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A lot of you probably know by now that our son Blake is making his own music, under the name Family Stereo, and has recently signed to the lovely Bella Union records. Debut album “The Thread” is released July 31st, and this is the second single from it. I first heard this song a year ago when Blake played it at the kitchen table and said, “Here’s something I’ve just written”. I thought, oh yeah that’s great. Tracey Thorn.

And now it is out in the world, with beautiful production from Sam and lap steel from Dov. It’s called “Waiting on Nina“, and it’s gorgeous, a woozy, dreamy slice of summer.

A clear sense of confidence in restraint radiates out of the debut album from Blake Watt, the London-based singer/songwriter who records as Family Stereo. The pleasure lies in the delicacy of measure on The Thread, an album of folk-tinged and brush-stroked reflections on distance and connection that majors in an evocative kind of narrative economy, suggesting rather than telling its stories. Inviting, dynamic and subtly cinematic, its artfully crafted precision feels like the work of a fast-maturing talent.

The record arrives in the aftermath of a string of prodigious EPs from the 25-year-old Blake, son of Everything but the Girl’s Tracey Thorn and Ben Watt. The development from those early works is clear, but it’s the kind of evolution that prefers to refine rather than embellish. As Blake says, “I think my writing has been getting more pared-back as I’ve progressed. I find more and more that simple is better. I love telling a story in the simplest way or conveying a feeling in the simplest way, with not too many frills.”

That intuitive clarity is evident on the album opener, ‘Remedy’, where Blake suggests a history at a stroke with the opening line (“After all you said and all I did…”). The haunting arrangement is minimalist yet richly expressive, Blake’s spare piano and producer Sam Hodder-Williams’s synth shimmers maintaining a mood of emotional suspension with a featherlight touch and an elegantly unhurried grasp of melody. Blake’s warmly tender vocal, too, gets the measure of the song in its controlled sense of pace and understatement.

Throughout the record, details accrue in finely judged increments. The plangent soft rock of ‘Waiting on Nina’ navigates themes of personal discovery over Dov Sikowitz’s luminous lapsteel. ‘Sea Change’ touches on how relationships move in time over mellifluous synths, used to evoke a mood rather than stress a melody. ‘Fault Lines’ navigates the mysteries in the spaces between people with a falling shiver of ethereal synths, a pulsing rhythm and a lean lyricism; etching out the bare bones of a story, Blake tells the listener all they need to fill in the blanks. Touches of mandolin, banjo and mellotron help flesh out the songs’ ambient surroundings elsewhere.

A former drama student, he understands the value of implication over explication, referencing New York’s Wooster Group as an influence. “They would present these disparate images on stage, like a tent with a light emanating from within and an old gramophone playing old music. And they’ll have someone reading out a transcript of a telephone call from their mother or something, and it conjures up different feelings. They will have an overarching story but it’s more impressionist. I like that brush-strokes approach.”

The title track bears out the point, acting as a kind of album centrepiece in the way it conveys the record’s core story through themes and motifs – “images of space, distance, wide open country, badlands, tunnels”, says Blake. While the influence is a long-distance relationship, literalism is deftly avoided. “I like asking questions more than answering them in lyrics,” says Blake. “A lot of the lyric writers I like do that. They will tell a story through snapshots rather than, you know, this happened and then that happened. I don’t like lyrics that are too literal because it doesn’t let the mind explore what they could be inferring. I’m trying to capture a feeling, or a sense of not understanding a feeling and trying to get to grips with that feeling.”

The rapturous dream-state reverie of ‘Removed’ illustrates the power of understated images, its red moons and figures in white conjuring ghostly tableaux; Blake credits the influence of The Wicker Man for the song’s enveloping mood. The mantric ‘Collapsing’ is similarly haunted, while ‘DLR’ shows a discreet dynamism and a canny grasp of contrast, its upbeat folk-rock melody framing a contemplation on growing up with youthful spritz. The dramatic crescendo of ‘Silhouette on the Hill’ – another striking image – is all the more powerful for the restraint shown elsewhere on the record, lending a tale of “connections missed” an understated yet tangible force. And in the record’s climax, ‘Three Moon Trail’ contemplates a gentle arrival before ‘Tunnels’ closes the record on a question mark, sending you tunnelling back to the album’s opening to trace rhyming motifs and images across its emotional route map.

