Alex Gallardo from Sony Music Latin accepts the Top Latin Albums Label of the Year Award from Kapo.
Tag:
Albums
5 Albums I Can’t Live Without: Anton Newcombe of the Brian Jonestown Massacre
by jummy84
written by jummy84
Name Anton Newcombe
Current City I live in Berlin and have my studio [there].
Really want to be in I’m one of those people that looks at property listings in Sweden and Norway on the ocean or lakes and thinks, “I could afford this…I don’t need people.”
Excited about I’m excited to finish our tour; Canada, U.S.A., Mexico, then South America. Then I have a three month break before Australia and New Zealand. It is my hope that I bag a new album in my downtime.
My current music collection has a lot of Scratched albums. But truthfully, I have eclectic tastes.
And a little bit of That’s an interesting boomerang being that I have a giant collection that’s all over the map. I guess the little bit would be new releases.
Preferred format I like vinyl, I wish the neighbors felt the same. I like the 20-minute-per-side format. It’s perfect.
5 Albums I Can’t Live Without:
1
Approach to Anima, Maya Ongaku
A friend invited me out to see them here in Berlin, they are from Japan and honestly renewed my faith in music in the way that live music can. Honestly a cross between Kraftwerk, Sigur Rós, Air and maybe a touch of spacey Pink Floyd; very analog, very real. Amazing group.
2
Inspiración, Ara Tokatlian, Enrique Villegas, Guillermo Bordarampé

If you are interested in far-out spiritual jazz like Coltrane and Sanders this record is for you; a most excellent selection from 1975.
3
Brigitte Fontaine Est Folle, Brigitte Fontaine

This is her debut solo album from 1968. I would highly recommend any collector slide down the rabbit hole of her many releases.
4
Pat Garrett & Billy The Kid: Original Soundtrack Recording, Bob Dylan

This is a soundtrack of a movie by the same name, the album includes “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door” but it’s so much more than that. It’s a mood and it moves at its own pace.
5
Domingo, Gal Costa and Caetano Veloso

This Brazilian record is amazingly beautiful. My copy is from 1967 and for as much as I love it, I don’t know very much about the origins, only that it is a classic and that’s why I bought it in Brazil. Give it a spin, maybe you will enjoy it too.
13 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: Tame Impala, Sudan Archives, and More
by jummy84
written by jummy84
With so much good music being released all the time, it can be hard to determine what to listen to first. Every week, Pitchfork offers a run-down of significant new releases available on streaming services. This week’s batch includes new projects from Tame Impala, Sudan Archives, They Are Gutting a Body of Water, Silvana Estrada, Monaleo, Bar Italia, Ty Dolla $ign, Militarie Gun, Destiny Bond, Elias Rønnenfelt, Cusp, Jane Inc., and Suzie True. Subscribe to Pitchfork’s New Music Friday newsletter to get our recommendations in your inbox every week. (All releases featured here are independently selected by our editors. When you buy something through our affiliate links, however, Pitchfork earns an affiliate commission.)
Tame Impala: Deadbeat [Columbia]
Name Kyle Stoopid
Best known for Singer-songwriter-performer of Slightly Stoopid.
Current city: Ocean Beach, San Diego, California.
Really want to be in Home is where your heart is. As long as you’re surrounded by love and good people, it’s where you should be. That could be anywhere. That being said, we grew up close to Mexico by the beach, so Mexico and all its culture, people, food, and music has always been close to my heart. The beach, the ocean, waves, tacos, and maybe a margarita, and it’s all gravy.
Excited about Making music is just one of our passions. To be able to create it in the lab, in the pad, in a hotel room, or on a bus, is like cooking in the kitchen. It’s a natural thing, but also a blessing. To be able to take what we cook up in the kitchen (the lab) and bring it to the stage and perform it is exciting. To see people singing along to the songs, and using the music as a form of therapy from the pressures of everyday life is also rewarding and a form of therapy for us too.
My current music collection has a lot of: There’s so many genres of music and so many eras… to choose one would be the same as choosing food. There’s too much good food and music to choose from. We learned guitar from wanting to play all the riffs on Metallica albums. We love metal. When we started the band as teenagers we played only super fast punk. Bands like Operation Ivy, Minor Threat, Pennywise and NOFX fueled our desire to play as fast as possible. Bands like the Skatalites and Buck O Nine inspired us to play ska. Roots music and reggae like Don Carlos inspired us to slow it down and turn up the bass for that kind of style. Over time we eventually played all the styles of music from Jazz, Afro Cuban, Blues, Funk, Punk Rock, Heavy Metal, Acoustic music, etc…so the style of records and music in my record collection is similar to walking into a record store.
Current format: Always have had a special love for vinyl, for the full vintage feel of buying a new record. The album cover art, the record art and all the cool things that come with a physical copy, how music was first released. It is nice to be able to just pull up any song you want nowadays as well if you are driving, or in motion.
5 Albums I Can’t Live Without:
1
The first three albums from Metallica all immediately make you want to head bang. It was [with] Miles and my first concert that we saw at the sports arena when we were young that made us want to play guitar. When the song “Master of Puppets” starts to play, it’s instantaneous that you want to get up and go. Whether you’re in the gym and need something heavy to get your blood pumping or in the mosh pit, “Master of Puppets” is the one that will get you off your ass and moving.
