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Matthew Culnane

Crawlspace Of The Pantheon

Crawlspace Of The Pantheon

Guided by Voices·2026·[no label]

Bob Pollard’s 44th album as GBV (solo records and side projects not included; nobody has the time). Familiarity might ordinarily breed contempt, but it never has with Pollard. Each album adds something, gives someone a new way in. There have been many eras of GBV, and this one, a decade or so deep with Gillard, Bare Jr., Shue and March, is among the strongest.

When I reviewed Broken Social Scene’s Remember the Humans I said not to expect anything wildly different, just an excellent BSS record. Pollard works at the opposite extreme of productivity, but the principle is the same: you know roughly what to expect, and reliability is sometimes better than reinvention. The danger is taking it for granted. They won’t be around forever.

Or will they? The record keeps circling its own story without quite admitting to it. “We outlast them all” is classic GBV power pop; Pollard insists it’s about anyone who perseveres, not the band, though good luck hearing it that way. Then “Out With a Theory” gives the actual autobiography, a covers act writing Cheap Trick knock-offs and dreaming of recording in Mitch Easter’s garage, and he calls that one the ballad of GBV’s history. Deflection and confession, two tracks apart.

Con Air

Con Air

Simon West·1997·★★★½· Rewatched

Inspired by a Guardian ranked list, I’ve decided to spend the summer rewatching John Cusack films—I’m not sure why, but I’ve been rather obsessed with him for about 35 years—and where better to start than one of the most insane films of the 90s. It was intended as an action film, but it works far better in hindsight as a dark comedy: a postmodern blend of Top Gun, The Rock, Speed, and Face/Off, celebrating and unwittingly sending up those sorts of films by sheer excess.

An absurd premise, stacked cast, bonkers juxtapositions of scene, score and dialogue, an audience set up to cheer for a cannibalistic child killer’s escape to freedom… I ought to watch this more often. Cusack plays his honest, moralistic US Marshal straight as the madness unfolds around him.

film·actionthrillercrimeundercoverambushwar-veteran·disneyplussummerofcusack
Birds of Paradise

Birds of Paradise

Thomas Dollbaum·Dear Life Records

Thomas Dollbaum writes about in-betweens: watching TV, catching rabbits, sitting on rooftops, plotting an exit from a Podunk town that the songs already suspect won’t happen. Birds of Paradise moves through Florida’s pine flatwoods and the backroads feeding the interstate, and it’s preoccupied with the sights and sounds of the American South: coyotes in the yard, birds flying south, discount cigarettes.

Some of these are short stories more than songs. “Big Boi” recounts an ugly encounter with a fractious couple who need the narrator’s help scoring drugs. “Waterbirds” belongs to someone who needs proper rest and wants to be useful to someone else, and isn’t sure he can manage either: “I always wanted to help / But it doesn’t mean I’m good at it.”

Dollbaum is a writerly songwriter, indebted to David Berman in the way he can deliver a devastating line without raising his voice. Berman’s ghost has been loud in this corner of music for a while now, and Dollbaum is squarely in it. The lyrics point as much to Southern gothic fiction as to any record, with Bill Callahan’s habit of letting one specific image hold a whole song somewhere in the mix too. The other touchstone is MJ Lenderman, who turns up on drums and backing vocals plus a ragged solo on “Dozen Roses.” The album was tracked live in four days, which you can hear in the looseness—it’s all the better for it.

Something Worth Waiting For

Something Worth Waiting For

Friko·ATO Records

Friko’s second record wears its influences the way the best maximalists do: the heart-on-sleeve 00s indie pop of Arcade Fire, Wolf Parade, Bright Eyes is all over it, but never as debt. Singer and songwriter Niko Kapetan has digested it into something of his own.

It moves between nostalgia and escape. ‘Dear Bicycle’ is an ode to a childhood bike; ‘Hot Air Balloon’ yearns toward a plan to get away, and would sit comfortably on Pablo Honey.

The arrangements are the real pleasure. On ‘Certainty’ the strings dial up the urgency under the vocal rather than just dressing it. ‘Seven Degrees’ revels in some 60s pop with a touch of psychedelia, Beatlesy and bright, though it perhaps throws in one key change too many.

I suspect the sequencing will be the bone of contention. Where you land on the couple of slower songs depends on what you want from a record like this: respite and variety, or unbroken momentum. Some listeners will feel the air go out of the room; others will be grateful for the window.

True

True

Tenderness·2026·Amorphous Sounds

Katy Beth Young has spent years lending her voice to other people’s records and records (she sings in Peggy Sue and Deep Throat Choir, members of both turn up here). True is the first one that’s entirely hers. According to the Bandcamp notes, it arrives several years after the initial demos were cut, but it’s worth the wait.

