Music at Elsewhere

These pages - sometimes with sample tracks and videos posted - introduce and review music which may otherwise go unheard and unnoticed. Subscribers to Elsewhere (free, here) receive a weekly e-newsletter with updates on what's new at the ever-expanding site.  Elsewhere: an equal opportunity enjoyer. So enjoy.

Subscribe to my newsletter for weekly updates.

Tyler Childers: Snipe Hunter (digital outlets)

28 Jul 2025  |  <1 min read

The country-rockin' Tyler Childers is one of those artists who seems to have gone past most people. He has six albums behind him and at 34 sounds like he's reached a peak on this willfully wayward album of psychedelic country, narrative country-folk and more, produced by Rick Rubin. And we should mention he's become engaged by the Krishnas so there's some spiritual depth here too, and... > Read more

Dirty Ought Trill

Tom Lehrer; An Evening Wasted with Tom Lehrer

28 Jul 2025  |  1 min read

In one of the university courses I took, I spent a couple of hours on a lecture under the title -- lifted from Frank Zappa -- "Does Humour Belong in Music?" The general point is that most contemporary musicians take themselves so seriously that we can barely imagine them cracking a smile let alone writing a funny song. Talking to you Chris Martin et al. Yet humour has been a... > Read more

Oedipus Rex

Half Japanese: Adventure (digital outlets)

21 Jul 2025  |  1 min read

Elsewhere's long-term affair with Half Japanese has been something of a hiding to nowhere: I doubt we would have convinced a single reader to dive into the albums we have reviewed. But we persist because they are quirky and a little bonkers but, slowly over the past decade or so, have moved more towards an audience than an audience has moved towards them. The problem is having that... > Read more

Lemonade Sunset

Ringlets: The Lord is My German Shepherd (Time For Walkies): (digital outlets)

21 Jul 2025  |  1 min read

When I reviewed Ringlets' single I Was on That Roof Once released in advance of this album I quoted what I thought were the lyrics to point out the surreal nature of their imagery. I heard “like the sea I am burning from the algae of tsunamis”. I was corrected, it was “I am foaming from the algae that's inhabited my gob”. I was close, but not close enough.... > Read more

Posh Girl Holds a Whip

Various Artists: A Day in My Mind's Mind: The Kiwi Psychedelic Scene (Frenzy)

21 Jul 2025  |  <1 min read

We have passed this way a few times over the years but the CDs in this Mind's Mind series – up to volume five now – disappear from shelves quickly. So it is sensible to get this 30 song collection out there. It appeared as a limited edition double album at the time when Real Groovy celebrated it 33 1/3 birthday 2014 and we pointed to it then. But this is a terrific... > Read more

Nirvana, by 40 Watt Banana

Polar Extremes: Strange Visions (digital outlets)

21 Jul 2025  |  1 min read

Okay, this is just odd fun . . . with a sense of smarts and cultural history behind it. And although it came out in 2019, it disappeared and has only now gone back up on digital platforms. so . . .  Not too many locals might even recognise the horse-flesh resonance of the opening title, Racing This Time (did the great commentator Reg Clapp coin that phrase?), but the album... > Read more

Captain Zodiac's Dictionary

Jay Epae: The Mercury/Capitol/Viking Recordings (Frenzy)

16 Jul 2025  |  1 min read

The archivist and avid compiler of New Zealand artists' recordings Grant Gillanders has written an excellent and assiduously researched article at audioculture about the remarkable life and career of singer/songwriter Jay Epae, a lightly edited version reproduced as the extensive liner notes for this thorough 29 song (and some soundbite promo pieces) collection. Epae from Manaia in Taranaki... > Read more

I'll Cry Tomorrow

Arcades: Who's Most Lost (Rattle, digital outlets)

14 Jul 2025  |  1 min read

A highly unusual release from Rattle who, let's be honest, release quite a lot of highly unusual contemporary classical and improvised music. That's their thing, really. However here David Prior and Dugal McKinnon – who met at Birmingham Uni while doing PhDs in composition – offer a kind of avant-folk pop on this album which was originally released in 2011 but has been now... > Read more

You Were Born Into This

Jesse Welles: Pilgrim (digital outlets)

14 Jul 2025  |  <1 min read

Because we introduced American politico-folk singer Jesse Welles not that long ago – noting he was grounded in Dylan's solo, acoustic protest singer days – we will make this brief, although we do suggest that if you hear nothing else, check out his song War Isn't Murder we posted there. He's still mining a similar vein – one of the songs here is Grapes of Wrath – but... > Read more

Philanthropist, ft Billy Strings

ONE WE MISSED: Trousdale: Growing Pains (digital outlets)

7 Jul 2025  |  <1 min read

Released in April but flying straight past us, this new album from the LA-based trio of Quinn D’Andrea, Georgia Greene, and Lauren Jones serves up concise, guitar-driven country-rock, harmonies and smart songs mostly recorded live in the studio to capture their energy and integrity. Some of this second album deals with the fatigue and expectations after their... > Read more

