Releases from September–October 2025
Great albums from around the world
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Pre-sale of the week is The Anthology Collection (2025 Edition) by The Beatles, out on 21 November.
Jump to: 12 September | 5 September
Releases for 12 September 2025
First out of the starting blocks on 12 September is Dim Probs, an intimate and hypnotic record from Gruff Rhys that mixes acoustic folk with whatever scratchy, primitive electronic machines come to hand on each track. The renowned singer, songwriter, musician, artist and best-selling author Josh Ritter continues his streak of releasing profound and inspirational albums with I Believe in You, My Honeydew, which is a more band-forward release than some of his previous albums. Progressive metal visionaries Between the Buried and Me return with their most immersive and eclectic record yet, mixing uncharted musical detours on The Blue Nowhere with their distinctive aggressive identity, creating a conceptual world unlike anything else in their incredible catalogue. Paul Epworth, one of this century’s most lauded producers and songwriters, collaborated with Baxter Dury to dream up and create Allbarone’s nine-track tour-de-force, building Baxter’s most melodically direct, futuristic collection to date. Finally The End Continues is the newest album from Spinal Tap, on which David St. Hubbins, Nigel Tufnel and Derek Smalls are joined by guests Elton John, Paul McCartney, Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood.
Our release of the week comes from Led Zeppelin, who celebrate the 50th anniversary of their iconic sixth album, Physical Graffiti, with the release of their new Live EP, which presents two live recordings from 1975 and two from Knebworth 1979 on CD and vinyl for the very first time.
- Led Zeppelin celebrate the 50th anniversary of their iconic sixth album, Physical Graffiti, with the release of their new Live EP. The EP features live recordings of ‘In My Time of Dying’ and ‘Trampled Under Foot’ from Earl’s Court 1975, alongside ‘Sick Again’ and ‘Kashmir’ from Knebworth 1979. These live performances were originally released on the 2003 Led Zeppelin DVD and appear on CD and vinyl for the very first time.
- Featuring fellow Welsh artists Cate Le Bon and H. Hawkline on backing vocals and produced with Ali Chant (Yard Act, PJ Harvey), Dim Probs echoes the warmth and closeness of Gruff Rhys’s career-defining first solo album (2005’s Yr Atal Genhedlaeth) and the stargazing melancholy of 2021’s Seeking New Gods. Written and performed entirely in Welsh/Cymraeg, Dim Probs places the listener side by side with one of the country’s greatest and most thoughtful songwriters in the corner of a studio as the songs grow around them from just voice and guitar. The result is an intimate and hypnotic record that mixes acoustic folk with whatever scratchy, primitive electronic machines come to hand on each track. One listen? Dim probs indeed!
- Note: The LP is initially available on orange vinyl.
- The renowned singer, songwriter, musician, artist and best-selling author Josh Ritter – one of today’s most thoughtful and prolific voices – continues his streak of releasing profound and inspirational albums with I Believe in You, My Honeydew, which is a more band-forward release than some of his previous albums. NPR Music has frequently praised Ritter’s songwriting, claiming “he remains a hydrant of ideas while embodying an endless capacity for empathy and indignation, often within a single song.”
- Note: The LP is initially available on root beer vinyl.
- Progressive metal visionaries Between the Buried and Me return with their most immersive and eclectic record yet. Mixing uncharted musical detours with their distinctive aggressive identity, the band create a conceptual world unlike anything else in their incredible catalogue, inviting the listener to experience the journey on their own terms. Though the story takes place in a hotel – The Blue Nowhere – don’t expect haunted corridors or shadowy figures behind every door. “It’s more of a feeling – those moments when you feel alone in the world and use that solitude to reflect on the human experience,” vocalist Thomas Giles Rogers clarifies.
- Note: The LP is initially available on mint green vinyl.
- Paul Epworth, the lauded producer and songwriter whose creations have draped themselves across the airwaves of the 21st Century, approached Baxter Dury backstage at Glastonbury festival in 2024 with to propose a collaboration. Together, they dreamt up Allbarone’s nine-track tour-de-force, stripping away everything and building Baxter’s most melodically direct, futuristic collection in intense daily three-hour shifts. “It’s kind of a character arc that goes through the whole thing, two personalities,” he explains. “It’s very critical of people, this album, whoever they are, maybe some bloke with a moustache and sockless loafers in Shoreditch or a fat old Chiswick gangster lording it up in a really comfortable middle-class part of London.”
- Note: The LP is initially available on Venetian blue marbled vinyl.
- The End Continues is the newest album from Spinal Tap, released in conjunction with the forthcoming film sequel, ‘Spinal Tap II: The End Continues.’ The 13-track album includes new original songs and classics from David St. Hubbins, Nigel Tufnel and Derek Smalls, joined by guests Elton John, Paul McCartney, Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood.