It opens with “Saturday Morning”: “Are you busy Saturday morning? / I’ve got thousands of things to tell you / Like how I’ve started making plans to replace you / With one perfect song that goes on and on.” That’s the record in miniature.

Calling it a country album would oversell the twang. Harry Bohay’s pedal steel runs through almost every track, but the reference points are as much Big Thief as Patsy Cline, and the spare, introspective arrangements leave plenty of room around Young’s voice. The lyrics belong to now: dating mediated by screens and algorithms (“Touchscreen”, “Database Blues”), and, underneath, the kind of grief no app can route around. “Playing ‘Country Roads’” is written for her late father. However the subject matter resonates with you, this is a very strong set of songs.

American Football (LP4)

American Football (LP4)

American Football·2014

The story so far is on the record, and it isn’t pretty. Mike Kinsella’s divorce, his drinking, Steve Lamos walking away for two years: LP4 puts all of it on the table.

Opener “Man Overboard” begins with a stuttering 7/4 drum pattern and soft vocalising, Kinsella resigned to his fate. “No Feeling” carries the mood: ‘Tell the doctors I’m done / The kids, “Adieu” / And mother, “Désolé”’. By “Blood On My Blood” the story of his life is in disarray. Three songs in, it’s clear Mike is struggling.

His voice has changed since LP1. More expressive, less one-dimensional. What was a constraint 25 years ago is now the thing that makes him worth listening to.

The lyrical themes peak on “Bad Moons”, the teenaged feelings of the debut firmly in the rear-view. This is a record about the difficulty of middle age. The kids of LP1 are divorced dads now.

The band keeps up its recent habit of using guests sparingly. Brendan Yates, Caithlin De Marrais and Wisp appear as backing vocalists, adding texture rather than rewriting the songs.

A record full of gut punches, then. Sonically it’s a leap over LPs 1–3, less in style than in execution: the twinkly, expansive sound is intact, the synths and strings improve everything without announcing themselves, and the arrangements are lusher than the band has managed before.

Put your headphones on for this one. Mike might not be alright, but the record is.

For Love of Grace & the Hereafter

For Love of Grace & the Hereafter

Iceage·2026·Mexican Summer

I wasn’t a fan of Iceage when they first broke. Strange, given I love nearly every band that fed into them. They had the attitude. The songs were another matter.

That was a long time ago. What changed was Elias Rønnenfelt’s two solo records, Heavy Glory and Speak Daggers, released inside a year of each other. The former leaned into Americana, the latter braided punk, folk and hip-hop, with detours via experimentalists like Dean Blunt. Suddenly prolific, and broadening his palette without dropping his standards. Both were among my favourites of 2024 and 2025.

For Love of Grace & the Hereafter arrives nine months after Speak Daggers and slots neatly into the sequence. It keeps the brightness, urgency and restlessness of early Iceage, recorded back in the same remote Swedish house where they cut Plowing Into the Field of Love, but adds melody, songcraft and a romanticism the early records never had. On “Ember” Rønnenfelt declares “I love you in an ominous way” over a major-key riff that pulls the menace out from under itself.

Look back at the early albums and the distance he’s travelled as a frontman and writer is the real story. He always had presence. He hasn’t suddenly turned into Jeff Buckley, but he now has greater range—emotional and vocal—and, more to the point, the songs to put it to use. I shouldn’t be surprised; we’re all different people in our mid-thirties than we were at nineteen. He’s becoming one of the best frontmen in rock.

Axiom Verge

2015·★★★★

I came to Axiom Verge late, and from the wrong direction. I’d been playing the post-Hollow Knight wave of Metroidvanias, the ones with their charm systems and stamina bars and cartographer NPCs, and worked backwards to the game that predates all of it. It came out in 2015, two years before Hollow Knight reset the genre’s reference point. Play it now and you can feel where it’s pointed: not at its descendants but back at 1994, at Super Metroid, which happens to be one of my favourite games. So I came to this predisposed to like it.

The map is good. Nine interlocking areas that expand in the mind the way the good ones do, where you’re navigating the corridor in front of you and plotting a route across the whole world at once. I got lost a few times, which I count as a point in its favour—getting lost is half of why I play these—and never for so long that it curdled. Only once did I reach for a clue: a lava pit you have to fire the address disruptor at to make it traversable. Obvious in hindsight, and apparently it stumps a lot of players. I’d walked through that room several times and it simply never occurred to me.

The weapons are where my reservations start. There are lots, and that’s the problem. I spent almost the whole game on Voranj, the low-power spread gun, and barely touched the rest. The flamethrower turns up and seems well regarded, but I found it situational at best, and I could never keep straight which weapon did what. Breadth standing in for depth.

