San Antonio Express-News

New albums

- By Robert Spuhler CORRESPOND­ENT

The Flaming Lips, “American Head” (Warner): The Oklahoma band is, somehow, 37, and “American Head” is studio album sweet 16. Lead singles “Mother Please Don’t Be Sad” and “Will You Return/When You Come Down” feel like callbacks to the late ’90s/“The Soft Bulletin” days (even if the former, in light of recent police killings, feels extra heavy in modern context). The album follows a collaborat­ion with garage rockers Deap Valley, under the name Deap Lips, released earlier this year.

Marilyn Manson, “We Are Chaos” (Loma Vista): The metal maven has hooked up with outlaw country favorite Shooter Jennings for Manson’s 11th studio album. The title track is heavy enough to top the Billboard Hard Rock Digital Songs chart, maintainin­g Manson’s dark worldview (“We are sick, (bleeped) up and complicate­d/ we are chaos, we can’t be cured”), but it also has an uplift to it that makes it sound like a stadium anthem.

Doves, “The Universal Want” (Virgin): The British indie-pop trio’s 2002 album “The Last Broadcast” was considered a post-Britpop classic, and now the band returns from a decade-long hiatus. Single “Prisoners” looks to reclaim the “danceable indie pop” label from Phoenix (Doves walked so Phoenix could run, essentiall­y), while “Cathedral of the Mind” turns a short, simple lyric and a sample of a speech by a member of the Black Panthers into a miniepic.

Delta Spirit, “What Is There” (New West): The Americana rockers had been trending in the right direction since 2007 in terms of audience, with 2014’s “Into the Wide” making Billboard’s top 20 for both Alternativ­e and Independen­t Albums. But with that success came interperso­nal strain, creating a sixyear gap between “Into the Wide” and “What Is There.” Lead singer Matthew Logan Vasquez has said that during the time off, “the friendship­s got an opportunit­y to come back.” Singles like “The Pressure” and the John Prine-quoting “Home Again” show a band picking up right where it left off.

YoungBoy Never Broke Again, “Top” (Never Broke Again/Atlantic): The prolific rapper Youngboy (an astounding 16 mixtapes since April 2015, including two this year) releases his second album while on a hot streak. His collaborat­ion with Future hit the top 40 on Billboard, while the video for his track with Da Baby, “Jump,” has more than 65 million views (it came out in April and has a coronaviru­s cleaning theme making it worth a watch). None of the six songs released before the album’s street date topped three minutes in length. Expect two verses and then on to the next idea.

Linoleum Knife,” a parody of the “Let’s All Go to the Movies” prefilm song that played before the Adult Swim cult favorite “Aqua Teen Hunger Force” and includes lines like “Be considerat­e to others or I will bite your torso.”

 ?? Amy Harris / Associated Press ?? Shown at a 2019 show, Marilyn Manson has teamed up with Shooter Jennings on his new album.
Amy Harris / Associated Press Shown at a 2019 show, Marilyn Manson has teamed up with Shooter Jennings on his new album.

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