Selective listening | Our playlist, from Marilyne Léonard to Vulgaires Machins

Every month, our music journalists add about 20 songs to the playlist of The Press on Spotify. These recent titles can be found in our selection.

Updated yesterday at 11:15 a.m.


Marilyn Leonard, She’s my lady

Josee Lapointe

Josee Lapointe
The Press

Marilyne Léonard launched her first album barely six months ago, but now she is already offering a new song. In the sensual She’s my lady, the young singer-songwriter does not take detours in the subject, and above all, she amalgamates with fire this mixture of soul and hip-hop which is already her signature. “Do you rap or sing/Trust me, it’s more stylish if I do both at the same time”. We can only agree, and look forward to the next album due in the spring.

fire at night, Childhood

Emilie Cote

Emilie Cote
The Press


PHOTO FRANÇOIS ROY, THE PRESS

The Feu la nuit trio made up of Mathieu Denoncourt, Francis Mineau and Simon Quevillon.

Fire at night is a new power trio” composed of Simon Quevillon and Mathieu Denoncourt, two former members of Mille Monarques, as well as Francis Mineau, the drummer of Malajube. Feu la nuit has released a three-song EP that has everything to please music lovers who love the twists and turns of new wave and dream pop flights. It’s rare to have such rock density in French.

Willows, I always come back

Josee Lapointe

Josee Lapointe
The Press


PHOTO LUCILE PARRY-CANET, PROVIDED BY INTEMPO

Willows, aka Genevieve Toupin

Less than two years after his magnificent EP The Hills, Willows – Geneviève Toupin – offers a new original song, in French this time. The Franco-Manitoban singer-songwriter has once again collaborated with Joseph Marchand on the production of I always come back, a refined folk song that breathes the long road between Montreal and Manitoba. Which makes you very eager to find the bewitching voice of Geneviève Toupin, in her new album which will be released in March.

Adib Alkhalidey, To kill time

Josee Lapointe

Josee Lapointe
The Press

Adib Alkhalidey launched a first album two years ago, evil hearts, under the pseudonym of Abelaïd. This time, it is under his real name that the comedian offers a new song, To kill time, which will also be the title of his upcoming album on November 11. “To kill time / I apprehend the worst”, a strong line that he repeats in his muffled voice, on a heavy and slightly anxiety-provoking rhythm, makes all the power of this dark and explosive song.

Gabrielle Shonk, How We Used to Be

Josee Lapointe

Josee Lapointe
The Press


PHOTO ANDRÉ RAINVILLE, PROVIDED BY ARTS & CRAFTS

Gabrielle Shonk

It’s been a long time since we heard from Gabrielle Shonk, whose debut album dates back to 2017. The singer-songwriter makes a beautiful and gentle return with How We Used to Be, beautiful R & B ballad that talks about the end of a love. Carried by the rich and nuanced voice of the singer, composed with Jessy Caron and produced by Jesse Mac Cormack, this new song announces a second album to come in the winter of 2023.

French 79, FOIX

Emilie Cote

Emilie Cote
The Press


IMAGE FROM A YOUTUBE VIDEO

French 79

French electronic musician French 79, born Simon Henner, has unveiled a new single, FOIX, accompanied by a video where he is at the turntables at the top of the castle of Foix, in the department of Ariège, in France. We find the ardor of the melodic master of keyboards, to whom we owe the hit Diamond Veins (with Sarah Rebecca), and the production of an album by his friend Kid Francescoli. To discover if you like CRi, for example.

Jeanne Added, Antidote

Emilie Cote

Emilie Cote
The Press


PHOTO JOEL SAGET, AGENCY FRANCE-PRESSE

Jeanne Added, winner of the 2019 Female Artist of the Year Award, is about to launch her third album, By Your Side, recorded with renowned French director Renaud Letang (Feist, Alain Souchon). The invoice turns out to be resolutely more intimate and fragile than its previous material, as evidenced by the extract Antidote. The singer-songwriter also unveils two first songs in French.

LCD Sound system, New Body Rhumba

Philippe Beauchemin

Philippe Beauchemin
The Press


PHOTO NICOLE FARA SILVER, THE NEW YORK TIMES

James Murphy, singer of LCD Soundsystem

A first piece in five years for the New York group LCD Soundsystem, taken from the soundtrack of the film White Noise by Noah Baumbach. Yes, the wait was worth it. The group, led by a James Murphy in great shape and all in voice – which recalls more and more the good years of Bono, moreover -, proposes to take the direction of the dance floor. The electro-pop sound heard in the opening is camouflaged in the last third of this piece of more than seven minutes behind heavy layers of rock guitar, while Murphy’s voice takes flight. Difficult not to wiggle!

Kanen, Nimueshataten nete

Josee Lapointe

Josee Lapointe
The Press


PHOTO SHUEN_PHOTO, PROVIDED BY MUSIQUE NOMADE

Kanen with Louis-Jean Cormier

Innu singer Kanen is another talented artist from the fertile Uashat-Maliotenam basin, near Sept-Îles. She just started Nimueshataten nete (“ I’m bored of there”), a very beautiful song with indie-rock accents that she wrote and that she performs in duet, in French, with Louis-Jean Cormier, in which they pay a vibrant tribute to their Native North Shore. The singer-songwriter will release an album in the winter of 2023.

Steve Hill, Everything You Got

Pierre-Marc Durivage

Pierre-Marc Durivage
The Press


PHOTO SARAH MONGEAU-BIRKETT, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Steve Hill & The Devil Horns in concert as part of the Montreal International Jazz Festival.

The Trois-Rivières Steve Hill still has the sacred fire, 25 years after the start of his illustrious career. The six-string maestro launches Everything You Gotfirst extract from his 12e album, Dear Illusion, which will be released on November 11. The clip that accompanies the song sets the tone, a sequence shot full of spontaneity directed and played by Jean Pellerin, alias Johnny Pilgrim, who has already worked with Kiss, Guns N’Roses, Def Leppard and Metallica.

Vulgar Things, Asylum

Dominic Late

Dominic Late
The Press

One sentence would suffice to dispel all our fears: no, Vulgaires Machins has lost none of its acute sense of the formula that does good, even if the contradictions it encapsulates hurt. “I complain in the line-up to Tim / that the world is made sad”, sing Guillaume Beauregard and Marie-Eve Roy in this sort of sequel, twenty years later, at like a brick. Recognized for their protest refrains, the punks are however never as poignant as when they describe the consequences on our small hearts of the ugliness – social, political, urbanistic – which surrounds us.

Weyes Blood, It’s Not Just Me, It’s Everybody

Philippe Beauchemin

Philippe Beauchemin
The Press


PHOTO FROM THE ARTIST’S FACEBOOK PAGE

Weyes Blood

Piano. Felted battery. Discreet harp. And a warm voice. Weyes Blood – Natalie Mering – does not seek to dazzle with added instruments. Rather, she achieves this by focusing on what makes her one of the best authors and composers: the search for simplicity and musical harmony. It’s still a success here. A perfect balance between an adult pop sound and contemporary and mature lyrics, where loneliness rubs shoulders with social incomprehension.


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