JOIVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Mick Jones’ 71st birthday.
Throwback: Happy 56th Birthday, Colin Greenwood!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Radiohead bassist Colin Greenwood’s 56th birthday.
New Video: Love Spells Shares Atmospheric and Yearning “Maybe I Still Love You”
Sir Teagan Harris is the Houston-born creative mastermind behind the rising, solo recording project Love Spells. At 18, Harris poured his passion for love into music, manifesting a career out of ambition and drive, while battling homelessness for years. Eventually, he wound up in California, where h lived with a friend he met online, traveling to different music studios everyday to perfect his sound. After six months, he returned to Houston and received a call from Kevin Abstract, who invited I’m to work on his most recent album, last year’s Bluish.
Working on Kevin Abstract’s Blush connected Harris to his now frequent collaborator Dominic Fike and Deb Never. That life changing experience pushed Harris to return to Los Angeles and work on his highly-anticipated Love Spells debut, LOVE IS THE LAW. Slated for a July 24, 2026 release through RCA Records, LOVE IS THE LAW found the Houston-born artist working with Danny Parra, Boy Deco, Brad Hale, Rodaidh McDonald, Alex Craig, and Rick Nowels to create material that recalled his nights at Numbers, a beloved Houston-based dance club and safe heaven for alternative communities. While at Numbers, Harris danced to 70s, 80s and New Wave, and he specifically wanted to inject that feeling into his work, seeking out similar spaces in Los Angeles and leaning on those eras in the studio. Movies like Dirty Dancing and Footlose were also sources of inspiration, helping the Houston-based artist and his collaborators craft a “theatrical yet authentic” feeling.
LOVE IS THE LAW will include the previously released “Crutch,” “Keep It To Yourself” and the album’s latest single “Maybe I Still Love You.” “Maybe I Still Love You” is a slow-burning and atmospheric bit of Quiet Storm-meets-Bill Withers-inspired R&B that features Harris’ achingly tender and yearning falsetto dancing alongside a sparse arrangement of twinkling piano, bursts of shimmering and soulful guitar, a simple backbeat, a supple bass line. The song’s narrator finds closure and freedom in recognizing the true depths of his emotions.
“‘Maybe I Still Love You’ is for anyone still fighting with feelings they can’t ignore, that moment of coming to terms with the fact that you still care and want to keep caring,” Harris explains. “Because above all, you have to believe in love for love to be seen.”
Directed by Colt Grice, the accompanying video for “Maybe I Still Love You” features a couple doing a simple two-step slow dance together while embracing. The couple’s story is up to interpretation but there’s palpable sense of love, the sort of love that at times is demanding and difficult yet worth fighting for.
New Audio: Halfway Up a Jagged Hill Shares Bruising “Obscure Sorrows”
Brooklyn-based indie duo Halfway Up a Jagged Hill (HUAJH) — longtime friends Devin Gilbert and Jeb Holstein — were walking in the woods one January night, looking for owls, when they can came across what could only have been described as a witch hut. Stacked between bare trees, the pile of sticks framed a void that swallowed any moonlight bouncing off the frozen ground, What mysterious crouched instead? The two friends found no owls that night. But as Halfway Up a Jagged Hill, Gilbert and Holstein continue to look.
Gilbert and Polstein have been writing and performing together for most of their lives, forging a deep and uncanny musical bond that stretches back to middle school jazz band. Since then, the pair have been involved in a number of different projects both together and separately including the post-hardcore band Primate House, the shoegaze-tinged Chris Sunshine, as well as Polstein’s Seattle-based free jazz/math duo Macaw and Gilbert’s experimental pop solo project Kid Dusty. But HUAJH can trace its origins back to 2024 when the two longtime friends found themselves both living gin New York for the first time in years, and hungry to explore the heavier side of their musical backgrounds.
After roughly a year of practicing and writing, the duo approached Vinegar Hill Sound‘s Reed Black to record an album. The longtime friends were very familiar with Black and his work: They worked with Black, recording a song on Fish Hunt’s 2024 effort Self-Taught, and the experience led them to believe that Black would the right person to bring their vision to life. But they didn’t know that halfway through the album’s mixing process that Black would sign them to Vinegar Hill Sound Records, who will be releasing the duo’s full-length debut, HUAJH on September 10, 2026.
HUAJH features a maximalist sound from a minimalist set up: Gilbert’s downtuned guitar carries weight, with distorted chugging leavened by ringing harmonies and melodic lines as Polstein’s drums simultaneously shoulder the guitar lines and dance around them. Gilbert’s vocal alternates between sining and screaming lyrics that take listeners on a journey from hopelessness to regeneration while drawing on natural imagery, daily observations and fantastical themes. The result is an album that bludgeons but also consoles while bringing Pile, Liturgy, The World Is A Beautiful Place & I Am No Longer Afraid to Die, Hella and Debussy to mind, while weaving them into something distinct.
Gilbert works as a mental health clinician during the day. And naturally themes of pain and recovery punctuate the album’s material. Polstein, on the other hand, is a landscape architect. While being immersed in nature and natural imagery, he thinks of music spatially — and for him, the drums are a way to create landscapes to move through musically.