The disruptor itself is the cleverest idea here, corrupting enemies, peeling back hidden passages, a riff on the out-of-bounds exploits speedrunners dig out of the actual NES Metroid. The lore leans the same way: deliberately strange, body-horror texture, an ancient world called Sudra. Intriguing for a while, and then somewhere around the midpoint I stopped following the plot and let it wash over me, with no real sense I’d lost anything.

What keeps pulling me back is that Tom Happ built nearly all of it alone—design, art, music, the lot. You can feel a single sensibility in each of those odd weapons and corrupted texture. It honours Super Metroid without hiding behind it, which is more than most of its successors manage in their Team Cherry reverence.

I won’t got for 100% but would happily replay it at some point.

game

Pinmark

For years I saved links to Pinboard with a Safari extension called bookmarker for pinboard. I just upgraded my work MacBook and during the migration I discovered that the extension is gone from the App Store so I can’t re-install it. The developer had stopped using Pinboard and stopped paying Apple’s developer fee. Fair enough—but it left me without the tool I used most days. The source is still up (Apache 2.0), but it’s Swift built on Safari’s old App Extension architecture, last touched about five years ago. Reviving someone else’s abandoned Swift on a dead framework held no significant appeal.

So I rebuilt it as a Safari Web Extension, in HTML, CSS and JavaScript, which is my stack. Now I own it.

The one feature I wasn’t willing to lose is live tag autocomplete against my full Pinboard history. A Shortcut can save a link; it can’t suggest “javascript” before “java” because I’ve used the first far more often. Pinmark fetches my entire tag list, caches it, and as I type it filters and ranks the matches by how often I’ve used each one. Arrow keys to move, Tab to accept, Enter to save. That is the whole reason it exists.

The rest is what you’d expect. Click the toolbar button and a popover opens, pre-filled with the current tab’s URL and title, and any text I’ve selected on the page becomes the description. Read-later and private toggles. If I’ve already saved the page it says so, and loads the existing tags so I edit rather than duplicate.

Some details worth noting:

  • The Pinboard API client sits behind a small interface in its own module, so I can later point it at my pinboard-mcp server (that I’ve also built, currently a private repo) instead of the public API without touching the popover
  • Tag suggestions are sorted most-used first, matching the behaviour of the extension it replaces
  • The token lives in extension storage, entered once, never read from disk at runtime
  • A daily background refresh keeps the cached tag list current

It’s on GitHub, in case anyone else was left in the same spot when the original disappeared.

It’s signed with a free Apple ID, so the certificate expires every seven days and I have to rebuild it. The original died because its developer wouldn’t pay Apple’s fee. Mine survives because I won’t either; it just asks for a rebuild each week as the price, which I’m fine with.

Remember The Humans

Remember The Humans

Broken Social Scene·Arts & Crafts

The first Broken Social Scene album in 21 years to be produced by Dave Newfeld. With so many singers and instrumentalists in the fold, every new member is additive. Newfeld is multiplicative. No other producer does so much with so much: instruments fade in and out, emphasis shifts to a different part of the mix, of the band. His return is excellent news.

It also makes it hard to resist comparing Remember the Humans to the earlier masterworks. I’m not sure this one has an era-defining piece like “Anthems for a Seventeen Year Old Girl”. It doesn’t open with the unbroken run of 10/10 songs that the self-titled album did.

So what do we have? The highlights are very strong. “Only the Good I Keep” arrives early, sung by new member Hannah Georgas (they had room for more?), full of forty-something nostalgia. Lisa Lobsinger brings “Relief”, a highly addictive piece of electro-pop with some great drumming. Feist turns up near the end on “What Happens Now”, a song that starts as a mantra and builds into something tender.

The consistency across the album is high, and the basslines are particularly good. BSS songs have always been melancholic. The specific flavour may have subtly changed, but it’s still there, still tangible through the densely layered arrangements.

Whether they’ve “grown” or “improved” is hard to say. They stretch the definition of a band. They arrived sui generis and have done what they do, well, across several albums, so don’t expect anything groundbreaking here. Expect an excellent Broken Social Scene album, which is a high watermark indeed.

