BROWN HORSE – ” Total Dive “

Posted: February 19, 2026 in MUSIC

The new Brown Horse single’s got an immediate buy-in from vocalist Nyle Holihan: “I like the voices on the radio, I like the feeling of changing lanes.” That sounds good to me. If you missed out on “All the Right Weaknesses” last year you can still reserve a spot for “Total Dive” in a few months. “Twisters” is a twangy ace in the hole with Neve Cariad singing backup—country guitars in bold lettering, whacked-out pickers each with a lead foot on their fuzz pedals.

This is lubed-up rock and roll—road-worn riffage you can catch a fix from anytime. If you’re a Jason Molina fan you’re gonna dig a barroom blitz like this, because Brown Horse are rambling around in a strange, disarming grin. It’s a good pocket to be in, especially when Emma Tovell’s pedal steel starts crying. “I hope a whip of lightning cuts me right in two” means something to me. “Twisters” rules because it’s spilling out all over the place.

We’ve been talking about Brown Horse as sort of the UK’s answer to MJ Lenderman/Wednesday type indie-country bands, and this new single from their upcoming third album “Total Dive” is a very fine example of why they deserve that title.

The album “Total Dive” is out April 10th 2026 on Loose Music.

LOW's Alan Sparhawk Details Debut Solo Album, 'White Roses, My God ...

Low co-founder Alan Sparhawk has shared two new songs featuring Eric Pollard on Drums and Sparhawk’s son, Cyrus Sparhawk, on bass.

Sparhawk shares about both singles:
“JCMF”: This is a song I’ve had for a few years, but couldn’t find the right way to play or record it. We started playing it last year in the Alan Sparhawk Solo Band, on tour, and with each month, the sentiment of the song only increased. I feel like the song has become a rebuke against the fascist/authoritarian streak that several world leaders have taken on and to the people who have been blinded into supporting them.

“No More Darkness”: Inspired by a David Lynch quote (“Don’t fight the darkness. Don’t even worry about the darkness. Turn on the light and the darkness goes. Turn up the light of pure consciousness. Negativity goes.”) This song reminds me to choose light in especially dark times. We were ending our set with this tune all year, and it is my wish for everyone, especially those who feel alone.

Both tracks were written, composed, and produced at 20 Below Studio in Duluth, MN, with Nat Harvie mixing. They feature Sparhawk on Guitar/Vocals, Eric Pollard on Drums and Sparhawk’s son, Cyrus Sparhawk, on Bass.

Sparhawk will be donating a portion of his royalties from these songs to the International Institute of Minnesota.

released February 17th, 2026

© 2026 Sub Pop Records

BUCK MEEK – ” The Mirror “

Posted: February 19, 2026 in MUSIC
May be an image of rearview mirror and text that says 'BUCK MEEK ४ਖਾਆ THE'

Buck Meek (who you may know from Big Thief, his joint releases with bandmate Adrianne Lenker, or perhaps just from his solo stuff already!)

The Mirror” is scheduled for release at the end of February. There’s a tender power, countered by immutable vulnerability. With an uncanny curiosity, Meek reveals the uniqueness in the mundane. “The Mirror” searches for new meaning and the familiar is reframed through Meek’s singular voice.

Just months after Big Thief had released one of our favourite albums of 2025 with “Double Infinity”, Big Thief guitarist Buck Meek announced his next solo album, The Mirror, due 2/27 via 4AD. It was made with his Big Thief bandmate James Krivchenia and Big Thief vocalist Adrianne Lenker contributes to it too, so it shouldn’t be a big surprise that you can hear a lot of Big Thief’s magic coming through on lead single “Gasoline.” It’s the kind of strummy folk rock that Buck Meek does so well, but it’s also got some of those art rock tendencies that came through on “Double Infinity“, making it just a little more far-out than what we usually get from Buck’s solo career.

COLA – ” Hedgesitting “

Posted: February 19, 2026 in MUSIC
Cola - Cost of Living Adjustment - Cover Artwork 3000x3000.jpg

“Cost of Living Adjustment” is the sort-of self-titled album from Cola, the Montreal trio of Tim Darcy (vocals/guitar), Ben Stidworthy (bass), and Evan Cartwright (percussion). C.O.L.A. — an acronym for “Cost of Living Adjustment” — is a fitting conceptual framework for the band’s third record. Why? Because C.O.L.A. considers, among other things, socialism vs. hell. It considers: rolling the dice of life. The erie and sweet pangs that nostalgia can provoke.

