Atwood Journal is happy to share our Editor’s Picks column, written and curated by Editor-in-Chief Mitch Mosk. Each week, Mitch will share a group of songs, albums, and artists who’ve caught his ears, eyes, and coronary heart. There may be a lot unbelievable music on the market simply ready to be heard, and all it takes from us is an open thoughts and a willingness to pay attention. By means of our Editor’s Picks, we hope to shine a light-weight on our personal music discoveries and showcase a various array of latest and up to date releases.
This week’s Editor’s Picks options Chappell Roan, Jo Hill, Pleasure Oladokun, Trousdale, MARIS ft. Caroline Kingsbury, and The Ophelias!
comply with EDITOR’S PICKS on Spotify 
“The Giver”
by Chappell Roan
“I get the job completed,” Chappell Roan croons – and on her newest single she does precisely that, with a wink, a strut, and an entire lot of sultry, seductive warmth. Lastly launched March 13th after months of anticipation following her SNL efficiency final November, “The Giver” is a boot-stompin’, lip-biting, innuendo-laced romp – a rhinestone-studded embrace of that country-pop music made well-known by titans like Shania Twain and Carrie Underwood, filled with winks, swagger, and candy sexual liberation. It’s playful, it’s provocative, it’s camp, and it’s proof that Chappell Roan can personal any style she touches – not by parodying it, however by totally embodying it.
Ain’t bought antlers on my partitions
However I positive know mating calls
From the stalls within the bars
on a Friday night time
And different boys may have a map
However I can shut my eyes
And have you ever wrapped
round my fingers like that
Pop’s not too long ago anointed Midwest Princess – and 2025’s Grammy Award winner for Greatest New Artist – leans right into a rowdy, fiddle-fueled sound that feels totally pure and genuine to her artistry and identification, like she’s been sporting cowboy boots all alongside. Along with her signature unapologetic boldness and charismatic aptitude for storytelling, she makes twang really feel timeless and queerness really feel basic, delivering a monitor that’s as easy as it’s electrifying.

“I feel I’ve a particular relationship to the place I’m from due to nation music,” Roan, who hails from the small city of Willard, Missouri (inhabitants 6,500), not too long ago advised Apple Music Nation’s Kelleigh Bannen. “And [I] honor that a part of myself by making a rustic music… Sure, I’m homosexual, and sure, I’m extremely pop. Sure, I’m a drag queen who may also carry out a rustic music.’”
“The Giver” is campy, frisky, and enjoyable, opening with a swell of hovering fiddle, crunchy electrical guitar, and driving drums that immediately set the tone.
Roan wastes no time diving into her cheeky, confident world, buying and selling conventional nation imagery for one thing way more thrilling and mischievous. “Ain’t bought antlers on my partitions, however I positive know mating calls,” she teases, turning honky-tonk bravado on its head with a smirk and a realizing grin. Her supply is suave and easy, leaning into the music’s flirtatious power because the rhythm picks up steam. By the point she hits the pre-chorus – “So, child, whenever you want the job completed, you possibly can name me, child” – it’s clear she’s in full command, balancing humor, confidence, and pure, unfiltered want.
The refrain of “The Giver” explodes with unshakable bravado, a foot-stomping, full-throttle declaration of prowess and fervour. Roan belts with fearless dedication, using the raucous country-pop instrumentation as she flips the script on conventional roles. “So take it like a taker, ‘trigger child, I’m a giver,” she sings, her voice dripping with appeal and innuendo. The pounding drums and electrified strum of the guitars solely amplify the music’s playful tone and fiery perspective, every lyric touchdown like a dare. And when she hammers residence the hook – “I get the job completed” – it’s much less a promise and extra a assure, cementing “The Giver” as an irresistible, invigorating anthem of company, thrill, and simple attract.
So, child
Once you want the job completed
You’ll be able to name me, child
‘Trigger you ain’t bought to inform me
It’s simply in my nature
So take it like a taker
‘Trigger, child, I’m a giver
Ain’t no must hurry
‘Trigger, child, I ship
Ain’t no nation boy quitter
I get the job completed
I get the job completed
The broader world could have been ‘launched’ to Chappell Roan by way of smooth pop masterpieces like “Femininomenon,” “HOT TO GO!” and “Pink Pony Membership” (or my private favourite, “My Kink Is Karma”), however “The Giver” is as true to her roots as any of these songs. Name it ‘nation (Chappell’s Model)’ – this music runs by way of her veins.
