The 47 Most Anticipated Albums of Fall 2023 – Warungku Terkini

Summer is over but new-release season is in full bloom: The fall 2023 calendar is a bumper edition, with the likes of Mitski, Sufjan Stevens, and Animal Collective promising autumnal joy and post-summer sadness in equal measure. Some seven decades in, the sun is still shining on the Rolling Stones—back with their first album of originals in 18 years—but not lycanthrope Peter Gabriel, who has been doling out singles from his new LP every full moon. Sampha, Yeule, Jorja Smith, and L’Rain are flourishing anew with follow-ups to revelatory breakout albums, and look forward to long-awaited inaugurals from Sofia Kourtesis, whose Madres LP abounds with late entries for the song of the summer, and Evian Christ, whose chilly, pugilistic debut does not. Big releases from Drake, Doja Cat, and Nicki Minaj promise to populate your fall flowerbeds with an earworm or two, while Oneohtrix Point Never is burrowing back underground after his triumphant stint as the Weeknd’s sideman. As of September 11, all release dates have been confirmed. But, as usual, everything is subject to change.


Amor Muere A Time to Love a Time to Die

Amor Muere: A Time to Love, a Time to Die

November 3

A Time to Love, a Time to Die is the first album from Amor Muere, a Mexico City collective of Mabe Fratti, Camille Mandoki, Gibrana Cervantes, and Concepción Huerta. The record developed out of a multi-disciplinary performance that Mandoki wrote and directed in 2018, with synthesizers, cello, tape manipulation, vocals, and violin among its musical components. “It’s a beautiful process where we connect through emotions and feelings as friends to make music,” said Cervantes of the ensemble’s work. The group shared one of the album’s five songs, “Love Dies,” in August. –Allison Hussey


Ana Tijoux: Vida

TBA

The Chilean hip-hop artist Ana Tijoux announced her new record with the single “Niñx,” which she called “a manifesto to the child we all have inside of us.… that is capable of dreaming and building infinite castles of humanity and love.” The album, her first in nine years, does not yet have a release date but will follow the memoir Sacar la voz, which she published through Penguin this year. –Jazz Monroe


Animal Collective: Isn’t It Now?

September 29

Stretching for 22 minutes, Animal Collective’s June song “Defeat” is the centerpiece of the ensemble’s next album, Isn’t It Now? The late-September LP is touted as the longest album to date from the electronics-bending ensemble, arriving less than two years after its predecessor, Time Skiffs. The group released the shorter “Soul Capturer” as the LP’s second single a few weeks after “Defeat.” Isn’t It Now? also includes “King’s Walk,” which Animal Collective have made a fixture of recent live sets and their “Tiny Desk (Home) Concert.” –Allison Hussey

All products featured on warungku are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

Animal Collective: Isn’t It Now?

Animal Collective: Isn’t It Now?


Armand Hammer: We Buy Diabetic Test Strips

September 29

First announced via a series of cryptic flyers, postcards, and phone numbers leading to pre-save details, Backwoodz Studioz duo billy woods and Elucid’s next album as Armand Hammer is their first since 2021’s Haram. They shared the DJ Haram–produced lead single “Trauma Mic,” which features Pink Siifu, in July, and the LP has additional contributions from Moor Mother, Soul Glo’s Pierce Jordan (aka Money Nicca), Junglepussy, Curly Castro, and Cavalier. –Hattie Lindert

Armand Hammer: We Buy Diabetic Test Strips

Armand Hammer: We Buy Diabetic Test Strips


Chai: Chai

September 22

Chai’s self-titled album was partly inspired by the Tokyo-born genre city pop—a local take on Western lounge music that blossomed in the 1970s and ’80s. The band members channel this nostalgic sound on cuts like the bass-driven “Para Para” and the groovy “Neo Kawaii, K?” Like their previous LP Wink, Chai is crammed with slightly scuffed pop hooks and cheeky celebrations of Japanese culture. “We live proudly as Japanese women,” the band wrote in a press release for Chai. “We hope this album gives everyone a little more confidence in living how they want to live.” –Madison Bloom

Chai: Chai

Chappell Roan: The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess

September 22

A few years after sharing her breakout single, “Pink Pony Club,” Chappell Roan is making her full-length debut with The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess. “I’m always trying to remind myself that this is just pop,” Roan told warungku’s Cat Zhang of her output. “Let’s not take it too seriously.” –Hattie Lindert

Chappell Roan

Chappell Roan: The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess


Chief Keef Almighty So 2

Chief Keef: Almighty So 2

October 13

Almighty So, released in 2013, is one of the most inventive and essential Chief Keef mixtapes. So, naturally, its sequel, nearly a decade later, comes with major expectations. But since the project was announced in October 2022, it has gone through endless pushbacks and failed promises of “coming soon.” Originally it was scheduled for January, then April, then June, and now, maybe, this autumn. Who knows if it will ever actually see the light of day? There are a couple singles rumored to be on Almighty So 2, like “Racks Stuffed Inna Couch” and “Tony Montana Flow,” which is decent proof that the project actually exists. –Alphonse Pierre


DJ Shadow: Action Adventure

October 27

Bay Area producer DJ Shadow’s Action Adventure is largely instrumental, a choice he said he made in the pursuit of writing “music that flexed different energies” without the added responsibility of supporting a vocalist. The follow-up to his sizable 2019 double album, Our Pathetic Age, pares down both the features and the runtime, placing the veteran turntablist’s production front and center. DJ Shadow shared the first song from the project, “Ozone Scraper,” in August, alongside a mixed-media video starring actor Askhat Kuchinchirekov. –Hattie Lindert

DJ Shadow: Action Adventure

DJ Shadow: Action Adventure


Dogstar: Somewhere Between the Power Lines and Palm Trees

October 6

Dogstar is a Los Angeles–based band that got started in the early 1990s and released two albums in 1996 and 2000. Guitarist and vocalist Bret Domrose leads the trio, which also features drummer Rob Mailhouse and, notably, the bass talents of The Matrix, John Wick, Bill & Ted, and Johnny Mnemonic star Keanu Reeves. It’s a full-on reunion from the alternative rock band, including a tour and a video for lead single “Everything Turns Around.” In a statement accompanying the single, the band called it “a fun summer song” with “an uplifting message and a positive vibe that hopefully makes your day a little bit lighter.” –Evan Minsker

Dogstar: Somewhere Between the Power Lines and Palm Trees


Doja Cat: Scarlet

September 22

Since calling her last two albums, Planet Her and Hot Pink, “cash grabs” back in May, Doja Cat has positioned her next project as a return to edgier roots and an opportunity to highlight her rap skills. A series of singles and one swiftly scrapped album cover later, Scarlet finally drops on September 22. She’ll tour the album throughout the fall, bringing Ice Spice and Doechii along with her across two dozen North American cities. –Hattie Lindert

two spiders on Doja Cat: Scarlet artwork

Dolly Parton: Rockstar

November 17

Dolly Parton’s next album lets its name speaks for itself: Rockstar finds the country veteran collaborating with a long, long list of artists of the titular persuasion. Although Parton herself initially declined (but later accepted) a Rock & Roll Hall of Fame nomination, she’s still plenty happy to play some rock music. Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Lizzo, Miley Cyrus, Mick Fleetwood, Sting, Elton John, Joan Jett, Emmylou Harris, Sheryl Crow, and many more feature on the 30-track album. –Hattie Lindert

Dolly Parton: Rockstar

Drop Nineteens: Hard Light 

November 3

It’s been more than 30 years since Drop Nineteens released their 1992 debut LP, Delaware, but, last year, Greg Ackell reassembled the original lineup to record a new batch of songs. Hard Light collects the first new music from Ackell, Steve Zimmerman, Paula Kelley, Motohiro Yasue, and Peter Koeplin since the Boston shoegaze band’s 1993 album, National Coma, and features songs written by Ackell and Zimmerman in their trademark drop tuning. If early single “Scapa Flow” is any indication, they’ve picked up right where they left off all those years ago. –Matthew Ismael Ruiz

Drop Nineteens: Hard Light

Drop Nineteens: Hard Light


Evian Christ: Revanchist

October 20

Evian Christ broke out in the 2010s with a string of pugilistic, bass-heavy tracks for labels including Tri Angle and Warp, as well as imprinting his signature strobing beats on rap hits like Kanye West’s “I’m in It” and Danny Brown’s “Pneumonia.” Now, after mostly exiting the spotlight to lurk behind the decks at his Trance Party club events, he is finally readying his debut album. He led Revanchist with “On Embers,” his first single in three years. –Jazz Monroe

Evian Christ: Revanchist

Flo Milli: Fine Ho, Stay

TBA

The titles of Flo Milli’s full-length trilogy offer a clear emotional narrative. There was 2020’s Ho, Why Is You Here ? (anger), which was followed by 2022’s You Still Here, Ho? (bargaining). This year it’s Fine Ho, Stay (acceptance), which features the lead single “Fruit Loop.” While “Fruit Loop,” new single “Chocolate Rain,” and the album announcement come after a prolific string of features and solo singles from Flo Milli in 2023 alone, a release date and tracklist have not been cemented. –Evan Minsker


Ian Sweet: Sucker

November 3

When recording Sucker, her fourth LP as Ian Sweet, Jilian Medford broke out of her comfort zone, both as a musician and as a Los Angeles resident feeling stuck in isolation. That liberating feeling takes shape in a catchy, polished sound audible in lead single “Your Spit” (whose music video features cameos by Saturday Night Live cast members Sarah Sherman and Martin Herlihy). Sucker also includes a new rendition of “Fight,” which originally appeared on Medford’s 2022 Star Stuff EP, for a little dose of reimagining her past in the present. –Nina Corcoran

Ian Sweet: Sucker

Jamila Woods: Water Made Us

October 13

A quote from Toni Morrison inspired the title for Water Made Us, Jamila Woods’ follow-up to 2019’s Legacy! Legacy! The Chicago singer-songwriter dives deep into her sense of self, her feelings, her relationships, and more, drawing upon astrology and plant metaphors; it is, in her words, “the most personal and vulnerable piece of art I’ve ever made.” She threads these pieces together with thoughtful interludes that give further peeks into her inner worlds. Woods treats love as a blossoming investment in the record’s first single, the duendita-featuring “Tiny Garden,” and she more recently shared the LP’s “Boomerang.” –Allison Hussey

Jamila Woods: Water Made Us

Jamila Woods: Water Made Us


Jane Remover Census Designated

Jane Remover: Census Designated

October 20

The sophomore LP from digicore innovator Jane Remover was, in part, conceptualized during a cross-country drive in a blizzard, an influence that rings clear in the anxious, heavy tones of its first single, “Lips.” After releasing other singles and mixes, Jane Remover’s first full project since 2021’s Frailty also marks a pivotal new moment in the artist’s life and career: It’s the first album she has released since coming out publicly as a trans woman last year. –Hattie Lindert


Jorja Smith: Falling or Flying

September 29

Jorja Smith’s debut album, 2018’s Lost & Found, delivered on her promise as Britain’s next great R&B singer. In the five years since, she has released a stopgap EP, Be Right Back, which she described as “a little waiting room so people knew I was coming back.” Now, she is back for real: Her official second album, Falling or Flying comprises a fresh batch of tracks, including collaborations with J Hus (on “Feelings”) and Jamaican singer Lila Iké (“Greatest Gift”), as well as the singles “Little Things,” “Go Go Go,” and “Falling or Flying.” –Jazz Monroe

Jorja Smith: Falling or Flying

Jorja Smith: Falling or Flying


Kylie Minogue: Tension

September 22

Kylie Minogue’s “Padam Padam” reigned as one of the blockbuster singles of the summer, and she’s riding the high of the hit into fall with the promise of her full-length Tension. It’s the first album from the Australian pop star in three years, following 2020’s Disco. “Padam Padam” is not only Tension’s lead single but also its opening track, chased with titles like “Things We Do for Love,” “You Still Get Me High,” and a non-Lorde “Green Light.” After the record’s release, Minogue will hold court at a new venue in Las Vegas for her first-ever residency, where she’s more than likely to perform Tension’s “Vegas High” along with her other classic cuts. –Allison Hussey

Kylie Minogue: Tension

Laurel Halo Atlas

Laurel Halo: Atlas

September 22

Los Angeles electronic musician and producer Laurel Halo has spent the past few years researching electroacoustic sound design and renewing her focus on piano. Now, five years after 2018’s Raw Silk Uncut Wood, she’s gearing up to release a new album. Atlas, which arrives later this month on September 22, features collaborations with saxophonist Bendik Giske, violinist James Underwood, cellist Lucy Railton, and vocalist Coby Sey. As captured in lead single “Belleville” and the title track, the album is a moving body of minimalist instrumentation, windswept strings, and Halo’s impeccable touch on the keys that showcases her more pensive side. –Nina Corcoran


Loraine James: Gentle Confrontation

September 22

Esteemed UK producer Loraine James has woven between electronic forms since releasing debut album Detail while a student in London. For You and I followed on Hyperdub, establishing the synthesis of puckish beats, vaporous ambience, and exquisitely textured melody that is now her trademark. Gentle Confrontation follows last year’s Building Something Beautiful for Me, an album of Julius Eastman interpretations, and an LP from her Whatever the Weather project. The new one, which has collaborators including Marina Herlop, KeiyaA, and George Riley, was announced with the single “2003,” prominently featuring James’ own vocals. –Jazz Monroe

Loraine James: Gentle Confrontation

Loraine James: Gentle Confrontation


Lost Girls: Selvutsletter

October 20

Jenny Hval’s electronic project with longtime collaborator Håvard Volden returned in 2021 with the beguiling Menneskekollektivet: a wilderness of insistent beats, otherworldly synths, and decayed electric guitar. Follow-up Selvutsletter advances the debut’s freeform abstraction, pairing Hval’s nocturnal poetry with exploratory compositions seemingly designed to breach alternate worlds. The album title, a made-up Norwegian word, translates in the duo’s telling as “someone who tries to erase themselves.” The concept loosely applies to Hval and Volden’s creative interplay, the way Lost Girls operates as “two parts of the unconscious,” a synergy described in the single “Ruins.” The approach might sound heady, but songs like “Jeg Slutter Meg Selv” break into mesmerizing raptures. –Jazz Monroe

