This week has been rather busy for the independent music community. Organizers for Outside Lands, Shaky Knees, Kilby Block Party festivals unveiled the lineup for their forthcoming installments, which was flooded with indie acts.
Big names such as electronic duo Disclosure and multi-genre musician SG Lewis announced the founding of their separation from major labels and independent record labels. While Nas’ Mass Appeal Records and Idris Elba’s 7Wallace’s entered into a transatlantic partnership to further the reach of each label’s indie acts. ATO Records rolled out their latest signee, Alex Amen, and his new single, “Cabin By The Sea.”
Other notable singles to hit streaming this week include Nate Curry & ClayDough’s “Going On Ten” and Lekan’s “Safety.” Kiana Ledé shared the visualizer for Cut Ties Deluxe bonus track, “Jury.”
Our album listening recommendations for the weekend include Anjimile’s You’re Free to Go, Brigitte Calls Me Baby’s Irreversible, Cut Worms’ Transmitter, Elucid & Sebb Bash’s I Guess U Had to Be There, Kim Gordon’s Play Me, Olive Jones’ For Mary, Shorelinе’s Is This The Low Point Or The Moment After?, Sweet Pill’s Still There’s A Glow, and We Three’s She Left For America.
Some of the album synopses featured below were provided by their respective record label.
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Anjimile - You’re Free to Go
North Carolina-based singer-songwriter Anjimile releases the full-length album You’re Free to Go. You’re Free to Go picks up where The King left off, but with its hands open wide - a central question being, what happens when you let go and let love in?
Contrasting the intricacy and complexity of The King, You’re Free to Go unfolds organically under the intuitive direction of producer Brad Cook (Waxahatchee, Hurray for the Riff Raff, Mavis Staples). The album’s songs bloom naturally, grounded in warm acoustic guitars, subtle synth textures, lush string arrangements, and delicate rhythmic layers. Collaborative efforts with musicians Nathan Stocker (Hippo Campus), Matt McCaughan (Bon Iver), and guest vocalist Sam Beam (Iron and Wine)—a personal hero of Anjimile whose music deeply influenced the album even before his involvement—cultivate an exploratory yet intimate atmosphere, perfectly aligned with Anjimile’s nuanced storytelling.
Crafted over years marked by transformation, the album traces vividly the profound complexities of change - from breakups to new love; deep grief and loss to renewal and rediscovery. “The past two years have been a deeply transitional point in my life,” Anjimile explains. On You’re Free to Go, he learns to trust life again.
To stream or order, click here.
Source: 4ADBrigitte Calls Me Baby — Irreversible
Since their widely lauded debut album, The Future Is Our Way Out, Chicago-based Brigitte Calls Me Baby have brought a greater intensity of vision to their lavish breed of alt-rock, arriving at a boldly singular sound that is both thrillingly new and immediately essential to the modern rock landscape. In a major leap forward, the band’s sophomore album, Irreversible, captures the energy, intrigue, and grandeur of their live show, all while pushing further into the exquisite pathos of their songwriting.
“There was a time when I tried to bury the kind of feelings we’re displaying on this record, but now I’m at the point where I don’t feel the need to repress anything whatsoever,” says Leavins, whose signature vocals imbue every track on Irreversible with a potent emotionality.
Produced by Yves Rothman and Lawrence Rothman (Blondshell, Yves Tumor), the album came to life amidst a relentless touring schedule that included performing at leading festivals like Lollapalooza and Corona Capital, sharing bills with the likes of Morrissey, Fontaines DC, The Last Dinner Party & Muse, and headlining sold-out tours across the U.S., U.K., and Europe. The result is a majestic suite of songs that burn bright, hit hard, and passionately celebrate the drama of being alive.
To stream or order, click here.
Source: ATO RecordsCut Worms — Transmitter
Transmitter is Max Clarke’s fourth full length record as Cut Worms. Produced by Jeff Tweedy at Wilco’s Loft studio, Transmitter marks a deepening of Clarke’s abilities and the convergence of two artists whose work searches for grace amid dislocation. These are places shaped by the myth of self-reliance, where people sold the idea of connection through technology have been reduced to quiet transmitters—data points bought and sold, manipulated and measured, their lives distorted through the very networks meant to unite them.
The first signs of Transmitter came when Cut Worms were on the road supporting Wilco in the summer of 2024. At the end of the tour, Tweedy invited the band to record at the storied Loft in Chicago, and plans were soon made to commence that fall. In the Loft’s warm clutter of guitars, amplifiers, and books, Clarke and Tweedy quickly found common musical ground and a shared instinct for songs that hold complexity. While Clarke’s voice and writing formed the framework, Tweedy’s guitar and bass lines sketched the rooms the songs inhabit. Tweedy’s presence as a producer revealed itself not in heavy-handed choices but in how he colored spaces and continually offered new textures. Between them, their like-minded sensibilities bridged a generational gap to create something more nuanced than either might have made alone.
If previous Cut Worms releases were steeped in Brill Building decadence and madcap Americana, the sound on Transmitter feels darker, richer, more saturated with the anxiety of contemporary living. “Long Weekend” accelerates time itself, carrying the melodic urgency of Big Star or Dwight Twilley. “Evil Twin” wrestles with bitter disappointment, its talky guitars recalling the jangling heartache of The Replacements and The Go-Betweens, and “Windows on the World” leans toward the sun of the future with a melancholy that drifts somewhere between Elliott Smith and Miracle Legion. Closing track “Dream” brings us back to a familiar plane: Clarke alone at the piano, tender and unresolved, pondering the fate of dreams and the risk of falling short or getting lost en route.