“I’ve such a particular place in my coronary heart for nation music. I grew up listening to it each morning and afternoon on my faculty bus and had it swirling round me at bon fires, grocery shops, and karaoke bars,” she tells Atwood Journal. “Many individuals have requested if this implies I’m making a rustic album? My reply is.., Proper now, I’m simply making songs that make me really feel blissful and enjoyable, and ‘The Giver’ is my tackle cuntry xoxo – could the basic nation divas lead their style, I’m simply right here to twirl and do some homosexual yodel for y’all.”
Lady, I don’t want no lifted truck
Revvin’ loud to select you up
‘Trigger how I look is how I contact
And on this strip-mall city of goals
Good luck discovering a person who has the means
To rhinestone cowgirl all night time lengthy
Solely Chappell Roan may make country-pop sound this horny, this subversive, and this a lot enjoyable. With “The Giver,” she proves as soon as and for all that when put to the duty, she will get the job completed.
What does this imply for all us? It’s going to be one more Chappell Roan summer time – this time, with a swanky, scorching nation flare.
So, child
In the event you by no means had one
Name me, child, yeah
‘Trigger you ain’t gotta inform me
It’s simply in my nature
So take it like a taker
‘Trigger, child, I’m a giver
Ain’t no must hurry
‘Trigger, child, I ship
Ain’t no nation boy quitter
I get the job completed
I get the job completed
“You bought this, babe.” Along with her newest single, British singer/songwriter Jo Hill shouts from the mountaintops, delivering a spirited message of affection, reassurance, and unwavering belief. Launched March 7th, “ZOOM OUT” is a triumphant, charismatic, comforting, and deeply affirming anthem of self-empowerment and perspective. Written throughout a interval of non-public hardship – together with heartbreak and the fallout of being dropped by a label – the music is Hill’s love letter to herself “and each different dangerous bitch out there that doesn’t know their potential and lets the smaller annoyances of life get in the way in which of the larger image.” By means of a dynamic rollercoaster of speed-ups and slow-downs, uncooked reflections and accentuated gang choruses that change into immediately irresistible singalongs, Hill reminds herself and anybody listening to “communicate to your self such as you would communicate to your finest good friend.” Infused with hometown reminiscences and a shifting power that mirrors life’s highs and lows, “ZOOM OUT” encourages all of us to interrupt free from self-doubt, embrace optimism, and – above all – “zoom the f* out” when life feels overwhelming.
Once you’re face down
nonetheless feeling sorry
with my hand wrapped ‘spherical
an empty bacardi
screaming what now?
however I’m what I’m
however i don’t wanna be this fashion
Be this fashion
And whenever you’re strung out
ugly crying over
hella dumb fool guys
Child zoom out,
it’s against the law to be crying
over factor that you simply
simply can’t change.
You bought this babe.
Sonically, the monitor blends playful, tempo-shifting momentum with a country-inspired aptitude that Hill attributes to a latest journey to Nashville. “My interior pow woman was capable of come out on this music,” she smiles, emphasizing the natural, free-spirited nature of the recording course of. The monitor’s heartbeat lies in its chorus: “You bought this, babe,” a phrase that encapsulates the theme of resilience and camaraderie central to Hill’s not too long ago launched debut album, girlhood. As Hill places it, “I hope listeners really feel empowered and like something is feasible. I hope it flips individuals’s views after they’re feeling low, makes them wish to exit and have a pint with their associates.”
“Typically it’s about zooming out, trying on the greater image, taking a deep breath and shouting, ‘U GOT THIS BABE.’”

Candid, uncompromising, and emotionally charged, “ZOOM OUT” is rooted in Hill’s upbringing and the tough-love knowledge handed down from her mom. “Rising up, no matter occurred – if a boy cheated on me and even older, after I’ve confronted difficult durations like getting Lyme illness – she’s like, zoom out, get up, greater image,” Hill remembers. This philosophy grew to become the spine of the monitor, a vibrant name to shift perspective and discover pleasure even in tough moments. With lyrics that traverse each childhood struggles and grownup anxieties, “ZOOM OUT” serves as a mirror to Hill’s previous and current selves, providing a common reminder to let go of the little issues and embrace life’s greater image.