Lost Girls: Selvutsletter

Lost Girls: Selvutsletter


L’Rain: I Killed Your Dog

October 13

It’s no derogatory statement to refer to Taja Cheek’s new album as L’Rain, I Killed Your Dog, as “basic bitch” music. The Brooklyn artist uses the term herself to describe the kind of album she wanted to create as a follow-up to 2021’s Fatigue. “Sometimes when people talk about experimental music, it’s like it’s untouchable,” she said. “I wanted to do something that was the exact opposite of that.” She recently shared a new single from the album, “Pet Rock,” alongside a playfully nostalgic and pink video. –Hattie Lindert

L’Rain: I Killed Your Dog

L’Rain: I Killed Your Dog


Maria BC: Spike Field

October 20

Singer-songwriter and classically trained vocalist Maria BC’s first album on Sacred Bones illustrates their complex relationship with the past. As they shared in a statement: “I had a very strong tendency to want to destroy any previous version of me.” Announcing Spike Field in late August, Maria BC shared the first two songs on the 12-track album: “Amber” and “Watcher.” –Hattie Lindert

Maria BC: Spike Field

Mitski: The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We

September 15

Mitski’s seventh album, The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We, is shaping up to be an intimate, introspective collection of songs about life’s fleeting details. That’s present in the lead single “Bug Like an Angel,” which reflects on self-destruction and community, and her forlorn vocals over quiet strumming in “Heaven” and “Star” alike. Written in small bursts, these songs draw inspiration ranging Arthur Russell to the spaghetti western scores of Ennio Morricone. It’s a shift from the disaffected indie-pop of last year’s Laurel Hell, but a fitting sound for Mitski all the same. –Nina Corcoran

Mitski: The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We

Mitski: The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We


The Mountain Goats: Jenny From Thebes

October 27

The next album from the Mountain Goats is a rock opera chronicling a woman’s Kawasaki-aided escape from a small town. It’s also, according to John Darnielle, a spiritual sequel to the band’s 2002 LP All Hail West Texas. The album’s first single “Clean Slate” sets the scene of Jenny’s life, which Darnielle and crew build out with guitar from Bully’s Alicia Bognanno, backing vocals from Matt Nathanson and the Go Go’s Kathy Valentine, and horn and string arrangements crafted by Matt Douglas. –Hattie Lindert

The Mountain Goats: Jenny From Thebes

The Mountain Goats: Jenny From Thebes


Nation of Language: Strange Disciple

September 15

Strange Disciple is the third album from Brooklyn synthpop trio Nation of Language, and first that wasn’t created and released outside of a pandemic lockdown. The title is drawn from the single “Sole Obsession,” and means “one who finds themself an adherent to a subject that is probably not worth the devotion,” according to a quote from the band. Nation of Language have also shared the single “Weak in Your Light” ahead of the release. –Eric Torres

Nation of Language: Strange Disciple

Nation of Language: Strange Disciple


Young Money Entertainment  Republic

Young Money Entertainment / Republic

Nicki Minaj: Pink Friday 2

November 17

Thirteen years after her debut, Nicki Minaj is releasing a sequel, Pink Friday 2. In the summer, Minaj released the new song “Last Time I Saw You,” a pop ballad that could as easily fit on The Pinkprint, in September. She’s also recently released music with Young Thug and Ice Spice (the closest thing she has to an heir apparent). Pink Friday 2 will follow 2018’s Queen. –Hattie Lindert


Oneohtrix Point Never: Again 

September 29

After spending the last couple of years as the Weeknd’s executive producer, Daniel Lopatin is ready to share his first studio LP since 2020’s Magic Oneohtrix Point Never. Revisiting a concept from his 2015 album, Garden of Delete, Lopatin imagines Again as a “speculative autobiography,” meditating on his identity as a musician through the lens of middle age. For a taste of Lopatin’s latest “what if,” check out album closer “A Barely Lit Path,” which features an orchestra conducted and arranged by Robert Ames and performed by the Nomad Ensemble. –Matthew Ismael Ruiz

Oneohtrix Point Never: Again

Oneohtrix Point Never: Again


Peter Gabriel: I/O

TBA

Peter Gabriel’s long-awaited I/O still doesn’t have an official release date, but the ex-Genesis leader has spent much of 2023 releasing new material to mark full moons. He began with “Panopticom” in early January, which he’s chased with monthly entries like the Brian Eno collaborations “Four Kinds of Horses” and “Road to Joy.” Whenever it arrives, I/O will be the first all-new studio LP from Gabriel since 2010’s Scratch My Back. –Allison Hussey


Ragana Desolations Flower

Ragana: Desolation’s Flower

October 27

Since coming up in the Olympia, Washington, DIY punk scene in the 2010s, Ragana have picked up a secondary homebase in Oakland and signed with The Flenser. Now, the duo of Maria and Coley will release their first album on the label, Desolation’s Flower, in October. The title track, which Ragana shared in August, is “a hymn of gratitude for queer and trans ancestors, known or unknown, by blood or affinity, whose joy and survival make our lives possible, and whose memory inspires and helps us resist the tide of increasingly visible hatred and oppression,” per a statement. –Hattie Lindert


Reverend Kristin Michael Hayter Saved

Perpetual Flames Ministries

Reverend Kirstin Michael Hayter: Saved!

October 20

Reverend Kirstin Michael Hayter is the new alias of Lingua Ignota, who retired the earlier project last year. “I will not allow my wounds to destroy me,” she said at the time. “I want to live a healthy, happy life and have changed much in myself and my surroundings to bring light in. As such the art has to change too. It is not healthy for me to relive my worst experiences over and over.” Her debut album under the new name mixes her typical, uniquely corrupted take on gospel standards with original music like the single “All of My Friends Are Going to Hell.” –Jazz Monroe


Rihanna

TBA

In the days leading up to Rihanna’s Super Bowl stand, fans were abuzz with hopeful speculation that the marquee event would be the launchpad for a new album announcement. Instead, she revealed another major life development: her second pregnancy with A$AP Rocky, following the birth of their first child last May. Since issuing Anti in 2016, Rihanna has said that her next LP will bend toward dancehall, claiming that she’s worked on more than 500 demos for the project. As of right now, the latest major Rihanna material is “Lift Me Up,” a one-off for the Black Panther: Wakanda Forever soundtrack that’s picked up a few major award nominations. “I want it to be this year,” she said of a new record in February. So do we, Rihanna, so do we. –Allison Hussey


The Rolling Stones: Hackney Diamonds

October 20

The Rolling Stones teased their first album of original songs in 18 years with a cryptic ad in the local paper Hackney Gazette. Named for the east London slang for glass shattered in a robbery, the LP led off with “Angry,” its burly riff and beat strutting into a singalong chorus about a lover’s spat. The follow-up to 2005’s A Bigger Bang and the 2016 covers album Blue & Lonesome features Paul McCartney and Lady Gaga on a track apiece (the former playing bass), as well as two songs recorded with the late drummer Charlie Watts. –Jazz Monroe

The Rolling Stones: Hackney Diamonds

The Rolling Stones: Hackney Diamonds


Sampha: Lahai

October 20

It’s been six years since Sampha released his debut album, Process, a critically lauded record so strong it earned him the Mercury Prize. He’s still popped up here and there as a featured artist, known for collaborating with A-list talent including Kendrick Lamar, Solange, Frank Ocean, Travis Scott, Kanye West, and more. Finally, Sampha is returning with a sophomore album. Lahai is set to feature “Spirit 2.0” and “Only.” –Evan Minsker

Sampha: Lahai

Sen Morimoto: Diagnosis

November 3

Chicago multi-instrumentalist Sen Morimoto will return with his first album in three years, Diagnosis, at the start of November. Once again blending together indie rock, R&B, jazz, and electropop, just like 2020’s self-titled LP, his new album is a rich, textured listen. And don’t be fooled by the pleasing production wrapping it all together. Morimoto uses his album to critique how the music industry commodifies trauma and identity to push sales, a sinister tale of capitalism that just won’t die. As singles “Diagnosis” and “If the Answer Isn’t Love” demonstrate, picking that bone is as nuanced as it is entertaining in Morimoto’s hands. –Nina Corcoran

Sen Morimoto: Diagnosis

Shabazz Palaces Robed in Rareness

Shabazz Palaces: Robed in Rareness 

October 27

Ishmael Butler’s Shabazz Palaces project has always had dual citizenship with outer space; he describes his latest album—the first in a series—as “hydroplaning over molten asphalt on a cloud of arctic vapor, distilling a sparkling vintage too complex for amateur palates.” Yup. The album features OGs (Camp Lo’s Geechi Suede), local heroes (Seattle favorite Porter Ray), and even Butler’s son, Lil Tracy. It’s a “Hustler’s Convention” for the Space X Age. –Matthew Ismael Ruiz


Slauson Malone 1: Excelsior

October 6

Jasper Marsalis, who records under the name Slauson Malone 1 and came up with the Standing on the Corner collective, signed with Warp Records earlier this year. The label is releasing Excelsior, which features the singles “New Joy” and “Voyager.” The new album follows A Quiet Farwell, 2016–2018 (Crater Speak), and in a statement, Marsalis described “Voyager” as a fraught period following his move from New York to Los Angeles. “I wanted to write something in the state of being sick of being sick, annoyed with being annoyed,” he said in a statement. “This verse documents my first steps of refusing the indulgence of trauma and grief. With each movement, the feeling returns but different, weirder.” –Evan Minsker

Slauson Malone 1: Excelsior


Sofia Kourtesis: Madres

October 27

Madres is the debut full-length from Sofia Kourtesis, the Peru-via-Berlin producer who last crafted a set of inviting electronic songs for her 2021 EP, Fresia Magdalena. She announced Madres with “Si Te Portas Bonito” in July, having shared the album’s title track earlier this year. The record is dedicated to Kourtesis’ mother, a cancer survivor, and Peter Vajkoczy, the neurosurgeon who operated to save her life. Kourtesis appealed to Vajkoczy for help with the promise that she’d dedicate a song to him, and she later took the doctor on his first visit to Berghain when he met her in Berlin. –Allison Hussey

Sofia Kourtesis: Madres

Sparkle Division: Foxy

October 20

For their second LP as Sparkle Division, composer William Basinski, engineer Preston Wendel, and new member Gary Thomas Wright dreamt up a drug-soaked soiree in late-1960s Hollywood, where brawls break out and the punchbowl gets dosed with acid. This trippy scene underpins Foxy, an eight-song instrumental record that winds between lounge, exotica, and smooth jazz. The new album follows Sparkle Division’s vibey 2020 debut, To Feel Embraced. On Foxy, Basinski’s saxophone still reigns supreme, particularly on opener “Have Some Punch” and the creeping “Here Comes Trouble.” Set over the course of one outrageous night, Foxy is meant to evoke a party that will be talked about for decades. –Madison Bloom

Sparkle Divison: Foxy

Sufjan Stevens: Javelin

October 6

Sufjan Stevens returns to stripped-down, solo songwriting on Javelin, which arrives three years after its elaborate predecessor, 2020’s The Ascension. Even so, several friends join him on the new LP, among them Bryce Dessner, who plays acoustic and electric guitars on a song titled “Shit Talk.” Stevens announced the record with the single “So You Are Tired” not long after the premiere of a stage adaptation of Illinois at Bard College earlier in the summer. In addition to the songs, Stevens assembled a 48-page Javelin companion book of art collages and 10 essays. Stevens also made the cover image for the album himself. –Allison Hussey

Sufjan Stevens: Javelin

Republic

Taylor Swift: 1989 (Taylor’s Version)

October 27

In a world swept up by the Eras Tour, the words “Taylor’s Version” are music to many ears. The next album Taylor Swift will re-record and release is 1989—the full-fledged pop embrace with hits like “Bad Blood,” “Blank Space,” and “Style.” She teased the new version back in 2021 with “Wildest Dreams (Taylor’s Version).” Earlier this year, Swift released a re-recorded version of her third album, Speak Now. –Hattie Lindert


Titanic Vidrio

Titanic: Vidrio

October 20

In tandem with a new album from her experimental ensemble Amor Muere, cellist Mabe Fratti joins multi-instrumentalist Hector Tosta under the moniker Titanic. Their first album together, Vidrio, is an eight-song collection of bright, airy compositions that dip into jazz sensibilities. The artists completed the record across three different studios in their home base of Mexico City, occasionally joined by drummer Gibran Andrade and Jarrett Gilgore on saxophone. Titanic announced the record with “Anónima” and “Hotel Elizabeth,” and they’ve since shared “Cielo Falso.” –Allison Hussey


Tkay Maidza: Sweet Justice

November 3

Sweet Justice is the sophomore album from Tkay Maidza, following the rapper’s 2016 self-titled debut, as well as a trio of EPs from her Last Year Was Weird series. The new record includes the Flume-produced single “Silent Assassin,” as well as the Two Fresh collaboration “Ring-a-Ling.” Maidza also enlisted guest vocalists Lolo Zouaï, Amber Mark, and Duckwrth for Sweet Justice, as well as producers Stint and Kaytranada. Maidza, who is the first female rapper to be signed by 4AD, called Sweet Justice a “diary of things and thoughts I’ve kept to myself” in recent press materials. She added that making the project in the wake of shattered friendships was “a healing experience.” –Madison Bloom

Tkay Maidza: Sweet Justice


Troye Sivan: Something to Give Each Other

October 13

It’s been five years since Australian pop star Troye Sivan released his sophomore LP, Bloom. In the meantime, he dropped 2020’s In a Dream EP, shared singles like “Could Cry Just Thinkin About You” and “Angel Baby,” and starred in Sam Levinson and Abel “The Weeknd” Tesfaye’s critical flop The Idol. In July, Sivan returned with “Rush,” a steamy summer club cut complete with a buns-baring music video. The song is an ode to party-hopping and spit-swapping; it’s also the first taste of Sivan’s third album, Something to Give Each Other, which the singer has called a “celebration of sex, dance, sweat, community, queerness, love and friendship.” –Madison Bloom

