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Barry Can't Swim - Loner - Out 07-11-25

Barry Can't Swim - Loner - Out 07-11-25

Following a meteoric rise over the past couple of years, 2025 will see Barry Can’t Swim cement his place at the upper echelons of dance music with the release of his sophomore album Loner. The album title sums up the philosophy with which Barry went into the album-making process.

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Barry Can't Swim - Loner

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Gigi Perez - At The Beach, In Every Life - Out 07-11-25

Gigi Perez - At The Beach, In Every Life - Out 07-11-25

Singer-songwriter-producer Gigi Perez releases her highly anticipated, self-produced debut album, At the Beach, In Every Life. The passionate, poetic, and powerful body of work centers around themes of grief, love, faith and religion. Notably, the album processes the aftermath of losing her beloved sister Celene, immortalized on songs like "Fable," and the love that ultimately helps her through her grief, as heard on the breakout hit, "Sailor Song." Gigi is ready to invite everyone behind the curtain on her debut release.

Gigi Perez - At The Beach, In Every Life - Island

Gigi Perez - At The Beach, In Every Life

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What's New 7-11-25

The Teskey Brothers
Glassnote

Captured live during three sold-out shows at London’s iconic Hammersmith Apollo, The Teskey Brothers’ Live At The Hammersmith Apollo channels classic tape-recorded energy reminiscent of Springsteen and Bowie. The set features powerful performances from 2023’s The Winding Way plus fan-favorite “Forever You And Me.” Soulful and timeless.

The Wildmans
New West Records

Siblings Aila and Eli from Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains, blend old-time, bluegrass, and roots with modern flair. From local tours with their mom to national festivals and Berklee training, they’ve shared stages with the likes Billy Strings, Molly Tuttle and Bela Fleck. Longtime Friend honors tradition while showcasing their evolving, improvisational musicianship. Roots renewed and alive.

Wet Leg
Domino Record Co.

Moisturizer roars with feral energy, capturing the Isle of Wight five-piece’s evolution into a bolder, tighter force. Written in rural isolation, the album dives into obsession and raw love with brash guitars and heavy beats. Quick-witted and fearless, it’s a wild, unrefined rush that sharpens their Grammy-winning debut’s bite.

Ekkstacy
UnitedMasters LLC

Vancouver’s Ekkstacy sheds post-punk haze for raw emo-punk grit on Forever, his most intense and personal work yet. Built from voice and guitar, the album channels Japandroids’ energy and melodic vulnerability. With no guests or gimmicks, it’s a focused, visceral statement from a 23-year-old artist breaking patterns and forging his own future.

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RSD PODCAST

RSD PODCAST

From the people who created Record Store Day, The Record Store Day Podcast with Paul Myers is an informative, record store-centric interview show featuring conversations with great guests talking about records, record stores and experiences in the physical retail space.


New episodes appear every Tuesday, and they are available wherever you get your podcasts -- all the major podcast platforms -- and also at the site bit.ly/RSDPODCAST!

The RSD podcast is a great platform to go in depth with truly independent artists, and those who are making good music that doesn't always get national attention. 
(And do check out the new albums from Ken Pomeroy and SG Goodman if you haven't already) 
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What's New 7-4-25

Kesha
Kesha Records

Kesha’s . (Yes, it’s just a period.) is a bold manifesto of independence and raw self-expression. Released on her own label, this fiercely personal album shatters pop conventions with unfiltered honesty and audacious energy. Co-written and produced by Kesha herself, it’s a fearless reclaiming of voice—a sonic middle finger to expectation, vibrant, untamed, and unapologetically Kesha.

Parker McCollum
MCA Nashville

McCollum’s self-titled third album is his most intimate yet, a full-album journey rooted deeply in Texas tradition. Balancing fresh songwriting with classic country grit, McCollum cements his place among the new generation’s leading voices. Produced by Frank L., tracks like “What Kinda Man” showcase his honest, heartfelt approach to modern roots music.

Daisy The Great
S-Curve

Daisy the Great team with producer Catherine Marks (boygenius, St. Vincent) to unleash a dreamlike kaleidoscope of harmony, wit, and bedroom-pop surrealism. The duo of Mina Walker and Kelley Dugan push past the expected, blending Friko’s left-field flair with Soccer Mommy’s intimacy. Each track is a rule-breaking revelation: rich in hooks, haunted by dreams, and defiantly, beautifully odd.