Johnny’s bought a automobile
he’s an actual boy racer
hurrying to 3rd base
and also you’re saying you’re effective about it
however you lied about it
Strolling ‘spherical faculty
along with your status,
he’s bought his palms
on one other woman’s waist,
you’re crying about it
losing your time about it
You’re by no means gonna want no man
and nobody’s gonna maintain you’re hand
‘Trigger honey you’re an actual dangerous bitch
and you bought greater plans
You gotta give all of it you bought
however by no means give it an excessive amount of thought
‘Trigger rattling you’re in an actual deep ditch
however I’m gonna pull you out
The manufacturing, just like the music’s message, is refreshingly unfiltered and uncooked. Recorded within the second with collaborators Martin and Havelock, the monitor was constructed on a basis of enjoyable and spontaneity. “All of the vocals on this are from one vocal take – we have been simply having a lot enjoyable on the day we simply put it in, no drums or something, simply over a guitar,” Hill explains. That easy power interprets into an electrifying listening expertise, the place the music’s shifting tempos and genre-blending parts create an intoxicating sense of motion.
“I’d all the time wished to write down a music that slows down and accelerates,” Hill says. “I feel I used to be simply Lime biking and singing into my cellphone on a journey residence, bought the melody and simply wished to make a music that was going to be actually enjoyable to play dwell – and turns out, one of the best ways of doing that’s altering tempo!”
Once you’re face down
nonetheless feeling sorry
with my hand wrapped ‘spherical
an empty Bacardi
screaming what now
however I’m what I’m
however I don’t wanna be this fashion
Be this fashion
And whenever you’re strung out
closely crying over
hella dumb fool guys
Child zoom out,
it’s against the law to be crying
over issues that
you simply can’t change.
You bought this babe.
“ZOOM OUT” arrives alongside information of a particular version of Hill’s critically acclaimed debut album, which Atwood Journal beforehand hailed as “a seductive, spirited indie pop file of uncooked ardour, interior magnificence, and human connection [that] concurrently aches and evokes, capturing Jo Hill’s coming-of-age by way of a group of daring, stunning melodies and unapologetically sincere, witty, and heat lyrics.” Fittingly titled girlhood. (u bought this babe), the brand new file options eight extra tracks that maintain with the theme, whereas highlighting Hill’s extra playful facet.
To that finish, her newest single is an ideal reintroduction – a energetic and frisky, but poignant all the identical, “ZOOM OUT” is a reminder to loosen our grip on life, soak within the current, and always remember to benefit from the journey. In fact, Jo Hill has crafted extra than simply an infectious, genre-blurring anthem, however a rallying cry for resilience, self-compassion, and discovering pleasure within the chaos. It’s a music that captures the emotional whiplash of life, mixing nostalgia with ahead movement, battle with celebration.
Hill’s signature mixture of uncooked honesty and playful defiance makes “ZOOM OUT” really feel like a dialog with an in depth good friend – one who reminds you to take a breath, shift your perspective, and do not forget that you’ve bought this. In a world that always feels overwhelming, Hill’s message is evident: Life isn’t meant to be spent sweating the small stuff, so zoom out and benefit from the journey.
“All My Time”
by Pleasure Oladokun
My first main job within the music business was in content material safety and anti-piracy, the place my division head repeatedly reminded us that essentially the most helpful useful resource on this planet wasn’t cash, however time. Our time is restricted; we solely get 24 hours in a day, and whereas he was primarily centered on funneling listeners towards income streams, his phrases grew to become a mantra and a information for a way I dwell my life right this moment.
Listening to Pleasure Oladokun’s newest single, I get the sense that she shares my values on this area: Our time is so helpful, and so restricted, that we should cherish it and spend it as properly as potential – prioritizing our family members over minutiae, and ensuring we’re the place we wish to be, as typically as we could be there – each bodily and emotionally. Launched March tenth, “All My Time” is an element love letter, half confession, and half level-setting: A heat, easy-flowing declaration from the deepest depths of Oladokun’s coronary heart and soul.
Each hour of the day
I ponder what you’re doing to date
Even once we’re miles away
my watch is ready to wherever you’re
Oh my thoughts’s all the time on you
You’ll be able to have all my time too

“Being on tour for the previous few years has taught me loads about time zones,” the Nashville-based singer/songwriter shares. “I’m continually calculating what number of hours I’m away from the individuals I really like. I wrote ‘All My Time’ throughout some downtime at a competition in Mexico whereas checking to see the place I used to be and who I may name. All of it was recorded within the again lounge of the bus the place I’m at the moment racing throughout America so I can get again to the place I name residence.”