Troye Sivan: Something to Give Each Other

Troye Sivan: Something to Give Each Other


Wilco: Cousin

September 29

Just over a year after their last album, Cruel Country arrived, Wilco are already back with their next one. Cousin was produced by Cate Le Bon, whom the band befriended at the Solid Sound Festival in 2019. Wilco’s last album was a country album; this new one is not. It’s a quality of the indie rock institution that the producer admires. “They’re so mercurial, and there’s this thread of authenticity that flows through everything they do, whatever the genre, whatever the feel of the record,” Le Bon said of the collaboration. “There aren’t many bands who are able to, this deep into a successful career, successfully change things up.” –Evan Minsker

Wilco: Cousin

Yeule: Softscars

September 22

Glitch Princess was both a broad introduction to Yeule and a deceptive descriptor of the avant-pop artist. Toying with breakbeats, whispered vocals, and belted falsettos, Yeule creates music that’s meant to feel like an enigma. Their new album, Softscars, keeps that mysterious momentum going with singles like “Dazies,” “Sulky Baby,” and “Fish in the Pool,” the latter a cover of a piece from the Japanese film Hana and Alice. –Nina Corcoran

Yeule: Softscars

Album Musik Terbaru


album musik, musik album, hot sauce album musik nct dream, cover album musik, contoh cover album musik, heejin album musik loona, download lagu house musik indo full album, download musik full album, padi (grup musik) album, tabel disamping menunjukkan album-album pada file musik di dalam flashdisk, musik iwan fals full album, album musik pertama fiersa besari, tabel di samping menunjukan album album pada file musik, download musik klasik mozart full album, suatu grup musik merilis album penjualan per minggu, xx album musik the xx, album musik indonesia, album rozy musik, lalisa album musik lisa, album musik pertama fiersa, suatu grup musik merilis album penjualan per minggu dalam ribuan, download album musik indonesia, foto album musik, apa album musik pertama fiersa besari, tenda biru album musik desy ratnasari, gambar album musik, suatu grup musik merilis album penjualan, album aura musik, album musik terbaik sepanjang masa, penghargaan grammy untuk album musik teater terbaik, dj dinar candy album musik dinar candy, album musik dj, download musik dj riri full album, download lagu musik album the mercys, album musik adalah, album musik pertama fiersa besari sebagai solois, philosophy gang merupakan album perdana dari grup musik bentukan, sholawatan album musik santri njoso, jenis jenis album musik, album musik terlaris sepanjang masa, album musik iwan fals, roxy by proxy album musik, musik reggae full album, apa itu album musik, mr. hands album musik herbie hancock, cara mengganti foto album musik, musik tipe x full album, download musik yeni inka full album, musik album kenangan album kenangan, debu grup musik album

The 57 Most Anticipated Tours of 2023: Taylor Swift, Beyoncé, Arctic Monkeys, Adele, Foo Fighters, and More – Warungku Terkini

As festival season approaches, it’s a perfect time to catch the scores of hot prospects and returning greats as we gear up for a huge summer of live music. Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour continues at full speed after her bumper three-hour opening shows. Beyoncé, the Cure, Depeche Mode, and Janet Jackson return to U.S. stages for the first time in years. And Blink-182’s original lineup will be on the road after a long fallow period of injuries, health scares, and UFO sightings. Here’s a look at who’s heading to venues across the world this year.


Adele

After a four-month, 34-show residency that brought more than 100,000 Adele fans to Las Vegas, the Tottenham superstar added a new batch of dates in early June—and promised to film the shows for all who couldn’t make it. “I came back, and as usual I smashed it,” she told the crowd upon making the announcement. “I always smash it.” –Jazz Monroe

All products featured on warungku are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

Adele: Weekends With Adele

Adele: Weekends With Adele


Alex G / Alvvays

In the fall of 2022, Alex G and Alvvays both released new albums: God Save the Animals and Blue Rev, respectively. The indie rock powerhouses will co-headline a North American tour, running from late August to early September. Alvvays have some dates in Europe this summer, too. –Evan Minsker

Alex G & Alvvays: 2023 Summer Tour

Alex G & Alvvays: 2023 Summer Tour


Angel Olsen

Following the release of her new Forever Means EP, Angel Olsen has a series of dates coming this summer. She’s playing a Forest Hills, New York, stadium show opening for the Strokes and some festivals including NOS Alive, All Points East, End of the Road, and Rock en Seine. She’s also plotted a North American tour for the last three months of the year where she promises a unique set each night. The dates include support from a variety of different opening acts, including King Tuff, Kara Jackson, Joanna Sternberg, and more.  –Evan Minsker

Angel Olsen: Forever Fall Tour 2023

Angel Olsen: Forever Fall Tour 2023


Anita Baker

Anita Baker has won back her masters, and, now, arena-goers can go see a master at work. For the first time since the restoration of those copyrights, the quiet-storm legend is headed out on tour to perform her classic hits. Baker’s trek began on February 11 and extends through December 23 in Oakland, California. Revisit warungku’s Sunday Review of 1986’s Rapture. –Marc Hogan

Anita Baker 2023 Tour Dates

Anita Baker 2023 Tour Dates


Arctic Monkeys

Arctic Monkeys released their seventh studio album, The Car, last October. The UK band is set to bring the record’s orchestral rock to North America starting this August, following a run of UK stadium dates. Irish post-punk band Fontaines D.C. are set to open for Arctic Monkeys as they stop in cities including New York, Boston, Seattle, and more. –Eric Torres

Arctic Monkeys: North American Tour 2023

Arctic Monkeys: North American Tour 2023


Beck / Phoenix

Indie heavyweights Phoenix and Beck are playing concerts together in August and September. Openers on the Summer Odyssey Tour include Jenny Lewis, Japanese Breakfast, Weyes Blood, and Sir Chloe –Matthew Strauss

Beck & Phoenix: Summer Odyssey Tour

Beck & Phoenix: Summer Odyssey Tour


Beyoncé

Beyoncé is embarking on her first solo headlining tour in seven years. Shows in support of 2022’s Renaissance began in Europe in May and continue into the summer and fall in North America. Check out “Beyoncé’s Renaissance Tour Kicks Off in Sweden: Setlist, Stage, Merch, and More.” –Matthew Strauss

Beyoncé: Renaissance World Tour

Beyoncé: Renaissance World Tour


Big Thief

Big Thief finished last year in South Korea, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand in support of the quartet’s February 2022 album, Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe in You, which was recently nominated for a Grammy. They began a new run of North American shows from January to early March. The band comes back in July for more concerts. –Marc Hogan

Big Thief: Summer 2023 Tour

Big Thief: Summer 2023 Tour


Black Country, New Road

The new ensemble lineup of Black Country, New Road has been playing a set of all-new material since singer Isaac Wood left last year. Since Ants From Up There—their second and presumably final album as a septet—swapped their trademark cringe-comedy for rapturous, soul-searching indie rock, the group has toured extensively as a six-piece, playing songs written by the remaining members (including Jockstrap’s Georgia Ellery). A document of this second phase, Live at Bush Hall, came out in the form of a live album and concert film this year. –Jazz Monroe

Black Country, New Road tour poster

Black Country, New Road: US + Canada 2023 Tour


Black Midi

The 1975 are on a tour they called The 1975 at Their Very Best. In what cannot be a coincidence, Black Midi will embark on the Black Midi at Their Very Best Tour. If you would like to see Black Midi, regardless of if they will actually be performing at their very best, you can catch them across the United States in June and July. They’re touring behind 2022’s Hellfire and its live album counterpart, Live Fire. –Evan Minsker

Black Midi: US + Canada Tour Summer 2023

Black Midi: US + Canada Tour Summer 2023


Blink-182

It’s been eight years since Tom DeLonge parted ways with Blink-182 for a second time, but he’s back again and ready for more proudly juvenile hijinks with his friends. Blink-182’s classic lineup—DeLonge, Mark Hoppus, and Travis Barker—have reunited for what’s shaping up to be their biggest comeback yet. The pop-punk trio began a massive 2023 world tour in May for a tour that will last nearly the entire year, with dozens of shows in North America and Europe. Turnstile, Rise Against, the Story So Far, and Wallows will open select dates. Blink-182 will then take a short break around the holidays before flying to Oceania for more concerts in early 2024, too. –Nina Corcoran

Blink-182: World Tour 2023/2024

Blink-182: World Tour 2023/2024


Boygenius

After announcing that they’ll lead a leg of the Re:Set concert series in June, Boygenius announced a North American tour of their own just a few days before they released their long-anticipated LP, The Record. On a recent episode of the warungku Review podcast, the musicians talked about the camaraderie they’ve developed since they first started working together. “Finding out that y’all are signed up for the difficult stuff too makes the difficult stuff less difficult and teaches me how to ask for help,” Julien Baker said to her bandmates. –Allison Hussey

Boygenius: The Tour

Bruce Springsteen

Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band’s expansive 2023 tour wound through the United States with a final U.S. date in Newark, New Jersey, on April 14. From there, the Boss headed to Europe with a stint that stretches from May through July. In the fall and winter, Springsteen and the band are back in North America. –Madison Bloom

Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band 2023 Tour

Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band 2023 Tour


Caroline Polachek

Caroline Polachek’s Desire, I Want to Turn Into You arrived on Valentine’s Day. To celebrate, she’s scheduled a lengthy North American jaunt, from April through May, that includes shows with Alex G, Sudan Archives, Magdalena Bay, Ethel Cain, George Clanton, and Toro y Moi. She has even more shows lined up across the world in June, July, August, October, and November. –Jazz Monroe

Caroline Polachek: The Spiraling Tour

Caroline Polachek: The Spiraling Tour


Coldplay

Coldplay’s first world tour since 2017 commenced last year in support of Music of the Spheres. The British pop-rock titans continue through the spring and summer with stops in South America, the United Kingdom, and Europe. More North American shows are set for September and October, too. After declining to trek behind 2019’s Everyday Life due to environmental concerns, the band has aimed to make its current stadium run more sustainable. –Marc Hogan

Coldplay: Music of the Spheres World Tour

Coldplay: Music of the Spheres World Tour


The Cure

Robert Smith publicly aligned himself with Ticketmaster haters as Verified Fan presales began for his first North American tour with the Cure since 2019, denouncing the company’s dynamic pricing system. As shows went on sale, fans expressed shock at the fees, which, in some cases, nearly doubled the face value of a ticket. Smith took to Twitter to say that he was “sickened” over the situation. Ticketmaster eventually ceded some ground, offering partial refunds and lowering fees for later sales. The Swifties, the Smithies—who’s next in line to take a swing at the industry’s behemoth? –Allison Hussey

The Cure: Shows of a Lost World Tour

The Cure: Shows of a Lost World Tour


Dave Matthews Band

Whether you’re a jam band lifer or novice, Dave Matthews Band are there for you. The Virginia rock institution is embarking on an expectedly long North American tour in support of the upcoming album, Walk Around the Moon. Beginning in Mexico City on May 9, the trek brings Dave Matthews Band across the United States and Canada for multi-night stints at nearly every stop, be it in Charleston, South Carolina, or Gilford, New Hampshire. After months on the road, Dave Matthews Band will close things out with three headlining shows at Washington’s Gorge Amphitheatre in September. –Nina Corcoran

Dave Matthews Band: Tour 2023

Dave Matthews Band: Tour 2023


Death Cab for Cutie / The Postal Service

Death Cab for Cutie fans have two 2023 tours about which they can get excited: In the winter, the band played more North American shows in support of Asphalt Meadows. (European and UK dates in support of the record stretch into the spring.) And, in September and October, Death Cab for Cutie will go on a co-headlining tour with Benjamin Gibbard’s other band, the Postal Service. The second tour celebrates the anniversaries of the 2003 records Give Up and Transatlanticism. –Matthew Strauss

The Postal Service & Death Cab for Cutie

The Postal Service & Death Cab for Cutie 2023 Tour


Deerhoof

The new album from Deerhoof marks the first time Satomi Matsuzaki sings entirely in Japanese. It’s also their first album in their storied discography to be made in a proper recording studio. In support of Miracle-Level, Matsuzaki, Ed Rodríguez, John Dieterich, and Greg Saunier head across New England in April, have a run of West Coast dates in May, and then head out for a series of Midwest shows in the summer. –Evan Minsker

Deerhoof: Miracle-Level Tour 2023

Deerhoof: Miracle-Level Tour 2023


Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode are hitting the road behind Memento Mori, their first album since 2017. The tour includes a pair of headlining sets in Barcelona and Madrid for Primavera Sound. –Evan Minsker

Depeche Mode: Memento Mori World Tour 2023

Depeche Mode: Memento Mori World Tour 2023


Drake

The Drake industrial complex steams ahead with his latest bumper tour this summer and fall, and he is bringing along 21 Savage for the ride. Arenas in the itinerary include a pair of homecoming shows at Toronto’s Scotiabank Arena to wrap the tour. Before then, he’ll play several nights apiece at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center and Manhattan’s Madison Square Garden, as well as big dates in Chicago and Los Angeles, among other cities. –Jazz Monroe

Drake, 21 Savage: It’s All a Blur Tour

Drake & 21 Savage: It’s All a Blur Tour


Erykah Badu 

Over the past couple years, Erykah Badu launched a cannabis brand and a very specific incense line. Her last full-length project was 2015’s But You Caint Use My Phone, and she made a memorable appearance at this year’s Met Gala. This summer, she’ll go on a tour of theaters and arenas around North America. She’ll be joined on the Unfollow Me Tour by Yasiin Bey. –Evan Minsker

Erykah Badu: Unfollow Me Tour

Erykah Badu: Unfollow Me Tour


Father John Misty

Behind his new album, Chloë and the Next 20th Century, Father John Misty hit road for a spring tour alongside support acts Omar Velasco, Loren Kramer, and Butch Bastard. He’s got more North American shows on the agenda starting in August. –Evan Minsker

Father John Misty tour poster

Father John Misty: Live! On Tour North America Spring 2023


The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips are going on tour, and it has nothing to do with a new album or their last one, 2020’s American Head. It’s been over two decades since the band released their 2002 album, Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots, and, to celebrate, they’ve plotted a world tour where they’ll perform the album in its entirety. The run includes shows in the United States and the United Kingdom. –Evan Minsker

The Flaming Lips tour poster

The Flaming Lips: Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots World Tour 2023


Fleet Foxes

Robin Pecknold returns to the road with a long stretch of dates in support of 2020’s Shore. The band has yet to announce a follow-up to the record, but, in November, Pecknold shared the new song “A Sky Like I’ve Never Seen,” a collaboration with Tim Bernardes for the Prime Video documentary Wildcat. –Allison Hussey

