It’s our 300th episode! Eli comes on while Grace is moving to remember, discuss and complain about all the episodes we’ve done in this main feed. Happy days.
All the stuff we should have talked about last month: Alex G, Lorde, and Jessie Murph. Three titans of industry. PLUS! Main feed co-host debut of @grace_roso !!
Scroll summer break is over!. Next week’s main feed is all about what we’ve missed but this bonus is about what we’ve been reading, watching and listening to over the last month! PLUS a very special interim host...... @grace_roso
This week @grace_roso is back to talk about the phenomenon that is Car Seat Headrest, the indie rock middle class, internet success and the furry of it all. Enjoy!
For this month’s artist deep dive, we’re listening to 6 records by The Cure. This episode tackles ‘Seventeen Seconds,’ ‘Faith,’ and ‘Pornography,’ and our general thoughts on post-punk and goth.
Our pal @grace_roso joins us for questions and answers, curated by Grace herself! We cover all kinds of things from what songs we want played at our funerals to the heights of “boyfriend music” and “ex-boyfriend music.”
In this very classic episode of Endless Scroll, we discuss three new albums: Oklou’s ‘Choke Enough,’ Horsegirl’s ‘Phonetics On and On,’ and Sleeper’s Bell’s ‘Clover.’ Also, some movie chatter.
For this month’s artist deep dive, we tackle alt-country pioneer Lucinda Williams. This episode, we get into her 1988 self-titled and 1992’s ‘Sweet Old World,’ and also take a detour into a Martina McBride music video.
We’re finally doing the Elliott Smith dive. In this episode, we listen to the first three albums, ‘Roman Candle,’ ‘Elliott Smith,’ and ‘Either/Or.’ Please Say Yes to listening to our thoughts 🙏
Liz Pelly is on to talk about her great new book Mood Machine: The Rise of Spotify and the Costs of the Perfect Playlist. We get into playlist payola, the new age of muzak, and much more! Enjoy!
After a few episodes of celebrating, it’s time to cap the year off with some hating. Ian Cohen joins us once again to tackle the albums that let us down most in 2024.