Oladokun’s phrases add a placing layer of intimacy to “All My Time” – a music that isn’t nearly love, however about presence, longing, and the deep-rooted want to remain related regardless of life’s inevitable distances. Her light, flowing melody mirrors the music’s sentiment, wrapping listeners in a heat that feels each nostalgic and pressing: A reminder that point is fleeting, and the individuals we maintain closest are value each second we can provide them.
In a world that continually calls for our consideration, “All My Time” appears like an antidote to distraction – an invite to be intentional with the hours we’ve. Whether or not it’s a fleeting cellphone name, a stolen second of stillness, or a journey residence, Oladokun reminds us that love isn’t nearly phrases or gestures; it’s about displaying up, time and again, in no matter means we will. As a result of on the finish of the day, time could also be our most beneficial useful resource, however how we select to spend it’s what actually defines us.
“Rising Pains”
by Trousdale
Trousdale kicked off 2025 on an particularly energetic observe this January, returning to the ‘highlight’ simply six months after their debut album’s deluxe launch with the primary tease of their sophomore album. Candy, sassy, charming, and churning, “Rising Pains” radiates that very same warmth and sun-soaked ardour we first fell in love with 5 years in the past. The Los Angeles-based trio of Quinn D’Andrea, Georgia Greene, and Lauren Jones deliver love and lightweight to every little thing they contact, and the lead single (and title monitor) off their subsequent file isn’t any exception – radiating with an infectious ardour underscored by huge, daring melodies and lyricism that’s directly empowering and sincere.
I really feel it in my knees
Catching as much as me every morning
I’m pleased with how far I’ve come
However there’s an extended, lengthy method to go
So, I run the additional mile
And I do it with a smile, no downside
I could not win the race, however
Regular and sluggish

“This music was about what we really feel every single day on this band, what we’re going by way of as a band,” Georgia Greene explains. “That is our shared expertise, being exhausted however discovering magnificence collectively.”
That duality – of ardour and exhaustion, of chasing goals whereas grappling with their weight – is what makes “Rising Pains” such a relatable and memorable anthem. The band captures the strain between ambition and burnout, balancing the joys of inventive achievement with the tough realities of an business that calls for fixed output and reinvention.
“The concept for this music happened fairly naturally by discussing one in all our favourite topics: How exhausted we’re,” bandmate Lauren Jones provides. “It truly is so disorienting at instances to have a profession that’s your ardour, but in addition your work. Your boundaries are continually being pushed and pulled, and also you’re all the time prepared to put-in the additional time since you care a lot. Over time, this could actually begin to appear like burn out in case you’re not cautious. ‘Rising Pains’ is about residing the dream whereas acknowledging that the dream could be fairly laborious typically.”
But, by way of all of it, Trousdale proceed to seek out pleasure within the journey. “Rising Pains” isn’t nearly battle – it’s about perseverance, camaraderie, and the love that retains them transferring ahead. With its anthemic power and heartfelt honesty, the music units the tone for what guarantees to be a deeply private and electrifying new chapter for the band. Troudale’s sophomore album Rising Pains is out April 11 by way of Impartial Co.
“Give Me a Signal”
by MARIS (ft. Caroline Kingsbury)
“I’m not simply one of many ladies,” MARIS admits at the beginning of her gorgeous new single. “Can’t you see I’m occupied with your lips?” There’s a stress that sits on the coronary heart of “Give Me a Signal” – a nervous, fluttering power that pulses beneath MARIS’ shimmering melodies and Caroline Kingsbury’s hovering vocals. It’s a music steeped in longing, worry, and the unstated weight of queer want – one which many listeners will discover painfully acquainted. And but, for all its aching uncertainty, “Give Me a Signal” is as a lot an anthem as it’s a confession: A cathartic, synth-drenched burst of hope wrapped in irresistible indie pop euphoria.

“Rising up and beginning to have romantic emotions in Missoula, Montana meant a couple of issues,” MARIS tells Atwood Journal. “One in all them being, a slight nervousness round by chance making the primary transfer on a lady who might not be into me, not to mention queer! As a result of not solely does that rejection sting – the potential social ridicule of being homosexual and making a straight woman really feel gross is terrifying.”