2
Blood Sugar Sex Magic, Red Hot Chili Peppers

RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS! These guys changed the game with so many styles and so many eras of their music. All their records are special in a different way. Freaky Styley and Mothers Milk are so good because of how funky they are, but Blood Sugar Sex Magik has it all. Every song is incredible and magical from the beginning to the end. The way they recorded the album is amazing too, if you watch the documentary on how they locked themselves away from the world to make it, and created something that will live forever as one of the greatest records of all time.
3
Check Your Head, Beastie Boys

The evolution of the Beastie Boys is a special thing. How they started from East Coast punk rockers, and transcended into RUN DMC style hip-hop, and then transcended further into Meters-style funk, and multiple other genres all in one. They are masters of all styles of music and instruments, and performed like they were going into the Olympics. All their records are brilliant in different ways and styles, but Check Your Head is special how they combined all genres and really made something so beautiful that stands the test of time. Mario C. really knocked it out the park producing this record.
4
1988, Operation Ivy

This is the band that really influenced us as teenagers to want to play fast punk and ska to either get the mosh pit started by playing punk rock music or to be in the mosh pit while listening to it. Every song on this album is so good and can change the mood to make you have a better day. It’s so raw and rugged and real. When I have a bad day and need to turn it around, this album saves the day. Or if you’re having a good day and want it to be better, play this fucking record! Matt Freeman’s insane bass style is a big influence on early Slightly Stoopid punk music. Tim Armstrong and Jessie Michaels put out a collaboration in 2023 called Doom Regulator that is killer. Check out the song “Raid” by Doom Regulator. Every album from Rancid is also a huge influence for Slightly Stoopid.
5
Which Doobie U Be?, Funkdoobiest

It’s not easy to pick a favorite Funkdoobiest song. They are all bangers and so good. But this album is mandatory to have in the record crates. It’s a game changer from top to bottom. These days whether just driving down the street, or at home cooking and getting shit done, this album has been playing on repeat. Shout out to the brother Son Doobie who is hands down one of my favorite MCs, but also one of the realest, most humble people you can ever meet, which is what I think makes him so dope on the mic and off.
13 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: PinkPantheress, OsamaSon, and More
by jummy84
written by jummy84
On their steady path from friends making lo-fi freak-folk to bandmates going proggy art-pop, Bruiser and Bicycle always find a calming center at the heart of their otherwise dizzying albums. Deep Country, their third album and follow-up to 2023’s Holy Red Wagon, takes that grounding reassurance to new depths, with shades of jangle pop and vintage progressive folk. Recorded live—a first for the Albany, New York, band—with a 15-song tracklist, the album’s sprawling 75-minute runtime shouldn’t intimidate as much as welcome you to take an edible and get lost. Let pairings like the fingerpicked jitters of the six-minute “Waterfight”—where, yes, the vocal harmonies sound just like Animal Collective—into the airy jazz drumming of “Sinister Sleep Shuffle” remind you what it feels like to stop worrying and just be present.
Listen on Apple Music
Listen on Spotify
Listen on Tidal
Listen on Amazon Music
Listen/Buy at Bandcamp
Feeo: Goodness [AD 93]
Now established as a maestro of London’s experimental underground, Feeo lands at AD 93 with a suite of droning, ambient, and softly psychedelic electronic music on her debut album. The compositions of Goodness warp, buzz, and whirr beneath Feeo’s distracted vocals, which, in contrast to the intricate electronics, seem exhumed from ancient folk song. The record follows her EP Run Over and collaborations with Loraine James and Caius Williams.
Listen on Apple Music
Listen on Spotify
Listen on Tidal
Listen on Amazon Music
Listen/Buy at Bandcamp
Buy at Rough Trade
As we gear up for the end of 2025, the heavy stream continues uninterrupted. Unearthed black metal recordings from LVTHN and Vörnir are finally released, while Gjendød, Nexion, and Destruction Ritual continue to define the present of the genre, albeit in different ways. Historic acts make their solid returns, with the newest Paradise Lost and the long-awaited Fauna releases. On the fringes, Nuclear Dudes continue their manic, low-key, ambitious efforts, Igorrr merge electronica and black metal, Hateful Abandon offer dark industrialized post-punk, and Intercourse stare into the abyss without blinking. That and much more, so dig in! – Spyros Stasis
The Best Metal Albums of September 2025
Arkhaaik – Uihtis (Eisenwald)
One of the stranger outfits from the Jünger Tumilon, Arkhaaik are obsessed with the ritualistic dimension of extreme metal. Their debut record, dʰg̑ʰm̥tós, follows the path of mystical black/death, tracing the lineage of Grave Upheaval and Mitochondrion. Yet, their return with Uihtis sees a tectonic shift. While the ritual remains at the centre of it all, the primal black/death has given way to a more refined, blackened death/doom approach, a change that is also mirrored in the cleaner production. “Hagrah Gurres” oozes with this essence, taking on the latter-day Septicflesh majesty (minus the symphonic applications) and delivering it with devastating force.
