Le Journal

Maul's got revenge on the brain in new Shadow Lord trailer

Our most anticipated films of Sundance 2026

5 songs you need to hear this week (January 22, 2026)
Every Thursday, the Paste staff and contributors will choose their five favorite songs of the week, awarding one entry a “Song of the Week” designation. Check out last week’s roundup here. Song of the Week—Modern Woman: “Dashboard Mary” When Modern Woman’s Sophie Harris sings, you can feel it in your ribs. On “Dashboard Mary,” her voice moves like a sprung trap: taut with pressure, capable of sudden force, and brutal when it snaps. The song unfolds as a charged overnight vignette—age gaps, bad decisions, long drives, the queasy silence of the morning after—rendered with a novelist’s eye for detail and restraint: “She thought that he was regretting, cos his hands on the wheel were blue / If the boy at home had woken and if the Dashboard Mary knew.” The instrumentation thrives on tension and contradiction, gliding between hush and abrasion as violin, saxophone, and rhythm section pull against one another—at least until the song’s final stretch, which is all riotous distortion. Nothing here is smoothed over or moralized; the thrill curdles, the momentum keeps going, and the picture never quite resolves. It’s an utterly gorgeous and brilliantly structured track, possibly one of my favorites of the year thus far (granted, it’s only mid-January, but still). Modern Woman’s debut record, Johnny Dreamworld, is set to release this May, and believe you me, I’m already lining up to hear it. —Casey Epstein-Gross Joshua Chuquimia Crampton: “Ch’uwanchaña 〜El Golpe Final〜” A year ago, Joshua Chuquimia Crampton and his sibling Chuquimamani-Condori made a masterpiece together: the psychedelic, structureless Los Thuthanaka. Now Crampton’s first solo full-length since 2024’s Estrella Por Estrella is coming next month. Anata is dedicated to the Andean ceremony of the same name, “where we celebrate the Pachamama (Mother Earth) before the rainy season, giving thanks for harvest with offerings & the principle of reciprocity (Anyi) between humans/nature,” according to the liner notes. Crampton has totally redefined the compositional possibilities of guitar playing, and the elaborate “Ch’uwanchaña 〜El Golpe Final〜” is shredded noise captured in trance-y loops and crushing ascending lines. Surges of metal guitar couple with the acoustic backings of charango and ronroco into an overwhelming spate of texture. It’s blown apart and obscured, analogous to YouTube clips of Andean ceremonies where the audio’s bottomed out. The energy of “Ch’uwanchaña 〜El Golpe Final〜” takes me to a different place. It’s not magic but a creative experiment—an explosive, suspended tribute. —Matt Mitchell Mitski: “Where’s My Phone?” Everybody wants to figure Mitski out but nobody can. In the wake of her 2018 breakthrough Be the Cowboy (long before she landed a Billboard Hot 100 spot with “My Love Mine All Mine”), she gave management the keys to socials and has since maintained an enigmatic distance from her adoring audiences who’ve turned her into a patron saint of sad girls (a role which she has vehemently rejected). On the lead single for her eighth album, she’s fighting fruitlessly to de-clutter her mind—jangly guitars and dusty distortion crowding its corners, fogging up the “clear glass” every time she tries to wipe it clean. Mitski plays the in-between Mother to a Maiden and Crone, rounding out the Hecate trio in a music video that lands somewhere between The Haunting of Hill House and Grey Gardens. Following a wordless bridge of backing vocals and a rising tide of strings, Mitski returns to ask once again, “Where did it go?” Over a decade into her strange and unparalleled rise through the ranks of (and beyond) indie fame, it’s a joy to see Mitski revel in meta-madness once again. —Grace Robins-Somerville OHYUNG: “all dolls go to heaven” Between the exquisite You Are Always On My Mind and the delicate dressings of her Sorry, Baby score, OHYUNG was my most important artist of 2025. Lia Ouyang Rusli makes sounds that have stayed so wonderfully present in my body, and…

Only YOU can save music videos

Sam Claflin is The Count Of Monte Cristo in teaser for new Masterpiece PBS series