Following two studio LPs which earned the trio praise from Rolling Stone (Best Indie Rock Albums of 2024), Pitchfork (Best Rock Albums of 2024), Stereogum (Best Songs of 2022) and more,” Cost of Living Adjustmentis abstract, oblique, sometimes strange, whatever you want to call it. But it is also beautiful, in the classic sense. Beautiful like a painting can be beautiful. It touches on the sublime. It is Cola, the band, at their very best.

Here’s the first single from Cola’s upcoming album “Cost of Living Adjustment”.

from Cola’s new album, “Cost of Living Adjustment”, out May 8th via Fire Talk Records

JULIA CUMMING – “ My Life “

Posted: February 19, 2026 in MUSIC
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Julia Cumming of Sunflower Bean has announced her debut solo album, “Julia“, due out April 24 via Partisan. The first single is “My Life,” and she says, “This song came after a period of intense pressure, the culmination of writing through the pandemic and the years spent in the rhythm of touring, recording, and trying to find my place within it all…Then something shifted. It was liberation, and I knew immediately it was the beginning of something new. It’s clear ‘My Life’ would open the album, because it’s the thesis. The seed that started everything.”

My Life” by Julia Cumming from Julia, out April 24th on Partisan Records

FOO FIGHTERS – ” Your Favorite Toy “

Posted: February 19, 2026 in MUSIC
May be pop art

Foo Fighters just previewed an album’s worth of songs last week, so if you guessed that meant a new album would be announced soon, you guessed right! The band’s first album since 2023’s invigorated “But Here We Are” and first since Ilan Rubin joined as the new Foos drummer is called “Your Favorite Toy” and it arrives on April 24 via Roswell/RCA. It was “recorded at home,” co-produced by Foo Fighters and Oliver Roman, engineered by Oliver Roman, and mixed by Mark “Spike” Stent. Pre-order the LP or CD in the BV shop.

They also just released the title track, a song that finds the Foo Fighters in fuzzed-out garage rock territory, with Dave Grohl leaning into his love of stuff like The Stooges and The Sonics. It’s pretty undeniably a ripper, and you can check it out below. The album also features last year’s grungy “Asking For A Friend.”

“’Your Favorite Toy’ really was the key that unlocked the tone and energetic direction of the new album,” Dave says. “We stumbled upon it after experimenting with different sounds and dynamics for over a year, and the day it took shape I knew that we had to follow its lead. It was the fuse to the powder keg of songs we wound up recording for this record. It feels new.”

Foo Fighters’ lineup for this album is Dave Grohl, Nate Mendel, Chris Shiflett, Pat Smear, Rami Jaffee and Ilan Rubin.

All upcoming Foo Fighters tour dates (including shows with Mannequin Pussy, Gouge Away, IDLES, Queens of the Stone Age, Die Spitz, Otoboke Beaker, Fat Dog, and more)

PARCELS – ” Tiny Desk Concert “

Posted: February 19, 2026 in MUSIC
May be an image of grass

Parcels does not shy away from abundance. The Australian quintet’s songs often feature a myriad of guitars, rivaling piano and synths, slinky basslines, pulsing drums and four (yes, four) vocalists. But the group opens its Tiny Desk concert with a secret weapon: hauntingly bare harmonies, backed only by gentle keys and guitar, that transform a snippet of the irresistibly catchy “Leaveyourlove” into a solemn oath of devotion.

It’s a stunningly stripped-down choice for a band that can — and does — properly rock out, with explosive live performances that turn its glossy, electro-pop studio albums into transcendental dance parties, collective rituals of movement and joy in which the crowd becomes a key sixth band member. But it’s also a return to the band’s roots. Parcels started out as a group of high school friends, jamming together in the idyllic seaside town of Byron Bay. After graduation, they relocated to Berlin, where their early days were spent busking on the streets, performing bluegrass covers of pop songs.

At the Tiny Desk, evenly spaced out and in a ceaseless, mischievous musical dialogue with one another, Parcels’ egalitarian ethos is front and center: There is no lead singer, there is no frontman. As an instrument-wielding boy band, the group converses with a fluidity that taps into the psychedelic playground of the Grateful Dead and dances into the hypnotic electronica of Giorgio Moroder. Sunlit melodies melt into one another; a cascade of soulful voices guides listeners from the early days of Parcels’ discography to the magnetic bliss of the band’s newly released album, “Loved”. Both the record and the performance emanate the magic of spending a decade making art with your best pals.

