#recommNeds

2026.6

Den Kosmiske Overorden: Verden

I know, I know, you've been patiently waiting for some sexy Eurojams and, hey, who loves ya? The latest from this Oslo band is fascinating. At four tracks totaling over 70 minutes, it is a journey and then some. The opening movement is pure ambient drone, glacial in its evolution, but as the album progresses it explodes with genre-bouncing abandon. Jammy rock-outs, dancehall electronica, jazzed freaking and more. Stick with it. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

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2026.7

Tyler Ramsey & Carl Broemel: Celestun

The Asheville guitarist/songwriter and the My Morning Jacket guitarist team up for a debut duo record. Pensive instrumental folk mixed in with a couple songs with vocals and a Neil Young cover as well. Acoustic guitars, mostly, with occasional pedal steel and some electric sprinkled in at appropriate moments. It's thoughtful and lovely, the two friends sharing a musical chemistry that's easy to love. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

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2026.8

Girls in Airports: Imaginal

Won't get to all the late-2025 leftovers, but... This Copenhagen collective is somewhere in a swirl of post-rock and orchestral jazz, alternatively sounding bigger or smaller than they really are. Here they pair with the strings of Halvcirkel who make the big moments feel bigger and the small moments smaller. It's the soundtrack to a movie you're watching inside your dream. Music that'll make you feel smarter, happier, and cooler. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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#recommNeds

2026.9

Temple Gong: Distanz

This collaborative project between Munich-based JJ Whitefield and Johannes Schleiermacher is a delight of retrofunk. A lot of it sounds like it could be theme music to 70's TV shows you don't remember watching as a kid. A healthy dose of flutes and killer bass grooves galore. Apparently more where this came from is in the works. Betcha dig. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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2026.10

Winged Wheel: Desert So Green

We need a new word for a band made up from musicians from other bands when "supergroup" doesn't quite fit. These guys, drawn from a myriad of sources and influences, have evolved into their own thing and along the way hit many of rock's great hyphenations: post-rock, psych-rock, jam-rock, math-rock. Their their release is filled with some seriously well-executed and developed complexity you don't find from just friends just messing around in the studio. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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2026.11

Chewing: Quintet (Live in Los Angeles)

One of the great things about the digital age is the gap between playing a great live and getting a recording of that set up on Bandcamp et al. is miniscule. And so we all get to hear jammers like this one. Keys man Nik "Chewing" Ewing leads another kinda-supergroup with Dave Harrington, Spencer Zahn, Ryan Hahn, and Griffin Goldsmith. It's blissjammy improv, loose explorations and lots of peaks in its brisk 25 minutes. This one surfaced in mid-Dec and may have gotten lost in the end-of-year shuffle. Well worth a listen. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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2026.12

Papir: IX

In a just world, we'd all be wearing Papir t-shirts and arguing the case that they're possibly the best psychjammers on the planet. In this quite unjust one, we just have to content ourselves with one monster under-the-radar release after another. I've been following this Copenhagen trio since at least IIII and can safely say they only put out winners and that's definitely the case with their latest. Yet another must-hear masterpiece of guitar/bass/drum improv. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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2026.13

Eyal Talmudi: Sonolodge III

The Israeli saxophonist draws equally from traditional sounds and instruments and electronica motifs. This is the third in a series released throughout 2025. While there are still some of his usual far-away grooves, this is largely an album of much-needed introspection and meditation. A deep loveliness. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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2026.14

The Natural Yogurt Band: Red Sky at Night

There are portions of the latest from this UK band that sound as if Mozart was scoring 70's spy thrillers and 80's video games, a funky kind of harpsichord sound. That's just part of it, though. It abounds: psychedelically dense layers of sound and a free-roaming creativity, without ever losing its groove. Give it a whirl, at least once with headphones, best to not miss the details. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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2026.15

Erik Hall: Solo Three

This is "contemporary classical" music, but don't let that scare you! Hall performs 4 pieces by American minimalism masters here in the third of a series. As it says, it's solo, and with these pieces the single-musician-doing-it-all serves to properly highlight the artistry in the overlapping layers. The music is playful and beautiful and most of all joyous . For zoning out with a smile on your face. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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2026.16