Transmitter finds Clarke in full stride, writing with the conviction of someone who’s made peace with uncertainty. These songs reckon with the cost of comfort and return to the idea that beauty, connection, and love are not luxuries but necessities for survival. Clarke is drawn to paradox—the friction between intimacy and escape, faith and doubt, shadow and light. His forgiveness, like the cut worm’s, comes through transference: the act of releasing something fragile into the noise and trusting it might still be felt.
To stream or order, click here.
Source: JagjaguwarElucid & Sebb Bash — I Guess U Had to Be There
Two turntables and a microphone. There is a truth in the clarity of that simple coda, a truth that also belies the breadth of what is possible within its confines. Sometimes you gotta get reminded. I Guess U Had To Be There, the new album from NYC rapper ELUCID and veteran producer Sebb Bash, is one of those ones. So fresh it sounds like it was made tomorrow, but bet money you could put this on in ’89 and get heads bopping.
There are moments in music when masters of their craft cross paths at the height of their respective powers—records like Madvillainy, Liquid Swords, Dr. Octagonecologyst, and Hell Hath No Fury—where the result is more than the sum of its parts. ELUCID and Sebb Bash find themselves in this heady, seemingly effortless ephemera on I Guess U Had To Be There. Everything is both familiar and groundbreaking. The beats shift and flip under ELUCID’s feet, but he tightropes it all, delivery nimble as a mountain goat, producer and rapper moving in perfect synchronization. Some shining stars make memorable appearances: billy woods, Breezly Brewin, Estee Nack, Shabaka Hutchings. But this is a two-man show, and the duo keep the spotlight where it belongs. I Guess U Had To Be There is a captivating, convention-defying listen and a high-water mark for two of the best artists in the genre.
To stream or order, click here.
Source: Backwoodz StudiozKim Gordon — Play Me
Kim Gordon's third album, PLAY ME, is distilled and immediate, expanding Gordon’s sonic palette to include more melodic beats and the motorik drive of krautrock. “We wanted the songs to be short,” Gordon says. “We wanted to do it really fast. It’s more focused, and maybe more confident."
The follow-up to 2024’s Justin Raisen-produced, two-time Grammy-nominated The Collective processes, in her inimitable way, the collateral damage of the billionaire class: the demolition of democracy, technocratic end-times fascism, the A.I.-fueled chill-vibes flattening of culture - where dark humor voices the absurdity of modern life.
Despite its frequent outward gaze, 'PLAY ME' is an interior record, one in which a heightened emotionality pulses through physical jams, rejecting definitive statements in favor of an inquisitiveness that keeps Gordon searching, ever in process.
To stream or order, click here.
Source: Matador RecordsOlive Jones — For Mary
Olive Jones shares her debut album, For Mary, an impressive statement from a legitimate rising star that is sure to cement her status as an exemplary and essential new artist.
Jones has a unique way of making us feel heard through her music. With her gorgeous soul and blues-influenced sound and stunning voice, Olive draws you into her world, as though she’s singing for you and you alone. Her debut album encapsulates this into one cohesive work, placing her at the forefront of a British soul renaissance.
For Mary is a remarkable testament to Olive’s maturity and confidence as an artist. Together with emerging producer James Wyatt (George Ezra, Ellie Goulding, Lianne La Havas), and by incorporating classic influences with timeless or otherwise timely themes, Olive has created a record that will resonate with listeners for years to come.
To stream or order, click here.
Source: Nettwerk Music GroupShorelinе — Is This The Low Point Or The Moment After?
Shoreline’s third studio album, Is This The Low Point Or The Moment After? is an emo/pop-punk gut punch. Across the project, Shoreline examines what it means to truly experience hitting rock bottom and the difficulty in discerning whether one is still at the lowest point or has already begun the process of recovery.
To stream or order, click here.
Source: Pure Noise RecordsSweet Pill — Still There's A Glow
Sweet Pill's sophomore album, Still There's a Glow, is a resilient response to the mounting pressures following their breakout debut, Where The Heart Is. Facing exhaustion, the band scrapped early demos to prioritize mental health, ultimately crafting a raw document of self-reflection that vocalist Zayna Youssef calls "the hardest thing I've had to do."
Marking a significant evolution in their creative dynamic, the new album is the first written fully as a collaborative unit by Youssef, guitarists Jayce Williams and Sean McCall, bassist Ryan Cullen, and drummer Chris Kearney. Recorded at Gradwell House with longtime producers Matt Weber & Dave Downham, the record aims to bottle the kinetic energy of their live shows-performances that have earned them endorsements from stars like Hayley Williams and Doja Cat. The resulting sound is an elevated mix of math-rock intricacy, urgent punk, and heartfelt emo.
To stream or order, click here.
Source: Hopeless RecordsWe Three — She Left For America
We Three releases their fifth studio album, She Left For America.
”’She Left For America’ means more to us than we can express,” writes the band in a statement. “We hope you hear and feel every ounce of pain, joy, fear, honesty, love, and deep surrender that we poured into this one. We made this the way we wanted to in every way. We honored ourselves and each other's creativity and couldn’t feel more proud of it.”
They continued, “Living this record was the hardest part, making it was the most healing part, and giving it to you is without a doubt forever and always the best part.”
To stream or order, click here.
Source: self-released