HUAJH‘s first single “Obscure Sorrows” is a bruising 90s alt rock-inspired tune that brings back nostalgic memories of Dinosaur Jr. and In Utereo-era Nirvana while anchored in a heart-wrenching despair and anguish that feels — well, completely of our time and yet somehow deeply timeless.
“Obscure Sorrows’ is inspired by The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows by John Koenig, which is a book of made-up words to describe human feelings and experiences that there are no real words for in the English language,” the duo explain. “In the screamed section, the lyrics reference the Nine of Swords, the tarot card that represents fear, pain, and sadness. The song is ultimately about releasing your despair and not being held captive by it. This was the first song we wrote and our first journey into blast beats.”
As many of you might recall, last year I had to announce a temporary hiatus of the site because of continuing financial issues. Because of those same financial issues, I was forced to make an emergency change in my email address. So if you’re a publicist, band manager or other music industry contact, who has been reaching out to me about JOVM-related stuff, please email me at the following email address:
william.ruben@joyofviolentmovement.com
At the moment, it’s temporary but it may be longer term.
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The Joy of Violent Movement is a completely independent and completely D.I.Y. media outlet. Over the course of this site’s 15+ year history, I’ve used my fiercely independent stance to cover music with an eclectic and global perspective that a lot of other publications just don’t have — and will likely never have.
To that end, I could use your support to continue to keep bringing you my unique global perspective on music. There are a number of ways that you can support this work.
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Throwback: Happy 63rd Birthday, George Michael!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates the 63rd anniversary of the birth of George Michael.
Throwback: Happy 74th Birthday, Tim Finn!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Tim Finn’s 74th birthday.
New Video: King Black Acid Shares Trippy and Groovy “Dialing 911”
Daniel Riddle is Portland, OR-based is a singer/songwriter and musician, who has written and recorded music under the moniker King Black Acid since the late 1980s, while spending time as a member of industrial outfit Hitting Birth. Since the early 90s, Riddle has led a number of different collectives and projects that have toured and shared stages with Elliott Smith, Nirvana, Low, Moby, Sonic Youth, The Dandy Warhols, Faith No More, Dead Moon, Menomena, The Fugees, Arctic Monkeys, Spacemen 3, Danzig, Nine Inch Nails and more.
Throughout his career, Riddle’s music has been featured on CSI: Miami, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Underworld: Rise of the Lycans, The Mothman Prophecies, Witchblade, Dream With Fishes, Do Me a Favor and CNN Sports, as well as ad campaigns for Nike, Reebok, Tiger Woods Golf, CNN, Coca-Cola, Abercrombie and Fitch, Gap and The Olympics.
Riddle’s latest King Black Acid effort, Telling Secrets in a Crowded Room is slated for an August 21, 2026 release through Cavity Search Records/Mazinga Records. The album reportedly features 10 cinematic and anthemic songs that “embrace total and subversive emotional anarchy.”
Telling Secrets in a Crowded Room‘s latest single “Dialing 911” is a sleek and mind-bending synthesis of Madchester-era sound, Evil Heat-era Primal Scream and Echoes-era The Rapture dance punk that showcases the collaborators uncanny ability to craft a remarkably catchy hook.
“Fierce stoner pop that explores the fragile human psyche in the modern digital thought prison,” the band says of the new single.
KThe accompanying music video by Kat Perkins and Daniel Riddle features a mix of collage-driven animation reminiscent of The Beatles‘ Yellow Submarine and the intro to Monty Python with strobe lit, monochrome footage of Riddle and dancing and instrument playing humanoid rabbits. Trippy, indeed.
New Video: Diary Shares Madchester-like “Keep Comin’ Up”
Brooklyn-based quintet Diary — longtime friends and co-founders Kevin Bendis (vocals) and Chris Croarkin (guitar), along with Adam Sachs (drums), High Waisted‘s Jessica Dye (vocals, guitar), and Two Man Giant Squid‘s Yan Kogan (bass) — have released two critically applauded EPs, 2024’s Speedboat and 2022’s The Cutting Garden and a list of singles, which they’ve supported with touring on both sides of the pond.
The local outfit’s highly-anticipated full-length debut, Spiral Bound is slated for a September 4, 2026 release through their longtime label home, Kanine Records. The album’s overall sound sees the quintet incorporating elements of jangle pop, psychedelia, dream pop and Brit Pop to firmly establish a hook and groove-driven, genre-defying sound.
Spiral Bound‘s first single, the Ben Hozie-produced “Keep Comin’ Up” draws from Happy Mondays-era Madchester scene, late 80s and early 90s shoegaze and 60s psych rock, while showcasing the band’s unerring knack for mind-bending, euphoric grooves and catchy hooks.
Directed by Sam Blieden, the accompanying video for “Keep Comin’ Up” draws from the 1960s art scene — and in particular, nods to Andy Warhol‘s Silver Factory and footage of The Velvet Underground. It captures a scene of folks, who are simply put, cooler and more interesting than you are.
Throwback: Happy 65th Birthday, Curt Smith!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Tears for Fears co-founder Curt Smith’s 65th birthday.
Throwback: Happy 60th Birthday, Hope Sandoval!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Hope Sandoval’s 60th birthday.