SET LIST
“Leaveyourlove”
“Tieduprightnow”
“Ifyoucall”
“Yougotmefeeling”
“Gamesofluck”
“Finallyover”

MUSICIANS
Jules Crommelin: vocals, guitar
Louie Swain: vocals, keys
Anatole Serret: drums
Patrick Hetherington: vocals, keys, percussion
Noah Hill: vocals, bass

“Loved” is Parcels’ third album, exuberant and euphoric, yet also reflective. It’s a record of unity – with each other, with the listeners, in the grooves – and that’s indisputable.

“We do have a purpose as a band to our audience: we’re giving people joy,” says guitarist/vocalist Jules Crommelin. “I see it as spirit, and it’s an incredibly powerful thing.”

The album includes tracks like “Safeandsound” and “Yougotmefeeling.” Parcels are back and brighter and more pop than ever.

Album artwork for Queen II by Queen

Queen’s second album, originally released in March 1974, is getting remixed, remastered and expanded to five CDs in March.

The 5CD/2LP Queen II Collector’s Edition box set features a 2026 mix of the album and will be available on March 27th. Brian May and Roger Taylor serve as executive producers for the set, which includes previously unheard outtakes and demos, live tracks and radio sessions from the era.

Arguably the heaviest Queen album, Queen II was originally released in 1974 and widely heralded as their first true masterpiece. With Brian May and Roger Taylor as executive producers, the album has been stunningly mixed by the team of Justin Shirley-Smith, Joshua J Macrae and Kris Fredriksson.

“Queen II” was the single biggest leap we ever made,” said May in a press release announcing the box. “That’s when we really started making music the way we wanted to, rather than the way we were being pushed into recording it.”

“With “Queen II”, I couldn’t believe how much work we put into it,” noted Taylor. “I think we felt we were evolving our own sound. We were pioneering this sort of multitracking thing. It gave you a tremendous palette, massive choral effects with just three of us singing.”

In addition to the new mix of the original album, the upcoming reissue will include discs featuring session tracks, BBC recordings and live performances.


The new Queen II: Collector’s Edition features a newly mixed and remastered version of the original album. It also features a disc of previously unreleased album sessions, including multiple takes and demo versions of album tracks “The Loser in the End” and “The March of the Black Queen.”

Backing tracks for the LP’s songs are also included on a disc. Another CD features Queen’s appearances on BBC radio programs in 1973 and 1974, when they performed songs from “Queen II”, including “Nevermore,” “White Queen (As It Began),” and others.

The fifth and final disc includes live tracks of several album songs, recorded at the Rainbow and Hammersmith Odeon in March 1974 and December 1975.


Robin Trower Live

Originally released in 1976, “Robin Trower Live!” 50th Anniversary Edition. the first concert release from the celebrated guitarist. Available April 3rd

Having joined up with Procol Harum from just after the 1967 release of debut single “A Whiter Shade of Pale” up to mid-1971, Trower’s next move was to form a power trio in the vein of his hero Jimi Hendrix. James Dewar sang and played bass, while Reg Isidore initially kept time on drums. 1974’s “For Earth Below” brought the American-born Bill Lordan into the fold on drums, and with him a new sense of funk, drive, and energy. 

The set includes five previously unreleased tracks from the 1975 Stockholm performance, offering the complete setlist as it was originally performed for the very first time. The recording showcases the electrifying chemistry between Robin Trower (guitar), James Dewar (bass/vocals), and Bill Lordan (drums) – widely regarded as one of the finest live bands of the era. Includes searing live versions of fan favourites like “Too Rolling Stoned,” “Bridge of Sighs,” “Day of the Eagle,” and many more, now sounding better than ever.

“For Earth Below‘s “Alathea,” “Confessin’ Midnight,” “Fine Day,” and “Gonna Be More Suspicious” were among the selections performed by the trio that night, but only “Alathea” made the cut for the original Live! album. (It was rounded out by tunes from both “Twice Removed from Yesterday” and “Bridge of Sighs”.Trower has professed that the band only knew the concert was being aired on the radio, not taped for posterity, leading to a performance of exceptional intensity and spontaneity without the pressure of recording a live album.

Remixed by Richard Whittaker from the original multi-track recordings and fully approved by Robin Trower. Features brand-new liner notes by David Sinclair with interviews from Robin and Bill Lordan with previously unseen photos.

“That night in ’75… we were just flying” – Robin Trower.

“These guys are shoulder to shoulder with the likes of Cream and the Hendrix Experience as one of the greatest power trios of all time” – Richard Whittaker.

