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July 12, 2022

Shorties (An Interview with Coco Mellors, An Exhibit of Lou Reed's Archives, and more)

Cleopatra and Frankenstein by Coco Mellors

The Creative Independent interviewed author Coco Mellors.


The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts is opening up Lou Reed’s archives in a large-scale exhibit.


free eBook today:

We Organize to Change Everything: Fighting for Abortion Access and Reproductive Justice edited by Natalie Adler, Marian Jones, Jessie Kindig, Elizabeth Navarro, and Anne Rumberger

July's best eBook deals.

Today's best eBook deals.


Poliça visited The Current studio for a live performance and interview.


Comics Beat recommended summer's most anticipated graphic novels.


Cover Me shared a collection of covers of the La's "There She Goes."


Bustle recommended the week's best new books.


All Things Considered examined the Ukraine war on Russia's music scene.


Natalka Burian recommended books about the odd jobs that people do to get by at Electric Literature.


Stream a new Mountain Goats song.


Bustle recommended nonfiction books that tell the history of reproductive rights in the United States.


Metric's Emily Haines discussed the band's new album with Paste.


Special Interest covered Amanda Lear's "Follow Me."


Stream a new song by Bonny Light Horseman.


Vulture explored the rise in double albums.


The Quietus profiled The Umlauts.

The Umlauts are a band whose music does a lot of things. Their name in itself, and the titular refrain of debut single ‘Boiler Suits And Combat Boots’, is like a deconstruction of the cliches of Euro-fetishising pop, but there is substance to their style that moves them well beyond the realms of parody.


PopMatters reconsidered Elvis Costello's Imperial Bedroom album on its 40th anniversary.


Bandcamp Daily profiled the band je’raf.

The premise of je’raf is to make the avant-garde accessible. Upon listening to their music, what is most likely to strike you is that it sounds both extremely familiar and wildly extraterrestrial. This is intentional: it’s left-field music you can groove to, and it exists to make you feel grounded while spiraling far out into other possibilities.



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