Phil Martin: Mystical Funk II

This album title is more or less truth in advertising. The latest from the Dutch musician is 31 flavors of funkification, from afrobeat-inspired to Daft Punk dance throwback and many points in between. I mean, c'mon!, there's a track on here called "Galactic Afro Groove" and it's a banger. Honestly, they all are.nEnjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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2026.17

Ryan J Raffa & Sam Prekop: Only Came To Say Goodbye

This one came out in December, but didn't come onto my radar until last month and I'm glad it did. This collaboration is electronic music that transcends electronic music. Beautiful and blissful, minimalist but lush, the cross-continental duo hit many many sweet spots... emphasis on the sweet. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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2026.18

Luke Marantz & Simon Jermyn: Echoes

There's a whole class of if-you-know-you-know NYC musicians who are under the radar, even locally, but if they're on a live bill you just know it's gonna be good. It's always a pleasure to spread the word about music those guys are making. That makes this release doubly sweet as it features two of those artists working together to bring their individual talent up a notch. The two mix piano and guitar (with same-category Josh Dion on drums!) to create sparkling pieces, loosely traipsing between jazz and rock, composition and improv. It's got the magical energy of a random midweek set in a small club in Brooklyn. The good stuff. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

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2026.19

Cordovas: Back to Life

This Nashville band continues to do the big things right, straddling the country-rock divide with great songs and an easy-to-dig sound. But on their latest they really sharpen up on the small things as well. The right dosage of pedal steel and mandolin here and there and laying on their stoner bonafides at the appropriate moments. And they take things one step further with a surprising and excellent guest appearance from Kamasi Washington, who elevates his appearance into a cool psychjazz space. A little bit for everyone. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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2026.20

Muriel Grossmann: Plays the music of McCoy Tyner and Grateful Dead

This is not Grossman's first appearance here, her brand of organ groove is almost always rec-worthy. But here, as the title implies, she takes some very cool source material and forces it through her stylistic colander. It's 4 tracks of extended, funkiness that loves the originals, but not enough to prevent a full topsy-turve. Mostly, it's just fun as hell, with equally great alternate versions. Hopefully this one has already been in your rotation, but if the weird end-of-year release date got it lost in the shuffle, now's your chance. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

#recommNeds

2026.21

Lo Greco Bros: Latin Bilbao

I'd love to tell you something about this album, but the who/what/how is surprisingly tough to find online. What I *can* tell you is that this is pure Latin funk perfection. If you heard any track on here at the proverbial club, you'd be checking your phone to find the source and if you play it at any social gathering of your own, your guests will be doing the same. Absolute groovy heat to get you through the cold months of winter. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

#recommNeds

2026.22

Yin Yin: Yatta!

This quartet is from the Netherlands, but their latest is a combination of Asian motifs and American disco, with a few other excursions thrown in. All in all, it's a delight of funkiness, culling groove from all sorts of far flung inspiration. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

#recommNeds

2026.23

Forever Pavot: Melchior, Vol 1

If I'm translating correctly, Emile Sornin, the French musician who performs as Forever Pavot, feels like he's working too hard making music and so he built a robot to do it for him. That's the conceit of this kind of concept album. Like most of his stuff, it's delightfully cartoonish and deeply interesting. A mash-up of styles and various levels of fun, never dull. Give it a whirl! Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

#recommNeds

2026.24

Leroy From the North: My Favorite Gun

In some ways, it's kind of hard to believe this is brand new music. The songs have a lived-in familiarity to them, like a leather coat pulled off the vintage rack that fits just right. This is southern rock at its best, a music that feels like it's been covered in whiskey bars and honky tonks for 5 decades, not 5 weeks. Great songs and a timeless sound, occasionally leaning more country or folky, but mostly just rockin'. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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#recommNeds

