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Ringo Starr Goes Country, and 13 More New Songs

Ringo Starr Goes Country, and 13 More New Songs


All issues patriarchal, capitalistic and obtuse are targets for Lambrini Girls, the gleefully obstreperous English punk duo Phoebe Lunny and Lilly Macieira. “Company Culture,” a blast at office harassment from their debut album, “Who Let the Dogs Out,” revs up instrumentally for almost a full minute — clattery drums, buzz-bombing bass, dissonant guitar — earlier than Lunny lets free a brutally sarcastic tirade: “Human assets say I’m asking for it,” she barks. PARELES

Chrystia Cabral, a California songwriter who data as Spellling, proclaims “I don’t belong right here!” with mounting vehemence in “Portrait of My Heart,” which would be the title observe of her fourth album, due in March. She sings a couple of psychological and religious disaster — “I want a stroke of luck / ’Cause I kicked down all my angels to the dust” — in a crescendo of uneven drums, layered guitars and orchestral strings, exulting within the drama. PARELES

Heartache and heritage mingle on Bad Bunny’s new album, “Debí Tirar Más Fotos” (“I Should Have Taken More Photos”). Like lots of its songs, “Baile Inolvidable” (“Unforgettable Dance”) morphs between present and classic sounds, underscoring the multigenerational continuity of Puerto Rican music. “Baile Inolvidable” begins as a blurred dirge of synthesizer strains and Bad Bunny’s vocals, mourning a misplaced romance; “I believed we’d develop previous collectively,” he sings in Spanish, and admits, “It’s my fault.” But the observe switches to an old-school salsa jam, with natural percussion and horns and a jazzy piano; the teachings of the girlfriend who taught him “methods to love” and “methods to dance” have stayed with him. PARELES

In “What Do I Do” — from “Lana,” her album-length addition to her album “SOS” — SZA solutions her telephone to listen to an by chance dialed name and the sounds of her boyfriend with one other girl. A lean, finger-snapping observe backs her as she grapples with the shock in short, colliding phrases: previous loyalties, new anger, damage, disgust and the clear realization that “It’ll by no means be the identical once more.” PARELES

The Caribbean-rooted British band Cymande, whose first three albums had been launched within the early Nineteen Seventies, is about to place out a brand new one, “Renascence,” after many years of listening to its music recycled as samples. “How We Roll” brings again the group’s hand-played, Afro-Anglo-Caribbean grooves and hardheaded idealism: “We must not ever lose willpower.” Its affected person, cymbal-tapping beat and electric-piano chords trace at Miles Davis’s “In a Silent Way,” whereas the horn strains look towards Fela Anikulapo Kuti’s Afrobeat. And deep-voiced visitor raps from Jazzie B, the founding father of Soul II Soul, join throughout British R&B generations. PARELES

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Written by EGN NEWS DESK

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