Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

ALBUMS WE CAN’T WAIT TO HEAR IN THE FALL

- BY AU G U ST B ROW N , R A N DA L L R O B E R T S A N D M I K A E L WO O D

WI T H large-scale tours and festivals still nowhere in sight, getting pumped about new music this fall means getting pumped about the season’s upcoming albums. Fortunatel­y, there are plenty to stoke our excitement, from the highly anticipate­d debut by K-pop’s biggest girl group to a timely return from a veteran club queen. Here are the 16 LPs we can’t wait to hear.

The Neighbourh­ood, “Chip Chrome & the Mono-Tones” (Just released) A characterd­riven concept album is a counter-intuitive conceit for a rock band in the age of TikTok’s streaming firehose. But OC-formed rockers the Neighbourh­ood are more in tune with modern tastes than most, and their R&Binfluence­d, big-budget indie sound has proved both adept and incredibly popular with Gen Z years into their career. Singles like “Devil’s Advocate” and “Cherry Flavoured” show how the band can still carve room for ambitious rock around the top charts. (August Brown)

Sufjan Stevens, “The Ascension” (Just released) Two years after the exquisitel­y wispy “Mystery of Love” (from “Call Me By Your Name”) carried him to the Oscars, Stevens has returned with a furious and densely arranged electrofol­k album about what he views as the “diseased” state of American culture in the age of Trump. (Mikael Wood)

SuperM, “Super One” (Just released) A K-pop supergroup featuring members of EXO, SHINee, NCT127 and WayV, Super M was built with the express purpose of producing the biggest records and stadium shows possible. They got there almost immediatel­y with the instantly meme-able technopop single “Jopping,” a Billboard 200-topping EP and sold-out Forum dates, and now they’re prepping a fulllength debut, preceded by a pair of high-octane singles, “100” and “Tiger Inside.” (AB)

Blackpink, Blackpink: The Album ( Friday) When the four members of Blackpink walked offstage at Coachella in April 2019 — the first Kpop girl group to perform there — everyone who keeps up with the genre expected them to sweep the U.S. in a matter of months. A turbulent 18 months delayed their ascent, however, as the Burning Sun scandal upended their Korean label YG and COVID-19 put a stop to touring. Now after months spent tweaking the record, they’ve finally popped the cork on their full-length rap and electro-pop-influenced debut. With singles like the smash “How You Like That?” and Selena Gomez collab “Ice Cream,” it’s as surefire a hit as anything in K-pop without BTS on the cover. (AB)

North Americans, “Roped In” (Oct. 9)

The Los Angeles guitarist Patrick McDermott’s first album for Jack White’s Third Man imprint expands on ideas set forth on North Americans’ previous album, “Going Steady.” An instrument­al record inspired by the so-called American primitive guitar style developed by John Fahey, “Roped In” sees McDermott teaming with pedal steel guitarist Barry Walker, fellow guitar traveler William Tyler and harpist Mary Lattimore. Taken together, the nine songs offer a meditative respite. (Randall Roberts)

Loudon Wainwright III, “I’d Rather Lead a Band” (Oct. 9) The veteran singer, songwriter and actor Wainwright is best known for his insightful, painfully honest folkbased songs. On “I’d Rather Lead a Band,” he conferred with noted music supervisor Randall Poster, dipped into the Great American Songbook, rounded up a big band and explored songs that his parents used to have on when Wainwright was a kid “sitting at the top of the stairs while they danced together before going out on dates.” (RR)

Open Mic Eagle, “Anime, Trauma, Divorce” (Oct. 16) The Chicago-born, L.A. based rapper, thinker and costar of Comedy Central’s “The New Negroes” is one of the most insightful lyricists in the business. In announcing “Anime, Trauma, Divorce,” the artist explained: “S— had gone haywire personally and profession­ally and my therapist had to remind me that I have an outlet to process some of my s— in rap music.” (RR)

Various Artists, “The Harry Smith B-Sides” (Oct. 16)

