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Snocaps 'Snocaps' Review
Music

Snocaps ‘Snocaps’ Review

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Blood harmonies: there’s magic in ‘em, literal and figurative — nature and nurture, love and rivalry, atmospheric alchemy born of living room dust and familial mishigas. Blood harmonies alone would be reason enough to cheer the surprise debut of Snocaps — Waxahatchee’s Katie Crutchfield and twin sister Allison Crutchfield of Swearin’ and P.S. Eliot, the best-known of their teenaged pop-punk sister acts. Of course, Sister Katie is also coming off two of the decade’s best albums, St. Cloud and Tigers Blood, the latter distinguished by her delicious harmonies with MJ Lenderman (whose electric guitar work is all over this new project, alongside Waxahatchee wingman Brad Cook) and her remarkable songwriting hot-streak.

That streak continues here, but the real delight of this ostensible side project is Allison Crutchfield’s return to the mic after an extended absence, and the rebirth of a sibling rock band, apparently sans fistfights or cricket bats. That means two great songwriters who, one senses here, write a little differently working together than they do separately.

The first release by Snocaps — a band name shared by a tooth-cracking old-school movie theater candy and a kneecapping new-school cannabis product — suggests as much. For one, this feels like a classic indie-rock record, minus the pedal steel and other signifiers that rebranded Waxahatchee as a kind of New South country-rock project. The songwriting’s shared, Katie getting six songs to Allison’s seven, which seems fair — Allison’s last record was Swearin’s fine 2018 Fall into the Sun, so she’s playing catching up, per usual, having come to songwriting a bit later in life than her sister.

“Coast,” which jumps off a discount-store drum-machine pulse, is one of two Allison songs that open the album, and it sets the tone for a song set that lives and bleeds largely on the road, emotions churning as time and miles hurtle by. “22nd is a straight shot south,” she sings, rhyming it with “you finally open your mouth” and confessing “I got the pedal on the floor/ or I’m slamming on the breaks/I could never just coast” — the twins leaning into the last line like a shared secret so foundational it becomes private language. 

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It’s the sound of women who’ve spent much of their lives driving from show to show. On “Over Our Heads,” it’s “40 East half past eight,” On “Angel Wings,” the singer narrates: “I ride down 29th/I delight in the spectrum of this yearning.” If you guessed that’s a Katie song, you’d be right, and it certainly could pass for a Waxahatchee track, like others here — “Wasteland” in particular, with Lenderman’s trademark bent-note sparkles on the outro. But Katie’s writing feels punchier, more direct than usual, harking back to records like Cerulean Salt and P.S. Eliot’s Introverted Romance in Our Troubled Minds. See “Cherry Hard Candy,” a mid-tempo chugger that spits clipped couplets breathlessly: “I’m a comet/I am heaven/I’m a wave crashing/I’m on my own/I got money/On our failure/I’m a sinner/I’m forgiving/You got time to kill/And I’m on the phone.” Even ballads like “Hide,” with its simple repeated rhymes, feel streamlined.

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Allison, meanwhile, wants mostly to rock. “Brand New City” takes flight like vintage Guided by Voices, a heart full of unsettled hope lofted higher by Lenderman’s chiming 12-string, ditto “Avalanche,” an exultation of falling hard with the guitars partway between the Byrds’ “Mr. Tambourine Man” and The La’s “There She Goes.” Whatever sibling rivalry exists finds a handsome stalemate in this band, each woman’s songs stronger for the harmonies and tag-team company of the other’s.

There’s certainly no question that Waxahatchee is one of America’s greatest rock bands. But the push and pull of styles here between two artists with different obsessions and skillsets — the mark of so many touchstone bands, sibling acts or otherwise — makes Snocaps an equally-compelling outfit. The sisters’ statement, released with the album, claims they’ll do a few shows in the coming months, at which point the band will be “put on ice for the foreseeable future.” But like the torch-passing reprise of “Coast” that ends this record, their eyes are on the road in front of them. And encouragingly, they leave the door open. Catch ‘em while ya can.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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11 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: Snocaps, Florence and the Machine, and More
Music

11 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: Snocaps, Florence and the Machine, and More

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

While touring behind her last album, Dance Fever, Florence Welch was hospitalized for an ectopic miscarriage; the singer channeled the effects of that life-altering, traumatic event into work for a follow-up. For the resulting Everybody Scream, Welch dove into medieval and renaissance studies and the history of witchcraft and mysticism, shrouding her characteristically vivid chamber pop with even deeper pathos and psychodrama. Welch worked on the new Florence and the Machine LP with Idles’ Mark Bowen, Danny L Harle, the National’s Aaron Dessner, and Mitski, who helped pen the title track.

