The Nottingham songwriter returns with a single that builds its tension through restraint and unresolved space.
The Nottingham songwriter returns with a single that builds its tension through restraint and unresolved space.
The Boston post-hardcore veterans and the indie folk songwriter forge an unexpected, potent alliance on their collaborative single.
The synth-pop duo return with “Out Come the Freaks”, an opening statement that channels a vanished New York nightlife through a refined, nocturnal atmosphere shaped by their enduring sonic identity.
The first song written for his new album finds the singer-songwriter refining his delicate, introspective craft.
The Australian songwriter’s new track, “The Long Reprise,” trades garage-rock immediacy for a slower, more deliberate kind of tension.
The North Carolina folk ensemble trades dense fiddle layers for a sparse, patient dialogue between banjo and guitar, charting a landscape of quiet memory.
The Welsh duo’s latest single pares back their usual sprawl into a concentrated blast of garage-rock insistence.
The former Lush frontwoman trades layered gauze for stark, wiry arrangements in a single that finds resilience in isolation.
The Wolf Parade and Sunset Rubdown multi-instrumentalist returns with a solo single that finds a hypnotic, anxious groove.
The duo’s cover of “Six O’Clock News” trades alt-country grit for a softer, more intimate kind of melancholy.