Formerly a drummer, Blake began making his way toward these songs of travel and distance when he took up the guitar at 15. From influences including Elliott Smith, John Martyn, Bob Dylan, Neil Young and Adrianne Lenker, he made formative forays into folk-pop with songs such as ‘Robot Boy’ and ‘My Favourite Band’; whimsical gems with a distinct sense of levity and unforced melody. He honed his voice live, across slots at festivals including Kendal Calling, headline shows from London’s Windmill to the Lexington, and gigs supporting the likes of Lichen Slow and Midlake. Eagle-eyed audiences might have spotted him at London’s Moth Club in 2025 performing with a reconvened Everything but the Girl, where a cover of ‘Removed’ held firm amid a carefully curated setlist. With support from John Kennedy on Radio X, standout EP tracks like ‘Matter’ and ‘I Knew I Loved You Then!’ plotted a sure, steady growth, while the gorgeously autumnal ‘Early Promise’ has notched up an impressive 215,000-ish Spotify streams.

Building on – and, to some extent, dismantling – those foundations, The Thread was recorded over nine months in the north London studio of album producer and close collaborator Sam Hodder-Williams, who also provided string arrangements and multitasked across acoustic/electric guitar, mandolin, synths and more. “Musically, I wanted to explore folk songwriting but with a kind of lush arrangement,” says Blake. “Sam is very good at realising a sound, and he can write string arrangements, and we wanted to throw everything in the pot but keep it kind of natural. I wanted to explore the pared-back thing but then his arrangements are quite lush, and I think they complement each other quite nicely.”

With collaborators including Pendo Masote on violin, Tom Allan on banjo, Ella Bleakley on backing vocals (‘Tunnels’) and George Vaux on bass helping add hints of colour, the result is an album of lush melodies and moods, a record that moves at its own pace, maps out a space of its own making and invites the listener in. “There’s so much good music coming out at the moment and it is quite an understated record,” says Blake, “but I hope that people give it some time. I’m just trying to explore the craft as much as I can and to get better all the time.” Follow The Thread, then: it will lead you somewhere special. 

releases July 31st, 2026

Due out in July – the monumental 20CD ‘Along the Road Forever: Martin Carthy at the BBC 1965-2022’. I had the great pleasuse of curating it – a testament to a giant of English music who played his last public performance at the Dick Gaughan tribute concert at Glasgow’s Royal Concert in January this year:

Though he eschews such terms himself, few would deny that Martin Carthy MBE is the godfather of English folk – a singer, tradition bearer and guitar stylist of colossal quality and influence with 60 years of celebrated recorded work as a solo artist, as a duettist with Dave Swarbrick and with his daughter Eliza Carthy, and as a member of ground-breaking ensembles Steeleye Span, the Albion Country BandBrass Monkey, the WatersonsWaterson:Carthy and Wood, Wilson, Carthy.

All of these collaborations and more are represented in this stunning collection from Martin’s extraordinarily extensive career of interactions with the British Broadcasting Corporation – as a studio session guest and concert performer over a span of 1965–2022, across BBC Radios 1, 2, 3 and 4 and BBC television, with early performances from 1960s regional channel ABC TV as a bonus. What survives of Martin’s BBC output is perhaps a fraction of what once aired over the course of nearly 56 years of moments on the usually ephemeral medium of broadcasting, yet its range and heft is remarkable – an alternative career history and testament to a truly singular artistry: 22½ hours328 tracks (two thirds from a master source) of which there are 237 distinct items of repertoire.

