Mandy, Indiana – URGH

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Mandy, Indiana

URGH

Released February 6th, 2026 on Sacred Bones

As per Spectrum Culture:

By cleaving closer to the bone of what they’re about, Mandy, Indiana avoid the too-clever, angular detached observational style that might have sunk their sophomore effort quickly.

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Joyce Manor – I Used to Go to This Bar

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Joyce Manor

I Used to Go to This Bar

Released January 30th, 2026 on Epitaph Records

From Spectrum Culture:

In a scant 19 minutes, I Used to Go to This Bar taps into the allure and the danger of living in the past, as well as the runaway joy and fear of living in the present.

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The Soft Pink Truth – Can Such Delightful Times Go on Forever?

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The Soft Pink Truth

Can Such Delightful Times Go on Forever?

Released January 30th, 2026 on Thrill Jockey Records

From Spectrum Culture:

The Soft Pink Truth’s sixth album is as far removed from a house music album as you could imagine. The electronics are still there, but they’ve been woven subtly into an experience whose compositions blend modernity with cinematic gestures that stretch back decades into the pre-color past.

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Poppy – Empty Hands

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Poppy

Empty Hands

Released January 23rd, 2026 on Sumerian Records

From Spectrum Culture:

Poppy has always been one to incorporate metal into her weird pop ideas, but on Empty Hands it often feels as though her own concepts take a backseat to shiny radio metal necessities.

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Megadeth – Megadeth

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Megadeth

Megadeth

January 23rd on BLKIIBLK

Dave Mustaine takes his veteran thrash metal band out doing what they do best, but not without some unnecessary score-settling.

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Sleaford Mods – The Demise of Planet X

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Sleaford Mods

The Demise of Planet X

January 16th, 2026 on Rough Trade Records

Some groups have a particular tone they mine for their careers. Other groups just do the same thing repeatedly. Sleaford Mods fall into the latter category.

Honestly though, haven’t we heard this one all before? Haven’t we all heard this one done better?

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Fucked Up – Grass Can Move Stones Part 1: Year of the Goat

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From Spectrum Culture:

The story is the main draw on Year of the Goat, the thread that ties the constantly shifting, often meandering musical elements together.

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Love – Forever Changes

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From Spectrum Culture:

The summer of 1967 – the “Summer of Love” – featured one of the largest youth movements in history, when the hippies came in droves to San Francisco to turn each other on, tune into their inner psychic frequencies and drop out of regular society, and countless more who did the same thing across North America. It’s a star in the crown of Boomer memories, a sometimes-literal orgy of delights soundtracked by the likes of the Who, the Animals, the Dead and Jefferson Airplane. The album that saw through to the heart of the micro-era, though, was really none of these staples of classic rock radio. That nod goes to Forever Changes, the third album from L.A. psychedelic pop band Love.


Where Are The Reviews?

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You can now find reviews by me at Spectrum Culture.

We’ll probably go back to the “Consumer Guide” Christgau-style format in the New Year for the stuff that gets published here.

Mount Eerie – Night Palace

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