Autumn Break Down by clust.r
For fans of Bagel Fanclub, Tirestires, Death’s Dynamic Shroud, those early, vibrant days of the hyperpop movement, and the subliminal voice which guides our thoughts through the algorithm, Autumn Break Down by clust.r filters romantic angst through the lens of online psychosis, all displayed by a completely unique form of experimental electronica.
Goyard & The Kayfabe Reveal by Ghais Guevara
For fans of Clouddead, Lil Ugly Mane, Nas, light beach reading like Anti Oedipus and Finnegan’s Wake, and the overlooked inner drives which govern all human behavior, Goyard & The Kayfabe Reveal by Ghais Guevara addresses the deep history of systemic violence through an abstract, poetic hip hop style which burrows into our collective psyche.
Something We All Got by Cootie Catcher
For fans of Feeble Little Horse, Pavement, Sweet Trip, folksy indie rock, and imagination as a device to realize a better world, Something We All Got by Cootie Catcher builds a cozy fantasy landscape for twee to exist alongside our deeply dangerous reality.
So Inspired, So Done In by Dog Chocolate
For fans of McClusky, Snooper, Hüsker Dü, the new wave of bouncy, off-kilter post punk, and every interaction with your local hr department, So Inspired, So Done In by Dog Chocolate boils over with classic punk resentment towards our toxic work culture and the conditions which got us here.
Blue Rider, Blue Faced by Fiona Fiasco
For fans of Big Thief, Nico, Prewn, slowcore-tinged singer-songwriter, and the cataclysmic blaring of your alarm to end a pleasant dream, Blue Rider, Blue Faced by Fiona Fiasco uses an accessible brand of traditional folk to immerse us in the melancholic aspirations of a restless romantic.
You Deserve Worse Than What You Got by Kullnes
For fans of Modest Mouse, Alex G, YHWH Nailgun, the Have a Nice Life extended universe, and getting to the end of the instruction manual and realizing your product was defective from the start, You Deserve Worse Than What You Got by Kullnes reveals the depths of mental health crisis after exhausting all recommended channels of relief.
Somersaults by Deathcrash
For fans of Champion Trees, Black Country, New Road, The Promise Ring, early spindly post rock, and that complicated feeling you get when you remember the view from your childhood bedroom window, Somersaults by Deathcrash grapples with nostalgia using a dark, calculated singer-songwriter style.
Idle Hands, Something About the Devil by Water-Mall
For fans of Elliott Smith, Slowdive, Todos Mis Amigos Están Tristes, that post Britpop sound, and the emotional tidal wave held back by modern mondanity, Idle Hands, Something about the Devil by Water-Mall presents a bold, progressive sound for the post-shoegaze era.
Tigray Funk by Sideshow
For fans of MF Doom, Death’s Dynamic Shroud, J Dilla, early ambient music, and institutional suspicion, Tigray Funk by Sideshow searches for emotional and material truth through a unique abstract hip hop style.
Hellbent Daydream by Brandon Seabrook
For fans of Dave Brubeck, Soft Machine, Eric Dolphy, chamber pop, and that delirious state between awake and asleep which you feel during a red eye flight in a middle seat, Hellbent Daydream by Brandon Seabrook experiences the harsh clash between subjectivity and objectivity through a unique take on free jazz.
Black Seraphim by Werner Durand and John Krausbauer
For fans of Sunn O))), the John Cale x Charli XCX collab, Ethel Cain’s “Perverts” era, and occult rituals to invoke Saturnine deities, the new release Black Seraphim by Werner Durand and John Krausbauer is your guide for a descent into the depths of eldritch madness.
Under Lies by Endive
For fans of Fugazi, Jawbreaker, Texas Is the Reason, 80s melodic hardcore, and the tender, vulnerable core of all anger, Under Lies by Endive gives us a rare newly released window into the mid 90s Midwest post hardcore scene.
Egin Ez Dugun Guztia by Vibora
For fans of La Dispute, Foxing, Deafheaven, contemporary hardcore, and that satisfying realization that you’re right where you want to be, Egin Ez Dugun Guztia by Vibora makes a bittersweet reflection on a narrowing life trajectory while celebrating a future devoted to a creative community.
Cursebreaker by Nyssa
For fans of Kate Bush, Big Blood, The Last Dinner Party, late 90s Lilith-Fair-adjacent singer songwriter, and the process of growing up and still feeling that urge to get out of this town and leave everything behind, Cursebreaker by Nyssa examines all the poor behaviors rewarded by a sadistic society through a theatrical take on alternative rock.
Discombobulated by Hen Ogledd
For fans of Can, King Crimson, Cardiacs, that strain of both theatrical and delicate singer-songwriter, and community as the answer to an antagonistic world, Discombobulated by Hen Ogledd speaks in an unapologetically idiosyncratic voice to shake us from our atomized complacency.
Join Hands by Congratulations
For fans of Underscores, Gang of Four, Jesse Ware, dance punk, and the decision to boldly and colorfully express yourself in the oppressive age of cringe, Join Hands by Congratulations finds a million musical ways to get us to move our bodies and celebrate in the face of a mass culture deprived of whimsical joy.
Terrible Things Will Happen to the Ones You Love Most by Dog Complex
Finally, the word becomes flesh, a horror which only adequately comes through in the extreme dark aesthetics of art like Terrible Things Will Happen to the Ones You Love Most by Dog Complex, a blackened hardcore record which breathes down our backs with the necrotic stench of totalitarianism.
Pale Bloom by Lucy Kruger & The Lost Boys
For fans of Nine Inch Nails, Björk, Massive Attack, indie sleaze and its revival, and having a conversation with your childhood self, Pale Bloom by Lucy Kruger & The Lost Boys mourns lost potential with a dark art pop funeral.
Disco II - Monomyth by La Petite Mort/Little Death
For fans of Parannoul, Brave Little Abacus, Your Arms Are My Cocoon, sasscore, and the scene you grew up in that doesn’t exist in the same way anymore, Disco II - Monomyth by La Petite Mort/Little Death takes a critical eye to the 2010s scene and sets the stage for something fundamentally different through their celebratory emo sound.
Tether Me to You by demleague
For fans of Willy Rodriguez, Total Wife, Car Seat Headrest, new wave, and those dreams which reveal themselves as symptoms of our most foundational desires, Tether Me to You by demleague infuses the bedroom sound with ample pop hooks to show us the sources of light in our melancholic lives.