2026.25

Orchestra of the Upper Atmosphere: Theta Seven

On their seventh (and apparently finally) album, the UK collective covers a lot of ground. It's a wild diversity of instruments, sounds, and genres. Even on the micro-scale: at any given moment in the album there are impressive sonic layers, such that two people might be hearing completely different music listening to the same thing. It's a total brain-tickler, occasionally going unhinged. Each track flows one into the other, even as the pace of musical change seems disconnected from those boundaries. Interlocking pieces of a larger puzzle. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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#recommNeds

2026.26

Lyke Rayne: The Time Will Sort Ye Out

Sean Conrad's music was made in the Pacific Northwest, but it has the sounds of some mythical Britain. To my ears, it's a mix of woozy London psychedelic, lush UK prog, and pastoral Britfolk. Perhaps just grey skies from a slightly different point of view. There's a homemade unevenness that's endearing, but when it gets there, it really shines. A promising debut. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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#recommNeds

2026.27

Various Artists: Don't Forget Your Guitar

Don't do a lot of compilation records here, but this one's definitely worth pointing your ears towards. Joel Harrison runs the Alternate Guitar Summit which does guitar-centric shows and workshops and more. For this album he's gathered a host of one-off guitar duos, many (but not all!) from the NYC music universe. The music runs the gamut: genres, moods, adventurousness; familiar names and some you won't know. You might not love it all, but guarantee there's enough that you'll absolutely *love*. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery #guitar

Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

#recommNeds

2026.28

Seven Teller: What Are The Chances?

Been sick for a few days this absolute banger out of Baltimore is a perfect way to clear out the cobwebs and head into the weekend feeling good. Densely layered rhythms, irresistible bass ripples, and catchy-as-heck synth melodies, Sam Cochran's band sounds like they've listened to a crapton of LCD Soundsystem and taken all the right lessons from it. I betcha dig it. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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#recommNeds

2026.29

Shake Stew: Ten One Two

The album title refers to both the Vienna band's tenth year in existence and that they are celebrating with a one-two double release. They've certainly got enough killer ideas to fill an oversized album. Don't try to categorize it, they'll just prove your labels wrong on the next track. Two basses, two drums, and a horn section gives the ensemble an incredible flexibility. Jazz, funk, rock, ambient, kraut, spacejam... All that and then some, they crush it all. One of the winter's best new releases, doubly so. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

#recommNeds

2026.30

Evan Shornstein & Celia Hollander: Unexpected Music II

The climate calls for some peace and this live performance, captured at a lovely-looking venue in Woodstock is just the thing. A duet matching piano with synth and more, it's a delight of ambient minimalism. The music comes in tiptoes and whispers, deep zones of quietude. Close your eyes and you're there, immerse yourself. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

Album links in LinkTree :https://linktr.ee/recommneds

#recommNeds

2026.31

Sightseeing Crew: Muffled Ears, the World Sounds Bad Quality

This new music out of London is a real tweener. Somewhere in between genres, although hard to pin down which ones. Somewhere in between instrumental and not. Kind of feels like a concept album but hard to say what the theme is. What is certain is that it's a bold suite of music, with strings and horns, moments of rockin', groovin', and plenty in between. A delightful specimen of art rock. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

#recommNeds

2026.32

Booker Stardrum: Close-Up on the Outside

Stardrum is a guy you'll find lending his talents to a wide variety of projects, including drumming for SML. His latest has some of the usual trappings of a solo drum album: textures of electroacoustic percussion panning your headspace. But there's some cool world-building here, too. A smattering of guests feature on the highlight tracks - ambient to experimental to exploratory - elevating the album in the process. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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#recommNeds

2026.33

Brian Marsella Trio: Play Zorn's Bagatelles

Marsella is in that "best pianist you don't know" category, an incredible and creative jazz talent. Here he's in trio with the equally powerhouse Trevor Dunn and Kenny Wollesen. They're tackling selections from the Zorn Bagatelles songbook, which is like both having guardrails and none at all at the same time. This set is adventurous in several directions: beautiful, chaotic, cerebral, inspiring. This is piano music at its finest. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery #piano

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2026.34

Ivan the Tolerable: Chromophobia

It's that time again! This guy's putting out great music faster than I can get to it. This one comes from the I the T vaults, recorded in 2018 and revisited and rejiggered more recently, a tribute to the producer, Nigel Crooks, who has recently passed. A set of semi-simple motifs that evolve and mutate into pieces groovy, psychedelic, and, occasionally sublime. Excellent, as always. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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#recommNeds

2025.35

The Tomeka Reid Quartet: dance! skip! hop!