The striking component here is the groove, and its derivation is uncanny. It alternates between the modern death/doom scene and also incorporates elements from Panzerfaust and their graphic applications. This is Arkhaaik’s newfound strength. Their ability to assimilate diverse elements and bring a unified result. Take their black metal side. For the most part, they rely on fleeting lead patches, small discordant fragments. However, these still convey the same sense of unease evoked by the dissonant orthodoxy advocates.
Similarly, the death metal form alters, at times settling into its atmospheric doom quality, but then exploding in a catchy beatdown with “Hrkþos Heshr Hiagom”. It continues, from the atmospheric interludes that evoke the darkness ushered in by the Ruins of Beverast, to the momentum and energy infused with the spirit of Bölzer. Most importantly, Uihtis does not simply rehash these ideas. It makes them its own, and while it does not appear that Arkhaaik have fully completed their vision, they are definitely on the right path. – Spyros Stasis
Destruction Ritual – Providence (End All Life)
Destruction Ritual’s 2021 demo felt like a message from the genre’s primal years. It manages to contain the lo-fi, raw, and aggressive quality that defined black metal demos, but without becoming a gimmick. The project of French heavyweights MkM (Antaeus), TerrorReign (Necrobloos), and US-based guitarist Arafel oozes with poisonous distortion, taking to heart the relentless core of Blood Libels, and the venomous extension of black metal orthodoxy.
Yet, Destruction Ritual’s return with Providence turns a new page. The production now suits a full-length, shedding the demo’s rougher edges without losing venom. From the outset, the early Scandinavian ethos prevails. The title track best exemplifies this turn, its riffology saturated with the trademark icy tremolos. It provides a vivid element, a dream of dark forests where spectres roam. It is an aesthetic that carries over through the eerie, arachnoid lead work, especially pronounced in the clean-ish parts of “Washed Away Sins”.
This excavation goes further, with a proto-black metal perspective shining through both lead mechanics and progression. The guitars encompass a duality, a yin and yang, at times descending into a cacophonous à la early Bathory haze (“Providence”), to then ascend to classically metallic notions (“Pride & Corrupted Dreams”). The drums do not relent, their continuous beating is not as fast, as it is dedicated. Their martial approach constructs a near militant procession, one that allows Destruction Ritual to tap into their latent DNA. The Antaeus strain is right there, and the venomous onslaught in “Closure” makes sure we do not forget this.
The orthodox route is also called upon, with the cold and torturous mid-tempo of “Gone Days of Splendor” and the atmospheric parts of “Decaying Masks of Remorse” shining through. Thus, Providence does not simply retrace Destruction Ritual’s steps. It instead unearths black metal’s primal soil, its proto form’s extremity, Antaeus’s venomous scars, and the ritual pulse of orthodoxy, binding them together in a singular, destructive statement. – Spyros Stasis
Fauna – Ochre & Ash (Prophecy/Lupus Lounge)
With their debut record, Rain, coming out the same year as Diadem of 12 Stars, Fauna established themselves as one of the first Cascadian black metal bands. Like their contemporaries, Fauna are obsessed with the majesty of the Pacific Northwest. They translate the area’s mystical sceneries into raw, ambient forms. However, it did take a moment for their sound to come together, with the rough promise of Rain and The Hunt finally paying off in their 2012 full-length, Avifauna. Following 13 years of silence, Fauna now return with another ambitious work in Ochre & Ash.
The atmosphere is again fundamental, Fauna taking great care in sonic placements and sound recordings to build a holistic ambiance. Today, this sounds closer to the Nordic folk of Wardruna, especially in “A Conjuring”, which also serves as a platform from which Fauna can leap into other territories. Hypnotic tinges rise from the clean guitars with “Labyrinths”, making use of their circular motif to craft its inescapable mazes. When the distortion surges and the pace drops, the music drifts toward funeral doom rather than earthy black metal.
The same energy can be harnessed to achieve a strange, forest psychedelia in parts of “Eternal Return”. The wolf might change his coat, but not his nature. Thus, Fauna still tap into the primal black metal havoc, the start of “Nature and Madness” conjuring an apocalyptic quality to its trademark black metal riffing. These reveal the bloodied teeth, with Fauna imbuing their form with a tribal essence passed from the likes of Neurosis. Not so much a musical influence, but rather a spirit guide that points the band toward their true north.
Fauna’s return is admirable, and Ochre & Ash sees them return to their true form. Longform compositions, blending ambient sensibility, tribal spirit, and black metal devastation, Ochre & Ash is a demanding yet deeply immersive rite, one that reveals more with each descent. – Spyros Stasis
Gjendød – Svekkelse (Osmose)
Rekindling black metal’s flames is no simple task, and few truly succeed in this endeavour. And then there are those who not only awaken the old ethos but also chart their own path. This is Gjendød’s story, whose latest record Svekkelse comes just one year after their excellent fifth full-length, Livskramper. As has been the case throughout the band’s discography, Gjendød’s foundation dates back to the mid-1990s, leaning toward the more outlandish expressions of the genre.