Robin Trower Live!” [50th Anniversary Edition] 2CD (DVD sized) Media Book: Complete Concert – 2026 Mix & Original 1975 Version, mastered at AIR Mastering. Housed in a hardback media book with extended liner notes by David Sinclair featuring interviews with Robin Trower and Bill Lordan and rare photographs.

PATTO – ” The Albums “

Posted: February 19, 2026 in MUSIC
Patto

Three albums and out, Patto (named after vocalist Mike Patto) were highly regarded on the British rock scene in the ’70s. formed in London in 1970.

Founded by vocalist Mike Patto, their line-up was taken from Timebox, consisting of vocalist Patto, guitarist and vibraphone player Ollie Halsall, bassist Clive Griffiths and drummer John Halsey.  Signed to the newly formed Vertigo label. With Muff Winwood as producer, they recorded their first album live in the studio.

The key point of the band was probably the superb guitar work of the eminently flexible , a performer whose session work was highly prized, even though the guitarist seemed hesitant to step into the spotlight. Patto performed a stately mix of jazz-rock with a little bit of blues. Following the breakup of the band,  Following the breakup of the band, Halsall moved on to play with Tempest while Patto joined Spooky Tooth for their album “Mirror”

In December 1971, Patto entered the studio again to record their second album, “Hold Your Fire“, after which they were dropped from the Vertigo roster. Despite poor record sales, they were becoming known as an exciting live act. Through his connections in England, Muff Winwood was able to have the band signed to Island Records, and they recorded the album “Roll ’em Smoke ’em Put Another Line Out” in 1972.

Patto and  came back together in  in 1975, though  remained for only a single album, with Patto remaining the sole founding member by the following album. Mike Patto died in 1979 of throat cancer.

Patto

Criminally underrated band at the time, but borne into legend by the unspeakable tragedies that awaited its makers, the debut album by Patto can safely be described among the finest jazz-rock fusion albums ever cut by a British band. Mike Patto’s vocals certainly match that billing, a throaty, emotive sound that puts one in mind of the effect that Steve Winwood spent much of his career pursuing, while first lieutenant Ollie Halsall’s reputation as one of the era’s hottest guitarists is revealed as only one of the strings to his bow — early into the opening “The Man,” he unleashes a mean vibraphone solo as well.

However, “Hold Me Back” quickly restates his lead duty and, though the song itself is little more than a crude rewrite of the Rolling Stones’ “Stray Cat Blues,” the riffs that scythe through the brew are sparkling enough to camouflage any lyrical redundancies. “Money Bag,” too, offers up a showcase that is difficult to shake, duelling with a scat rhythm section that is tasteful enough to eat, but never overwhelming the mood.

The passing of time has not preserved all of Patto’s joys — like so much of the fusion of the age, there are elements that sound preposterously overwrought today. At its best, however, it re-establishes all the glories for which Patto was renowned at the time.

Hold Your Fire

Ignore the fact that the opening title track sounds almost exactly like the intro to Neil Young’s “Ohio” and Patto’s second album kicks into gear from the moment needle strikes vinyl. A driving fiesta of good-time bluesy-rock, “Hold Your Fire” retains just enough of its predecessor’s jazz fusion sensibilities to ensure that you’re never sure what will happen next, but similarly imbibes sufficient oxygen from elsewhere on the early-’70s British rock underground to line up alongside any other primal gem of the age.

Certainly producer Muff Winwood seems considerably more at ease than he did his last time around, hauling Ollie Halsall’s tuneful soloing high up in the mix and framing the album’s best tracks — the melancholy “You, You Point Your Finger” among them — within some breathtakingly lovely arrangements. Another highlight, the funky Faces-like “See You at the Dance Tonight,” almost single-handedly blueprints the best of the still-unborn pub rock boom, while Halsall’s playful “Air Raid Shelter” would not have been out of place on “Hold Your Fire”, which further proves that not all of Patto’s early instincts have been suppressed. Neither do the surprises stop with the music.

“Hold Your Fire” was released in positively the most un-Roger Dean-like sleeve design to which Dean ever put his name.

Roll 'Em, Smoke 'Em, Put Another Line Out

The band switched the label and the new company sent Muff Winwood to produce and change the band’s direction to maybe become more mass friendly. It failed to appeal a new audience and alienated the base they had.
The album has its moments but hardly even one consistent song. It remains an undefinable hotchpotch of possibilities.

Studio albums

  • 1970 – Patto
  • 1971 –  Hold Your Fire
  • 1972 – Roll ’em Smoke ’em Put Another Line Out