H.C. McEntireโ€™s 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 didnโ€™t know it then. โ€œHouses of the Holyโ€ seemed like a one-off between the Mount Moriah bandleaderโ€™s 2018 solo debut, LIONHEART, and whatever would come next.ย 

Since Merge revealed the tracklist, we know itโ€™s the final song on the new album, and for sure, McEntireโ€™s electric-folk sanctification of Led Zeppelin would be a hard act to follow. But โ€œTIME, ON FIRE,โ€ the single that dropped with the announcement, is a strong contender and an interesting counterpoint. As an alternate title, โ€œHoly 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 Thinkโ€”or maybe to one of McEntireโ€™s 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 Arkโ€™s as the Triangleโ€™s 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 โ€œTime, 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 

McEntireโ€™s 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 songโ€™s intimation of something mundane and precious constantly slipping awayโ€”now, and now, and now. ย 

Wow, OK, that got kind of dark. Thatโ€™s on me. But we can lighten things right up with the anthemic folk-pop wattage of โ€œLIGHT,โ€ Autumn Nicholasโ€™s 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 sheโ€™s been in LA working on her second EP, from which โ€œLightโ€ is the first single.

The song begins with just Nicholasโ€™s 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.

Thereโ€™s no doubt lurking in dark corners because thereโ€™s nowhere for them to hide.ย โ€œLightโ€ is a pure beam of inspiration that dispels shadows. Check out the stripped-down acoustic version from Sofar, too:

If Nicholasโ€™s song is everything under the sun, Jay Bishop’sย โ€œOUTER SPACE LOVE”ย is completely over the moon. The choice cut from the Durham nativeโ€™s new album, Steppers, is a flight test for all its beloved vintage tropesโ€”only 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 Bishopโ€™s 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&Bโ€”from 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 

Itโ€™s 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 Clintonโ€™s spiel at the beginning of Snoopโ€™s 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 

Thereโ€™s something extra-poignant about Bishopโ€™s 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, heโ€™s been in Japan for the last three years for his wifeโ€™s 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 weโ€™ve been trapped in since mid-March, these musical escape pods from limbo are especially welcome.

Wow, that got kind of dark again. Iโ€™m fine, really.ย 


Follow Interim Editor in Chief Brian Howe on Twitter or send an email to [email protected].ย 

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