades games, for washing the car in the driveway on Saturdays and cleaning the house on Sundays.ย ย
Thereโs something extra-poignant about Bishopโs ode to the domestic, community-based soundtrack of his life:ย He made it in Tokyo, where it was issued July 3 on Late Pass Records. Though he still has a home in Durham, heโs been in Japan for the last three years for his wifeโs work.
So Steppers transfigures around another corner in space and time, in one of the billions of personal labyrinths that make up the master pattern.ย A car or boat or plane will take you backย there, wherever it is. But only music can take you backย then. During this endless month weโve been trapped in since mid-March, these musical escape pods from limbo are especially welcome.
Wow, that got kind of dark again. Iโm fine, really.ย
Follow Interim Editor in Chief Brian Howe on Twitter or send an email to [email protected].ย
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