Fleet Foxes: Shore Tour 2023

Fleet Foxes: Shore Tour 2023


Foo Fighters

Later this month, Foo Fighters will commence a series of concerts—marking their first batch of headlining shows since drummer Taylor Hawkins died last March. The band will play a number of dates across the United States, including stops in Boston, Columbus, Milwaukee, and Asbury Park, along with a slot at Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival in Manchester, Tennessee. Foo Fighters will also perform select gigs in Germany, Canada, Japan, and Brazil. A handful of their concerts will feature support from indie icons the Breeders. The band has not yet announced who will fill in on drums for each performance. –Madison Bloom

Foo Fighters Tour Dates

Harry Styles

Harry Styles has toured consistently since releasing his Grammy-winning 2022 album, Harry’s House. For spring and summer 2023, he’ll stay on the road Europe and the United Kingdom. –Matthew Strauss

Harry Styles: Love on Tour 2023

Harry Styles: Love on Tour 2023


Indigo De Souza

In April, Indigo De Souza released the Any Shape You Take follow-up and “Younger & Dumber”–featuring album All of This Will End. She then hit the road for a tour that heads across North America. An August and September tour with Sylvan Esso will follow. –Evan Minsker

Indigo De Souza Tour Dates

Indigo De Souza Tour Dates


Janet Jackson

Janet Jackson is one of the platinum-tier performers of the last half-century, and she returns to the stage for the first time since 2019 for a lengthy run through the United States and Canada. She was slated to hit the road in 2020 in support of a new album titled Black Diamonds, but neither the tour nor the LP ever materialized. Still, last year, Jackson previewed a new song with the release of a Lifetime documentary last year, hinting at more as yet unreleased material. Ludacris in the opening slot on these shows makes for a promising wind-up to Jackson’s main event. –Allison Hussey

Janet Jackson: Together Again Tour

Janet Jackson: Together Again Tour


Killer Mike

In support of his new album, Michael, his first solo album in over a decade, Killer Mike will embark on the High & Holy Tour. Billed under the name Killer Mike and the Midnight Revival, the dates precede a Run the Jewels anniversary tour this fall. Mike’s solo tour takes place across the United States in July and August, and it includes a stop at this year’s warungku Music Festival. –Evan Minsker  

Killer Mike: The High & Holy Tour

Killer Mike: The High & Holy Tour


King Krule

Archy Marshall will return in June with Space Heavy, his follow-up to 2020’s Man Alive. The following month, he will bring the album to North America. He teed it all up with the single “Seaforth,” which came with a video featuring two happy dogs; no word yet on whether the dogs will join him on the road, but it seems unlikely. Still, one can hope. The run includes a performance at warungku Music Festival in Chicago. –Jazz Monroe

King Krule: Space Heavy Tour

King Krule: Space Heavy Tour


LCD Soundsystem / Boygenius / Steve Lacy

Re:Set is a new outdoor concert series where three different headlining artists—LCD Soundsystem, Boygenius, and Steve Lacy—perform in the same city on consecutive nights. Jamie xx, Idles, Big Freedia, and L’Rain are among LCD Soundsystem’s openers. Boygenius’ openers include Clairo, Dijon, and Bartees Strange. Steve Lacy’s supporting acts include James Blake, Toro y Moi, and Fousheé. –Evan Minsker

Re:Set Concert Series

Le Tigre

Nearly 20 years after their last tour, Le Tigre are going back on the road. The electropop trio—comprised of Kathleen Hanna, Johanna Fateman, and Sadie Benning—will come to North America for the first time since 2005, beginning on May 27 in Philadelphia and continuing throughout the summer. After a number of shows in Europe for headlining dates and festival sets at Primavera Sound, Le Tigre will stop in major cities across the United States and Canada, including Seattle, Los Angeles, Chicago, Cleveland, Baltimore, Toronto, and Montreal. –Nina Corcoran

Le Tigre: 2023 Tour

Liz Phair

With 1993’s Exile in Guyville, Liz Phair delivered a jagged debut album that drew inspiration from youthful ambitions, contemporary alienation, and the Rolling Stones, opening a lane for a generation of other young, independently minded rock musicians in her wake. To close out 2023, Phair is taking Exile in Guyville on a 30th anniversary run, where she’ll play the record from front to back, promising a few more of her hits in each set. Blondshell, on the heels of issuing their self-titled first LP in April, is accompanying Phair for the tour.  –Allison Hussey

Liz Phair: Guyville Tour

Lizzo

Lizzo has already toured a bit behind last year’s Special, the follow-up to her 2019 major-label debut, Cuz I Love You. After a two-night stand in London in mid-March, the tour continues from April 21 in Knoxville, Tennessee, to June 13 in Hartford, Connecticut. The North American shows will feature Latto as an opener. –Marc Hogan

Lizzo: The Special 2our

Madonna

Madonna is embarking on a massive arena tour with dates across the world every month from July to January. The Celebration Tour, as it’s called, was first heralded by a star-studded announcement video featuring Lil Wayne, Eric André, Jack Black, Judd Apatow, Diplo, Kate Berlant, and more. –Evan Minsker

Madonna: The Celebration Tour

Madonna: The Celebration Tour


Maggie Rogers

Following dates at this year’s Primavera Sound and Glastonbury, Maggie Rogers continues her run of live shows behind 2022’s Surrender with a North American tour that begins this summer. The dates include runs with Soccer Mommy and Alvvays, plus appearances at Lollapalooza and Outside Lands. She’s also headlining All Things Go at Merriweather Post Pavilion alongside Lana Del Rey, Boygenius, and Carly Rae Jepsen. –Evan Minsker

Maggie Rogers: Summer of ’23 Tour

Maggie Rogers: Summer of ’23 Tour


Mastodon / Gojira

It’s called the Mega-Monsters Tour, get it? Because the bands are called Mastodon and Gojira? I mean I guess it’s debatable that you could call a mastodon a “monster,” but, hey, the extinct mammals were pretty big. Anyway, two big metal bands are touring through the summer. –Evan Minsker

Gojira and Mastodon: The Mega-Monsters Tour 2023

Gojira and Mastodon: The Mega-Monsters Tour 2023


Mavi

Charlotte, North Carolina, rapper Mavi released his melodic, inventive latest album, Laughing So Hard It Hurts, last fall. He’s heading out across North America and Europe throughout the spring. The tour includes stops in Toronto, Paris, Chicago, and more, and wraps in New York in late May. On July 21, Mavi will perform at warungku Music Festival in Chicago. –Eric Torres

Mavi tour poster

Mavi: Laughing So Hard It Hurts 2023 World Tour


Metallica

After receiving the coveted Stranger Things bump last summer, Metallica are in especially high demand. The metal legends have some new singles, an album on the way, and they’ll hit the road for a massive tour kicking off this spring. Metallica will wind through Europe and the United States for the next two years, with their final Mexico City dates landing in September of 2024. The gigantic trek will include support from Pantera, Greta Van Fleet, Five Finger Death Punch, Mammoth WVH, Architects, Ice Nine Kills, and Volbeat. –Madison Bloom

Metallica: M72 World Tour 2023-2024

Metallica: M72 World Tour 2023-2024


Muna

Muna have already been tapped to open stadium tours for Taylor Swift and Lorde, but that won’t stop them from embarking on a run of North American dates of their own in between. The Life’s So Fun Tour, in support of the Los Angeles pop trio’s self-titled album from last year, kicked off in Seattle with further stops in New York, Philadelphia, Toronto, and other cities. –Eric Torres

Muna: Life’s So Fun Tour

Muna: Life’s So Fun Tour


The National

Following the release of their ninth studio album, First Two Pages of Frankenstein, the National will begin the first in a series of tours in May. The first run, opened by Soccer Mommy, begins in Chicago and ends on the West Coast in June. They have another run of shows with the Beths in August, a Madison Square Garden show with Patti Smith, and then a series of dates in the fall with Soccer Mommy and Bartees Strange. –Evan Minsker

The National: First Two Pages of Frankenstein Tour

The National: First Two Pages of Frankenstein Tour 2023


The New Pornographers

Behind their new album, Continue as a Guest, the New Pornographers headed out on a tour across North America in April and May. They’ll be joined by Wild Pink on the trek. The band will continue its tour in November. –Evan Minsker

The New Pornographers Tour


Paramore

After a jaunt through smaller venues in North American cities last year, Paramore will be hitting the road properly in 2023 in support of the emo-pop trailblazers’ first album since 2017, This Is Why. They’ll be flanked by a who’s who of openers, among them Bloc Party, Foals, the Linda Lindas, and Genesis Owusu. The tour criss-crosses the globe, touching down in Ireland and the United Kingdom in April, and winding up in Saint Paul, Minnesota, by August. –Marc Hogan

Paramore in North America

Paramore in North America


Pearl Jam

Slowly but surely, Pearl Jam have been heading out back on tour in support of 2020’s Gigaton. After a longer run in North America and Europe last year, Pearl Jam will hit up the United States this August and September to perform in locations they skipped in 2022. With nine dates scheduled in just five cities, however, it’s a relatively short leg. Consider it an opportunity for Pearl Jam to stay energized and committed to their famously lengthy sets and shape-shifting setlists at each show. –Nina Corcoran

Pearl Jam: 2023 U.S. Tour

Pearl Jam: 2023 U.S. Tour


Pixies / Modest Mouse / Cat Power

Modest Mouse’s second bumper tour of the year (alongside their role in Weezer’s Indie Rock Roadtrip—see below) puts them in the company of legends. Co-headliners Pixies return for their first full North American tour since 2019, and Cat Power will support on every date. The first batch of dates includes a handful of New York shows and a dozen more scattered across the country; additional shows will be added soon. –Jazz Monroe

Pixies and Modest Mouse With Cat Power

Pixies and Modest Mouse With Cat Power: Summer 2023 Tour


Red Hot Chili Peppers

The year is 2023, and the Strokes, St. Vincent, the Mars Volta, Thundercat, Iggy Pop, the Roots, City and Colour, and King Princess are slated for an absurdly huge North American tour. What almighty force could unite these titans of prog, funk, punk, rap, and indie? It’s Red Hot Chili Peppers, of course, and while you won’t get all those support acts at any one date, you can find one or two in each city before Anthony Kiedis, Flea, and company set off their stadium fireworks. –Jazz Monroe

Red Hot Chili Peppers 2023 Tour

Red Hot Chili Peppers 2023 Tour


Redveil

Teenage Maryland rapper Redveil is heading out on a tour behind his 2022 album, Learn 2 Swim. It includes dates across North America in May, June, July, and August. Read the new interview “Teenage Rap Phenom Redveil Is Growing Up on Record.” –Evan Minsker

Redveil: Water 2 Fire Tour

Redveil: Water 2 Fire Tour


Run the Jewels

Ten years after Killer Mike and El-P told the world that they’d be releasing a joint album under the name Run the Jewels, the stalwart duo is heading out on an anniversary tour. Run the Jewels will play multiple dates apiece in New York, Chicago, Atlanta, and Los Angeles, “performing a different set each night spanning the band’s full discography, bolstered by a plethora of special guests and surprises along the way,” according to a press release. –Jazz Monroe

Run the Jewels tour poster

Run the Jewels: RTJX – Celebrating 10 Years of Run the Jewels


The Smashing Pumpkins

The Smashing Pumpkins are gearing up for a reliably melodramatic new album called Atum, billed as the sequel to 1995’s Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness and 2000’s Machina/Machine of God. In tandem with this 33-song rock opera, Billy Corgan and the gang have arranged a suitably epic tour with Interpol and Stone Temple Pilots. It will be, in Corgan’s words, a “true alternative festival, where all the self-proclaimed weirdos and outsiders of the world can get together and have a party.” –Jazz Monroe

Smashing Pumpkins: The World Is a Vampire Tour

The Smashing Pumpkins: The World Is a Vampire Tour


Stevie Nicks

The November death of Christine McVie may have quelled any hopes for a full-complement Fleetwood Mac reunion, but, fortunately, Stevie Nicks is still sashaying across stages with her sweeping shawls and inimitable main-character charisma. She remains a bewitching presence, her catalog of wistful and passionate cuts having taken on an even smokier luster. Amid her North American solo dates, she’s got a handful of co-headlining shows with Billy Joel. –Allison Hussey

Stevie Nicks: Live in Concert

Stevie Nicks: Live in Concert


Taylor Swift

The last Taylor Swift tour took place nearly five years ago. As a result, she planned something extra special for her long-awaited return to the stage: the Eras Tour. Billed as a journey across her various musical eras, it will mark Swift’s sixth headlining concert tour and her first since releasing the albums LoverFolkloreEvermore, and Midnights. The Eras Tour kicked off in March after making waves for Ticketmaster’s infamous handling of presale tickets. Guests on the tour include Phoebe Bridgers, Haim, Paramore, Beabadoobee, Gayle, Girl in Red, Gracie Abrams, Muna, and Owenn. –Nina Corcoran

Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour

Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour


Thundercat

Fresh off a couple of shows with Red Hot Chili Peppers and the Strokes—as well as a few dates in Europe, the United Kingdom, and Australia—Thundercat will embark on his own headlining tour. The In Yo Girl’s City Tour winds through North America between August and October, with stops in Newport, Portland, Los Angeles, Chicago, Brooklyn, Dallas, and more. His final U.S. show takes place in Albuquerque on Halloween. After that, Thundercat will play a handful of shows in Brazil and Chile. –Madison Bloom

Thundercat: In Yo Girl’s City Tour

Thundercat: In Yo Girl’s City Tour


U2 

During a Super Bowl musically dominated by the long-awaited return of Rihanna, U2 shared a commercial featuring a baby’s face in an orb. That mystical child heralded the band’s Las Vegas shows, where they’ll perform their 1991 album Achtung Baby from September to November. U2:UV Achtung Baby Live at the Sphere marks the opening of the MSG Sphere at the Venetian, which seats 17,500. With Larry Mullen Jr. taking time away from the band to recover from surgery, Bram van den Berg will play drums at the shows. In a statement accompanying the announcement, the Edge used the phrase “the beauty of the Sphere” (speaking of the venue and not the baby from the Super Bowl spot). –Evan Minsker

U2:UV Achtung Baby Live at Sphere

U2:UV Achtung Baby Live at Sphere


The Walkmen

A decade on from their unexpected hiatus, the Walkmen are finally reuniting. The beloved New York–based rock act marked its 2023 reunion tour with a handful of sold-out shows at Webster Hall in April. The Walkmen have made and  will make their way to select U.S. cities: Philadelphia, Atlanta, Salt Lake City, Chicago, and Washington, D.C. The Walkmen currently plan on concluding their reunion tour with festival performances this summer, including Austin City Limits, Boston Calling Music Festival, Green Man, and Paredes de Coura Festival in Portugal. –Nina Corcoran

The Walkmen Tour Dates

Weezer

The latest Weezer live outing will not be Hella Mega, nor will it be a Broadway residency. Billed as Weezer’s Indie Rock Roadtrip!, the band will head on tour with opening acts including Spoon, Modest Mouse, Future Islands, Joyce Manor, Momma, and White Reaper on select dates. –Evan Minsker

Weezer: Indie Rock Roadtrip!