If you didn't know who the leader of this quartet was and you listened to this album, I think you'd be hard pressed to figure it out. The playing and interactions between the four musicians is democratic and fluid, like four top-tier athletes moving as a unit up and down the field. The fact that the cellist is joined by high-caliber players like Halvorson, Fujiwara and Roebke doesn't hurt. Their jazz is equally smile-inducing transcendence and edge-seeking exploration. The exclamations in the album title are warranted and then some. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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#recommNeds

2026.36

Wet Tuna: Vast

The latest from Matt Valentine and Co is a trip... almost literally. The album is a psychedelic wunderkammer full of Garcia Easter eggs, electronic hallucenations, loose indiejams, and just general weirdness. An all-around escapist delight. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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2026.37

Fabiano Do Nascimento & Vittor Santos Orchestra: Vila

I thought you could use some good vibes for your weekend, so I'm bringing you this ray of sunshine from this LA guitarist. Here he pairs with an orchestra and this music is really all about the strings. Those on the guitar and how they resonate and jibe with those in the larger ensemble. It's really magic. There are some horns and reeds and vocals in there as well, and sounds from Do Nascimento's native Brazil and it all mixes to a totally relaxed *mood.* For lazy Sunday mornings or whenever else you might need it. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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2026.38

Plankton Wat: The Vanishing World

Dewey Mahood has been making music as Plankton Wat for quite a while now and as a fan, my impression has been an excellent DIY, lo-fi psychedelic. His latest is surprisingly rich, with a full band of great talent from his Portland hometown. Its breadth stretches from classic rock to prog to surf, with horn-laden rave-ups and funk as well. There are trinkets of weirdness and psychedelia mixed in, too. Most importantly, it all kinda crushes. A welcome addition and expansion of the deep Plankton Wat catalog, or a great place to start. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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2026.39

Zahn: Purpur

Some great rock music from this Berlin trio. There's plenty of great bang-your-head heaviness in here, but the album seems to evolve as it goes, exploring a variety of increasingly interesting sounds. You go from "yeah, this is pretty good" to "damn, this is sick" in due time. And ready to return to the start when you get to the end. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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2026.40

Pan-American: Fly the Ocean in a Silver Plane

Mark Nelson says his latest is about travel, both the physical journey and the metaphysical one to the beyond. The music is a solo ambient guitar electronica that drifts and floats. There's a sense of journey, yes, but maybe even more so, the preparation and expectation of the journey to come. Music for airports, but also awaiting lift-off on a trip to the moon, or perhaps the waiting room for afterlife. It's beautiful. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

#recommNeds

2026.41

Joe Harvey-Whyte & Geir Sundstøl: Langeleik

The world is a noisy, fucked place and I've got just the thing to take you mind off it. For thirty minutes or so. Because what's better than one ambient pedal steel, but two of em. Here the London and Oslo-based musicians go weightless Americana with some
soul-soothing steel, as well as some other guitars and percussion thrown in. It's the kind of peaceful that'll take the edge off. Grab the headphones and zone for a little, you deserve it. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery #pedalsteel

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2026.42

Dødsego: Reisen Vol. 1 - Beyond The Void

It's stoner metal! It's out-jazz! It's psychfolk! And least surprisingly, it's from northern Europe! Oslo, to be exact. The Norway seven-piece's new release is heavy in the right ways, wearing their myriad influences on their sleeves. Flavor notes include King Gizzard, Pink Floyd, Genesis, and plenty of others, but their own brand of Eurojam, for sure. Worth waiting for volume 2. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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#recommNeds