Disc 1: Studio sessions 1973–77 Sounds of the 70s, 1973 (Albion Country Band), John Peel, 1974, 1976, 1977 (all Martin solo)

Disc 2: Onstage 1973–7 Folkweave, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1977 – live at St Albans Folk Club, Loughborough Festival and Cambridge Folk Festival (all Martin solo)

Disc 3: Onstage 1977–78 Folk ’78 and Folkweave – live at Sidmouth Folk Festival 1978 and 1979 (all Martin solo)

Disc 4: Onstage 1979–1986 Sidmouth Folk Festival 1979 (Martin solo), Cambridge Folk Festival 1982 (Brass Monkey), Folk on 2 concert 1983 (Brass Monkey)

Disc 5: Onstage 1981–83 Stagfolk, Godalming 1981, Fylde Folk Festival 1982, Pontardawe Folk Festival 1983 (all Martin solo)

Disc 6: Studio sessions 1983–88 John Peel 1983 (Martin solo), Andy Kershaw 1987 (Martin solo), Andy Kershaw 1988 (The Watersons), Andy Kershaw 1988 (Martin solo), Folk on 2 1987 (Martin & Chris Wood)

Disc 7: Onstage 1984–1990 Whitby Festival 1985 (Martin solo), BBC Radio Sussex 1984 (Martin solo), Salisbury Arts Centre 1990 (Martin & Dave Swarbrick)

Disc 8: Martin Carthy & Dave Swarbrick: Studio sessions & onstage 1988–97 Folk on 2 1988, 1989, 1997, Andy Kershaw 1990, Belfast Festival c. 1988

Disc 9: Martin & Eliza Carthy: Glastonbury Festival, 1995

Disc 10: Studio sessions 1995–97 Andy Kershaw 1995 (Waterson:Carthy), Folk on 2 1997 (Martin solo – alt takes), Folk on 2 1997 (Martin & Dave Swarbrick – alt takes)

Disc 11: Studio sessions 1997–2004 Folk on 2 1997, Andy Kershaw 2004 (all Martin solo)

Disc 12: Onstage 1990–99 Sidmouth Folk Festival 1990 (The Watersons), Sidmouth Folk Festival 1992 (Martin solo), Rare Music Club, Bristol 1997 (Wood, Wilson, Carthy), Cambridge Folk Festival 1999 (Martin solo)

Disc 13: Onstage 1999 Sidmouth Folk Festival 1999 (part 1) (Martin solo)

Disc 14: Onstage 1999 / 1986 Sidmouth Folk Festival 1999 (part 2) (Martin solo), Butlin’s, Bognor Regis 1986 (Brass Monkey)

Disc 15: Martin Carthy with Norma Waterson: 60th Birthday Concert, 2001 Alhambra Theatre, Bradford

Disc 16: Onstage 2005–14 BBC Folk Awards 2005 (Martin with Martin Simpson & Paul Sartin), The Barbican 2005 (Martin solo), The Barbican 2006 (Martin solo), The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan – A Folk Tribute 2011 (Martin solo), Front Row 2011 (Martin & Eliza Carthy), In Tune 2012 (Martin with the Aurora Orchestra), Cambridge Folk Festival 2013 (Martin & Dave Swarbrick), BBC Folk Awards 2014 (Martin & Eliza Carthy)

Disc 17: Studio Sessions 2014–22 Jools Holland 2011 (Martin & Jools Holland Ensemble), World on 3 2014 (Martin & Eliza Carthy), Bob Fisher, BBC Radio Tees 2017 (Martin solo), In Tune 2020 (Martin & John Kirkpatrick), In Tune 2020 (Martin & Eliza Carthy), Music Planet 2022 (Martin & Eliza Carthy)

Disc 18: 1963–68 Songs from Hullaballoo (ABC TV 1963) (Martin with Bob Davenport, Rory McEwen, Lisa Turner), Songs from Hallelujah (ABC TV, 1966) (Martin with the Johnny Scott Trio), London Folk Song Cellar 1966 (Martin solo; Martin & Dave Swarbrick; Martin & Rory McEwen; Martin & Isla Cameron), Once More with Felix 1967 (Martin & Dave Swarbrick), Degrees of Folk 1968 (Martin & Dave Swarbrick)

