Releases from March–April 2026
Great albums from around the world
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Find releases from 2025.
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Jump to: 24 April | 10 April | 3 April | 27 March | 20 March | 13 March | 6 March
Releases for 24 April 2026
- Einar Solberg Vox Occulta
- A bold, heavy and symphonic statement from the Leprous frontman, recorded in collaboration with the much-sought-after Norwegian Radio Orchestra.
- Foo Fighters Your Favorite Toy
- The band’s hardest-rocking album to date sees them pushing boundaries as they pin the volume meters, burning through 10 absolute bangers in under 40 minutes.
- Julia Cumming Julia
- An unadorned declaration of independence: voice and piano uniting for a liberating proclamation of self that rejects doubt, misogyny and the notion of being ‘too much’.
- Cavs Sojourn
- The second album from from the King Gizzard drummer features 10 instrumentals rooted in his love of spiritual jazz, prog and Krautrock, but never anchored to it.
- Failure Location Lost
- After half a decade, the influential shoegaze pioneers return with nine new tracks, showcasing a focused, modern vision of their signature alternative space-rock sound.
- Noah Kahan The Great Divide
- A reflection on Noah’s past, his complicated relationship with family and friends, and the disconnect and distance that silence and unspoken truths create between people.
Releases for 10 April 2026
- Richard Barbieri Hauntings
- A diverse collection of dark but uplifting immersive sound worlds from the Japan and Porcupine Tree synthesist, nostalgic for the past and for things that didn’t happen yet still manage to haunt the mind and soul.
- Brown Horse Total Dive
- On the Norwich band’s strongest work to date, they lean away from the playfulness and eclecticism of their previous works and step forward into the darkness, moving confidently between searing noise and delicate reflection.
- Ella Langley Dandelion
- The second album from an artist who has redefined the next wave of country music with her magnetic, unmistakable voice and fearless songwriting.
- Joe Jackson Hope and Fury
- Often labelled a musical chameleon, the Grammy-winning Jackson insists that most of his work belongs to his own ‘mainstream’ – sophisticated pop songs with ever-shifting rhythms and textures.
- Long Distance Calling The Phantom Void
- Epic musical studies of transcendent beauty, surging storms of sound in instrumental perfection, conveying profound emotion without uttering a single syllable. Just sound. Pure sound.
- Pictish Trail Life Slime
- A strange, tender, psychedelic electro-pop record shaped by transformation, exhaustion, hope, guilt and renewal further refines Johnny Lynch’s world of lo-fi electronics, warped melodies, baggy rhythms and emotionally direct songwriting.
Releases for 3 April 2026
- Arlo Parks Ambiguous Desire
- Parks has swapped live band sessions for modular synths, Ableton plugins and samplers that channel the frenetic, vibrant spaces she’s immersed in, all while spotlighting the acclaimed poetry and lyricism she’s beloved for.
- Billy Fuller Fragments
- Moody, immersive, and utterly unbound – kosmiche-inflected, hauntological electronica plays freely with melody, and motorik grooves pulse beneath skewed electro textures.
- Bruce Hornsby Indigo Park
- This concept album of sorts is an extended multi-dimensional inquiry into the nature of ageing and memory, with Hornsby contemplating moments from his deep past, often with a lightness of tone.
- Corrosion of Conformity Good God / Baad Man
- Raw, dynamic, and unapologetically diverse, the album moves from high-energy punk to swampy Southern grooves and heavy riff-driven rock, delivering a hard-hitting ride that’s as gritty as it is soulful.
- Peach PRC Porcelain
- Porcelain bridges the ink-faerie world of ‘Peach PRC’ with Shaylee Curnow’s raw humanity, exploring identity, evolution and self-acceptance through a vulnerable creative lens.
- Venetian Snares Traditional Synthesizer Music (10th Anniversary Edition)
- This collection of songs created and performed live exclusively on the modular synthesiser now includes ten additional tracks previously available only on a limited-edition CD.
Releases for 27 March 2026
- Raye This Music May Contain Hope
- The multiple award-winning global superstar’s highly anticipated second album is set in four ‘seasons’, taking listeners on a sonic journey that begins with darkness and ends with light.
- Black Label Society Engines of Demolition
- One of heavy music’s most unshakeable pillars deliver blues-soaked grooves, hard-hitting riffs and soul-baring ballads, displaying an unrelenting commitment to pure, uncompromising hard rock.
- Butler, Blake & Grant Murmurs
- The trio’s second album in some ways goes back to where it all began for them: reimagining songs from their individual back catalogues, which was the premise for their very first shows stogether.