Weezer: Indie Rock Roadtrip!


Yeah Yeah Yeahs

With September’s Cool It Down, the first Yeah Yeah Yeahs record in nearly a decade, Karen O and company found new energy in patient, driving songs. Ahead of a full tour in support of the LP, the band staged a handful of comeback shows in the United States, New York, and Los Angeles; the group had to cancel three other shows in Australia due to health problems. Perfume Genius, who joined the band on Cool It Down’s Grammy-nominated “Spitting Off the Edge of the World,” opens some of the shows on the band’s spring leg in the United States. –Allison Hussey

Yeah Yeah Yeahs Tour Dates

Yeah Yeah Yeahs Tour Dates

Album Musik Terbaru


album musik, musik album, hot sauce album musik nct dream, cover album musik, contoh cover album musik, heejin album musik loona, download lagu house musik indo full album, download musik full album, padi (grup musik) album, tabel disamping menunjukkan album-album pada file musik di dalam flashdisk, musik iwan fals full album, album musik pertama fiersa besari, tabel di samping menunjukan album album pada file musik, download musik klasik mozart full album, suatu grup musik merilis album penjualan per minggu, xx album musik the xx, album musik indonesia, album rozy musik, lalisa album musik lisa, album musik pertama fiersa, suatu grup musik merilis album penjualan per minggu dalam ribuan, download album musik indonesia, foto album musik, apa album musik pertama fiersa besari, tenda biru album musik desy ratnasari, gambar album musik, suatu grup musik merilis album penjualan, album aura musik, album musik terbaik sepanjang masa, penghargaan grammy untuk album musik teater terbaik, dj dinar candy album musik dinar candy, album musik dj, download musik dj riri full album, download lagu musik album the mercys, album musik adalah, album musik pertama fiersa besari sebagai solois, philosophy gang merupakan album perdana dari grup musik bentukan, sholawatan album musik santri njoso, jenis jenis album musik, album musik terlaris sepanjang masa, album musik iwan fals, roxy by proxy album musik, musik reggae full album, apa itu album musik, mr. hands album musik herbie hancock, cara mengganti foto album musik, musik tipe x full album, download musik yeni inka full album, musik album kenangan album kenangan, debu grup musik album

The 46 Most Anticipated Albums of Summer 2023 – Warungku Terkini

As festival season approaches, the flies of summer are abuzz with anticipation. While headline pop records dominated last year’s release cycle, 2023 is set to be a marquee year for a broad spectrum of rock. Foo Fighters and Queens of the Stone Age are back, and there are much-anticipated returns from PJ Harvey, Best Coast’s Bethany Cosentino, King Krule, and even a new album from Radiohe— well, not exactly, but Jonny Greenwood’s collaborative record with Dudu Tassa promises much, as does a new LP from club maestro Clark, executive produced by one Thom Yorke. Killer Mike, Noname, Julie Byrne, and Jenny Lewis are also back after long breaks, and you can never rule out the arrival of that endlessly speculated-upon Rihanna album. Here’s a rundown of all that and more that we’re looking forward to this summer.


12 Rods: If We Stayed Alive

July 7

During the COVID-19 lockdown, 12 Rods frontman Ryan Olcott found some of the band’s previously recorded demos and decided to finish them. That has developed into If We Stayed Alive, the Minneapolis band’s first album since Lost Time came out 21 years ago. “These are songs that I forgot about,” Olcott said frankly. –Alphonse Pierre

All products featured on warungku are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

12 Rods: If We Stayed Alive

12 Rods: If We Stayed Alive


Albert Hammond Jr: Melodies on Hiatus

June 23

Strokes guitarist Albert Hammond Jr. announced his latest album, Melodies on Hiatus, in April. So far, Hammond has shared the first nine songs of the LP, including collaborations with Washington, D.C., rapper GoldLink, Arctic Monkeys’ Matt Helders, and guitarist Steve Stevens. Hammond created the album long-distance with songwriter Simon Wilcox, who wrote the lyrics. “I think this is the best collection of music that I have made,” Hammond said of the 19-track LP in a statement. “I wasn’t trying to make a double album; I wanted to make a deconstruction of a band.” –Eric Torres

Albert Hammond Jr: Melodies on Hiatus

Albert Hammond Jr: Melodies on Hiatus


Amaarae: Fountain Baby

June 9

Amaarae, the Ghanaian American pop star, will follow up her 2020 debut, The Angel You Don’t Know, with Fountain Baby in June. She’s already shared the slow-burning lead single “Reckless & Sweet,” which promises to continue her spiky, experimental fusion of Afrobeats, hip-hop, and R&B. “Coming back after so long, I had a lot of time to think and reflect on what I wanted my message to be,” Amaarae said in a statement, “Last time it was about confidence, this time it’s about love and faith.” –Eric Torres


Arlo Parks: My Soft Machine

May 26

British singer-songwriter Arlo Parks is back with her second album, My Soft Machine. It’s the follow-up to 2021 Mercury Prize winner Collapsed in Sunbeams, which also earned Parks a Grammy nomination for Best Alternative Music Album (not to mention Best New Artist). It’s a record that includes a new collaboration with Phoebe Bridgers titled “Pegasus.” –Evan Minsker

Arlo Parks: My Soft Machine


Bethany Cosentino: Natural Disaster

July 28

It’s been almost 15 years since Bethany Cosentino and Bobb Bruno formed the indie-rock duo Best Coast, and, now, Cosentino is stepping out on her own. The guitarist, songwriter, and vocalist announced the news with her new track “It’s Fine,” the lead single from her solo debut, Natural Disaster. Cosentino also revealed that Best Coast would go on indefinite hiatus. “I have heavily identified as ‘Bethany from Best Coast’ for over a decade, and being anyone other than that has felt challenging for me,” Cosentino said. “I decided to push myself through the discomfort and go explore being … just Bethany Cosentino. This record is a product of that experience.” The 12-song Natural Disaster was produced by Butch Walker. –Madison Bloom

Bethany Cosentino: Natural Disaster

Bethany Cosentino: Natural Disaster


Bonny Doon Let There Be Music

Bonny Doon: Let There Be Music

June 16

Detroit alt-country band Bonny Doon released their last album, Longwave, in 2018. Since then, the group performed as Waxahatchee’s backing band on 2020’s Saint Cloud, and Bonny Doon are now set to return with Let There Be Music, their first album since signing to Anti-. The new record also features Waxahatchee’s Katie Crutchfield, and includes the singles “Let There Be Music,” “San Francisco,” “Crooked Creek,” and “Naturally.” “I moved to the Bay Area in 2018 and for the first time in a while, we had one foot somewhere other than Detroit,” the band’s singer and guitarist, Bobby Colombo, said in a statement. “We spent a lot of time on the West Coast, which found its way into the writing, and also provided some distance to reflect more deeply on our hometown.” –Eric Torres


Brigid Mae Power Dream From the Deep Well

Brigid Mae Power: Dream From the Deep Well

June 30

A year after 2020’s Head Above the Water, Irish singer-songwriter Brigid Mae Power released 2021’s Burning Your Light EP, a six-song set of covers. She makes her album-length return with Dream From the Deep Well, billed as “folk music, but not as we know it.” The album features a cover of Tim Buckley’s “I Must Have Been Blind” and an original tribute to a primary school teacher and traditional Irish musician who was killed while jogging. So far, Power has shared videos for the title track and the touring contemplation “Counting Down.” –Marc Hogan


Bully: Lucky for You

June 2

Grunge rock band Bully released their last album, Sugaregg, back in 2020. The group, led by Nashville-based musician Alicia Bognanno, will soon release Lucky for You, an album inspired by Bognanno’s dog Mezzi, who died during a period of transition in Bognanno’s life. Bully’s  fourth album is led by the feedback-loaded single “Days Move Slow,” and features the previously released “Lose You,” featuring Soccer Mommy. –Eric Torres

Bully: Lucky for You

43B

Chief Keef: Almighty So 2

June 9

Almighty So, released in 2013, is one of the most inventive and essential Chief Keef mixtapes. So, naturally, its sequel, nearly a decade later, comes with major expectations. But since the project was announced in October 2022, it has gone through endless pushbacks and failed promises of “coming soon.” Originally it was scheduled for January, then April, and now, maybe, this summer. Who knows if it will ever actually see the light of day? There are a couple singles rumored to be on Almighty So 2, like “Racks Stuffed Inna Couch” and “Tony Montana Flow,” which is decent proof that the project actually exists. –Alphonse Pierre


Christine and the Queens: Paranoïa, Angels, True Love

June 9

Christine and the Queens wrote his new album, Paranoïa, Angels, True Love, as the “second part of an operatic gesture” that also encompassed last year’s Redcar les adorables étoiles (prologue). Both albums were inspired by Angels in America, Tony Kushner’s award-winning play chronicling relationships ravaged by the AIDS crisis in 1980s New York. “Redcar felt colorful and absurd,” Christin and the Queens said in press materials. “Paranoïa, Angels, True Love is a key toward heart-opening transformation, a prayer towards the self—the one that breathes through all the loves it is made of.” –Madison Bloom

Christine and the Queens: Paranoïa, Angels, True Love

Christine and the Queens: Paranoïa, Angels, True Love


Clark: Sus Dog

May 26

What’s Sus Dog? Why, it’s the latest album from British electronic music mainstay Clark. For the first time, Clark is singing on one of his records. The album features several contributions from executive producer Thom Yorke. “The first thing he sent me was him singing about being stuck between two floors and I was already sold,” Yorke said in a statement. “To me the way he approached it all wasn’t the usual singer songwriter guff thank god; it mirrored the way he approached all his composition and recording, but this time it had a human face. His face.” Sus Dog includes the lead single “Town Crank.” –Evan Minsker

Clark: Sus Dog

The Clientele: I Am Not There Anymore

July 28

After going on an indefinite hiatus, the Clientele resurfaced in 2017 for their first album in seven years, Music for the Age of Miracles. Fast forward another six years, and the UK indie-rock trio is back with a double album, I Am Not There Anymore. This time, singer and guitarist Alasdair MacLean has said, the Clientele branched out into post-bop jazz, contemporary classical, and electronic music. MacLean, bassist James Hornsey, and drummer Mark Keen don knights’ armor in the video for the album’s first single, “Blue Over Blue,” which billows out with horns, strings, and samples. –Marc Hogan

The Clientele: I Am Not There Anymore

The Clientele: I Am Not There Anymore


Dave Matthews Band: Walk Around the Moon

May 19

This year, Dave Matthews Band return for a massive tour here on planet Earth behind their new album, Walk Around the Moon. It’s an album with lofty song titles like “Break Free,” “Monsters,” “The Ocean and the Butterfly,” “The Only Thing,” and “All You Wanted Was Tomorrow.” If all you want is tomorrow, so you’re one day closer to hearing this whole album, here’s some good news—lead single “Madman’s Eyes” is out now. –Evan Minsker

Dave Matthews Band: Walk Around the Moon

Dave Matthews Band: Walk Around the Moon


Dudu Tassa / Jonny Greenwood: Jarak Qaribak

June 9

Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood and Israeli musician Dudu Tassa are teaming up for Jarak Qaribak, a collaborative LP whose title translates to “Your Neighbor Is Your Friend.” Greenwood, who previously collaborated with Israeli singer and composer Shye Ben Tzur on 2015’s Junun, has described the process of creating the new album as similar in scope. “You have all these scales which don’t conform to western major/minor scales,” he explained in a statement. “It’s very hard to impose a chord sequence on these melodies. It usually makes them collapse. It’s like reducing the resolution on a colour photo until it’s just squares.” So far, the duo has shared lead singles “Ashufak Shay” and “Ya Mughir al-Ghazala” ahead of the release. –Eric Torres

Dudu Tassa & Jonny Greenwood: Jarak Qaribak

Dudu Tassa & Jonny Greenwood: Jarak Qaribak


Feeble Little Horse: Girl With Fish

June 9

Make it past the prickly layer of scuzzy noise-rock in Feeble Little Horse’s music and you’re rewarded with a mellow dose of alt-pop sweetness courtesy of Lydia Slocum’s vocals. The Pittsburgh quartet broke onto the scene in 2021 with its debut album, Hayday, and signed to Saddle Creek shortly afterward. On their upcoming sophomore LP, Girl With Fish, Feeble Little Horse further strengthen their take on noise pop. Get a taste for it with lead single “Tin Man” ahead of the album’s release on June 9. Plus, read warungku’s new Rising feature “Meet Feeble Little Horse, the Young Noise-Pop Band Repping Pittsburgh DIY.” –Nina Corcoran

Feeble Little Horse: Girl With Fish

Feeble Little Horse: Girl With Fish


Foo Fighters: But Here We Are

June 2

It was a heartbreaking year for Foo Fighters. Following the death of their beloved drummer Taylor Hawkins, the band made a new album called But Here We Are that’s coming this summer. Produced with their frequent collaborator Greg Kurstin, its album announcement referred to the work as a “brutally honest and emotionally raw response to everything Foo Fighters endured over the last year.” It was announced with the new single “Rescued.” –Evan Minsker