Disc 19: Steeleye Span: 1970–71 Top Gear 1970, John Peel Sunday Concert 1971, Sounds of the 70s 1970, 1971

Disc 20: Bonus: off-air 1966–73 Hallelujah (ABC TV) 1966 (Martin solo), Wonderful Copenhagen 1967 (Martin & Dave Swarbrick), My Kind of Folk 1968 (Martin & Dave Swarbrick), Folk on Friday 1971 (Martin solo), John Peel 1972 (Martin solo), unidentified TV show 1972 (Martin & Dave Swarbrick), John Peel 1973 (Martin solo)

The troubadour, the folk-rocker, the guitar hero, the acapella master, the champion of songs from the people, the voice of history, the wit and raconteur, Martin Carthy seemingly walked the road forever, never strayed far from the folk clubs and never sold out. This limited edition set – lovingly curated by Colin Harper – includes a lavishly illustrated 80-page hardback book with essays by Clinton Heylin and Kevin Boyd, a 1971 Keith Morris photograph signed by Martin and 20 discs of audio magic mastered by Pete Reynolds. With your hosts John PeelSuzy KleinAndy Kershaw, Jim Lloyd and further denizens of Broadcasting House, here is Martin Carthy providing, time after time, plentiful evidence for those who would – despite his protestations – call him a legend.

THE MOST COMPREHENSIVE MARTIN CARTHY COLLECTION EVER ASSEMBLED – 20 CD SET WITH LIVE AND SESSION PERFORMANCES RECORDED FOR THE BBC OVER A 57 YEAR PERIOD

 INCLUDES 80-PAGE HARDBACK BOOK WITH AN ESSAY BY CELEBRATED BIOGRAPHER CLINTON HEYLIN, COVERING MARTIN’S WHOLE LIFE IN MUSIC

 WITH UNSEEN PHOTOS, MANY FROM MARTIN’S PERSONAL ARCHIVE, SEPARATE SESSION NOTES BY RENOWNED CARTHY CHRONICLER KEVIN BOYD AND A PHOTOGRAPH SIGNED BY MARTIN

Released: 17th July 2026

Mannequin Pussy - I Got Heaven [Indie Exclusive Tie Dye Splash]

Mannequin Pussy’s music feels like a resilient and galvanizing shout that demands to be heard. Across four albums, the Philadelphia rock band that consists of Colins “Bear” Regisford (bass, vocals), Kaleen Reading (drums, percussion), Maxine Steen (guitar, synths), and Marisa Dabice (guitar, vocals) has made cathartic tunes about despairing times.

“There’s just so much constantly going on that feels intentionally evil that trying to make something beautiful feels like a radical act,” says Dabice. “The ethos of this band has always been to bring people together.”

Their latest album, “I Got Heaven“, is the band’s most fully realized recording yet. Over ten ambitious tracks which abruptly turn from searing punk to inviting alternative pop, the album is deeply concerned with desire, the power in being alone, and how to live in an unfeeling and unkind world. It’s a document of a band doubling down on their unshakable bond to make something furious, thrilling, and wholly alive.

When Missy Dabice sings, the words course through her entire body. Just as quickly as she screams about the cyclical nature of lust, she whispers her heartbreak and longing. Mannequin Pussy lives between those two spaces: the raw ferocity of feminine rage and the quiet moments of hopeless vulnerability. “I want to be a danger,” she sighs. “I want to be adored.”

When an artist comes to the Tiny Desk, they often seize upon the opportunity to reimagine their music. Here, a string quartet helps to crack these songs wide open, swelling with urgency and overflowing with emotion. “I Don’t Know You” and “Split Me Open,” in particular, soar with lush string arrangements, yet don’t stray from the songs’ uninhibited and deeply relatable appetite to be desired.

