Cherry Glazerr announced the upcoming release of their new album, I Don’t Want You Anymore, out Sept. 29.
The record will be co-produced by frontwoman Clementine Creevy and Yves Rothman, known for his work with Girlpool and Yves Tumor, and will arrive four years after the release of Stuffed and Ready. Creevy described the new project as a “mature” album, which she considers to be “Cherry Glazerr, fully-actualized,” per a press release.
“The songs on this one are songs I’ve dreamed of making,” she said. “I’ve spent these...
The record will be co-produced by frontwoman Clementine Creevy and Yves Rothman, known for his work with Girlpool and Yves Tumor, and will arrive four years after the release of Stuffed and Ready. Creevy described the new project as a “mature” album, which she considers to be “Cherry Glazerr, fully-actualized,” per a press release.
“The songs on this one are songs I’ve dreamed of making,” she said. “I’ve spent these...
- 7/13/2023
- by Charisma Madarang
- Rollingstone.com
Cherry Glazerr are set to return on September 29th with a new album called I Don’t Want You Anymore. As a preview, bandleader Clementine Creevy has shared the record’s lead single “Soft Like a Flower.”
Creevy explains in a press release that I Don’t Want You Anymore marks some of her “most personal, raw music to date,” catalyzed in part by the stillness the pandemic forced upon her. “I’ve spent these years taking a hard look at myself, at my relationships, and writing about it,” she adds. “When you’re always leaving [for tour], you don’t have a great sense of where your relationships stand, romantic or otherwise. You’re not thinking about the work that goes into maintaining them.”
On the eerie, brooding “Soft Like a Flower,” Creevy appears to evaluate her place in an overdependent relationship, recalling experiences of delusion and full-on surrender. “I like you killing me,...
Creevy explains in a press release that I Don’t Want You Anymore marks some of her “most personal, raw music to date,” catalyzed in part by the stillness the pandemic forced upon her. “I’ve spent these years taking a hard look at myself, at my relationships, and writing about it,” she adds. “When you’re always leaving [for tour], you don’t have a great sense of where your relationships stand, romantic or otherwise. You’re not thinking about the work that goes into maintaining them.”
On the eerie, brooding “Soft Like a Flower,” Creevy appears to evaluate her place in an overdependent relationship, recalling experiences of delusion and full-on surrender. “I like you killing me,...
- 7/12/2023
- by Abby Jones
- Consequence - Music
Los Angeles rock outfit Cherry Glazerr have released a new song, “Big Bang.”
The track is a concise bit of alt-rock craftsmanship, packing a sprawling universe into its sub-three minute runtime. “Big Bang” swells effortlessly from a dreamy simmer to an expansive peak flecked with synths as frontwoman Clementine Creevy belts, “I still call you when I need escaping/You go on and on and on and on and on/Catching everything I’ve thrown at you/Forgetting all the bad shit that I’ve done.”
Clementine said of the song,...
The track is a concise bit of alt-rock craftsmanship, packing a sprawling universe into its sub-three minute runtime. “Big Bang” swells effortlessly from a dreamy simmer to an expansive peak flecked with synths as frontwoman Clementine Creevy belts, “I still call you when I need escaping/You go on and on and on and on and on/Catching everything I’ve thrown at you/Forgetting all the bad shit that I’ve done.”
Clementine said of the song,...
- 2/10/2021
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Cherry Glazerr blazed through an intimate set for the latest installment of Rolling Stone’s In My Room, a series in which artists perform from home while in quarantine.
Sitting alongside a funky purple light fixture, lead singer Clementine Creevy and bassist Tabor Allen launched into “Juicy Socks” from their 2019 LP, Stuffed & Ready. “Don’t be nervous,” Creevy sings repeatedly, as O’Brien plucks the guitar behind her in a cowboy hat.
The duo dove into “Self Explained,” a song that Creevy prefaced as their favorite to play live. “I...
Sitting alongside a funky purple light fixture, lead singer Clementine Creevy and bassist Tabor Allen launched into “Juicy Socks” from their 2019 LP, Stuffed & Ready. “Don’t be nervous,” Creevy sings repeatedly, as O’Brien plucks the guitar behind her in a cowboy hat.
The duo dove into “Self Explained,” a song that Creevy prefaced as their favorite to play live. “I...
- 5/13/2020
- by Angie Martoccio
- Rollingstone.com
Cherry Glazerr has recruited Portugal. The Man for the glossy, catchy new single “Call Me.” The new track will be celebrated Tuesday night with a pop-up merch store at Los Angeles’ Fred Segal store.
Ariel Rechtshaid (Haim, Vampire Weekend) co-produced the conga-accented song. The track is bright piece of California pop with singers Clementine Creevy and John Gourley trading off lines throughout the verses and chorus.
Cherry Glazerr recently made their late-night television debut, performing the Reggie Watts remix of their single “Daddi” on The Late Late Show with James Corden with Watts himself.
Ariel Rechtshaid (Haim, Vampire Weekend) co-produced the conga-accented song. The track is bright piece of California pop with singers Clementine Creevy and John Gourley trading off lines throughout the verses and chorus.
Cherry Glazerr recently made their late-night television debut, performing the Reggie Watts remix of their single “Daddi” on The Late Late Show with James Corden with Watts himself.
- 10/1/2019
- by Brittany Spanos
- Rollingstone.com
Network: Amazon.
Episodes: 40 (half-hour) + musical special.
Seasons: Five.