That worry lingers into maturity, shaping the emotional core of “Give Me a Signal”: “Now, as an grownup, I discover myself terrified to make the primary transfer, subconsciously begging my crushes to make the primary transfer – so I can know if it’s secure for me to precise my very own attraction. ‘Give Me a Signal’ is that plea for my crush to point out me they need me, so I can present them how badly I would like them. Is it Girlie Pops… or is it extra?”
That plea echoes all through the monitor, carried by MARIS’ emotive vocal efficiency and Kingsbury’s powerhouse supply. “I noticed the icon that’s MARIS on Instagram and was blown away by her expertise,” Kingsbury remembers. “We arrange a writing session and actually from the second I walked within the door I felt her pleasure and spirit… We’re ‘80s rock vocals mamas. I’ve by no means felt so seen by one other artist! Our collaboration on ‘Give Me a Signal’ was only a matter of time… and the primary of many.”
What makes “Give Me a Signal” so compelling isn’t simply its lyrical vulnerability, however the way in which its sound mirrors the emotional push and pull of queer longing. The monitor is coated in shiny, cinematic manufacturing, mixing glistening synths with uncooked, impassioned vocals that crackle with each anticipation and hesitation. MARIS and Kingsbury don’t simply sing about wanting an indication – they make you are feeling that want in each breathless beat and hovering refrain.
For all its heartache, “Give Me a Signal” doesn’t wallow. As a substitute, it dances on the sting of risk, leaving house for connection, braveness, and perhaps even love. It’s a music for anybody who’s ever hesitated earlier than sending a textual content, stolen glances throughout a crowded room, or waited only a second too lengthy earlier than leaning in. And at its core, it’s a reminder that, typically, the signal we’re ready for is already there – we simply must belief ourselves sufficient to see it.
“Cumulonimbus”
by The Ophelias
The Ophelias’ “Cumulonimbus” appears like a music pulled straight from the deepest hours of the night time – when the world is asleep, the streets are empty, and your ideas echo louder than they need to. There’s a cost within the air, an eerie loneliness that adheres to each observe, as if the music itself is a streetlamp flickering above an empty highway. The lead single off the band’s forthcoming album Spring Grove – notably the primary album Julien Baker has produced for an additional artist – “Cumulonimbus” is heavy with self-reflection, reminiscence, longing, and the ghosts of what’s been left behind.
Vocalist/guitarist Spencer Peppet wrote the music throughout multi-hour nighttime walks by way of her Ohio neighborhood on the peak of 2020’s isolation. “Nobody was out, particularly not late at night time,” she remembers. “On these walks, I might hearken to my designated stroll playlist (which nonetheless rips – Sluggish Pulp, HAIM, Yves Tumor, The Books, Blood Orange) and crisscross down the middle of the highway. That playlist nonetheless brings again the sense reminiscence.”

Not like I may have advised the longer term
nevertheless it is sensible
You say that within the years to come back
you would like me all one of the best
And I don’t doubt it for a second
that you realize it’s merciless
You’re already prematurely gray
so you possibly can select the foundations
This intimate solitude seeps into the monitor’s core, wrapping listeners in an electrically charged haze of reverb and melancholia. The refrain is cinematic in its storytelling – the reminiscences you locked into the trunk of the automobile are going to begin to bang on the again window, cursing at nothing – a visceral picture of nostalgia turned stressed, haunting the current with the burden of the previous.
I do know that you’re gonna miss me
greater than you say you
Will, the reminiscences you locked
into the trunk of the automobile are going to
Begin to bang on the again window,
cursing at nothing
Smashing the taillights and waving
hiya, saying “You higher pull over”
Produced with a fragile but expansive contact, “Cumulonimbus” is the form of music that lingers lengthy after it ends. It’s a spectral presence, whispering down empty streets, weaving between flickering neon, urgent towards glass. The Ophelias have crafted a nocturnal anthem for the lonely and the misplaced – those that discover themselves awake after they shouldn’t be, chasing one thing they will’t fairly identify.
And within the glow of Spring Grove’s impending launch, “Cumulonimbus” stands as its first beacon, illuminating the highway forward with quiet, mesmerizing depth.
Not like I’m blissful,
being caught in right here
My palpitations final so lengthy
that I can overhear
The following selections being made
with out me within the room
These items are predetermined
and I’m doomed
I do know that you’re gonna miss me
greater than you say you
Will, the issues that
I didn’t say are all the time going to
Cling above you
like a cumulonimbus
I’m in your heels,
I’m operating prefer it’s nothing
— — — —
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