If, like me, Mannequin Pussy’s Romantic found a way into your tender heart 10 years ago; thankfully, the band commemorates the anniversary by performing the title track with nostalgic appreciation. But the highlight of the show, just before “Loud Bark,” lies in Dabice’s deep acknowledgement of how it feels to be human right now: the pain, the grief and the sadness that swirls inside of us.

“Your rage is a part of you and you have to honour it. Give it the space to breathe,” says Dabice, before she leads the audience in a primal, cathartic scream.

SET LIST
“I Don’t Know You”
“Split Me Open”
“Loud Bark”
“Romantic”

MUSICIANS
Missy Dabice: vocals, guitar
Maxine Steen: guitar, keys
Colins “Bear” Regisford: bass
Kaleen Reading: drums
Shaan Ramaprasad: violin, music director, string arrangements
Ashley Parham: violin
Kyung Leblanc: viola
Juliano Bitonti: cello

 Johanna Samuels announces her new album, “Sorry, Kid“.

Gathering nearly two decades of songwriting into something lived-in, luminous, and fully realized, “Sorry, Kid” balances warm 70s tones, emotional precision, and the feeling of looking backward without losing forward motion.

Johanna shares “Circles” featuring Tyler Ballgame, a song that reframes repetition as evolution. What first feels like distance slowly reveals itself as movement, kindness, and return. Piano, mellotron, and sun-faded harmonies drift through a song that strolls in with summer ease while asking what it means to stay connected in a world grown disengaged and unkind.

When sincerity is lost, all we can do is wait for it to come around again. “Circles” gives hope that it will.

Sorry, Kid” never feels brittle. There’s humour in its edges and steadiness in its performances. You can hear the tape hiss, the room, and the breaths between lines. The record trusts that imperfection can hold weight.

Sorry, Kid” arrives August 14th

The RASPBERRIES – “

Posted: May 30, 2026 in MUSIC
'Mildly scandalous': Raspberries lead singer Eric Carmen - Getty Images

‘Mildly scandalous’: Raspberries lead singer Eric Carmen – In the early ’70s, when rock was either sprawling (prog) or heavy (hard rock), the Raspberries championed something different: concise, melodic power-pop. Fronted by Eric Carmen, they delivered sugary harmonies with a rock punch, and their single ‘Go All the Way’ was a huge radio smash.

For a time, they looked like inheritors of The Beatles’ pop mantle. But power-pop rarely sells longevity, and after four albums, they split. Carmen’s solo career and ballads (‘All By Myself’) overshadowed his former band. Today, the Raspberries are remembered mainly by power-pop aficionados, but their best singles still sparkle.

Though one could argue that the inclusion of the Raspberries’ 1972 hit “Go All The Way” on the Guardians of the Galaxy soundtrack –  as well as being briefly featured in an episode of HBO’s short-lived series Vinyl – represents a bit of a cultural rediscovery of the Cleveland, Ohio pop rock band, the truth is that the group remains mostly forgotten. One of the biggest issues that worked against the Raspberries is that their record company – and by extension, the record-buying public at large – couldn’t figure out where the band fit into the larger pop landscape and were summarily ignored.

That’s a crying shame because, while it’s true that the Raspberries sounded quite different from many of their contemporaries, this is what made them a cut above many of those same acts, as Raspberries songs were built around ear-pleasing melodies and strong vocal harmonies. Following brief mainstream success with the aforementioned single “Go All The Way,” the band inadvertently shot themselves in the foot by experimenting with their sound over their next few records; a decision that produced plenty of great music that no one listened to. After trying and failing to make it big, the Raspberries called it quits in 1974, leaving fans to wait until 30 years later for a reunion tour in 2004.

From the heart of the Australian psych scene… rainbow rockersBabe Rainbow return with their 7th studio album “Acid And Honey” recorded on an op shop acoustic on a houseboat in Amsterdam and finished at zen master Mullarky’s Malibu ranch. Exciting country-pop beat production backs wailing Babe Rainbow vocals on solid skanking hip-hop hard rocking finger funky sounds.