2026.43

Jeremy Bass: Cabin Songs

Sure, we often dig it complicated and dense around here, but, man, sometimes it's nice to just keep it simple. Bass' latest is simplicity at its most beautiful. A solo instrumental acoustic guitar album that doesn't overthink it for even a second. While his folk compositions and gorgeous finger-picking are anything but easy, the feeling it will give you is one of total ease. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery #guitar

Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

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2026.44

Tomo Katsurada & Misha Panfilov: Eternal Almost

Regular readers of the recommneds probably already have this one in rotation, but just in case... The meeting of the minds between the do-no-wrong Panfilov and the also-do-no-wrong Katsurada (RIP Kikagaku Moyo!) is as excellent as you'd expect. A perfect amalgamation of the pairs' individual aesthetics creating something new and excellent, extending far along the psychfolk and groovejam axes. No way you're not gonna dig this. No way. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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#recommNeds

2026.45

Work Money Death: A Portal to Here

Insofar as you might find a perfect specimen of spiritual jazz here in 2026, the latest from this Leeds band might just be the one. Equally hypnotic as it is ferocious, this album really takes you there. These four tracks cover over 50 minutes that allow the ear to zoom in on any component - horns, harp, that devotional rhythm section - or wrap around the entire collective with equally heady zone-out potential. It's a masterpiece, more accurately *another* one for WMD . Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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2026.46

Ali & Charif Megarbane: Tirakat

This is Habibi Funk 034 and like the rest of the label's releases, it's definitely a delicious bit of funk. The pairing is of the trio Ali from Jakarta joined by the Lebanese Megarbane. The music slides easily along the spectrum between Arabic grooves and 70's-era funk and soul, sometimes finding itself far on one or the other, but mostly with the bopping somewhere in the delicious in-between. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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#recommNeds

2026.47

Zena: Temesgen

While we're on the subject of globetrotting funkiness, get a load of this UK duo who simply do not miss on their new EP. The bass-plus-synth pair bring their own brand of joyous Ethio-jazz. Their flavor of synth gives it an almost retrofuturistic sound while the bass leads the world-spanner grooves. Heady head-bobbers from a parallel universe. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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#recommNeds

2026.48

Natalie Jane Hill: Hopeful Woman

There's a beautiful vagueness in the cover art to Hill's latest album. It matches the music perfectly, a sparse folk not overly concerned with the details. You get all you need from her songs, voice, and the strum of her acoustic guitar. The other stuff - well-placed bits of pedal steel, flute, drums, harmonies - make the lovely even lovelier, but from a perfect distance on the periphery. It's all pretty great and a few tracks reach that next listen-to-that-again level of songwriting. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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#recommNeds

2026.49

Saturno 4000: Arrival

This Berlin-based group isn't necessarily a prog band, but their new album does have proggy bits to it. They're not necessarily a psychrock band, but they do get to outer space on occasion. They're not a funk band, but they do get pretty funky, somewhere in between Turkish grooves and Afrobeat. So, you know, just some more rec-worthy Eurojams. Their debut full-length doesn't even crack 35 minutes over 10 tracks, but, no worries, it's an all-killer/no-filler kind of thing. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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2026.50

Studio Kosmische: Electronic Meditation For Inner Space Travel

Kosmische translates to "cosmic" and the latest album from the UK band certainly is. It's space travel as the title suggests, long stretches of weightless floating occasionally interrupted by alien encounters and other-planet weirdness. With multiple sonic threads woven throughout, it plays like a singular suite. A cosmic one. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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2026.51

Matt Douglas: Repetition Sketchbook

There's much to bemoan about our current digital age, but there's something to be said for four guys getting together to jam in January and then by the end of March the pristine recordings are released for easy worldwide consumption. That's more or less the story here with the NC saxophonist joined in quartet by Chris Boerner on electric guitar, Cameron Ralston bass, and Matt McCaughan on drums. It's jammy jazz or jazzy jams but really it's just four dudes totally locked in. It's an EP and not very long, but it doesn't need to be. Magic. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