Foo Fighters: But Here We Are

Foo Fighters: But Here We Are


Hayden Pedigo: The Happiest Times I Ever Ignored

June 30

The Happiest Times I Ever Ignored is the latest record from Texas guitarist Hayden Pedigo, who last issued a set of acoustic compositions with 2021’s Letting Go. Pedigo’s playing style is light, warm, and open, drawing inspiration from a wide variety of fingerpickers and other eccentrics without succumbing to imitation. Occasionally anointed with pedal steel, Pedigo’s songs unwind with pensive ease, maintaining a loose air of mystique. They’re effective one by one as five-minute escapes or in an album-length oasis, inviting contemplation and compassion. Pedigo announced The Happiest Times I Ever Ignored with the track “Elsewhere” in April. –Allison Hussey

Hayden Pedigo: The Happiest Times I Ever Ignored

Hayden Pedigo: The Happiest Times I Ever Ignored


Home Is Where The Whaler

Home Is Where: The Whaler

June 16

After rolling out one of the best rock albums of 2021 with their debut full-length, I Became Birds, Home Is Where are back with another dose of heart-on-sleeve emo meets Elephant 6 indie rock. The Palm Coast, Florida, band is calling The Whaler, its sophomore effort, a concept album “about getting used to things getting worse.” Although it was spurred by a nervous breakdown and the spiraling thoughts that culminated in its wake, The Whaler has moments of blissful harmonica, cyclical tape loops, and tender sentiments buried beneath lyrics of dystopian defeat. –Nina Corcoran


Janelle Monáe: The Age of Pleasure

June 9

Since releasing her third LP, Dirty Computer, in 2018, the alien superstar Janelle Monáe has spent more of her time branching out into short fiction and screen acting, publishing The Memory Librarian in 2022 and picking up roles in a Knives Out sequel and a Josephine Baker biography series. Now, she’s back with The Age of Pleasure. After sharing the new single “Float” with Seun Kuti and Egypt 80 in February, Monáe followed it with “Lipstick Lover” and the full album announcement in May. “I definitely have had an opportunity to evolve and grow and to tap into the things that bring me pleasure, the things that perhaps I should rethink and rework,” she told Apple Music’s Zane Lowe about developing the project. –Allison Hussey

Janelle Monáe: The Age of Pleasure

Janelle Monáe: The Age of Pleasure


Jay Worthy / Roc Marciano: Nothing Bigger Than the Program

May 26

Vancouver-raised, Compton-molded rapper Jay Worthy has been a steady hand in hip-hop for a while now. On Nothing Bigger Than the Program he teams up with another Mr. Reliable in Roc Marciano, who produced the entire album. This won’t be the first time Marciano has given out the full-project production sauce, most recently he was behind the boards on Stove God Cooks’ Reasonable Drought and Flee Lord’s Delgado. As for Jay Worthy and Marciano, they have collaborated before on Worthy and Larry June’s joint album, 2 P’z in a Pod, and lately have been on tour together. –Alphonse Pierre


Jenny Lewis: Joy’all

June 9

Jenny Lewis penned some of the songs on her new solo album, Joy’all, during a pre-pandemic tour. The rest emerged from a week-long virtual songwriting workshop hosted by Beck in 2021. “The challenge was to write one song every day for seven days, with guidelines from Beck,” Lewis wrote in press materials. “The guidelines would be prompts like ‘write a song with 1-4-5 chord progression,’ ‘write a song with only cliches,’ or ‘write in free form style.’ The first song I submitted to the group was ‘Puppy and a Truck.’” Joy’all was produced by Dave Cobb and engineered and mixed by Greg Koller; it also features contributions from Jon Brion. –Madison Bloom

Jenny Lewis: Joy’all

Jess Williamson: Time Ain’t Accidental

June 9

After collaborating with Waxahatchee’s Katie Crutchfield for last year’s I Walked with You A Ways, Texas-reared singer-songwriter Jess Williamson returns with another solo LP. Time Ain’t Accidental arrives three years after her last album, 2020’s Sorceress. Williamson draws up vivid, sensual imagery, painting with twangy tones and synthy beats. The record’s title track is an ode to the long, winding paths toward falling in love, and she contemplates the heartache of chasing after free spirits on the album’s first single, “Hunter.” Williamson also shared “Chasing Spirits” as a preview of Time Ain’t Accidental. –Allison Hussey

Jess Williamson: Time Ain’t Accidental

Jess Williamson: Time Ain’t Accidental


Jessy Lanza: Love Hallucination

July 28

Love Hallucination is a collection of songs that Jessy Lanza first wrote for other artists; yet, after pushing her own limits, these experiments in style proved enticing enough to lead her to rewrite and record them herself. Building on her 2021 DJ-Kicks release, Lanza weaves propulsive dancefloor bangers with sultry downtempo jams. “I’ve never written explicitly about orgasms or played saxophone on one of my records before,” Lanza said. “But these choices made sense on Love Hallucination.” A trust fall in album form, Love Hallucination promises to show what happens when an artist finds faith in her own deconstruction. –Matthew Ismael Ruiz

Jessy Lanza: Love Hallucination

Jessy Lanza: Love Hallucination


Joanna Sternberg: I’ve Got Me

June 30

There’s something inherently pure about Joanna Sternberg’s music that’s reminiscent of the first time you heard a classic folk record. Their guitar chords are evocative yet simple, their words truthful and eager. On I’ve Got Me, Sternberg sophomore album and the follow-up to 2019’s Then I Try Some More, Sternberg sits upright, takes a deep breath, and lets it all spill out: the tiny thrill of making a friend laugh, the specific exhaustion of hustling in New York, the thoughts that consume your mind before they help you make sense of it all. I’ve Got Me is a dare not to fall in love with all the traits that make Sternberg a captivating singer-songwriter. –Nina Corcoran

Joanna Sternberg: I’ve Got Me

Joanna Sternberg: I’ve Got Me


Julie Byrne: The Greater Wings

July 7

Six years ago, Julie Byrne unleashed the gentle-sounding Not Even Happiness, the album she worked on with collaborator Eric Littman. They began to work on her follow-up, The Greater Wings, until Littman’s death in June 2021. Byrne then went to the Catskills and finished the album with producer Alex Somers. The lead single of her upcoming 10-track album is called “Summer Glass.” –Alphonse Pierre

Julie Byrne: The Greater Wings

Julie Byrne: The Greater Wings


Kari Faux Real Btches Dont Die

Kari Faux: Real B*tches Don’t Die!

May 26

The South will be the source of inspiration on Kari Faux’s upcoming album, Real B*tches Don’t Die!, an homage to her roots. Hailing from Little Rock, Arkansas, hip-hop, R&B, and gospel will co-exist on the project, which will be her first since 2021’s Lowkey Superstar (Deluxe). Multiple singles have already been released, including “Make a Wish,” “Me First,” and “Turnin’ Heads.” To hammer home the theme, Southern legends Big K.R.I.T., Devin the Dude, and the late Gangsta Boo feature on the new album. –Alphonse Pierre


Killer Mike: Michael

June 16

It’s been more than a decade since Killer Mike’s last solo album, R.A.P. Music. In that time he’s been anything but quiet: Releasing four albums with El-P as Run the Jewels, breaking out into television, and becoming one of the loudest political voices in all of hip-hop. His upcoming album, Michael, which will be his official return to solo material, is a self-described “origin story.” The recent single “Don’t Let the Devil” is a soulful joint with El-P and Thankugoodsir; he wrote a note about the song on Instagram: “I want to time travel and tell 12-year-old #MICHAEL that he dropped a 🔥 song with his rap potna El-P…Life is great kid.” –Alphonse Pierre

Killer Mike: Michael

King Krule: Space Heavy

June 9

Space Heavy is Archy Marshall’s first King Krule LP in three years, following 2020’s Man Alive! Marshall was inspired by the concept of “the space between” as he was writing the new album in London and Liverpool between 2020 and 2022. He recorded Space Heavy with producer Dilip Harris, guitarist Jack Towell, bassist James Wilson, saxophonist Ignacio Salvadores, and drummer George Bass. Upon announcing the new record, Marshall shared lead single “Seaforth” along with a music video directed by Jocelyn Anquetil. The clip stars Marshall, his band, and two happy dogs. –Madison Bloom

King Krule: Space Heavy

Lucinda Williams: Stories From a Rock n Roll Heart

June 30

Americana icon Lucinda Williams will return this June with Stories From a Rock n Roll Heart—her first album since recovering from a stroke in 2020. The new record features guest spots from Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band’s Patti Scialfa, who joined Williams on the lead single, “New York Comeback.” The married couple also appears on the as-yet-unreleased song “Rock n Roll Heart.” Williams enlisted the likes of Angel Olsen, Margo Price, and the Replacements’ Tommy Stinson as backup singers on select tracks of the album, too. Stories From a Rock n Roll Heart follows Williams’ 2020 LP, Good Souls Better Angels. The singer-songwriter recently published her memoir, Don’t Tell Anybody The Secrets I Told You. –Madison Bloom

Lucinda Williams’ album cover

Lucinda Williams: Stories From a Rock n Roll Heart


Mandy, Indiana: I’ve Seen a Way

May 19

Mandy, Indiana catherine-wheeled out of Manchester in 2021 with a darkly alluring EP titled with only an ellipsis. On May 19, a new sentence begins: The British band’s debut album promises a battery of industrial noise, warehouse-ready rave beats, and antic Franglais vocals from mantra-incanting singer Valentine Caulfield. Lead single “Injury Detail,” produced by techno pugilists Giant Swan, set the tone with an incendiary display of simmering synths, menacing mantras, pounding drums, and guitars hammered horribly out of shape—a banger, in every sense. –Jazz Monroe

Mandy, Indiana: I’ve Seen a Way

Mandy, Indiana: I’ve Seen a Way


Mega Bog: End of Everything

May 19

End of Everything is the Mexican Summer debut of Erin Elizabeth Birgy’s Mega Bog. After breaking out with a series of idiosyncratic, folky pop records, Birgy modulates her sage observations to a synthpop frequency on the new LP. Making the album, she got sober, which evinced an impatience for the intellectualized “secret codes” of more austere songwriting. “I no longer wanted to hide behind difficult music,” she said in press materials. “I was curious to give others the same with the music I create; to make music someone could use to explore drama, playfulness, and dancing, to shake the trauma loose.” –Jazz Monroe

Mega Bog: End of Everything

Mega Bog: End of Everything


Meshell Ndegeocello: The Omnichord Real Book

June 16

Bassist and vocalist Meshell Ndegeocello calls upon an impressive roster of friends for The Omnichord Real Book, a sweeping and dense work that knits together jazz, soul, funk, rock, hip-hop, gospel, and even bits of children’s songs. With Jeff Parker, Brandee Younger, Joan as Police Woman, and others joining her across the LP, Ndegeocello processes pain, doubt, and personal growth. She transforms her struggles into moody, spiritual meditations and passionate bursts of triumph. “I really, really, really love my pain so much,” Ndegeocello growls on “Clear Water,” with a “Rrah!” to emphasize her point. With a 73-minute runtime, The Omnichord Real Book asks for ample attention, but its rewards are so numerous that every minute is worth the investment. –Allison Hussey

Meshell Ndegeocello: The Omnichord Real Book

Meshell Ndegeocello: The Omnichord Real Book


Militarie Gun: Life Under the Gun

June 23

Last year, Los Angeles post-hardcore quintet Militarie Gun issued All Roads Lead to the Gun (Deluxe), a record compiling two previous EPs and four new songs. Now, the band is gearing up to drop its debut album, Life Under the Gun. The 12-track LP includes recent single “Very High,” which was inspired by “the desire to escape the embarrassment of day to day life as much as possible,” as lead singer Ian Shelton revealed in a press release. –Madison Bloom

Militarie Gun: Life Under the Gun

Militarie Gun: Life Under the Gun


Miya Folick: Roach

May 26

After releasing her 2007 EP last year, Los Angeles-based pop artist Miya Folick announced her second LP, Roach, in January. She described it as “an album about trying to get to the core of what life really is.” Folick released “Get Out of My House” as the first official single from the album. Roach includes all of the material from 2007 plus a few more new tracks, such as the recent single “Cockroach.” –Allison Hussey

Miya Folick: Roach

Nation of Language: Strange Disciple

September 15

Strange Disciple is the third album from Brooklyn synthpop trio Nation of Language, and first that wasn’t recorded in the early days of pandemic lockdown. The title is drawn from the single “Sole Obsession,” and means “one who finds themself an adherent to a subject that is probably not worth the devotion,” according to a quote from the band. Nation of Language have also shared the single “Weak in Your Light” ahead of the release. –Eric Torres

Nation of Language: Strange Disciple

Nation of Language: Strange Disciple


Noname: Sundial

TBA

Over the last few years, Noname’s focus has been expanding her book club and racial justice outreach. But, in July, she’s due to follow-up her 2018 album, Room 25, with Sundial, which she announced on Instagram with a message that provided little more information. She hasn’t released much music in the nearly five years between records, but did get into a spat with J. Cole, resulting in one of the most impressive and dismissive diss records in recent memory in “Song 33,” and she put out the single “Rainforest” in 2021. Sundial will be a welcomed return for one of hip-hop’s strongest voices. –Alphonse Pierre


Peter Gabriel: I/O

TBA

If you looked up into the night sky and gazed upon a full moon this year, its glow has heralded a new song from the great Peter Gabriel. It all appears to be leading up the release of I/O, his long-awaited new album. Thus far he’s shared “Panopticom,” “The Court,” “Playing for Time,” “I/O,” and “Four Kinds of Horses.” Gabriel has also announced some tour dates behind all this new lunar music. –Evan Minsker


PJ Harvey: I Inside the Old Year Dying

July 7

Seven years since The Hope Six Demolition Project, PJ Harvey is set to return with her 10th studio album. Inspired by Harvey’s booklength poem, Orlam, the improvisatory album was made with producers Flood and John Parish, longtime collaborators of hers. In the build-up, she released a video for the new single “A Child’s Question, August,” and has been reissuing past works like the recent B-Sides, Demos & Rarities. In a press release, Harvey described the new album as “a resting space, a solace, a comfort, a balm—which feels timely for the times we’re in.” –Alphonse Pierre

PJ Harvey: I Inside the Old Year Dying

PJ Harvey: I Inside the Old Year Dying


Queens of the Stone Age: In Times New Roman…

June 16

With the lead single “Emotion Sickness” from their forthcoming new album, In Times New Roman…, Queens of the Stone Age showed that they’re sticking to the aesthetic formula as muscular hard rock guitars underpin Joshua Homme’s glam-adjacent vocal melodies. It’s the band’s first album in six years, and, for Homme, Troy Van Leeuwen, Dean Fertita, Michael Shuman, and Jon Theodore’s latest full-length for Matador, they recorded at Homme’s Pink Duck Studios with help from mixer Mark Rankin. Their go-to collaborator Boneface is behind the grim artwork. There is a song called “Carnavoyeur.” –Evan Minsker

Queens of the Stone Age: In Times New Roman...