The first single  “Polymucalsaccharride” is just something Perry Farrell says and it means “drool, like you’re dribbling cos the truth is once you hit the road you don’t remember the good shows, they’re just like every other show”

New album “Acid and Honey” out July 16th

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The Black Crowes made a recent return visit to their Atlanta roots a special one during an concert stop in the area thanks to a couple of surprises, including an unexpected AC/DC cover.

It happened Saturday evening (May 23rd) in the closing moments of the group’s performance at the Ameris Bank Amphitheatre in the local suburb of Alpharetta. The night had already seen an appearance from Drivin’ n’ Cryin‘ frontman Kevn Kinney, a Georgia musical fixture, who came out to guest with the group on a version of his band’s “Acceleration.” That would have been plenty of excitement for the fans in attendance, but the Black Crowes had one more ace up their sleeves.

After closing out the main set with strong versions of a couple of proven catalogue tracks, “Twice as Hard” and “Remedy”, the band returned to the stage for an encore and Chris Robinson addressed the crowd. “I know you can probably guess this, but we always love coming home,” he shared. “Although I left Atlanta in 1990, so it doesn’t look like it when I drive around, but I know we’re home.” Thanking both Whiskey Myers and Southall, their current touring partners on the ongoing Southern Hospitality tour, he added, “I hope y’all like this one!”

A fiery version of “Riff Raff” from AC/DC’s 1978 Bon Scott-era album “Powerage” proved to be the perfect way to wrap up their evening in Georgia.

“The interesting thing about it, you know, [early Black Crowes bassist] Johnny [Colt] is rockin’ the Cliff [Williams] bass parts pretty much [back then],” Rich Robinson shared with UCR in 2024. “The drum parts were very groove-oriented. Very Phil Rudd, not a ton of fills. And a lot of the guitar parts were just doubled. It was minimalist in that approach.”

Each night on the band’s summer run supporting their newest album, “A Pound of Feathers”, has brought along new surprises. The trek kicked off May in Austin, Texas with guest appearances from John Doe of X, who joined the Crowes to perform “The New World”  from the 1983 X release “More Fun in the New World“. Guitar legend Charlie Sexton came out that same night to jam “Feelin’ Alright?” from the Traffic catalogue (also made famous in a whole different way, by of course, Joe Cocker’s subsequent version).

“But also, obviously, there was also Rolling Stones, the Faces — everything and in between that you could imagine,” he continued. “But there was a lot more of that [AC/DC feel] and listening to [the first Black Crowes album] “Shake Your Money Maker” [in recent years] really brought that back. I was like, ‘Oh, I forgot.’ We were way into that rhythm section and the interplay between the guitars and what’s happening between Cliff and Phil Rudd. So it was eye-opening to look back.”

St. Vincent, Jules Buckley - Live in London! (BBC Proms at the Royal Albert Hall)

An opportunity to relive (or experience for the first time) that enthralling evening; a historic occasion that found Annie Clark, Buckley and the orchestra reimagining 19 classics, staples and rarely played deep cuts spanning the St. Vincent catalogue from 2007’s solo debut, “Marry Me”, up to 2024’s multiple-GRAMMY-winning “All Born Screaming”.

Featuring reimagined works from across her entire career, this is a chance for fans to experience an evening that Rolling Stone UK called “A glorious re-imagination,” what The Times Of London classified as “Here’s how to do a classical crossover,” and about which Far Out Magazine UK said “There are certain gigs that are always destined to be great — like St. Vincent, at the Royal Albert Hall, with an orchestra.”

’Digital Witness’ comes from ‘Live in London!’ an album capturing last year’s majestic BBC Proms performance at London’s Royal Albert Hall accompanied by the 60-piece Jules Buckley Orchestra. Available on vinyl July 10th.

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Manchester, four-piece Westside Cowboy have announced their debut album, “It Goes On” on Island Records, and shared a new single, “Kick Stones (The Boys),” via a music video.