#recommNeds

2026.52

Sean Thompson's Weird Ears: Inner Principles

Thompson is, in my opinion, one of the more interesting guitar players to keep an eye on right now. Last year he released a jammy country record, was a principal jammer on the exploratory Shrunken Elvis and shredded nightly as the touring guitarist for Margo Price. His latest expands the pallette even more. It's jazz guitar of various types, from ambient to bluesy to essentially old school jazz fusion. Expanding on his brand of "weird" in the best way possible. Can't wait to see what's next. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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#recommNeds

2026.53

Cactus Lee: Lee's Dream

Your mileage may vary, but listen to the latest from the Cactus Lee, the sounds that come to mind are the sounds of the FM radio of my youth when my mom was driving me around: Cat Stevens, John Denver, Dan Fogelberg. It's a soft focus rock with a strong undercurrent of folk and country. It's comfy and makes you feel good. The songs are great, some hit-repeat worthy, and his voice is warm and easy. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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#recommNeds

2026.54

Chris Morrissey: Infinite Source of Heat

Morrissey seems to get stronger with each release, honing his unique sound. It's the kind of sound borne from the combination of a bass player's perspective, the synthesis of his songwriting influences, and an A+ band that's built for jazz improv, but is playing an inventive indie rock of sorts. It's propulsive and dreamy all at once. With a few extra special guests that indicate the kind of talent Morrissey rolls with on the reg. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

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#recommNeds

2026.55

Yelena Eckemoff: Rosendals Garden

Eckemoff is an under-the-radar prolific Russian-American pianist that only puts out the goods. Her roots in classical lead to a certain intellectual flavor in her compositions and a unique creativity in her improvisation. Her latest is a musical ode to Sweden, in a trio with local talent... there's even a song for ABBA! It's more magic from Eckemoff and worth listening front to back. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery

Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

#recommNeds

2026.56

Ezra: Whippersnap

It's been less than a year since I featured an album by this group, but they are already back and continuing to hone their sound. It's strongly (and welcomingly) reminiscent of work put out by combinations of guys like Fleck and Meyer 2-3 decades ago. Bluegrass, jazz, and classical alloyed into a single thing, a very heady thing. Here a piano features prominently, balancing the mandolin, banjo, and guitar nicely. The main attraction here is in the writing, the compositions forging a maturing voice. Keep em coming! Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery #bluegrass

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2026.57

Allison, Cardenas & Nash: Triological

At first glance, this might look like a no risk jazz quartet whose drummer didn't show, but they decided to play the gig anyway. But give it a minute or two and it reveals something much deeper. Without the rhythmic guardrails of the drums, the trio (bass, reeds, guitar) feels fully weightless and the conversational chemistry of the veteran players is easy to follow. Easy and quite pleasant. Playing all original music, they make it look and sound easier than it is. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery #jazz

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#recommNeds

2026.58

John Andrews and the Yawns: Streetsweeper

I love how Andrews named his solo effort the Yawns. His sound is so laid back, it's like the bare minimum that could still be called rock and roll. But it's definitely rock, with immaculate slacker vibes. What once felt like a hobby project for a musician often in the supporting role has become increasingly more its own awesome thing and the latest finds him at his best yet. The songs have a noticeable focus, they don't stick in your head, but rather leave you consumed with their overall laid-back energy. Enjoy!

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Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

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2026.59

Memorials: All Clouds Bring Not Rain

Listening to this one through brings to mind an old favorite band of mine, Apollo Sunshine. Parts of it legitimately sound wonderfully quite similar to that early-aughts trio, but more of the connection is this UK duo's ability to smear together their far-flung influences into a singular theirs-alone sound. Unsurprisingly, I love the heck out of it and you probably will, too. And this is also a reminder that I'm always open for your recommendations, I listen to pretty much all of em, so never hesitate to pass along and I will do the same. Enjoy!

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Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

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2026.60

Prymek & Sage: Shelter

When you navigate a forest you are moving through the spaces between the trees and in much the same way, listening to the debut full length from this duo is not so much navigating the notes, but navigating the spaces between them. Trading between guitar, piano, clarinet, harmonium and more, the music is sparse and delicate, the gaps between both infinite and finite. It's not so much the instruments as the sounds, layered on top of each other, inverting the spaces and making them quiet. A lovely meditation. Enjoy.