- Courtney Barnett Creature of Habit
- This decisive new chapter in the Aussie singer’s musical evolution is a bold, emotionally resonant record that explores the central question: how to get out of your own way so you can truly feel your life.
- Flea Honora
- After a nearly five-decade career as one of his generation’s defining rock bassists, his debut full-length solo album has allowed Flea to return to his first musical loves: jazz and playing the trumpet.
- Godsticks Void
- Godsticks’ darkest, heaviest and most uncompromising album to date reflects a disillusionment with a world increasingly defined by division and the loss of nuance, and documents a retreat into a personal void.
Releases for 20 March 2026
- Hanakiv Interlude
- The composer, pianist and singer’s second album is as mysterious as it is seductively unconventional, with piano – both analogue and electronic – only one of its elements, creating a space that allows her to address feelings long buried.
- Luke Combs The Way I Am
- This album dives deeper than ever into the life behind the spotlight, exploring the push and pull of fatherhood and the challenge of balancing family and career, self-belief, the quiet battles of mental health and the clarity that comes from remembering what truly matters.
- Morgan Evans Steel Town
- The highly anticipated new album from the Australian-born, Nashville-based country star showcases his storytelling, resilience and unmistakable charm.
- Tedeschi Trucks Band Future Soul
- On Future Soul, Tedeschi Trucks Band expand their horizons without losing the roots that ground them, exploring deeper grooves and richer textures than ever before.
- The Leaf Library After the Rain, Strange Seeds
- This luminous collection of pastoral indie-pop is the London quartet’s most immediate and melodic work to date, brimming with chiming guitars, buzzing organs and warm, dulcet strings.
- Feeder The Singles
- Feeder’s second UK compilation album, which went platinum on its original release, gets its first vinyl issue since its original limited pressing in 2006, finally making this highly successful best of available to fans once more.
Releases for 13 March 2026
- Chalk Crystalpunk
- The Irish duo’s debut album speaks directly to the upbringing and roots of the band members, under the shadow and around the scars of conflict, which is entangled in the industrial dance-punk hybrid encoded in the record’s DNA.
- Art School Girlfriend Lean In
- Armed with the freedom and space to experiment, Polly Mackey – one of the UK’s most vital artists operating at the moment – self-produced her new album in her own East London studio, tackling alternative rock, electronic pop and experimental ambient sounds.
- Gong Bright Spirit
- The third instalment in a trilogy sees Gong at their experimental best, more adventurous and more open to the dream than ever. And dreams are central here, as a way of thinking where psychedelia, love and the thin membrane between worlds feed into the music.
- Kim Gordon Play Me
- Kim Gordon’s vision of art and noise has come sharper into focus just as readily as it has changed: a paradigm of possibility that, four decades on, still feels like a dare. Play Me expands her sonic palette to include more melodic beats and the motorik drive of krautrock.
- The Black Crowes A Pound of Feathers
- Reflective of their mood and expression, The Black Crowes have created a rock record that’s loose and funky, dark and heavy, sensuous and jagged, flesh and bone.
- Peter Gabriel In the Big Room
- This 14-song set, recorded live in the Big Room at Real World Studios on 23 November 2003, draws on material from both the Growing Up Live tour of 2002–03 and the subsequent Still Growing Up Live tour.
Releases for 6 March 2026
- The Delines The Set Up
- Willy Vlautin couldn’t stop writing songs after Mr. Luck & Ms. Doom, and the US opioid epidemic with thousands of young people raddled with addiction living in tents, on the streets and in old cars influenced their new album.
- Katherine Priddy These Frightening Machines
- Marking the transition from her 20s to her 30s, this new album is the most sonically varied of Priddy’s career, with the songs spanning a full spectrum of emotions, reclaiming the voices of women silenced by history and expressing solidarity and love.
- Squeeze Trixies
- Written by Chris Difford and Glenn Tilbrook when they were just 19 and 16 respectively, Trixies is a concept album set in a fictional members’ club – glamorous, smoky and populated by colourful characters.
- Harry Styles Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally.
- The 12-track fourth studio album by the global pop sensation was executive-produced by Kid Harpoon.
- Various Artists HELP(2)
- An incredible line-up of contributors came together for this album in support of War Child’s vital work delivering support and protection to children affected by conflict around the world.
- Morrissey Make-up Is a Lie
- The legendary singer-songwriter returns with his much anticipated 14th solo album, his first in over 5 years. The 11 new songs here are sure to become classics in Morrissey’s catalogue.
Other releases for 2026
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