The of the album, the band say: “We wanted the music to be instant, concise, and honest to us as people today. There will be plenty of time in the future for the sprawling triple album with horns and string sections but for now, it’s young music made by some young(ish) people. We want to make songs that are lean and imperfect.”

‘It Goes On’ is the debut album from the Manchester-based four piece Westside Cowboy, produced by Loren Humphrey.

In an age of algorithms, Westside Cowboy are pure-spirited proof of the magic that can only come from human connection. Just three years on from forming in Manchester, starting a band for the fun of it without so much as a plan to even play a gig, the quartet – Jimmy Bradbury (vocals, guitar), Reuben Haycocks (vocals, guitar), Aoife Anson O’Connell (vocals, bass) and Paddy Murphy (drums) – have crafted perhaps the year’s most exciting debut by simply figuring out what feels good, and following it into the horizon.

“There’s no computer that could make “It Goes On”. No formula to creating the joyous whack of emotion that comes from these four mates pooling their ideas and watching them fly. “If you go in with a preconceived notion of what you’re doing, it’s sort of destined to fail because you’re not truly being yourself,” suggests Aoife. “So because we didn’t think we were gonna [do any of this] at the beginning, all we were thinking was: ‘What’s going to be the most enjoyable thing to play right now?’”

Aoife, Reuben and Paddy all knew each other from the Royal Northern College of Music; Jimmy and Paddy had played in a band together a few years previously. When they decided to sit in a practice room as a quartet for the first time, there was only one rule for what would follow. “We just wanted to make simple music. I think the reason there was such chemistry – and when we look back, even after two weeks we were really working well together – is because it was such a simple statement of intent,” recalls Reuben. “Any time we’d disagree on something – which was very rare – we’d just consult the original mission statement: if you’ve got too many chords in it, you’re wrong.”

A purposeful reaction against the “more abstract” styles they’d individually been dallying with before, Westside Cowboy swiftly became a place for concise, straight-hitting ideas influenced by “early rock’n’roll: Lonnie Donegan, The Beatles and The Velvet Underground,” says Paddy. Jimmy remembers spending the bulk of 2023 playing the first five songs of an Elvis Presley album on repeat. “When we started the band, people would ask who was in it and we’d be like, ‘We got this guy who works in a guitar shop, only listens to Elvis and dresses like Marty McFly – you know, that guy!’” Aoife laughs.

If these were the solid early seeds of Westside Cowboy, then the biggest thing that’s shaped them into the exploratory, melodically robust band they are now, has been their own journey. When they did start playing gigs (their first two shows were at a coffee shop, and for an animal rights charity), they found that their songs were being stretched and pushed forward in real time. Paddy notes that the true crux of “It Goes On’s” propulsive, heady opening track ‘Kick Stones (The Boys)’ is “as much about how we made it as the lyrics”.

“We loved the way it felt to play, but we thought we couldn’t record it like that or people would think we wanted to be a stadium rock band,” Aoife jokes. Instead, they translated it through their own lens, using a live recording of The Velvet Underground’s ‘What Goes On’ as their primary reference point. “We always thought, if we can pull this off it could be really fun,” Paddy grins. “Taking this mad, ‘70s rock thing but then having it played by a bunch of scrawny kids.” Since those first shows, Westside Cowboy have found themselves notching up an increasingly wild list of live milestones. Last year, they won Glastonbury’s prestigious Emerging Talent Competition, leading them to an opening slot on the televised Woodsies Stage. Since then, they’ve toured with Black Country, New Road and Geese while, later this year, they’ll play their biggest headline gigs to date, including stop offs at London’s O2 Kentish Town Forum and Manchester’s Albert Hall. Winning the Glastonbury slot, says Reuben, felt like “the first moment that we realised we really were a band”. Now, with the making of It Goes On, Westside Cowboy have underlined exactly what kind of band they want to be.

