The British artist returns with a satirical rock track that pairs runway imagery with end-of-the-world commentary.
The British artist returns with a satirical rock track that pairs runway imagery with end-of-the-world commentary.
Billy Corgan confirmed on his Substack that he, James Iha, and Jimmy Chamberlin tracked a new single with the producer of Gish and Siamese Dream. The song is 98% finished and planned for release this year.
The duo mapped out a 28-date North American run for this fall and teased a new track that channels their signature bass-heavy attack.
A handful of releases cut through this week, each built on deliberate shifts and a refusal to chase obvious moves.
Last-minute performances in Roswell and Lubbock leaned into extraterrestrial lore and offered a first listen to unreleased material.
On “Punching the Flowers,” Death Cab for Cutie return with a song that feels wiry, compressed, and quietly brutal, turning emotional inertia into a piece of indie rock that moves with real pressure. Released on April 27 as the second single from I Built You A Tower, the track suggests a record more interested in …
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 a new interview, the singer-songwriter traces a path from California wildfires to a track that confronts a society too numb to act.
The band introduced a second unreleased track during their current run of live dates, following last month’s debut of “See Out Loud.”
The post-punk group schedules festival dates and releases “No Kings Here!” after previously marking their final shows.