The Texas songwriter shifts to Lost Highway Records for a 13-track record about stillness, geography, and the pull of rural life.
The Texas songwriter shifts to Lost Highway Records for a 13-track record about stillness, geography, and the pull of rural life.
Fifteen years after its official release on XL Recordings, Jai Paul’s “BTSTU” remains a touchstone for texture, restraint and emotional architecture in electronic music. We examine its precise cultural footprint and the lessons it still holds for makers.
The Richmond solo project adds two new fuzz-pop cuts to a growing catalog, marking James Goodson’s first output of 2026 just as he prepares to open for Sleaford Mods.
On their fourteenth album, The Black Keys turn to a set of covers and, in the process, recover something more valuable than novelty: touch, weight, and the friction that once made their music feel alive
In the hushed afterglow of Tranquilizer, Oneohtrix Point Never exhales “Dim Stars / For Residue (Extended),” a double helix of microtonal drift and unstable intimacy via Warp Records.
The band leaves Run For Cover after more than a decade and works with a new producer for the first time. Two tracks are out now.
The Leeds band’s ‘You’re Gonna Need A Little Music’ arrives on July 17 via Island Records, produced by Justin Meldal-Johnsen during an uninterrupted five-month session.
The Leeds duo return with an album that channels China Miéville’s idea of crisis energy into a visceral, uncompromising listen.
Schranz resurges in 2026: Berlin’s raw hard techno from ’97—Felix Kröcher tours, 83% SoundCloud growth. Warehouse energy meets transatlantic circuits.
The London five-piece, longtime regulars at the celebrated venue, release ‘Are we friends yet?’ on Young, wrapping violin, guitar and drums around songs built for motion.