Ruin the picnic in the tricky ant-based board game Gingham
You shouldn’t bring sweets to a picnic, because, as Malory Archer warned us, that’s how you get ants. In Gingham, you are the ants, and their queens, trying to create chains on the picnic blanket to connect and claim tokens for various types of sweets located at the vertices of the chess-like board. It starts slowly, but space on the blanket becomes tighter as the game progresses, leading to longer chains and bigger stacks of sweets for higher point gains in the last few rounds. Gingham plays two to four players, with one blanket for the two-player game, which uses five sweet types, and another for three or four players, where you use just four sweet types. Each player has a colony of ants and two queens that they’ll use to determine where their ants go. The starting player chooses one of the four sides of the board, which also has a stitch connecting two diagonally-opposed corners, and places their queen at the end of one of the rows on that side. They may then place one of their ants anywhere between the end space and the stitch, but not beyond it. In the first round, players go around the table and each take the same two actions—place a queen, then place an ant. You can place an ant on an empty space or bump someone else’s ant; if you do the latter, they get to move that ant to any empty space on the board, ignoring the stitch. If any player creates a contiguous chain of their own ants between two sweets of the same type, they score one point per ant in the chain. The chains have to be orthogonal, and you score your shortest path, even if you have a longer one that connects the same two tokens. The player then takes one sweet token and stacks it on the other one, replacing the vacated vertex with one or two white sugar cubes. In addition, if the player surrounds any sweet token with their own ants—four ants in the middle of the board, two on the edge, just one in the corners—they can place their own matching token for that sweet type on top of the stack, scoring one point per token covered. You can even grow your stack by chaining it with ants to an unclaimed stack, or steal someone’s stack by surrounding it with your own ants and displacing theirs. You can chain two claimed stacks, but you can’t merge them. Once all players have placed their two queens and placed two ants, the round ends. The player closest to the corner of the board with the stitch in it then becomes the first player in the next round, and turn order proceeds to the next closest player to that corner. The first player in a round gets to choose any of the other three sides of the board to use that round; they can’t reuse the same side. If a player places an ant next to a vertex with a sugarcube on it, they take that, and can use it on a later turn to take a special action costing one to three cubes. Those allow players to break or bend the rules, like placing a queen on a row that’s already occupied, placing an ant beyond the stitch, or moving one of your already-placed ants rather than placing a new one. Play continues until a player reaches 40 points (or 32 in a four-player game, although I missed that when I first played this and we went to 40, welp), and then the game ends immediately. Players then re-score every sweets stack they have covered with one of their claim tokens, with an additional five point bonus to the player with the highest stack of each sweets type. Each leftover sugar cube is worth one point. The best part of Gingham is the last third or so of the game, where chains get longer and competition for spaces and stacks is much tighter, leading to much more direct competition between players. The scoring increases significantly faster at that point, and poor choices earlier in the game can really come back to bite you, as it’s hard to build longer chains late in the game without some of your ants already in position. The start of the game feels quite slow, though, and I think it takes a certain sort of brain to be able to envision…

L’aventure de l’Orchestre de Chambre d’Europe (4/4) : 40 ans d’existence
En 1981, plusieurs membres de l’Orchestre des Jeunes de la Communauté Européenne décident de ne pas se quitter comme ça. 45 ans après avoir été mis sur orbite par Claudio Abbado, le Chamber Orchestra of Europe est toujours un joyau orchestral, en concert le 27 janvier au Théâtre des Champs-Elysées.

"Jeux de société : les cartes" de Anne Castex (4/5)
La jeune compositrice Anne Castex a composé pour le trio KDM en 2024, une suite qui s'inspire des figures d'un jeu de cartes pour suggérer en musique des relations entre les classes d'une société.

Vince Gilligan, R.E.M, 700 other artists sign open letter condemning AI "theft"

Jeunes pianistes à Radio France : Nour Ayadi, Rodolphe Menguy, Jonathan Fournel, Nathalia Milstein, Marie-Ange Nguci...
![[SORTIE CD] Véronique Gens / Ensemble les Surprises / Louis-Noël Bestion de Camboulas - Reines](https://www.radiofrance.fr/s3/cruiser-production-eu3/2026/01/55b93658-7658-4f5e-bcc1-e9207fc03151/1200x680_sc_design-sans-titre-3.jpg)
[SORTIE CD] Véronique Gens / Ensemble les Surprises / Louis-Noël Bestion de Camboulas - Reines