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KeiyaA: Hooke’s Law [XL]

KeiyaA’s second studio album is named after the law of elasticity, which states that the extension of a spring is directly proportional to the load applied to it. The Chicago-born, New York–based singer and producer puts that law to the test with an expansive, head-spinning collage of R&B, electronic, jazz, and experimental music that threatens to uncoil at any minute. KeiyaA wrote, recorded, and produced the new material over the past five years, playing every instrument on the album, with one feature from rapper Rahrah Gabor. Hooke’s Law is “an album about the journey of self love, from an angle that isn’t all affirmations and capitalistic self-care,“ KeiyaA explained in press materials. “It’s not a linear story with a moral at the end. It’s more of a cycle, a spiral—it’s Hooke’s law.”

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Snocaps: Snocaps Album Review | Pitchfork
Music

Snocaps: Snocaps Album Review | Pitchfork

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

The record is split equally between the two sisters, with each writing and taking lead vocals for half the songs. They frequently sing in harmony, their voices blending to produce a kind of magic that seems unique to sibling pairs. Katie and Allison aren’t just identical twins but mirror twins; the term comes to mind when hearing their voices—nearly indistinguishable but flecked with individuality—singing together. Allison’s songs—like “Over Our Heads,” all rollicking percussion and sunny riffs—lean toward bouncy indie rock. Katie’s make fruitful use of her newer songwriting habits: Her syncopated cadence on “Wasteland” and the triumphant twang of “Cherry Hard Candy” make the songs feel like they could be demos for last year’s Tigers Blood. But some tracks hark back to her past: The forlorn and minimal “I Don’t Want To” sounds unguarded compared to the artful poise of her recent releases, a reminder of the directness and vulnerability that made her early records such a revelation.

Both Katie and Allison can be skilled profilers of the moments when introspection verges on action, or the ways too much self-interrogation can paralyze us. But these are songs that refuse to be pinned down, with lyrics about having “the pedal to the floor,” driving down any number of numbered roads—“22,” “40 East,” “29th”—or taking “a walk down Sunset.” (This comprises another throughline from their earlier collaborations, filled with songs of restless searching: “I’ve got a racing mind and enough gas to get to Tennessee,” Katie sang on P.S. Eliot’s first album; “Planes and trains and 95 straight up” on their second.)

These are also songs of tangled relationships and messy self-regard, common themes for both songwriters. Katie has been forthright about her experience with addiction and sobriety; in a long, moving profile published earlier this year, she spoke at length about her and Allison’s relationship with the youngest Crutchfield sister, who also struggles with addiction. These lyrics seem animated by questions of care and codependency, too: “When you go down,” they sing on “Heathcliff, “You’ll take me down with you”; or later, on “Wasteland,” Katie sings of a “willful bottom line,” of abandoned “lines in the sand.” More explicitly, the album’s last full song is called “You in Rehab.” “Can’t imagine you getting better,” Allison sings, “But I never give up.” The song’s pop-punk buoyancy betrays its heartbreaking premise: “I watch myself split in two,” she sings, “One loves me/And the other loves you.” Seen through the light of this shared struggle, it’s especially moving to hear Katie and Allison backing each other up here.

Since their last album-length collaboration, Katie and Allison Crutchfield have worked with scores of different artists, lived in different cities, triumphed over personal difficulties—but likely, many of the same challenges of love and relationships and family and identity still persist. There’s something therapeutic, then, about hearing them return to each other on a record that sounds genuinely fun, even as they continue probing these core questions. “When Katie and I feel really inspired by something,” Allison once said, “we can build each other up in this way where we have complete courage in ourselves and complete confidence.” As young songwriters, those qualities made them sound brash and fearless. But here, their candor sounds hard-earned and their uncertainty feels honest. Above all, they sound rooted: ready to head out in their own directions, confident of what they’ll find when they come back home again.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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