Queens of the Stone Age: In Times New Roman…


Rihanna

TBA

In the days leading up to Rihanna’s Super Bowl stand, fans were abuzz with hopeful speculation that the marquee event would be the launchpad for a new album announcement. Instead, she revealed another major life development: her second pregnancy with A$AP Rocky, following the birth of their first child last May. Since issuing Anti in 2016, Rihanna has said that her next LP will bend toward dancehall, claiming that she’s worked on more than 500 demos for the project. As of right now, the latest major Rihanna material is “Lift Me Up,” a one-off for the Black Panther: Wakanda Forever soundtrack that’s picked up a few major award nominations. “I want it to be this year,” she said of a new record in February. So do we, Rihanna, so do we. –Allison Hussey


Snõõper: Super Snõõper

July 14

Nashville punk group Snõõper are gearing up to release their debut album, Super Snõõper. In the time since their 2020 formation, Snõõper have garnered attention for their wild live shows and EPs, ultimately getting signed by Third Man. On Super Snõõper, the band further evolves its sound by throwing everything at the wall over the course of 14 tracks, including the single “Pod.” Snõõper are at their happiest while sprinting between riled-up punk, garage rock, and new wave, so prepare for your heart rate to spike when tagging along for the ride. –Nina Corcoran

Snõõper: Super Snõõper

Snõõper: Super Snõõper


Sparks: The Girl Is Crying in Her Latte

May 26

After getting the documentary treatment and penning a star-studded musical, Sparks are returning with a new album, The Girl Is Crying in Her Latte. Brothers Ron and Russell Mael are perhaps the greatest comedy duo to emerge from the new wave scene, and they haven’t lost their bizarro sense of humor in the past five decades. Sparks released the title track from the record along with a music video starring Cate Blanchett dancing wildly in a canary yellow suit. The Girl Is Crying in Her Latte also marks the band’s first album for Island Records in 47 years, following 1976’s Big Beat. –Madison Bloom

Sparks: The Girl Is Crying in Her Latte

Sparks: The Girl Is Crying in Her Latte


Squid: O Monolith

June 9

Squid electrified the UK festival circuit with an anthemic, yelpy spin on the acerbic post-punk that has prevailed since Sleaford Mods brought monologuing back into vogue. The band’s tentacles have since reached further afield, into sonically nuanced (and sometimes proggier) realms. Recent single “Swing (In a Dream),” from second album, O Monolith, shares airspace with The Bends and ’90s Modest Mouse: with bigger riffs and deeper grooves, but more fraught and intimate, too. –Jazz Monroe

Squid: O Monolith

Taylor Swift Speak Now

Taylor Swift: Speak Now (Taylor’s Version)

July 7

Leave it to Taylor Swift to make every album announcement a real surprise. During the first of her multi-night stint in Nashville for the Eras Tour, Swift revealed that Speak Now is the next album to get her re-record treatment. Speak Now (Taylor’s Version) comes with six previously unreleased tracks and will arrive on July 7. “The songs that came from this time in my life were marked by their brutal honesty, unfiltered diaristic confessions and wild wistfulness,” Swift said. “I love this album because it tells a tale of growing up, flailing, flying and crashing… and living to speak about it.” Swift was much younger when she wrote the crux of the original album, which means this new version may carry some of the wisdom that comes with being a 33-year-old. –Nina Corcoran


Water From Your Eyes: Everyone’s Crushed

May 26

Since issuing their fantastic LP Structure in 2021, Brooklyn experimental duo Water From Your Eyes have signed to Matador and are readying their debut for the label. Everyone’s Crushed features the single “Barley,” a warped slice of synth-pop skewed by vocalist Rachel Brown’s deadpan delivery. Brown and musician Nate Amos are playing a New York residency this month, followed by an extensive North American tour. Revisit warungku’s Rising interview “Alt-Pop Duo Water From Your Eyes Commit to the Bit.” –Madison Bloom

Water From Your Eyes: Everyone’s Crushed

Water From Your Eyes: Everyone’s Crushed


Youth Lagoon: Heaven Is a Junkyard

June 9

For seven years, while Trevor Powers continued recording under his exceptional given name, Youth Lagoon was gone—a moniker without a country. The years of hibernation are over, as the project returns in June with Heaven Is a Junkyard. Inspired by Powers’ hometown of Boise, Idaho, the first single is appropriately titled “Idaho Alien.” –Evan Minsker

Youth Lagoon: Heaven Is a Junkyard

Youth Lagoon: Heaven Is a Junkyard

Album Musik Terbaru


album musik, musik album, hot sauce album musik nct dream, cover album musik, contoh cover album musik, heejin album musik loona, download lagu house musik indo full album, download musik full album, padi (grup musik) album, tabel disamping menunjukkan album-album pada file musik di dalam flashdisk, musik iwan fals full album, album musik pertama fiersa besari, tabel di samping menunjukan album album pada file musik, download musik klasik mozart full album, suatu grup musik merilis album penjualan per minggu, xx album musik the xx, album musik indonesia, album rozy musik, lalisa album musik lisa, album musik pertama fiersa, suatu grup musik merilis album penjualan per minggu dalam ribuan, download album musik indonesia, foto album musik, apa album musik pertama fiersa besari, tenda biru album musik desy ratnasari, gambar album musik, suatu grup musik merilis album penjualan, album aura musik, album musik terbaik sepanjang masa, penghargaan grammy untuk album musik teater terbaik, dj dinar candy album musik dinar candy, album musik dj, download musik dj riri full album, download lagu musik album the mercys, album musik adalah, album musik pertama fiersa besari sebagai solois, philosophy gang merupakan album perdana dari grup musik bentukan, sholawatan album musik santri njoso, jenis jenis album musik, album musik terlaris sepanjang masa, album musik iwan fals, roxy by proxy album musik, musik reggae full album, apa itu album musik, mr. hands album musik herbie hancock, cara mengganti foto album musik, musik tipe x full album, download musik yeni inka full album, musik album kenangan album kenangan, debu grup musik album

The 34 Most Anticipated Albums of 2023 – Warungku Terkini

A new year means a new batch of albums to which we can look forward. Some, like Gorillaz’s Cracker Island, feel like they’ve been on the way for as long as we can remember. While others, like Mac DeMarco’s Five Easy Hot Dogs and Popcaan’s Great Is He, seem to have taken us happily by surprise. And, of course, there are the records shrouded in mystery, the ones we hope to see, that feel as likely to drop tomorrow as they are to stay locked away at the studio—we’re looking at you, Rihanna, Cardi B, and Normani. Here are some of the most anticipated albums of 2023. (As of January 9, all release dates have been confirmed. But as usual, everything is subject to change.)


Andy Shauf: Norm

February 10

Andy Shauf thinks in scenes. The Canadian songwriter broke through with 2016’s The Party, a heartfelt account of a single night out told with grace and precision, which was followed by the astute The Neon Skyline in 2020. After a brief detour with the 2021 surprise album Wilds, Shauf’s upcoming album, Norm, is another character-driven comedy, this time focused on a single fictional person. The album’s lead single, “Wasted on You,” finds Shauf pondering the afterlife and wondering what to do when a lover dies. –Rob Arcand

All products featured on warungku are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

Andy Shauf: Norm

A$AP Rocky: Don’t Be Dumb

TBA

A$AP Rocky has had a tumultuous run of it since releasing 2018’s Testing. He made songs with Skepta, Slowthai, FKA twigs, and Nigo and Tyler, the Creator, among others. He joined Tame Impala at Coachella, starred in fashion campaigns and psychedelics documentaries, and endured a spell in Swedish jail, as well as other encounters with the law. He coupled up. With Rihanna. They had a baby boy, and looked consistently great. Then he trickled out more details on a new album, apparently called Don’t Be Dumb. At one point, when the album was called All Smiles, he said Morrissey would be on there; for now, we have his May single, “D.M.B.,” and the Need for Speed: Unbound song “Shittin’ Me,” both of which may or may not feature. Per Rocky, expect extensive production from Metro Boomin. –Jazz Monroe


Beyoncé

TBA

When Beyoncé dropped Renaissance last year, it came with the tantalizing subtitle “Act I,” with two more promised to follow. Does that mean two more full-length albums? Will “Act II” be the teased visuals for Renaissance’s music, and “Act III” an accompanying world tour? It’s hard to say, but after the superstar’s outstanding seventh studio album shook the table yet again for pop, R&B, and dance music, whatever comes next will be icing on the cake. –Eric Torres


Black Belt Eagle Scout: The Land, the Water, the Sky

February 10

Katherine Paul left Portland in 2020 to return to Washington’s Swinomish Indian Tribal Community, where she grew up, finding herself touched with grief, gratitude, and joy as she reflected upon her Indigenous lineage. The singer-songwriter, who’s operated as Black Belt Eagle Scout for the better part of a decade, unravels her feelings across her third full-length, The Land, the Water, the Sky. She considers her connections with her ancestors on “My Blood Runs Through This Land” and she finds comfort in connecting with the natural world on the gentle and hazy “Don’t Give Up.” –Allison Hussey

Black Belt Eagle Scout album cover

Black Belt Eagle Scout: The Land, the Water, the Sky


Cardi B

TBA

Cardi B knows we’re hungry for her sophomore LP. “HERE some scraps since yall STARVING,” the rapper recently tweeted along with a snippet of new music. In the nearly five years since she dropped her debut, Invasion of Privacy, Cardi has shared singles, collaborated with reigning hip-hop stars, revealed two baby bumps on live television, had the two babies, launched a Fashion Nova line, and branded her own boozy whip cream…. Basically everything imaginable but release a new album. Still, her regular teasing and steady release of tracks could be the preamble to that long-awaited full-length. Now that Kendrick, Beyoncé, and SZA have returned with new music—will 2023 mark the second coming of Cardi B? –Madison Bloom


Caroline Polachek: Desire, I Want to Turn Into You

February 14

Long removed from Chairlift, Caroline Polachek continued her evolution with 2019’s Pang, her first solo album under her given name. After a steady stream of recent singles that includes “Bunny Is a Rider,” “Billions,” “Sunset” and “Welcome to My Island,” Polachek recently announced that her next solo album, Desire, I Want to Turn Into You, is due out on Valentine’s Day. All four of the singles are set to appear on the album, which finds her reuniting with PC Music’s Danny L Harle and working with other producers including Dan Nigro and Jim-E Stack. –Rob Arcand

Caroline Polachek album cover

Caroline Polachek: Desire, I Want to Turn Into You


Danny Brown: Quaranta

TBA

Reliably unpredictable, Danny Brown has given few clues toward his next record, and only a fool would bet on what direction the Detroit eccentric might take. In 2019, he followed the eclectic Old and the industrially scorched Atrocity Exhibition with Uknowhatimsayin¿, a more classically produced LP helmed by Q-Tip. The new record, which Brown has said will include some production from the Alchemist and be “just all over the place,” has no release date, but the rapper, who previewed music from the LP at his Bruiser Thanksgiving show, has indicated that it might arrive sooner rather than later. –Jazz Monroe


Fever Ray: Radical Romantics

March 10

Fever Ray’s 2017 album, Plunge, explored the chaos of digital life with absolute precision, and its follow-up promises a similar conceptual bent. Radical Romantics was announced with “Carbon Dioxide,” an explosive single about love and sex in a moment of climate apocalypse. The album includes the excellent track “What They Call Us” and contributions from Trent Reznor, Atticus Ross, Nídia, Johannes Berglund, and more. –Rob Arcand

Fever Ray: Radical Romantics

Fever Ray: Radical Romantics


Fucked Up: One Day

January 27

“What could you do in just one day?” That’s the basic question that powers Fucked Up’s One Day, the Canadian post-hardcore institution’s first album with frontman Damian Abraham contributing lyrics since 2014’s Glass Boys. They’ve accomplished plenty in Abraham’s time away from the pen, including last year’s reissue of early recordings and Year of the Horse. –Marc Hogan

Fucked Up: One Day

Gorillaz: Cracker Island 

February 24

Gorillaz’s new album, Cracker Island, will pick up where their 2020 collection Song Machine, Season One: Strange Timez left off, at least in terms of its star-studded tracklist. Cracker Island is another collaboration-heavy affair, with a tracklist that boasts guests like Bad Bunny, Stevie Nicks, and Beck, among others. Gorillaz have shared four singles ahead of the album’s release on February 24: “New Gold” featuring Tame Impala and Bootie Brown, “Cracker Island” featuring Thundercat, “Baby Queen,” and “Skinny Ape.” –Nina Corcoran

Gorillaz: Cracker Island

H.C. McEntire: Every Acre

January 27

North Carolina’s H.C. McEntire continues her twang-inflected spiritual searching with Every Acre, her third solo album. Opening from the gentle patter of “New Day,” McEntire places herself against an instrumental backdrop of loose guitars, piano, and the occasional groove that feels as comforting as an heirloom quilt. Kentucky singer-songwriter S.G. Goodman joins McEntire on “Shadows,” and Indigo Girls’ Amy Ray is on “Turpentine.” Drawing inspiration from rural living and celestial forces, McEntire’s reconciles with reckons with her faith, fate, and herself on her warm collection of songs. –Allison Hussey

H.C. McEntire: Every Acre

H.C. McEntire: Every Acre


Jennifer Lopez: This Is Me … Now

TBA

News of a sequel to J. Lo’s This Is Me… Then came on the 2002 album’s 20th anniversary. One song on the new LP is titled “Dear Ben Pt. II,” suggesting a follow-up to her 2002 song “Dear Ben,” about her then-partner, then ex, now husband Ben Affleck. Since her last album, 2014’s A.K.A., Lopez has performed at the Super Bowl LIV halftime show with Shakira, sung at Joe Biden’s inauguration, performed a Motown tribute at the 2019 Grammys, and won the Video Vanguard Award at the 2018 MTV Video Music Awards. –Jazz Monroe


