The Good Ones              Rwanda Sings With Strings    

Rwandan folk duo whose record combines their signature earthy vocals and acoustic instrumentation (guitar and hand percussion) with atmospheric cello and violin arrangements, creating a soundscape that vividly brings to life their powerful stories of resilience, memory, and longing.

Ambarchi, Berthling and Werliin          Ghosted III       

Alongside the eternal energies of their established styles — ambient neo-jazz, post-kraut, minimal funk — the three play with the exuberance of prog-rockers or new-wave popsters across the album’s six sprawling tracks.

Modern Nature              The Heat Warps            

The key to the album is their new dual guitar sound and listening to the demos Television did with Brian Eno.

Prolapse            I Wonder When They’re Going To Destroy Your Face

Still pursuing their own path of repetition and twisted melodies, they merge influences from post punk to krautrock and even folk.They feature vocalists Mick Derrick and Linda Steelyard, whose intense duelling vocals combine with ferocious triple guitar assault and pummelling rhythms.

Sabrina Carpenter       Man’s Best Friend       

Her seventh album and follow up to ‘Short’n’Sweet’ which sold ten million copies globally.

Nova Twins       Parasites And Butterflies        

Since bursting out of the independent UK scene, the Mercury Music Prize and two-time BRIT Award nominees have rewritten the rulebook of what a modern rock band can achieve.

Myah                   I Don’t Know What I’m Feeling             

Over 17 tracks, the alt-indie pop artist captures falling in and out of love–the butterflies, joy, turbulence, heartache, anger and everything in between–as she comes to terms with love not always being the fairytale it appears to be.

Connor Selby  The Truth Comes Out Eventually         

Young artist with an authentic roots-based voice who has supported The Who.

CMAT   Euro Country  

It continues her ability to combine contradictory themes and moods: wide-eye drama with self-deprecation; the fusion of country and pop, with even more influences stretching across decades and genres.

Bryan Adams   Roll With The Punches             

His 17th studio album is packed with powerful rock anthems.

Vicious Rumors             The Devil’s Asylum      

The US power metal act’s first album in five years sees them returning to their roots while throwing in some contemporary influences.

The Technicolors           Heavy Pulp      

Band that have woven a luminous sonic tapestry of fuzz-fueled riffs existing somewhere between the gloomy echoes of 90s Britpop and the snake-charmed stars of the Sonoran desert.

Runnner             A Welcome Kind of Weakness             

Runnner’s sound has undergone a drastic sonic shift. Foregoing the home-recorded crackle of his previous work for a widescreen sound reminiscent of the early 2000s indie rock boom, A Welcome Kind of Weakness’ hifi bombast lends Weinman’s songwriting a new immediacy without sacrificing the intimacy of his earlier material.

Guedra Guedra              Mutant

A compound of visionary electronics and musical traditions drawn from across the continent of Africa.

Wreck and Reference                Stay Calm        

Two men who emerged with a singular vision for the future of dark, intense music: tortured samples, blasted acoustic drums, and a distinct lack of guitars. They walked straight past the orthodoxies of metal music and into the weird new dawn of electronic experimental

Joe & the Shitboys        Greatest Shits

Faroese queer vegan shitpunks with a record that compiles the band’s first 3 albums (originally released on 7” due to their blistering 10 minute run times) plus a salvo of new singles

Manegarm        Edsvuren          

Band known for weaving Norse mythology, ancient rites, and folkloric wisdom into an unrelenting metal tapestry.

Jehnny Beth      You Heartbreaker, You              

Ex-Savages

Ron Sexsmith  Hangover Terrace        

With 17 studio albums under his belt and songs covered by everyone from k.d. lang to Rod Stewart, Sexsmith remains one of Canada’s most cherished songwriters.

Various               When Will They Ever Learn? A Story of U.S. Folk Music 1963 – 1969

4CD compilation featuring a huge array of acts including Pete Seeger, Arlo Guthrie, The Byrds, The Mamas & Papas, Taj Mahal, Karen Dalton, Tim Buckley, and The Grateful Dead

Pinkshift            Earthkeeper    

A record that bursts at the seams with big riffs, big feelings, and big ideas.

Braxton Cook                 Not Everyone Can Go

It’s a soulful meditation on letting go of what no longer serves you, leaning into life’s inevitable shifts, and finding gratitude amid the chaos.

Lathe of Heaven            Aurora 

The record incorporates influences from mid 80s British and Finnish post-punk, combined with subtle nuances from 90s and contemporary underground pop,

Gulp     Beneath Strawberry Moons    

Musician and multi-media artist, Lindsey Leven rejoins Guto Pryce, who traces faintly around the simmering offbeat sounds of his life as a Super Furry Animal, for Gulp’s third album.

Myd      Mydnight          

A kaleidoscopic journey through club euphoria, playful honesty and technicolour emotion.

Eiko Ishibashi and Jim O’Rourke          Pareidolia         

The duo’s fifth collaborative release is a dynamic medley of colour and shape appealing to your suggestibility.

Whitehorse / UBOA     The Dissolution of Eternity     

Australia’s heaviest force of nature Whitehorse teams up with sonic chaos conjurer UBOA for a split album that crushes, scorches, and transcends.

No Apologies   Life       

The record blends thrash-inflected groove, melodic aggression, and deeply personal themes of mortality, grief, and resilience.

ThxSoMch         The Sound of You Laughing    

A project that sees the multi-faceted songwriter, producer and performer find his own sound that disrupts both rock and rap as he delivers a fast-paced, exhilarating and honest examination of the self and life’s impermanence.

The Berries       The Berries      

Matthew Berry’s strongest take yet on the hallowed tradition of the guitar-wielding singer-songwriter.