Releases for 5 September 2025
There’s a huge number of releases coming out on 5 September – click here for the full list. Our pick of the bunch starts with Chosen, a hard-hitting album that presents Glenn Hughes at his most explosive and inspired – a masterclass in powerful songwriting and production. Saint Etienne’s new album, International, is the group’s final album-length statement after a 35-year excursion through pop: a dreamlike drift with friends and collaborators, featuring cameos from the higher echelons of pop, from Vince Clarke to Nick Heyward, Confidence Man to Erol Alkan, Chemical Brothers, Orbital, Doves and Xenomania. Cutthroat is an unapologetic, souped-up and supercharged album: this is Shame at their blistering best, with ambitious sonic ideas and the technical chops to execute them, and stamped throughout with their trademark sense of humour. Who Is the Sky?, the first new album from David Byrne since 2018’s acclaimed and award-winning American Utopia, has contributions from musical friends old and new, including St. Vincent, Paramore’s Hayley Williams, drummer Tom Skinner (The Smile) and percussionist Mauro Refoscow. For three solid weeks last winter, Big Thief rode bicycles along frozen streets from Brooklyn to the Power Station in Manhattan, where they played for nine hours a day, improvising arrangements and making collective discoveries that would become Double Infinity.
Our release of the week is Antidepressants, a milestone achievement that sees Suede at the top of their game, translating their approach to playing in front of a live audience directly into this recording. The album is about the tensions of modern life, the paranoia, the anxiety, the neurosis. This is broken music for broken people.
- Antidepressants is a milestone achievement that sees Suede at the top of their game, translating their approach to playing in front of a live audience directly into this recording. “If Autofiction was our punk record, Antidepressants is our post-punk record,” says frontman Brett Anderson. “It’s about the tensions of modern life, the paranoia, the anxiety, the neurosis. We are all striving for connection in a disconnected world. This was the feel I wanted the songs to have. This is broken music for broken people.”
- Note: The LP is initially available on white vinyl.
- Glenn Hughes rose to fame in the early 1970s with the band Trapeze before joining Deep Purple in 1973. He later launched a prolific solo run and formed several notable bands, including Black Country Communion (with Joe Bonamassa), California Breed and The Dead Daisies. He now returns with Chosen, a hard-hitting new studio album that presents him at his most explosive and inspired. Produced by longtime collaborator Søren Andersen, it is a masterclass in powerful songwriting and production. This is Glenn Hughes at the peak of his craft: bold, loud and unforgettable.
- Saint Etienne’s new album, International, is the group’s final album-length statement after a 35-year excursion through pop. A dreamlike drift with friends and collaborators, International features cameos from the higher echelons of pop – from Vince Clarke to Nick Heyward, Confidence Man to Erol Alkan, Chemical Brothers, Orbital, Doves and Xenomania. Saint Etienne are the ’90s band who never left us, never imploded and never adhered to clichéd excess. They are a testament to getting along, getting on with creating something new – and, of course, getting away with it.
- Note: The LP is initially available on orange bio-vinyl.
- Cutthroat is Shame at their blistering best: an unapologetic album that’s souped-up and supercharged. It’s exactly where you want Shame to be, with ambitious sonic ideas and the technical chops to execute them. Stamped throughout with Shame’s trademark sense of humour, the album takes on the big issues of today and gleefully toys with them – casting a merciless eye on themes of conflict and corruption, hunger and desire, lust, envy and the omnipresent shadow of cowardice. Musically, too, the record plays with visceral new ideas: electronic loops made on tour for fun have found their place on the album. Cutthroat shows with a resounding flourish that, right now, Shame have never sounded better.
- Note: The LP is initially available on independent shops exclusive hot-shots coloured vinyl, including a few signed copies.
- Who Is the Sky?, the first new album from David Byrne since 2018’s acclaimed and award-winning American Utopia, has contributions from musical friends old and new, including St. Vincent, Paramore’s Hayley Williams, drummer Tom Skinner (The Smile) and percussionist Mauro Refoscow. The album was produced by the Grammy-winning Kid Harpoon (Harry Styles, Miley Cyrus) and features intimate orchestral arrangement by members of New York-based chamber ensemble Ghost Train Orchestra.
- Note: The LP is initially available on both lemon-yellow vinyl and independent shops exclusive apple-green vinyl with a poster.
- Double Infinity – the follow-up to 2022’s Grammy-nominated album, Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe in You – was recorded last winter at the Power Station, New York City. For three solid weeks, Big Thief rode bicycles along frozen streets between Brooklyn and Manhattan, meeting in Power’s Station’s warm wood-panelled room, where they would play for nine hours a day, tracking together – simultaneously – improvising arrangements and making collective discoveries.
- Note: The LP is initially available on green vinyl, exclusive to independent shops.
Other releases for 2025
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