So echoes of Ulver’s pastoral melancholy reverberate through the passages of “Lykkens bortgang”, while the Enslaved influence injects a sense of lost magic and lore. It is an otherworldly pull, captured through the relentless progression of “Uten nåde” and the second half of “En elv av kjøtt” and its beautiful acoustic guitar passages.
Yet, underneath this foundation lies a discordant self. On “Maktens sødme”, the pre-industrial Thorns lineage is clear. The intricate guitar work feels like an echo of Snorre’s feverish dreams. This dissonant methodology recalls Ved Buens Ende. The start of “En elv av kjøtt” spirals into a vortex of chaos and entropy. Slight melancholic touches are offered, with “En staur i hjertet” employing the icy riffology to create a nocturnal anthem, parallel to the works of Djevel.
Further off-kilter ideas float, like the synthesizers in “Den Falske råte” hint at a cosmic escape. Throughout all this, Gjendød seamlessly balance between the primitive core of the genre and its more nuanced manifestation. Svekkelse stands as a testament to Gjendød’s duality, firmly rooted in tradition yet unafraid to venture into uncharted terrain as a hermit. – Spyros Stasis
Hateful Abandon – Threat (Sentient Ruin)
Hateful Abandon understand intersections. Their entire discography is built on this fact. For them, punk and industrial are not parallel lanes. No, they are branches of the same tree, best presented under a joining post-punk root. Their first record in a decade, Threat, opens with this principle. “Nuclear Thread Worker” relishes the early Killing Joke aura, this unsettling state between punk history and urban reality, where the two competing forces mold Threat.
“Shithouse” moves closer to hardcore chaos, but never gives in. The straightforward progression instead repeats on an endless loop. On the other side, the industrial tone appears in a sinisterly gleeful manner. The bombastic start to “Scavenger” is only the surface for Hateful Abandon, but deeper undercurrents are running just below. The apocalyptic essence of “Scavenger” takes hold, with operatic vocals evoking memories of the early In Slaughter Natives releases, as does “Sculptures” with its off-kilter synthesizers. It is an always-present narrative, as Hateful Abandon feel a strong pull toward the apocalyptic.
“Dome” with its huge bass lines evokes the fiery visions of Streetcleaner, the faraway cries heralding an inescapable devastation. It is a vibe that persists even in the most desolate moments, with “Shimmer Road” evoking the Swans-like melancholy. Coupled with some minor black metal influences, especially pronounced in “Nuclear Thread Worker”, Hateful Abandon unveil a world aflame. This invocation comes with a certain mystique. And while their guiding light might be the post-punk foundation of Joy Division, their far-reaching extensions make for a much more daunting offering. – Spyros Stasis
Treading a similar path to Jason Köhnen’s Bong-Ra, the past two decades saw the breakcore architecture of Gautier Serre’s early career mutate into ever more concrete forms—still as spastic and crazy as his earlier works, but touched differently. Where Köhnen’s vision ended up encased in industrial grime and heaviness, all oozing electronic textures and sparking electricity (check out Black Noise, released earlier this year), Serre pushed his project Igorrr towards predominantly black metal territories. While 2017’s Savage Sinusoid had already hinted at this direction and 2020’s Spirituality and Distortion announced the true metallic potential behind the project, Amen witnesses its full realization.
Drop the needle anywhere on the album and you’ll be inundated with waves of utterly intense and, perhaps, insane but organic-sounding instrumental expression. Owing to Serre’s ambitious approach, which included recording actual church organs and acoustic instruments, the album feels vibrant and breathes deeply even in its more suffocating passages.
Neoclassical strings and operatic vocals float above ripping riffs and striated breakbeats, then pour right through them (“Daemoni”). Gorgeous Eastern melodies intertwine with blast beats to explode into blistering second-wave black metal (“Headbutt”). Elsewhere, chants dissolve into saturating textures (“Pure Disproportionate Black and White Nihilism”). While it might appear unnecessarily extravagant on paper, this astute eclecticism is what ultimately elevates the album above its peers, with an injection of adrenaline at hand every time things threaten to fall into a rut. – Antonio Poscic
Intercourse – How I Fell in Love With the Void (Brutal Panda)
Many find staring into the abyss daunting, something to be done sparingly if at all. But that is not the case for Connecticut’s Intercourse, who, since their inception, have consistently peered into the void. Their aptly titled, fifth full-length, How I Fell in Love With the Void, does not abstain from that practice. To that end, they once more contort their noise rock fascinations through a hardcore immediacy. This makes the discordant guitar work in “The Ballad of Max Wright” hit with much more potency. “Unsuccessfully Attempting to Parse Nightmare From Reality” takes this further, contemplating a dissonant obsenity that bounces between old-school punk ethos and Fugazi‘s post-hardcore.
Thus, Intercourse dig into the dark and oppressive side of hardcore. The heavier groove works nicely alongside the noise rock influence, with touches of a sludge pedigree coming through when things slow down. This makes the despair more palpable in “Zoloft and Blow”, staring down the same dead ends that Great Falls have found (“Family Suicide Gun”). Plunging into the atmospheric only enhances the despair, the title track being a prime example when the clean guitars and subdued playing come in.
