Speaking to last week, Shinoda said that he was “unable to say what will happen with the band”, adding: “There’s really just no answer, and it’s funny because if I even say anything about the band’s future, that becomes the headline, which is stupid because the answer is there is no answer.” “Fans think they want to know what the future is: Believe me, I want to know what the answer is. But there just isn’t one.” Shinoda’s ‘Post Traumatic’ album follows on from. The solo LP will be released on June 15 via Warner Bros. Finale 2014 crack. • Powerful mixer fine-tunes your playback. Linkin Park have announced that their new album will launch later this year. Titled One More Light, it’ll be released on May 19 via Warner Bros and is available now for pre-order. The band launched the first track from the album yesterday titled Heavy after teasing the lyrics earlier in the week. “Imitadora” has a charmingly preposterous scenario. It’s a single from “Golden,” the third studio solo album by the high-voiced, Bronx-born Latin pop heartthrob Romeo Santos, formerly of. Like most of his songs, “Imitadora” adds a dollop of R&B keyboards to the syncopated guitar plucking of the Dominican bachata, along with a few words in English, and it’s a plea for romance. Linkin Park New Album Release DateIn “Imitadora,” though, his lover isn’t responding the way she used to — and so, he decides, she’s an impostor. He’ll prove it by quizzing her about their sex life: What turns her on more, her neck or her navel? (He insists he knows the answer better than she does.) It never occurs to him that he could be the problem. Palmieri, the, has found something of a permanent home at Subrosa in Lower Manhattan, where he plays often. He just released this video from a night in mid-April, when the vibraphonist Joe Locke joined his quintet onstage, and it shows why Mr. Palmieri is still the most respected living figure in Latin jazz. To wit: This rendition of the lilting “Samba Do Suenho” — which he first recorded in 1966 with the song’s author, the vibes player Cal Tjader — holds onto the tune’s core rhythmic pattern and its coy tempo, starting off nonchalantly. Locke takes a debonair solo. Octopus lg tool. Palmieri starts coolly unloading his toolbox of fuses and fire-starters: dissonant chord clusters; quizzical single-note lines; small, busted montunos that bounce between the left and right hands. By the end of these nearly nine minutes, the groove has some extra contrast, and considerably more glue. (Starting July 31, Mr. Palmieri will be playing a handful of Monday shows over the coming months at the Blue Note, Subrosa’s sister club.) GIOVANNI RUSSONELLO At the peak of his fame, Toby Keith would have found a way to make this song, about being a hack on the links, a deep-dive double entendre about male fragility. But the onetime country titan is in late-career chill mode, and so this new single — from “The Bus Songs,” a new album set to be released in September — is simply about being a bum with a 3 wood: “I got the shorts and all the plaid sweaters/That new TaylorMade driver didn’t make me any better.” J.C. PVRIS, ‘Half’. To be or not to be. Pvris’s singer, Lynn Gunn (Lyndsey Gunnulfsen) furiously confronts the contradictions of existence and a persistent death wish in “Half,” from the band’s next album, “All We Know of Heaven, All We Need of Hell.” Churning, echoing chords and martial drums — like U2 turning to mope-rock — accompany her as she builds up to a glum, angry chorus: “Never wanted to be here now/One foot in the grave, other on the ground/I can’t process what I’m feeling now/This skin I can do without.” But there’s fervor in her voice and craft in the music, very much alive. UV-TV, ‘Go Away’. It takes deeply rooted and restively curious minds to make music like this. On the opening track of this duo’s new album, “Expedition,” Mr. Marsh’s sense of syncopation on the drum kit refers back to before even the establishment of jazz rhythm. Linkin Park New AlbumZeitlin, an inveterate piano innovator since the 1960s and a fusion pioneer, plays a variety of keyboards and synthesizers; he conjures a vague drone in the middle-to-low range, circling your inner ear with melodies and effects. They wander at first, then find direction; they deepen and soak in, rather than evaporate. Linkin Park vocalist Mike Shinoda has released a new song called “Running From My Shadow,” accompanied by a music video. While still squarely in the hip-hop mold of the previous three tracks shared from Shinoda’s upcoming solo LP, “Running From My Shadow” is more hard-hitting and guitar-driven, and is closer in spirit to Shinoda’s work with Linkin Park than his other hip-hop efforts. Shinoda’s new album, Post Traumatic, is due out on June 15th. He’s previously shared the songs “About You,” “Crossing A Line” and “Nothing Makes Sense Anymore.” Post Traumatic will also include collaborations with Deftones frontman Chino Moreno, Machine Gun Kelly, K. Flay and Blackbear. The album will be the first full-length release from a member of Linkin Park since the suicide of singer Chester Bennington last July. The band’s future plans are still unknown at the moment. • Limited Edition 48-page hardcover Book, featuring all the best photos from the album package, blown up super big so you can see all the gritty details—plus all the lyrics, and the physical CD. Once these sell out, they're gone. • One-of-a-kind 2.4' x 1.8' instant photo.
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