Field of Dreams

Field of Dreams

Phil Alden Robinson·1989·★★★½· Rewatched

The sort of high-concept swing nobody risks any more (which is of course a small tragedy). What struck me most was this: do this exact film with football and it’d be insufferable, yet with baseball it’s earnest and earned. The mundanities of another country’s sport arrive here as something close to myth. We don’t have that for football. Partly the game’s class baggage, partly a national suspicion of taking it too seriously, of being caught intellectualising a thing that’s meant to be felt. Costner stands in a cornfield talking to ghosts and it plays straight. Try the equivalent featuring a centre-half on a wet Tuesday in the Championship and you’re looking at something vastly different.

film·dramafantasyfarmregretsportsbaseball·amazonprime

The book has three layers: the 1978 original, a brief 1985 update, and a more substantial 2022 one. The accretion does something historiographical. Each pass lets Leaf revisit his earlier claims, correct what time has disproved, adjust what had previously been legally neutered, and register how public perception of Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys has shifted across four decades. You can watch the consensus reorganise itself around the man, edition by edition. For a fully paid-up Brian Wilson acolyte like me, it’s about as comprehensive as the literature gets. Forty-four years is a long time to keep returning to one man. Leaf makes a good case for why it was worth it.

The Nice Guys

The Nice Guys

Shane Black·2016·★★★½

It was today I realised that this and The Other Guys are different films. Cleverly written, sharply directed, and Gosling is, as ever, a delight. Keith David and Kim Basinger perhaps a little wasted.

film·comedycrimeactiondaughterdetective1970s·amazonprime

Pocket Symphonies

www.the-hinternet.com

Sam Jennings on Pet Sounds at 60. It starts as criticism—Spector’s “little symphonies for the kids”, Wilson’s panic the first time he heard the Beatles, the instrument list that runs from French horns to Coke cans—and then fades into a memoir, “I Just Wasn’t Made for These Times” reprising itself across different years, different places, different girls.

WikiCommute: Time-Boxed Wikipedia Reading for Your Commute

wikicommute.vercel.app

Tell it how long your commute is and it builds a Wikipedia rabbit hole sized to fit. One continuous scroll instead of twenty tabs you’ll abandon at your stop. There’s a “Surprise Me” mode and fifteen languages, and it cites its CC BY-SA source like a good citizen. Whether the chain actually reads as one story or just vaguely adjacent topics is the part I haven’t tested, but time-boxing the spiral instead of fighting it is a neat inversion.

Listening: May 2026

1,264 tracks in May 2026

Top artists: Mildred, Acetone, Broken Social Scene

Fenceline

Fenceline

Mildred

Remember The Humans

Remember The Humans

Broken Social Scene

love songs and spiritual recollections

love songs and spiritual recollections

big long sun

I Don't Know Right From Wrong: Lost La Peste 1976 - 1979 Vol. 1

I Don't Know Right From Wrong: Lost La Peste 1976 - 1979 Vol. 1

La Peste

Double Nickels on the Dime

Double Nickels on the Dime

Minutemen

I keep coming back to the Mildred album. The title track has a bit of Lambchop in it:

Elsewhere, the new Broken Social Scene album, which I want to give a more considered opinion on once it’s settled. I don’t think it quite matches You Forgot It In People or Broken Social Scene, but hearing the band reunited with producer Dave Newfeld is a treat.

big long sun and La Peste I’ve talked about already, and the Minutemen LP appears on track play count alone—it’s a double. I was pleased to see it ranked highly in Rolling Stone’s list of 100 greatest punk albums, a list I have plenty of feelings about, you’ll not be surprised to hear.

Lastly, Acetone. I’m amazed I’ve never come across them before—they recorded four albums and I like them all. A fascinating mix mostly straddling slowcore and alt-country, with a bit of Beach Boys and Velvets in there too. No idea what the consensus is on their best work but York Blvd. is the one I’m on at the moment.

The last Friday of May was busy for new releases. Paul McCartney, Kurt Vile, Iceage, Guided By Voices, Greg Mendez, Boards of Canada… the listening pile is growing faster than I can keep up. June will be a busy month.

La Grazia

La Grazia

Paolo Sorrentino·2025·★★★★

Paolo Sorrentino gives us Toni Servillo as a president in his final months: a former judge who values truth and certainty above all, a man who ponders but does not dream. Several pressing decisions await him, but the film is less concerned with the verdicts than with the weighing. Underneath it all sits a grief he can’t resolve, for a wife whose infidelity he learned too late to confront. A straightforward premise, and a fascinating character study built on it. Servillo brings exactly the gravitas and indecision the part needs, holding the screen while doing, on the face of it, very little.

film·dramamoral-crisispresidency·mubi
Lady Bird

Lady Bird

Greta Gerwig·2017·★★★½

I can see exactly why people love this. It hands you a version of your seventeen-year-old self and asks you to forgive her, which is a generous trick. The complaints land too. Lady Bird is a brat, and the world Gerwig builds around her is conspicuously white and insulated in ways that are never interrogated. But Ronan and Metcalf are excellent, the latter astonishing at times. Gerwig directs tightly. Other directors would have added at least 15 minutes of exposition.