This contradiction brings to mind Chat Pile and their melancholic outlook, especially in “I’m Very Tired Please Let Me Die”, where they provide a subtle industrial injection. Even in their more energetic state, as seen in the metallic-induced “Cadaver Resume” with its chugging and the mathcore-adjacent “Another Song About the Sun”, they still cling to a sense of hopelessness. Intercourse understand that hopelessness is not always defeatism; sometimes it is the only way through. – Spyros Stasis
LVTHN – The Devil’s Bridge (Amor Fati)
Formed in the mid-2010s, LVTHN quickly transitioned from their early, raw, Scandinavian-inspired sound to the rising orthodox black metal trend. Their debut full-length, Eradication of Nescience, was a timely offering, following the footsteps of the French black metal scene, coalescing Antaeus’s devastating force with the Aosoth-ian transcendental devilry. The band’s sophomore record, The Devil’s Bridge, might be arriving nine years later, but in spirit it inhabits the same space as their debut.
The latter stage of orthodoxy still prevails, with “A Malignant Encounter – The Servant” employing the Aosoth principles once more, forming a solid, impenetrable guitar wall. The guitar timbre is near elemental, a cosmic force that pushes against all life. From there, the dissonant injections are expected, with the guitars in “A Malignant Encounter – The Master” and “Sum Quod Eris” dripping their discordant poison on top of the aggressive progression. Here, the more chaotic outbreaks break the mould, the start of “Cacodaemon” and “Grim Vengeance” show the unforgiving side of the band, honed by the spirit of Ondskapt and Funeral Mist.
In moments, this can become even more abrasive, with “Mother of Abominations” unearthing the Katharsis corpse for a brief time. However, while The Devil’s Bridge is a well-put-together record, it does feel like clinging too hard to the past. According to their press release, the bulk of the work was written and recorded in 2019, with further adjustments being made over the years. That’s something that comes across. A record frozen in a different time, which invokes its spirit, but does not extend it. – Spyros Stasis
Modern Life Is War – Life on the Moon (Deathwish)
One of the prominent hardcore acts of the 2000s, Modern Life Is War, released two pivotal records in My Love. My Way and Witness. What made them stand out was their dedication to the punk ethos, while feeling a strong melodic pull. This pull might have been overstated in their third full-length, Midnight In America, and the band eventually performed a course correction with their 2013 Fever Hunting. Now they return 12 years later with Life on the Moon, a record that swings the pendulum wildly across different states and moods.
The emotional core is exposed, from the “Invocation” introduction and its almost poppy sentimentality, and it remains prevalent throughout Life On The Moon. “Jackie Oh No” pushes harder on these melodic inclinations, while “Homecoming Queen” further digs in its hooks. Still, there are times when the balance is better, with “First Song on the Moon” finding equilibrium between fervour and catchiness. Similarly, “In the Shadow of Ingredion” and “Johnny Gone” move closer to the old-school ethos, the former embracing quasi-metallic elements and the latter some New York hardcore characteristics.
The transformations keep revolving, from post-hardcore abrasiveness in “There Is a Telephone That Never Stops Ringing”, to the relentless speed of “Bloodsport” and the subdued Have Heart energy of “You Look Like the Morning Sun”. There are also moments of quasi-psychedelic introspection, “Empty Shoes” with its emotive quality, “Over the Road” with its hypnotic aspiration, and finally “Kid Hard Dub” with a hazy perspective.
Overall, this constant transformation holds the record back, disrupting its flow and restraining it from hitting a certain stride. There are still interesting ideas in Life on the Moon, but it feels like Modern Life Is War have not completely coalesced these. Maybe this will come the next time around, and hopefully that will not take another 12 years. – Spyros Stasis
Nexion – Sundrung (Avantgarde Music)
The problem with unexpected hit albums, even in niche genres, such as 2020’s Seven Oracles by Reykjavík’s black-death metal outfit Nexion, is that the band suddenly have expectations to live up to. While the yips, the curse of the sophomore release, or whatever you want to call it, is very much a real thing, the Icelandic quintet appear too imperious and self-assured to succumb to such foolishness. Sundrung stands shoulder to shoulder with the best Nexion have produced so far.
Nebulous as it might be, applying the Icelandic black metal term here makes sense, as Sundrung exhibits certain similarities with the music of Misþyrming and Svartidauði in each of its tracks’ epic tapestry: majestic riffs rolling along growled chants and lighter folk flourishes alternating with brutal attacks. Simultaneously, there is a hunger at play within Nexion’s idiom that separates them from the lot as they draw from death metal’s unfiltered brutality and sprinkle perverted atmospherics across the eight tracks.