TV show dates: August 27, 2014 — September 27, 2019.
Series status: Ended.
Performers include: Jeffrey Tambor, Judith Light, Gaby Hoffmann, Amy Landecker, Jay Duplass, Rob Huebel, Kathryn Hahn, Alexandra Billings, Zackary Arthur, Carrie Brownstein, Melora Hardin, Jenny O'Hara, Brett Paesel, Cherry Jones, Trace Lysett, Emily Robinson, Alex MacNicoll, Kiersey Clemons, Jerry Adler, Clementine Creevy, Julia Butters, Alia Shawkat, Anjelica Huston, Bradley Whitford, and Lawrence Pressman.
TV show description:
An Amazon dark comedy, the Transparent TV show centers on a Los Angeles family. After some false starts, patriarch Mort Pfefferman (Tambor) comes out to her family as Maura -- a transgender woman.
The clan includes Maura's former wife Shelly (Light), who has long...
Episodes: 40 (half-hour) + musical special.
Seasons: Five.
TV show dates: August 27, 2014 — September 27, 2019.
Series status: Ended.
Performers include: Jeffrey Tambor, Judith Light, Gaby Hoffmann, Amy Landecker, Jay Duplass, Rob Huebel, Kathryn Hahn, Alexandra Billings, Zackary Arthur, Carrie Brownstein, Melora Hardin, Jenny O'Hara, Brett Paesel, Cherry Jones, Trace Lysett, Emily Robinson, Alex MacNicoll, Kiersey Clemons, Jerry Adler, Clementine Creevy, Julia Butters, Alia Shawkat, Anjelica Huston, Bradley Whitford, and Lawrence Pressman.
TV show description:
An Amazon dark comedy, the Transparent TV show centers on a Los Angeles family. After some false starts, patriarch Mort Pfefferman (Tambor) comes out to her family as Maura -- a transgender woman.
The clan includes Maura's former wife Shelly (Light), who has long...
- 9/28/2019
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
Cherry Glazerr made their late-night television debut on The Late Late Show with James Corden. They were joined by the show’s house band leader Reggie Watts to perform Watts’ remix of their song “Daddi.”
Shrouded in cherry red, like their namesake, the group performed the glitzy, disco-infused remix. Lead singer Clementine Creevy sported a tiara and, halfway through, shed her guitar to dance around the stage in the glow of the multi-colored disco light sitting on Watts’ board.
The original version of “Daddi” served as the lead single for...
Shrouded in cherry red, like their namesake, the group performed the glitzy, disco-infused remix. Lead singer Clementine Creevy sported a tiara and, halfway through, shed her guitar to dance around the stage in the glow of the multi-colored disco light sitting on Watts’ board.
The original version of “Daddi” served as the lead single for...
- 9/26/2019
- by Brittany Spanos
- Rollingstone.com
“No men, just sugar.” Clementine Creevy is reading the ingredients of a candy bar she keeps on a shelf in her living room. “Crush men, eat candy,” she continues with a grin as she turns it over to read the other side. The treat is a merch item for the Los Angeles wrestler Candy Pain that she’s been holding on to since she got it at an event put on by Future Ladies of Wrestling (F.L.O.W.). “I can’t eat it!” Creevy says, her large brown eyes widening at the idea.
- 1/11/2019
- by Sarah Gooding
- Rollingstone.com
Psychic Temple is another name for Chris Schlarb, a self-styled cult leader from Long Beach, California, who’s really just a wickedly skilled producer, songwriter and musician. His Bandcamp page is full of sweet, strange sounds on the outskirts of folk-rock, jazz and psychedelia, and even further out than that — check his fantastic 2016 remake of Brian Eno’s Music for Airports (complete with a new proletarian B-side, “Music for Bus Stops”).
The rest of Psychic Temple is a rotating studio ensemble that often feels like the names from a bunch...
The rest of Psychic Temple is a rotating studio ensemble that often feels like the names from a bunch...
- 10/9/2018
- by Simon Vozick-Levinson
- Rollingstone.com
Alex Ross Perry has the music video directing bug. Last month, the independent film writer-director co-directed his first music video, for the duo Sleigh Bells’ “I Can Only Stare,” sharing duties with the band’s Derek E. Miller. The experience taught him an important lesson: making music videos is fun.
Read More: Alex Ross Perry: Indie Filmmakers Can Afford to Shoot Film
“I’m really excited about it, and now I know it’s something that I’m interested in,” Perry told IndieWire in a recent interview. “I would almost aggressively pursue further opportunities to do things like this.”
The song for the video comes from Sleigh Bells’ new album “Jessica Rabbit,” released Friday. The band approached Perry to co-direct the video after seeing his 2015 film “Queen of Earth” and using it as inspiration for their video “It’s Just Us Now,” the first single from “Jessica Rabbit.”
“I...
Read More: Alex Ross Perry: Indie Filmmakers Can Afford to Shoot Film
“I’m really excited about it, and now I know it’s something that I’m interested in,” Perry told IndieWire in a recent interview. “I would almost aggressively pursue further opportunities to do things like this.”
The song for the video comes from Sleigh Bells’ new album “Jessica Rabbit,” released Friday. The band approached Perry to co-direct the video after seeing his 2015 film “Queen of Earth” and using it as inspiration for their video “It’s Just Us Now,” the first single from “Jessica Rabbit.”
“I...
- 11/18/2016
- by Graham Winfrey
- Indiewire
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