Jessie Ware

TBA

Dance beats and moonlit ambience have long suited Jessie Ware, who made her mark with her 2012 debut album, Devotion. But, with 2020’s What’s Your Pleasure?, she transformed into a libidinous disco-pop queen. On last year’s “Free Yourself,” billed as a “taster” to her upcoming fifth album, Ware stayed well within that “sex and dancing” sweet spot—and why not? After a brief run of fall 2022 shows that included a stint opening for Harry Styles, Ware recently teased a springtime release for the as-yet-untitled record. Pleasure seekers, rejoice! –Marc Hogan


Kate NV: Wow

March 3

Between 2018’s для For and 2020’s Room for the Moon, Kate NV moved from squishy soundscapes to polyglot pop, but a sense of wonder remained present. The Moscow-based singer, songwriter, and producer returns with Wow, preceded by the singles “Oni (They)” (with Japanese lyrics by Yokohama producer Foodman), “Early Bird,” and “D D Don’t.” Last May, Kate NV also released the improvisation-based set Bouquet to benefit Ukrainian refugees. –Marc Hogan

Kate NV: Wow

Kelela: Raven

February 10

The cult of Kelela started brewing long before her landmark mixtape, Cut 4 Me, arrived in 2013, and has scarcely let up in the intervening decade, despite relatively little output. Her debut album, Take Me Apart, delivered on the R&B innovator’s potential, and, now, she is finally readying a follow-up. Singles “Washed Away,” “Happy Ending,” and “On the Run” have led Raven. –Jazz Monroe

Kelela: Raven

Lana Del Rey: Did You Know That There’s a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd 

March 10

Did You Know That There’s a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd is Lana Del Rey’s first album since 2021, a year that saw the release of both Blue Banisters and Chemtrails Over the Country Club. Her new LP includes production from Jack Antonoff, Drew Erickson, and Zach Dawes, plus gest turns from Jon Batiste, Father John Misty, and more. So far, the singer-songwriter has shared the album’s title track, which makes reference to the Harry Nilsson song “Don’t Forget Me,” as well as the Eagles’ “Hotel California.” –Rob Arcand

Lana Del Rey cover

Lana Del Rey: Did You Know That There’s a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd


In Real Life

Liv.e: Girl in the Half Pearl

February 10

Liv.e’s ascent has caught the attention of Earl Sweatshirt and Erykah Badu, among plenty of others. The Los Angeles–based artist’s 2020 debut, Couldn’t Wait to Tell You, was a rough-edged text of modern love songs, blending lo-fi hip-hop, jazz fusion, and the soul-meets-rap romance of the late ’90s. Liv.e’s follow-up LP, Girl in the Half Pearl, retains those influences, and focuses on her personal growth—namely, letting go of “people pleasing habits,” as she wrote in press materials. The new record is led by “Wild Animals,” which extends the timeless metaphor that men are dogs. And, for Liv.e, the new album is a “depiction of gaining the strength and courage to choose [herself] every time.” –Madison Bloom


Lydia Loveless

TBA

Lydia Loveless wrote most of her new album at North Carolina’s Secret Studio while navigating the end of a relationship. The Ohio singer-songwriter says the Daughter follow-up slips into a more succinct songwriting style. “I think this is probably the most punch I’ve packed into my lyrics, and without being so verbose,” she told Matter News. –Jazz Monroe


Mac DeMarco: Five Easy Hot Dogs

January 20

Mac DeMarco recorded his new album, Five Easy Hot Dogs, on the road. “The plan was to start driving north, and not go home to Los Angeles until I was done with a record,” he explained in a press statement. Each song on the album, as a result, is named after the city in which it was recorded, including three in DeMarco’s native Canada—Victoria, Vancouver, and Edmonton. Five Easy Hot Dogs follows DeMarco’s 2019 record Here Comes the Cowboy. –Matthew Strauss

Mac DeMarco: Five Easy Hot Dogs

Mac DeMarco: Five Easy Hot Dogs


Margo Price: Strays

January 13

Just after releasing her memoir, Maybe We’ll Make It, Margo Price continues to dig into herself with her fourth LP, Strays. A mind-opening experience with psilocybin mushrooms brought on new revelations about personal growth, love, and purpose for the singer-songwriter. She leverages the psychedelic influence in songs like “Been to the Mountain” and “Change of Heart,” while “Lydia” is a harrowing reflection on reproductive freedom. –Allison Hussey

Margo Price: Strays

Metallica: 72 Seasons

April 14

Over six years after Hardwired…To Self-Destruct, Metallica return this spring with an album named for the seasons navigated in the first 18 years of our lives. “Much of our adult experience is reenactment or reaction to these childhood experiences,” James Hetfield said of the concept. “Prisoners of childhood or breaking free of those bondages we carry.” The Greg Fidelman–produced LP’s lead single and title track signaled a band content to menacingly thrash about in its tried-and-true comfort zone. –Jazz Monroe

Metallica: 72 Seasons

​​Normani

TBA

Last year, Normani assured fans that her debut solo album would be “worth the wait.” A teased summer release date came and went, but the former Fifth Harmony member did return with a wounded, downtempo single, “Fair,” and a gaudy, string-drenched collaboration with Calvin Harris, Tinashe, and Offset, “New to You.” She has indicated that the delays are due to “personal life stuff,” as well as her own high standards. No one who has heard her 2019 breakout single “Motivation” and 2020 Cardi B collaboration “Wild Side”—or witnessed their stunningly choreographed videos—needs to doubt Normani’s determination for quality control. –Marc Hogan


Paramore: This Is Why 

February 10

If the two singles that Paramore released are any indication, then their new album This Is Why is a reaction to being pent-up during the pandemic. The title track is a paranoid tale of isolation and hesitancy set to the tune of groove-forward indie rock, while “The News” is a whiplash single about the inability to shake that feeling of helplessness while doom-scrolling. “You’d think after a global pandemic of fucking biblical proportions and the impending doom of a dying planet, that humans would have found it deep within themselves to be kinder or more empathetic or something,” frontwoman Hayley Williams explained in a statement. This Is Why is Paramore’s first album in six years and the follow-up to 2017’s After Laughter. –Nina Corcoran

Paramore: This Is Why

Philip Selway: Strange Dance

February 24

Radiohead drummer Philip Selway has already released a pair of solo albums, 2010’s Familial and 2014’s Weatherhouse. “Check for Signs of Life” is the lead single from Selway’s third album, Strange Dance. The 10-rack set features collaborators such as Hannah Peel, Adrian Utley of Portishead, Quinta, Marta Salogni, Valentina Magaletti, and Laura Moody. It also follows Selway’s 2017 soundtrack to the Polly Steele–directed drama Let Me Go. –Marc Hogan

Philip Selway: Strange Dance

Philip Selway: Strange Dance


Popcaan Great Is He

Popcaan: Great Is He

January 27

Popcaan has trickled out singles since his 2020 project Fixtape, and now, the Jamaican dancehall superstar’s long-teased follow-up is imminent. Early this year, a collaboration with Drake, “We Caa Done,” preceded the release, with a video shot in Turks and Caicos. (The pair last collaborated on a pair of songs for Fixtape, and Drake will release Great Is He through OVO Sound.) The single, Popcaan said, “is all about persevering. We don’t think about limits. We’re living the life we’ve dreamed of, and despite what the haters and naysayers have to say, we will only be greater.” –Jazz Monroe


Quasi: Breaking the Balls of History

February 10

Quasi’s Breaking the Balls of History is an album of several firsts for the Portland duo of Sam Coomes and Janet Weiss. It’s their first album in a decade, on the heels of 2013’s Mole City. It’s Weiss’ first project since parting ways with Sleater-Kinney in 2019. And, with second single “Doomscrollers,” which follows the early advance track “Queen of Ears,” it’s also certainly the first Quasi album to contain a lyric about “teenage TikTok stars.” On a much more serious note, the album comes after Quasi had to reschedule a planned 2019 reunion tour as Weiss recuperated from a car accident. –Marc Hogan

Quasi: Breaking the Balls of History

Quasi: Breaking the Balls of History


Rihanna

TBA

Rihanna’s long-awaited follow-up to 2016’s Anti somehow seems closer than ever. The pop star released her first new songs in years for the Black Panther sequel soundtrack last November, and was announced as the Super Bowl halftime headliner this winter. Signs are as good as ever that her elusive ninth LP, described as a “reggae album” back in 2018, could be imminent. But we’re still keeping our fingers crossed. –Eric Torres


Róisín Murphy

TBA

Nearly 30 years after her breakout with the dancey trip-hop duo Moloko, Róisín Murphy has carved a singular lane as the disco-pop star of an alternate reality that’s both more glamorous and less inhibited than our own. Last summer, the Irish solo artist told NME she was in the “final stages” of a new album with whimsical German producer (and past collaborator) DJ Koze. The time seems almost at hand: She recently hinted that a “new era” would soon begin. Murphy’s first non-remix album since 2020’s Róisín Machine will follow her acting debut, in last fall’s Netflix drama The Bastard Son & the Devil Himself. –Marc Hogan


Sam Smith: Gloria

January 27

Sam Smith released their last album, Love Goes, back in 2020. Now the pop singer will return at the top of the new year with Gloria, led by the piano ballad “Love Me More” and the campy, chart-topping Kim Petras collaboration “Unholy.” Smith worked on the new album with producers Jimmy Napes, Stargate, and Ilya in Los Angeles, Jamaica, and London, and also recruited guests Ed Sheeran, Koffee, and Jessie Reyez. “Gloria got me through some dark times and was a beacon for me in my life,” they wrote about the album. “I hope it can be that for you.” –Eric Torres


Shame: Food for Worms

February 24

On their third full-length, Food for Worms, UK quintet Shame leave behind the bratty angst of their 2018 debut, Songs of Praise. They even blow past the pummeling existential dread of 2021’s Drunk Tank Pink. The band’s next entry is a paean to friendship—particularly, the bonds they’ve forged as a touring group, coming of age together in vans, venues, and shared flats. “Popular music is about love, heartbreak, or yourself,” frontman Charlie Steen mused in an announcement for the album. “There isn’t much about your mates.” Shame recorded Food for Worms live with producer Flood, who has managed to smooth some of Shame’s craggier edges without erasing their ragged charm. –Madison Bloom

Shame: Food for Worms

The Smashing Pumpkins: Atum 

April 21

If there’s one thing the Smashing Pumpkins at which have always excelled, it’s making melodramatic rock. Their expansive new album, Atum, pronounced “autumn,” plans to do just that. Billed as the sequel to 1995’s Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness and 2000’s Machina/Machine of God, it’s a 33-song rock opera split into three acts. Each act of Atum will be released every 11 weeks until the full version comes out on April 21. That means the first part—which spans 11 tracks, including the instrumental title track—is available to stream now, with the second act arriving on January 31. The Smashing Pumpkins’ previous album, Cyr, came out in 2020. –Nina Corcoran

The Smashing Pumpkins: Atum

The Smashing Pumpkins: Atum


Yo La Tengo: This Stupid World

February 10

Roughly five years since swiping an album title from Sly and the Family Stone with There’s a Riot Going On, Yo La Tengo have found something even more to the point. This Stupid World is the band’s 17th studio album, following 2020’s We Have Amnesia Sometimes. The album marks a return to the live feel of Yo La Tengo’s earlier material and was self-produced by the band. The lead single, “Fallout,” for one, wouldn’t feel out of place on 1997’s I Can Hear the Heart Beating as One. –Rob Arcand

Yo La Tengo: This Stupid World

Yo La Tengo: This Stupid World


Young Fathers: Heavy Heavy

February 3

Just about five years after Cocoa Sugar, Young Fathers are returning with Heavy Heavy. The album was recorded in the band’s basement studio, and was announced with a single called “I Saw.” The album also includes the track “Geronimo.” –Rob Arcand

Young Fathers: Heavy Heavy

Young Fathers: Heavy Heavy


Yves Tumor

TBA

Since releasing the raw, shapeshifting goth opus Heaven to a Tortured Mind in 2020, Yves Tumor has collaborated with Joji (“Reanimator”) and Kelsey Lu (“Let All the Poisons That Lurk in the Mud Seep Out”), and released a six-song EP titled The Asymptotical World. In recent months, they dropped a new song called “God Is a Circle,” along with a playfully sadistic music video directed by Jordan Hemingway. The track—which was produced by Noah Goldstein and features backing vocals by Ecco2K and Thoom—could be a hint that a new album is coming shortly. –Madison Bloom



Album Musik Terbaru


album musik, musik album, hot sauce album musik nct dream, cover album musik, contoh cover album musik, heejin album musik loona, download lagu house musik indo full album, download musik full album, padi (grup musik) album, tabel disamping menunjukkan album-album pada file musik di dalam flashdisk, musik iwan fals full album, album musik pertama fiersa besari, tabel di samping menunjukan album album pada file musik, download musik klasik mozart full album, suatu grup musik merilis album penjualan per minggu, xx album musik the xx, album musik indonesia, album rozy musik, lalisa album musik lisa, album musik pertama fiersa, suatu grup musik merilis album penjualan per minggu dalam ribuan, download album musik indonesia, foto album musik, apa album musik pertama fiersa besari, tenda biru album musik desy ratnasari, gambar album musik, suatu grup musik merilis album penjualan, album aura musik, album musik terbaik sepanjang masa, penghargaan grammy untuk album musik teater terbaik, dj dinar candy album musik dinar candy, album musik dj, download musik dj riri full album, download lagu musik album the mercys, album musik adalah, album musik pertama fiersa besari sebagai solois, philosophy gang merupakan album perdana dari grup musik bentukan, sholawatan album musik santri njoso, jenis jenis album musik, album musik terlaris sepanjang masa, album musik iwan fals, roxy by proxy album musik, musik reggae full album, apa itu album musik, mr. hands album musik herbie hancock, cara mengganti foto album musik, musik tipe x full album, download musik yeni inka full album, musik album kenangan album kenangan, debu grup musik album

×
Order Warungku

You were not leaving your cart just like that, right?

Enter your details below to save your shopping cart for later. And, who knows, maybe we will even send you a sweet discount code :)

Exit mobile version