There is very little filler here despite the album’s 50-odd minutes. In fact, the extended duration seems critical in making the band’s special moments—passages that sound like storms brewed in the deepest layers of hell—feel truly earned. Here, Josh Rood’s deranged, Attila Csihar-evoking roars skitter over machine gun riffing and snaking melodies, like something off of an early Behemoth record or Keep of Kalessin’s flash in the pan Reclaim. Terrific stuff. – Antonio Poscic
Nuclear Dudes – Truth Paste (Independent)
Jon Weisnewski, of the mighty Akimbo, might have started Nuclear Dudes as his bedroom project, but boy, this thing has legs. On their fifth full-length, Truth Paste, Weisnewski is joined by Teen Cthulhu vocalist Brandon Nakamura for an exhilarating ride. The start is bombastic, as “Napalm Life” descends into a grindcore frenzy, fierce and unrelenting. It is an expression rooted in the punk lineage, which manifests in various forms.
The crossover-inspired “Holiday Warfare” contains fragments of a thrash past, while “Juggalos for Congress” reveals a more traditional groove. However, Nuclear Dudes tend to take things to extremes, relishing the powerviolence perspective, especially pronounced in the absolute mayhem of “Sad Vicious”.
Still, a fundamental component here is the industrial backbone, and Nuclear Dudes feel a strong pull towards electronica. It is so powerful that at times they retreat to dance-like moments, as in the second half of the title track and “Death of a Burning Man”. At other times, this morphs into an industrialized fascination, which at its most basic level arrives with a Ministry or Prong-ian quality (“Cyrus the Virus”).
Where things get really interesting is when the industrial self merges with the grindcore essence, taking a cue from Genghis Tron’s monumental Board Up the House. “Space Juice” is a prime example of this motif, and the stunning use of synthesizers is capable of expanding the violent ideas toward otherworldly realms, as is the case with the hazy quality of “Concussion Protocol”. There is a lot of sarcasm and playfulness here, and it fits the image, but do not fool yourself: Truth Paste is anything but middle-of-the-road or straightforward. The ambition shines from underneath all that. – Spyros Stasis
Paradise Lost – Ascension (Nuclear Blast)
Among the original wave of doom-death metal bands, particularly those who rose to fame during the early 1990s in the ranks of the UK’s Peaceville Records, Paradise Lost have aged most gracefully. Whether thanks to the stability of their lineup or the self-confidence and freedom to experiment with genres as they saw fit—from death and gothic metal to synthpop and back—the music they put out feels vibrant and played with genuine gusto even four decades into their career
Ascension, the group’s 17th LP, finds them in stellar form. As if each style they ever came across embedded a fragment of itself into their DNA, the album becomes akin to a mashup—based in dramatic death and doom metal, but free to stretch into territories of gothic rock, post-metal, and pop. Take, for example, the opener “Serpent on the Cross”, which is a crushing and relentless sublimation of Paradise Lost’s death-doom tendencies, featuring tightly wound atmospheres that release into galloping rhythms and gorgeously melodic riffs.
Meanwhile, “Tyrants Serenade” ups the melancholy and Weltschmerz to levels unheard since 1993’s Icon, and “The Precipice” has the group descending into funeral doom, with grave piano keys and Nick Holmes’ stunning vocal delivery leading the dirge in its steady, heavy crawl. These are all signs of a mature band that, despite all odds, sound as if their life had just begun. – Antonio Poscic
Vörnir – Av Hadanfärd Krönt (Mystiskaos)
I am becoming increasingly terrified by the prolific nature of particular musicians, especially when they tend to collaborate. Not only can they continue to produce new work, but they also tend to unearth their earlier material, reworking it and releasing it. This is the case with Vörnir, featuring artists such as Alex Poole, Rory Flay, Swartadauþuz, and H.V. Lyngdal. Much like the case of LVTHN’s new record, Vörnir’s debut was written at a different time. Written between 2011 and 2015 and recorded from 2015 to 2024, Av Hadanfärd Krönt radiates with the spirit of another era, steeped in the orthodox tradition of black metal.
This work needs to be experienced as a continuum, a flow of dark energy that arrives in maelstrom form. Vörnir tend towards orthodoxy’s harsher side, not shying away from relentless assault without many breaks. However, while the anger is palpable, there is an underlying methodology that runs through it. This unyielding perspective is defined by strict precision, not loose aggression. It makes the work that much more calculating, and as a result, it becomes colder.
The pull of the dissonant is still there, but it feels like the time passed between writing and recording has transfigured it. Instead of the venomous injections, Vörnir unleash psychedelic fumes. Far away, fleeting lead work delves into this motif, projecting different emotional flavors. At times, these hallucinogenic capabilities project a deep ambiance, an otherworldly dreaminess. Still, they are also capable of constructing towering moments of mid-tempo dedication, or even granting momentum to the ongoing assault.
This is where Vörnir succeed. They balance between the initial proximity of their compositions to orthodox black metal, but they have allowed time to imbue these with additional components. In that sense, they appear almost as an avant-garde act that is rooted in tradition but pushes further beyond. – Spyros Stasis
11 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: Taylor Swift, Malibu, and More
by jummy84
written by jummy84
With so much good music being released all the time, it can be hard to determine what to listen to first. Every week, Pitchfork offers a run-down of significant new releases available on streaming services. This week’s batch includes new albums from Taylor Swift, Malibu, Kelly Moran, Snooper, Nala Sinephro, Thirteendegrees º, Peel Dream Magazine, Blue Lake, Klein, Prewn, and Agriculture. Subscribe to Pitchfork’s New Music Friday newsletter to get our recommendations in your inbox every week. (All releases featured here are independently selected by our editors. When you buy something through our affiliate links, however, Pitchfork earns an affiliate commission.)
