Every week, there are hundreds of thousands of new songs hitting the airwaves. It’s too much for just your two ears to handle: With all those options, you can’t be wasting your time on tracks worthy of a thumbs-down click.

But don’t worry, we’re going to save you the hassle. We listen to some of the most-hyped and interesting songs each week, and tell you which are worthy of your precious listening time.

Here are our top 5 songs to stream this week:

Jeff Tweedy —Theme In Yellow

The latest single from Wilco frontman Jeff Tweedy comes as an homage to famed poet Carl Sandburg, whose poetry collectionChicago Poemscelebrates its centennial this year. An adaptation of Sanburg’sTheme In Yellow,the new track is set to soothing strings, acoustic guitars, and a very Wilco-esq melody. Tweedy’s effort is a tasteful tribute which may end up being Chicago’s fall soundtrack, just as soon as the colors start to turn.

Action Bronson and Mark Ronson —Standing In The Rain

DC’sSuicide Squadmay not be racking up rave reviews, but it does come with one heck of a soundtrack. Case in point:Standing In The Rain, a Mark Ronson and Action Bronson collaboration that features Dan Auerbach of The Black Keys on a dark chorus, and is certifiably dirty. In fact, we can’t think of a song more perfectly suited to a movie which centers on a group of gritty, super-powered misfits.

Kevin Morby —Cut Me Down(and more)

A soft and compelling tribute to the choking death of Eric Garner in New York City in 2014,Cut Me Downwas beautifully performed by Kevin Morby at the famed NPR Tiny Desk in a video released this week. The singer also offers stoic takes on two other songs from his latest recordSinging Sawin the set, all of which are compelling reasons to catch Morby in person whenever possible.

Sugar Candy Mountain —Windows

Slow and classic, Sugar Candy Mountain’sWindowsis just the sort of single you imagine rolling with the front-end credits of the latest Tarantino movie. It’s gentle and groovy, but has a gritty West Coast edge — well suited to the abandoned desert which the Joshua Tree band chose as the backdrop for the accompanying music video.

Valley Queen —In My Place

New Alt-country that shimmers atop perfectly executed Los Angeles production, Valley Queen’sIn My Placeshows the personal side to the quartet’s often vapid hometown. It’s a deep tale of the self-destruction of vocalist Natalie Carol’s family relationships which builds from a gentle melodic introduction to a heavily-rocking outro.

That’s it for now, but check back every week for more new tunes to stream!