The Atlanta archival imprint Dust-to-Digital describes this set as “the closing of a collector’s circle.” Drawing on noted experiment­al filmmaker and music collector Harry Smith’s famed 1951 six-album Folkways Records collection, “The Anthology of American Folk Music,” producers compiled remastered versions of those folk, blues and country songs’ B-sides. It features both the Carter Family’s foundation­al rural twang and Mississipp­i John Hurt’s sweet blues music; and mixes Southern Black jug bands with banjo-playing white coal miners. (RR)

Boy Pablo, “Wachito Rico” (Oct. 23)

Lovers of Cuco’s overlooked 2019 “Para Mi” should check out this crafty bedroom-pop maestro from

Norway, whose tender but jumpy music has a similar modern-retro vibe and sits in the same emotional register. His debut LP follows a string of singles and EPs — including the winsome YouTube hit “Everytime” — that made Boy Pablo a welcome presence at music festivals around the world (back when music festivals were a thing). (MW)

Gorillaz, “Song Machine: Season One — Strange Timez” (Oct. 23) The latest from Damon Albarn’s shapeshift­ing animated troupe is a collection of tunes created as part of his rolling multimedia Song Machine project. But the smart-alecky spirit and spooky-festive sound are classic Gorillaz, as is the delightful­ly random guest list, which includes Beck, Elton John, Schoolboy Q, St. Vincent, the Cure’s Robert Smith and the late, great Tony Allen. (MW)

Bruce Springstee­n, “Letter to You” (Oct. 23) Springstee­n tends to release albums right at moments of national crisis. His 2002 LP, “The Rising,” helped speak to the grief of 9/11, and “Letter to You” will no doubt be some kind of salve for the most divisive election in a generation. His 20th album, recorded in a five-day blitz with his longtime comrades in the E Street Band, betrays no signs of age. Recorded live at his New Jersey home studio, it’s loud and passionate and maybe the last thing you’ll be able to talk to your Republican dad about after November. (AB)

Elvis Costello, “Hey Clockface” (Oct. 30) For his 33rd studio album (give or take) since 1977, the British bard went to Paris where, over two days just before the coronaviru­s ruined everything, he worked with an ensemble he named “Le Quintette Saint Germain.” In addition to longtime collaborat­or Steve Nieve on piano, Costello gathered a trumpeter, a woodwind player, a cellist and a drummer. (RR)

Rico Nasty, “Nightmare Vacation” (Oct. 30) The marvelousl­y in-your-face singer-rapper Rico Nasty delivers rhythmic fury while reveling in the performati­ve requiremen­ts of her job. Last year’s breakout mixtape, “Anger Management,” found her collaborat­ing with producer Kenny Beats. For her forthcomin­g follow-up, Nasty has wandered even further afield from the mainstream. The first single, “iPhone,” is a collaborat­ion with experiment­al pop duo 100 Gecs. (RR)

Kylie Minogue, “Disco” (Nov. 6) If anyone deserves to capitalize on 2020’s dancepop revival, it’s 52-year-old Kylie Minogue, who was pairing airy melodies and ecstatic grooves before Dua Lipa and Doja Cat were born. As if to prove the point, the Australian diva’s latest — her follow-up to 2018’s country-accented “Golden” — is called simply “Disco.” (MW)

Chris Stapleton, “Starting Over” (Nov. 13)

Will country music’s most impressive­ly bearded traditiona­list jump on the Fleetwood Mac bandwagon that’s been rolling through Nashville of late? Seems unlikely — though Stapleton’s new one does feature a cameo by Mike Campbell, the longtime Tom Petty sideman who stepped in for Lindsey Buckingham on FM’s last tour. (MW)

Josh Groban, “Harmony” (November)

America’s cuddliest baritone is back this fall with a new studio album (his first since 2018’s “Bridges”) and a series of virtual concerts in which he plans to revisit his favorite show tunes and his most treasured holiday songs. As always with Groban, the music’s quality will increase in direct proportion with how much of his oddball sense of humor he lets in. (MW)

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Jason Carman ‘THE BOSS,’ a.k.a. Bruce Springstee­n, from top, Kylie Minogue, Loudon Wainwright III and and newcomer Rico Nasty have intrigued the critics with their upcoming LPs.
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Ross Halfin
Loudon Wainwright III. Ross Halfin
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Danny Clinch
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Darenote Ltd.

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