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Back to Spring Music Preview: May

May

From Conor Oberst to Cam'ron, an eclectic slate.

Posted Mar 20, 2009 10:55 AM

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We took you inside heavyweight returns from Eminem and Green Day and bold new projects from Ben Harper and Lil Wayne, but May also brings new music from an eclectic roster that includes Conor Oberst, Cam'ron and the legendary the New York Dolls. Here's what else is on tap:

Conor Oberst
Outer South 5/19

Conor Oberst has found his Crazy Horse. For his second album with his five-man Mystic Valley Band in two years, Oberst laid down 16 roots-rock tracks, including road-tested favorites like "I Got the Reason #2" and "Ten Women." This time, Oberst invited his bandmates to contribute their own tunes, and seven of Outer South's tracks feature someone other than Oberst on lead vocals. "Everyone has input on the songs," says drummer Jason Boesel. "Conor would ask, 'What do you think of that line?' I'd be like, 'Wow, I think you're the best lyricist alive, and you're asking me what I think?'"

Cam'ron
Crime Pays 5/5

"It's definitely a street record," Cam'ron says of Crime Pays, his first disc in three years, which he cut in the basement studio of his New Jersey home. With no big-name guests or producers, the music skews toward grimy bounce, with Cam turning in complex rhymes about drug-slinging and his bedroom skills. On the first single, the soul-steeped "I Hate My Job," he creates a perfect song for our current economic climate. "Someone I knew was complaining about her job," says Cam. "But I also imagined [unemployed] people who'd love to be in her position."

New York Dolls
'Cause I Sez So 5/5

Todd Rundgren, who produced the glam-punk legends' 1973 debut, has reunited with the New York Dolls to oversee their fourth studio album (their last was in '06). Singer David Johansen and guitarist Syl Sylvain are the only living members left from the original lineup, but the Dolls' raw, bluesy sound still comes through on new tunes like the title track and "This Is Ridiculous." "There's not a lot of philosophizing," he says. "It's a band that knows how to plug in and start playing. I'd sing a song and say, 'Should I sing it again?' And Todd would say, 'Why?' "

• Listen to "'Cause I Sez So"

St. Vincent
Actor 5/5

Multi-instrumentalist Annie Clark (who records as St. Vincent) prepped for her second album by watching Disney classics like Snow White. "I'd imagine that I was composing the score," says Clark, who broke out with 2007's Kate Bush-like Marry Me. Loaded with lyrics about black eyes and Playboys under a mattress, the album finds Clark playing everything from clarinet to Mellotron. On "Laughing With Blood in Your Mouth," she combines brutal imagery with a singsong melody. "I was always thinking, 'How can I make it sound human?' " she says. "I felt like E.T."

• Listen to "The Strangers"

Steve Earle
Townes 5/12

Earle pays tribute to old friend Townes Van Zandt on this collection of covers, stripping down to bring new urgency to tunes like "Pancho and Lefty" and "To Live Is to Fly." Earle laid the album's foundation of vocals and acoustic guitar tracks in his NYC apartment before heading to Nashville to fill out the sound. There, he also teamed with a bluegrass group for three more tracks. "It would have been easy for this to be a record to slit your wrists by," Earle says. "But this is one of the best records I've ever made."

• Listen to "Lungs"

Jay Rock
Follow Me Home 5/12

"I'm just glad to be alive," says rapper Jay Rock, who grew up in L.A.'s infamously rough Nickerson Gardens projects. With a commanding voice that recalls the Game, Jay Rock rhymes with precision about guns, crack spots and life in South Central L.A. over sleek, soul-specked beats from producers like Cool and Dre and Will.i.am. Lil Wayne appears on the first single "All My Life," a cameo that came about after Rock gave Weezy one of his mixtapes. "I thought he would shine me off," says Jay. "But he was real with it."

• Listen to "Follow Me Home"

Watch Jay Rock and Nipsey Hustle work on "Army All By Myself"

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Zee Avi
Zee Avi 5/19

"She's got a voice that sounds like something from the past, but you can't put your finger on it," says Jack Johnson of Zee Avi, the Malaysian YouTube discovery he signed to his label. The singer-songwriter flew in from Kuala Lumpur to work with Johnson's band at its solar-powered studio in L.A. The album has a brunch-friendly acoustic swing vibe: "Just You and Me" features Avi on ukulele, "First of the Gang to Die" is a chilled-out Morrissey cover, and on "Kantoi," she sings in the Malay-English hybrid known as Manglish. "I do that one last when I perform at home," she says. "It really gets the crowd going."

More on Zee Avi

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Black Moth Super Rainbow
Eating Us 5/26

The cult Pittsburgh psych-pop act is poised to break out this year with its fourth record, a dazzling set that resembles a trippier Air — whooshing synths, hip-hop beats and lots of frontman Tobacco's vocoder vocals. The group cut the disc with Flaming Lips producer Dave Fridmann. "We wanted his spacey kind of sound," says Tobacco. "I wanted everything to sound much greater in scope."

• Listen to selections from Eating Us

Grizzly Bear
Veckatimest 5/26

After opening for Radiohead and collaborating with Paul Simon, the Brooklyn indie-rock crew headed to Cape Cod to record parts of its third album, named after a remote island off the coast of Massachusetts. Helped out by classical composer Nico Muhly, the quartet piled on strings, woodwinds and children's choirs. "Nico was extremely receptive to doing what we wanted and not overly precious about it," says singer Ed Droste. The resulting orchestral-pop odysseys sound like spaced-out versions of Brian Wilson songs, from the heavy guitars on "Ready, Able" to the stacked vocals on "Dory." "It's a smorgasbord," says Droste. "We did some simple pop songs, but we also weren't afraid to get proggy."

Mandy Moore
Amanda Leigh 5/26

"We didn't use anything — guitars, basses, amps — made after 1977," says Mandy Moore of her sixth album. "I was going for a supergroovy vibe." Moore — who co-wrote the album with Mike Viola (formerly of the Candy Butchers) — took inspiration from favorites like Paul McCartney and Joni Mitchell. High points include the haunting love song "Everblue" and the country-flavored "Indian Summer," which sounds like a lost Fleetwood Mac track. "I'm not sure I'll ever go back to the poppy stuff," she says. "This signals the direction I want to go in."

• Listen to "I Could Break Your Heart Any Day of the Week"

Watch Mandy Moore record Amanda Leigh in the studio

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UP NEXT: Sonic Youth, Elvis Costello and more June releases

SPRING MUSIC PREVIEW INDEX

PHOTOS
Go inside the studio with Green Day, Wilco, Dave Matthews and more in our exclusive shots.

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