Fresh Juice

Fresh Juice 23rd February 2026

Laptop – Xanadu

This summery, laid back new single has the potential to join the ranks of the great misinterpretations in music. Like the many who failed to notice that ‘Born In The USA’ was damning, or that ‘Every Breath You Take’ was basically a stalker song, so too some might miss that ‘Xanadu’ is far from the colourful ode to an exotic holiday destination it initially appears as. The tune is a duet between the bands frontman Jesse Hartman and Nevis vocalist Anna Hadeed that has enough sunshine and sand in the production to deceptively masquerade as a sunshine pop hit with an ambient nod to Jamaican chill. But, as is depicted in the video, this is actually throwing a grenade at the materialistic idea of happiness being found in consumerism. Originally formed in the late 1990s, Laptop released three albums of arch, synth leaning art pop on Island Records before disappearing from view for a while, but they return revitalised with Jesse now joined by his son Charlie. They have a forthcoming album called ‘On This Planet’ and you can check them out more here: https://laptoptheband.bandcamp.com/

Hudson Freeman – I’m Most Me

Sometimes when new music is raining down on you there will be a chance discovery unaccompanied by fanfare or hype that stands out simply by virtue of being very, very good. So, that very thing happened with this song, captured as a live performance on the GoodNoise channel. There is nothing in Hudson’s presentation that grabs you, he has a pretty unassuming look, but as soon as he plays ‘I’m Most Me’ the thing that stands out a mile is that it is the work of a sensitive and tuned in songwriter. He is at one with his instrument as both lyrically and sonically he plugs into the exact feeling the number is trying to convey. Add to that some hot guitar abrasions and it adds up to a quiet eruption of music in the lo-fi Americana style. Hudson has focused more on the intimacy of singer-songwriting post pandemic, but you cannot fail to detect something raging under the surface. Find out more here: https://hudsonfreeman.com/

Kevin Morby – Javelin

Following a totally fresh discovery I move onto an artist who has been a firm favourite for at least ten or fifteen years at this point. Kevin Morby is dependably excellent with his releases too, having settled on an alternative folk-rock sound that whilst referencing Lou Reed, Wilco or Jonathan Richman textures is always unmistakably his own. He has recently announced a forthcoming new album called ‘Little Wide Open’ from which ‘Javelin’ is a rather promising taster. Kevin has described the record as his most personal and vulnerable yet although, by the sounds of this song, that does not mean he has lost any of his energy and musical thrust. Aaron Dessner of The National produces and by the sounds of things is leaving a welcome amount of space in the production for the performance to express as only Morby can. The full album is coming in May but for now you can get the song here: https://amzn.to/4qV05Et

Jill Scott – Beautiful People

The Roots have long been one of the best acts on the rap scene, not just because in tandem with their beats and mixing they are a super tight live unit but also because of the strength of their collaborations. Soul singer Jill Scott broke through in music in the late nineties after working with the band, amongst others, then really made her mark with a strong solo debut in 2000 that fused the rap and nu-soul styles of the day with an authentic retro texture marking her territory as the real soul deal. She has kept her quality high, possibly by not overkilling on the releases as this is her first new music in ten years, but whenever the three time Grammy winner puts out something new it has always been worth hearing. The new album is out now, called ‘To Whom It May Concern,’ you can grab a copy here: https://amzn.to/4rxeY1b

Mitski – I’ll Change For You

Mitski is another artist about whom you can say if there is new music in the pipeline, it would be wrong not to check it out for she delivers consistently. There is a perception that she belongs in the mainstream pop world but if that is the case, it is a pop avenue that I am happy to send you down because the music has depth, eloquence and range. There is also a maverick unpredictability to her, after all, the surprising support act she picked for a recent tour was the equally unique and out-there folk singer Richard Dawson. The new album ‘Nothing’s About To Happen To Me’ is more narrative driven and is available February 27th on Dead Oceans; for purchasing just follow the link: https://amzn.to/4c51Viz

India Bourne & The Big Skirts – Lava

To conclude this week, a lovely and mesmerising live clip featuring India Bourne. There is something so beautiful about a choir of voices, producing a sound with both volume and punch but devoid of the clinical tuning in modern recording standards, the human element of a choir with all its built in natural variables makes for a sound that is raw and alive. India is a classically trained cellist who was a long time member of Ben Howard’s band alongside her own Tender Central project, but she also moonlights as a vocal coach and for the past ten years, a choir leader of The Big Skirts. For further exploration into her warm, experimental sounds head this way: https://tendercentral.bandcamp.com/album/the-garden

Standard

Leave a comment