Taylor Swift: The Life of a Showgirl [Republic]
Name Milo Aukerman
Best known for Going to college, for some reason.
Current city Newark, Delaware.
Really want to be in Colorado, where I can go on hikes and practice with the Descendents (and record at the Blasting Room!).
Excited to Go on tour to Canada in a few weeks. I’ve always secretly wished I was Canadian, and now more so than ever. Hey Canada, I know our government sucks, but don’t take it out on me, please!
My current music collection has a lot of Cars, Kinks, Bob Mould, Bad Brains, Black Flag.
And a little of Little Chair, but that’s only because there’s not a lot of Little Chair. If there was a lot of Little Chair, that would be better.
Preferred format Radio in the car. Vinyl albums around the house, when I get noise ordinance clearance. When it’s “for me only,” I’ll pop in earbuds and do Spotify.
5 Albums I Can’t Live Without:
1
Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!, DEVO

This served as a manifesto for my teen nerd years. Yeah, maybe it’s new wave, but I loved the aggressive guitar chording that would soon have me searching for harder, faster punk stuff. And most of the songs are hilarious, made even funnier by the band’s attempts to pass it all off as serious.
2
Los Angeles, X


First saw them open for DEVO, and after hearing them on KROQ (Rodney on the ROQ), they became my favorite band. I love the weird harmonies between John Doe and Exene, the in-your-face yet intelligent lyrics, and of course the coolness of Billy Zoom. In those pre-merch days I made myself a T-shirt of the album cover using spray paint and an X-Acto knife (appropriate tool, eh?), thus destroying the sleeve…
3
(GI), Germs


This album is “slick mayhem”—maybe the first hardcore punk album, but Joan Jett gave it a tight, professional sound. Pat Smear’s tasty guitar licks inserted neatly between buzz-saw chords, and Darby Crash’s poetry-as-lyrics were inscrutable, but also evidence of a dark, twisted genius. I only saw them play once, and then Darby killed himself a few days later.
4
Look Again, The Last


These guys lived in Hermosa Beach, near me and Bill, and they gave us a copy of the Look Again test pressing back in 1980. But it only got released for real in the last few years! Bill and I worshipped the Last, and did a deep study of all their stuff, but especially this album. Every single song is classic power pop.
5
Revolver, The Beatles


Growing up, I had the U.S. version that lacked three of John Lennon’s songs, so when I play the U.K. version, it sounds… wrong. Even though those are great Lennon songs! But when you play an album over and over again like I did with this one, it just has to go the way you heard it as a kid. So, yeah, McCartney-heavy, but he wasn’t messing around on this one. Some true masterpieces.
Nicki Minaj Accuses Industry Of Using ‘Barney B’ For ‘Rage Bait’ To Distract From Her Charting Albums & Sold-Out Tour
by jummy84
written by jummy84
Nicki Minaj
Nicki Minaj Accuses Industry Of Using ‘Barney B’ For ‘Rage Bait’ To Distract From Her Charting Albums & Sold-Out Tour
Nicki Minaj is calling out what she believes is a calculated attempt to discredit her success by using “Barney B” to stir controversy.
“Sweetheart, the general public just sold out my tour,” Nicki wrote on social media, slamming critics as “bots & PAID FOR OPINIONS.” She suggested the industry is intentionally downplaying her achievements because it “costs them money. Maybe even their freedom.”
Nicki also claimed she currently has five albums charting and accused her rivals of being “livid” over her wins.
“They’ve simply been paid to act like they don’t see it,” she said, warning fans that her haters are afraid of her dominance.
“They’re using Barney B to rage bait so they can get a song of hers off the ground from that flop album,” she added. “Hope that helps. Love u.”
While she didn’t say any names, “Barney B” is the name she has been using to refer to Cardi B?
Do y’all think the beef will end soon?
The future haunts popular music. From Sun Ra‘s cosmic philosophies to Kraftwerk‘s robotic minimalism, from Janelle Monáe‘s android suites to the shimmering dream worlds of Björk, artists have long looked to the future as both a warning and a possibility. To imagine the future in sound is not merely to garnish it with synthesizers and sci-fi tropes but to wrestle with what it means to be human in a world constantly shifting under the weight of technology, identity, and desire.
In 2025, that conversation is more urgent than ever. Music is no longer just a mirror of culture, but a laboratory for speculation: a space where love can be reprogrammed, identities shapeshift, and utopias and apocalypses coexist in the same beat. What defines “futuristic” music today is not its palette of synthetic tones; those are already common currency, but its ability to disrupt time itself, destabilizing the boundaries between memory and prophecy.
The five albums gathered here don’t simply gesture toward tomorrow. They inhabit it. Each one offers a distinct vision of how music can bend space, fracture genre, and reimagine the self. Together, they form a constellation of possibilities.