Adrian Quesada
ATO Records

The Black PumasAdrian Quesada’s second volume in his acclaimed Boleros Psicodelicos project dives deep into late ’60s Latin psychedelia with a fresh, modern twist. Featuring guests like Hermanos Gutierrez, Cuco and iLe, the Grammy-winning artist blends vintage balladry with lush, expansive production. It’s a vibrant, genre-blurring celebration that feels both timeless and vividly now.

Katseye
HYBE/Geffen

On Beautiful Chaos, the genre-blurring, globe-spanning girl pop group revel in the art of disarray. Spanning styles and cultures (USA, South Korea, Philippines, Switzerland), the sextet fuse bold experimentation with introspective growth. It’s an exhilarating, borderless statement: playful, unpredictable, and defiantly unpolished. A sonic whirlwind that celebrates confusion not as failure, but as fuel for fearless artistic evolution.

Turnpike Troubadours
Thirty Tigers / Bossier City Records

The Price of Admission deepens their Red Dirt roots with warm, acoustic-driven Americana. Produced again by Shooter Jennings, the album flows with effortless ease, letting moods and collaboration shape its subtle, world-weary songs. Two decades in, the band has found a sweet spot, unassuming yet rich, intimate yet enduring.

Deadguy
Relapse Records

A blistering, genre-defying masterpiece that closes their ambitious concept series. Fusing death metal, intricate time changes, and technical prowess, the Philadelphia trio pushes metalcore into progressive territory. With their signature intensity, Kaonashi delivers a chaotic yet thrilling sonic conclusion to their powerful saga.

Hotline TNT
Third Man

On Raspberry Moon, Hotline TNT trades fuzz for feeling, with Will Anderson embracing melody and vulnerability like never before. Love songs bloom amid shimmering guitars and tender flutes, though regret still lingers in the static. A full-band effort at last, this is Anderson at his most open-hearted—and possibly, his most enduring. The noise whispers now.

Joshua Redman
Blue Note

On his second Blue Note release, Joshua Redman unveils a new quartet shaped on the road and refined in the studio. Born from pandemic-era introspection, these originals sway between melancholy and quiet strength. With sharp interplay from rising talents and cameos by Melissa Aldana and Gabrielle Cavassa, it’s Redman embracing change with lyrical poise and fresh fire.

James McMurtry
New West Records

Haunted by a childhood sketch, James McMurtry crafts The Black Dog and the Wandering Boy—a wry, weathered album of vivid character studies and fatalistic tales. Blending dry wit with bruised wisdom, his eleventh release finds quiet grace in hard truths. Americana in tone but too sharp to sit still, McMurtry just keeps getting better.

Yungblud
Capitol

Yungblud sheds past posturing for something grander and gutsier. Part one of a double album, Idols is hard, channeling glam, grunge, and orchestral bombast with emo angst and theatrical flair. From the nine-minute opener to the Brian Wilson-tinged chaos of “Lovesick Lullaby,” it’s a bold, big-hearted statement from a shape-shifting alt-pop provocateur finding fresh fire.

U.S. Girls
4AD

Scratch It is a reinvention of sorts, with Meg Remy trading art-pop abstraction for gospel grit, country swagger and garage soul. Cut live in Nashville with a crack band, it’s bold, raw and full of conviction. From the slinky “Like James Said” to the cathartic “Bookends”, Remy’s belief in her vision burns brighter than ever.

Neil Young and The Chrome Hearts
Reprise

Galvanized by age and outrage, Talkin To The Trees finds Young rallying a reshuffled band, the Chrome Hearts, for a homespun folk protest rooted in reflection. With Spooner Oldham onboard, he balances fireside intimacy (“Family Life,” “Bottle Of Love”) and snarling fuzz (“Dark Mirage”). It’s a journal, not a bulletin, anchored in hearth, haunted by history.

Van Morrison
Virgin Music International

Shaking off past paranoia, Remembering Now finds Van Morrison renewed, reflective and musically reborn. From soul tributes to Belfast nostalgia, he blends Hammond grooves, lush strings and lyrical grace. At its peak, the title track and “Stretching Out” reveal a man no longer lost in ruins but alive in the present, chasing wonder instead of shadows.

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