Lonely Night

Jazmine Mary: I Want to Rock And Roll (digital outlets)

7 Jul 2025  |  1 min read

Auckland's Jazmine Mary (Australian-born Jazmine Phillips, identifying as they/them) has confounded and impressed over her previous two albums: her downbeat The Licking of a Tangerine picked up Best Independent Debut at the 2022 Taite Prize and their recommended follow-up DOG appeared in many best-of lists in 2023. Their music is along the axis of noir-folk, kinda gloomy but... > Read more

Memphis

Autocamper: What Do You Do All Day? (digital outlets)

6 Jul 2025  |  <1 min read

Some days, overcome by the stress of living in the troubled first quarter of the 21st century, you just want an album to play a bit too loud and which isn't therapeutic for the artist whose troubles gets dumped on you. Welcome then to your computer, car or turntable Manchester's Autocamper who like the idea of jangly guitars and alt.rock with slightly melancholy pop inclinations. And... > Read more

Map Like a Leaf

RECOMMENDED RECORD: Annahstasia: Tether (digital outlets)

30 Jun 2025  |  1 min read

From time to time Elsewhere will single out a recent release we recommend on vinyl, like this which comes with full credits on an insert sheet, a fold out lyric sheet and a framable cover. Check out Elsewhere's other Recommended Record picks . . . . If we're honest, few artists are wholly original or have the capacity to surprise. Most work in familiar, codified genres... > Read more

Take Care of Me

Evan Silva: 6IX (digital outlets)

29 Jun 2025  |  <1 min read

Those with a very long memory may recall Evan Silva as singer in The Action in the Sixties and as the more soulful man with the large Afro (he wrote his autobiography, Beneath the Afro, a few years back). He's been long gone from this country but had a decent career in Australia and as a committed Christian he has a podcast, has done jingles and intermittently releases albums. We've picked... > Read more

It's Gett'n Late

People of the Sun: People of the Sun (digital outlets)

27 Jun 2025  |  1 min read

Out of New Plymouth, this heavyweight trio of Joseph Anderson, Djordje Nikolic and Tom Scrase don't want for ambition with this debut album which opens with a slow heartbeat and taonga puoro then moves into the relentless, steadily building acid rock on the eight minute Lisurgen. These announce an album of real substance from accomplished musicians who ride the line between punishing metal... > Read more

Elders

The Bajanaires: The Last Cowboy (digital outlets)

23 Jun 2025  |  1 min read

From the cover to the contents this is damn fine album of Americana (with some local inflections) from musicians with real road miles behind them: multi-instrumentalist Rob Sinclair, writer/singer Ann Frances Woolliams and writer/ multi-instrumentalist Bevan Revell. The Bajanaires – like Gary Harvey who takes a more tough Texas blues approach – are grounded in America because... > Read more

Country Road

Phoebe Rings: Aseurai (digital outlets)

23 Jun 2025  |  1 min read  |  1

We come at this in reverse because when we went to see the American band Japanese Breakfast we were delighted to find that the opening act was Auckland's Phoebe Rings . . . and we had been listening to this new album (launched on the night) all day in anticipation of writing a review. It's a damn good album as you may read, but on the night they were a little disappointing: they were... > Read more

Drifting

King Gizzard and The Lizard Wizard: Phantom Island (digital outlets)

19 Jun 2025  |  <1 min read

On their 27th album since 2012, Melbourne's psychedelic jam-band flatly refuse to be categorised easily with this beefy, orchestrated collision of horn-driven rock'n'soul (Deadstick), rocking left-field folk with flute and strings (Lonely Cosmos) and something like a heavily medicated ELO pulled towards funky space-rock (Eternal Return). There's a fair bit of cosmic prog-rock here too on... > Read more

Deadstick

19-Twenty: Call It What You Want (digital outlets)

19 Jun 2025  |  1 min read  |  1

This Australian blues-soul band have played at an alphabet of festivals (more than 70!) across their homeland and for two years running were the people's choice winners at the Bridgetown Blues Festival in Western Australia. The three-piece – Kane Dennelly (vocals/guitar), Jeremy Berg (drums), and John Gwilliam (double bass) – can be a take-no-prisoners band and their 2019 album... > Read more

Havin' a Good Time

RECOMMENDED RECORD: Mary Chapin Carpenter: Personal History (Thirty Tigers/digital outlets)

17 Jun 2025  |  2 min read

From time to time Elsewhere will single out a recent release we recommend on vinyl, like this which comes with full credits, lyrics  and is "pressed on D2 Ultra Premium vinyl for superior audio quality". We'll confirm that. Check out Elsewhere's other Recommended Record picks . . . .  At 67 Mary Chapin Carpenter has long since moved beyond categories... > Read more

New Religion