Kid Cudi – Entergalactic
Loneliness Among the Stars
Few artists embody the paradox of futurism like Kid Cudi. Since his 2009 breakthrough Man on the Moon, Cudi has been hip-hop’s melancholic astronaut, orbiting mainstream rap while never quite belonging to it. Entergalactic, released alongside his Netflix animated odyssey, distills his ethos into an interstellar love story that is both cartoon fantasy and confessional diary.
Futurist records often revel in alienation, but Cudi makes the infinite feel intimate. His voice — nasal, fragile, endlessly human — floats against glacial synths and psychedelic textures. Songs like “Willing to Trust” transform zero gravity into a metaphor for vulnerability, while “Do What I Want” pits trap percussion against shimmering arpeggios.
“Space here is not a void,” the album insists, “but a canvas for longing”. In Cudi’s cosmos, the cold vacuum of the future still carries the warmth of a heartbeat.
NZCA Lines – Infinite Summer
Dancing Through the Anthropocene
Where Cudi looks upward, NZCA Lines looks around at the planet itself. Michael Lovett’s Infinite Summer dazzles with the sleekness of 1980s synthpop, yet its brilliance hides shadows: an ecological crisis, a world locked in perpetual heat. The title alone feels like an omen, paradise turning to drought, endless light shading into exhaustion.
Tracks such as “Persephone Dreams” seduce with crystalline surfaces, but their lyrics evoke collapse: oceans swelling, skies burning. Lovett’s genius lies in the tension between sound and theme. The music sparkles like utopia even as it mourns the fragility of the earth beneath it.
This is futurism for the Anthropocene: the apocalypse not as silence, but as something glittering and dangerously danceable. Infinite Summer reminds us that tomorrow’s catastrophe may arrive disguised as pleasure.
Don Toliver – Love Sick
Posthuman Desire
If NZCA Lines envisions planetary collapse, Don Toliver zooms into the microcosm of desire. Love Sick is futurism refracted through romance in the digital age, where emotions are filtered, mediated, and reassembled by technology.
Toliver’s Auto-Tuned croon is less an effect than an existential condition. His voice drips like liquid chrome, warping between seduction and distortion. In tracks like “Private Landing”, ecstasy collides with alienation; in “Do It Right”, nostalgic samples crash into futuristic beats, compressing decades into a single moment.
Here, AutoTune becomes a metaphor: in a posthuman world, to love is to glitch, to yearn through distortion. Love Sickaches with vulnerability despite, or because of, its synthetic sheen. It argues that the future of intimacy is not the erasure of feeling, but its mutation.
Lava La Rue – Starface
Queering the Cosmos
For Lava La Rue, futurism is liberation. Starface imagines queerness not as marginal, but as interstellar —a force expansive enough to light entire galaxies. Where Cudi makes space personal and NZCA Lines makes it planetary, La Rue makes it political, envisioning futures where identity is fluid and infinite.
The EP shapeshifts like its creator. UK rap bleeds into neo-soul, psychedelia rubs against indie textures, all threaded with cosmic imagery. “Lift Off” pulses with ecstatic confidence, while quieter tracks hover like weightless daydreams.
La Rue’s cosmos echoes the traditions of Black queer futurism, Octavia Butler’s novels, Janelle Monáe’s android anthems — yet it feels distinctly rooted in London’s multicultural vibrancy. Starface is speculative but never escapist. It argues that the future is not abstract: it is lived, grounded, and already shimmering in communities that refuse confinement.
Johnel – Galactic Theme
Ancestral Rhythms in Hyperspace
If La Rue queers futurism, Johnel reorients it toward heritage. Galactic Theme fuses African polyrhythms with cosmic synthscapes, producing music that feels both ancient and interstellar. Inspired by Kid Cudi’s Entergalactic, this short album is a distinctly Afrofuturist vision: the drum as heartbeat and warp drive, ancestral memory traveling across galaxies.
Unlike futurist projects that abandon the past for shiny abstraction, Johnel insists that continuity is itself a radical gesture. Released via Nnamani Music Group, his music resonates with Sun Ra’s cosmic philosophies and Burna Boy’s global reach, yet it never imitates. Instead, it extends the lineage. The future, he suggests, is not blank but already inscribed with ancestral echoes.
In Galactic Theme, one hears time collapse: tradition becomes trajectory, history becomes horizon. The past is not left behind in tomorrow; it is what powers the leap into it.
The Future Is Already Here
What unites these albums is not sonic uniformity, but rather a defiance of stasis. Cudi turns solitude into cosmic intimacy. NZCA Lines transforms climate dread into shimmering pop. Toliver reframes digital longing as posthuman desire. La Rue queers the cosmos into infinite possibility. Johnel launches ancestral rhythm into orbit.
To call them “futuristic” is less about sound design than about ambition, the audacity to construct sonic worlds that imagine beyond the limits of today. Each album refuses the idea that the present is fixed. Each insists that tomorrow can be sounded into existence.
“Perhaps the most radical act of futurism,” these works seem to say, “is not predicting what comes next, but daring to invent it.”
In their music, the future is not a horizon waiting to arrive. It is already here, scattered across beats, refrains, and voices bold enough to claim it.