Recorded with producer Loren Humphrey (Geese, Cameron Winter, Wunderhorse) at Greenmount Studios in Leeds over a period that saw them thinking on their feet and remodelling their production into an even more directly energetic new form, there’s an urgency of feeling to “It Goes On” that could only ever really happen with a young group’s debut record. “First albums are often my favourites because you can tell there’s a point to prove. You’re firing on all cylinders because you know that this may never happen again,” says Paddy. “You’re trying to create these big feelings, but all you have with you to string it together is a pencil and a Pritt Stick.”

In a time of terrifying division and conflict, Westside Cowboy always try to focus on what unites us. Early on in the group’s life, they co-created No Band Is An Island: a Manchester-based collective putting on fundraising nights to spotlight both local artists and important issues via speakers from charities and direct action groups.I think we wanted to engage with politics in a way that felt more impactful beyond the music,” notes Aoife. In their current video for ‘Kick Stones (The Boys)’, they called upon the skills of FC United: a splinter team that started when Man United were sold to an American corporation. “They’re very community minded and they have a similar atmosphere to what we want to be,” says Reuben. “Their ethos is ‘making friends not millionaires’.” 

Image may contain Animal Bird Applique Pattern Quilt Art and Collage

Florida-born, Louisiana-based songwriter Thomas Dollbaum’s specific strain of heartland rock is all about place. He has the type of rich baritone that reverberates throughout a room, outlining its every identifying nook and cranny in the process. However, on his second album, he draws inspiration from the great American pastime of roaming, revisiting past relationships and old wounds like familiar haunts.

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Birds of Paradise

by Thomas Dollbaum

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Rabbits 00:00 / 02:50
  • Digital AlbumStreaming + DownloadIncludes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.Download available in 16-bit/44.1kHz.Buy Digital Album  $12 USD  or moreSend as Gift 
  • Black Vinyl LPRecord/Vinyl + Digital Album
    Includes unlimited streaming of Birds of Paradise via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.

    Includes unlimited streaming of Birds of Paradise via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.Download available in 16-bit/44.1kHz.shipping out on or around May 22, 2026Buy Vinyl  $21.98 USD or more Send as Gift 
  • Roseate Spoonbill Pink Vinyl LPRecord/Vinyl + Digital Album
    Includes unlimited streaming of Birds of Paradise via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.

    First 100 Purchasers get a limited “Thomas Dollbaum” carpenter pencil!

    Includes unlimited streaming of Birds of Paradise via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.Download available in 16-bit/44.1kHz.Sold Out
  • Compact DiscCompact Disc (CD) + Digital Album
    Includes unlimited streaming of Birds of Paradise via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.

    Includes unlimited streaming of Birds of Paradise via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.Download available in 16-bit/44.1kHz.Sold Out
1.Visitation 02:10
2.Dozen Roses 05:24
3.Rabbits 02:50
4.Coyote 03:57
5.Waterbirds 04:34
6.Big Boi 04:56
7.Pulverize 03:52 video
8.King’s Landing 02:58
9.Scrub Jay 03:57
10.Blue Meets Blue 03:04

about

The realest-deal storyteller in indie-rock today is the Tampa-born, New Orleans-based singer/songwriter Thomas Dollbaum, and “Birds of Paradise” is his most powerful and dynamic work yet. Following up his critically acclaimed “Wellswood” (Big Legal Mess, 2022) and “Drive All Night” EP (Dear Life Records, 2025), “Birds of Paradise” is a goodbye letter to lost loved ones and former selves. These songs find Dollbaum searching for acceptance in the transient in-between places: Florida’s pine flatwoods, backroads leading to I-95, where birds fly across the water. And even though the ghosts of his alt-county predecessors Townes and Molina are definitely present, on “Birds of Paradise”, Dollbaum emerges from their shadows–waving to the past, sounding all the more like himself.

Recorded in Oxford, Mississippi over the course of a week, the record features a backing band of Josh Halper, Nick Corson, and MJ Lenderman, the latter of whom tackles drums, guitar, and backing vocals.

“Dozen Roses” is from “Birds of Paradise” by Thomas Dollbaum, out May 22nd, 2026 via Dear Life Records