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Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

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2026.61

Maston & Greg Foat: Moving Images

Greg Foat is a repeat offender around here. His output is a ratified extreme of quantity and quality: how does he put out so much music and how is it all so damn good? The latest is a collaborative effort with Maston, 12 tracks and 33 minutes, a dozen short bursts of exemplar grooves. It's their modernized take on library music and you feel like you could sit in each piece for an eternity and never tire of it. Enjoy!

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Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

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2026.62

John Zorn: Alea Iacta Est

Zorn's latest release is a masterclass in the kind of composing only he can pull off. The music moves between a range of genres and feels and energy barriers in a short amount of time, the four movements seemingly containing infinite mini-pieces. But the movement between them is the opposite of jarring, almost imperceptible. Of course, having top notch musicians to realize your genius helps and the band here, Brian Marsella on piano, Jorge Roeder on bass, and Ches Smith on drums, is as good as it gets. Enjoy!

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Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

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2026.63

Dida Pelled: I Wish You Would

We lean a little New York City around here and today's pick is from an NYC artist I'm always happy to catch around town. Her latest album also features an impressive cast of NYC-regulars - Sullivan Fortner on keys, Tony Scherr on bass, and Kenny Wollesen on drums. The record is a love letter to the blues, the set of standards and favorites almost out of Jorma Kaukonen's repertoire. But (in case the album cover didn't give you the hint) this is the sexy, jazzy blues of an Israeli-born, NYC vocalist/guitarist, a different kind of love letter altogether. Enjoy!

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Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

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2026.64

Pearla: Song Room

At its base, the sophomore full-length from Pearla is a solo voice and guitar record. And the songs and voice are good enough, sparse observations on love, lyrics that you want to luxuriate in, that you don't need much more. But there is more: when it needs extra sadness, there's some pedal steel; when it needs a beat, there are drums; when it needs airy whispers of electronics, it's got that, too. And when it needs to be just a voice singing those songs and nothing else, well, there's plenty of that, too. Enjoy!

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Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

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2026.65

Yvonne Rogers: The Button Jar

There are few young musicians I'm as high on as this NYC-based pianist. While she almost exclusively performs as part of a group, either leading or sidepersoning, her latest is a purely solo performance. And while she is undoubtedly a jazz player, the record fully transcends genre. It is as if we have been given a private peek at the inner-voice narrative of a musician's mind: beautiful, complex, focused for a while and then wandering expertly and back again. Piano music at its finest. Enjoy!

#newmusic #MusicDiscovery #piano

Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

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2026.66

Adam Schatz: Civil Engineering

Schatz is a guy who is equally comfortable following a script, like when he's backing artists Iike Japanese Breakfast or Sylvan Esso, writing the script, as he does with his art rock project Landlady, and going completely without a script, as he does in this trio with bassist Carmen Quill and drummer Qasim Naqvi. His brand of freeform is an understated one, pieces unfolding in delightfully slow and quiet fashion. Moving easily and often simultaneously between sax, keys, and technology, Schatz creates something unique and compelling. Enjoy!

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Album links in LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/recommneds

@Neddyo I’m sure you’re already aware, but Hiss Golden Messenger has a new album “I’m People” dropping next week. I’m excited to hear it.
Overnight Delivery - EP by Delicate Steve | Spotify

Delicate Steve · EP · 2026 · 4 songs

Spotify
@Neddyo great recommendation -- anything Jacob Jolliff is involved in is super interesting. The whole band are incredible talents.
@Neddyo I shared this a while back when it came out, great stuff. Also kinda surprised it was much more jammy and melodically interesting than the title suggests. Matt Douglas has his hands in so many projects…
@aburtch very well may be how it ended up in my listening queue...
Repetition Sketchbook EP, by Matt Douglas

4 track album

Matt Douglas
@Neddyo Charif is unstoppable.