New Video: Weird Nightmare Shares Sweetly Nostalgic and Anthemic “Might See You There”

Almost every band that’s worth a damn has had a member, who at some point worked in a record store. With JOVM mainstay acts METZ and Weird Nightmare, it was frontman and creative mastermind Alex Edkins. Slinging indie rock and hardcore records at his hometown record store while attending university, Edkins became an ardent student of rock ‘n’ roll from the psychedelic 1960s to the DIY 1990s and beyond.

Hoopla, Edkins’ sophomore Weird Nightmare album, which is slated for a May 1, 2026 release through Sub Pop globally and Dine Alone Records in Canada, reportedly sees the JOVM mainstay mixing and matching these wide-ranging influences in fun, exhilarating combinations, showcasing his sophisticated musical mind, while continuing to showcase his unerring knack for ridiculously catchy and rousingly anthemic hooks and choruses.

Co-produced by Edkins and Spoon‘s Jim Eno at Providence‘s world famous Machines With Magnets, Hoopla also sees the acclaimed Canadian artist expanding upon Weird Nightmare’s musical palette with the addition piano, bells and castanets, which give his long-held straightforward songwriting a shiny luster.

The album will feature the previously released “Forever Elsewhere,” and the album’s latest single “Might See You There.” Seemingly channeling Cheap Trick and Weezer, “Might See You There” is a raise-your-beer in air and shout along with your best pals power pop anthem that continues to showcase Edkins’ remarkable craftsmanship. But the song is anchored in sweet, perhaps rose-colored glasses of nostalgia for one’s youth. In the case of “Might See You There,” the boredom, isolation and small joys of the narrator’s teenaged years, living in a small town — before the days of social media and constant screen time.

“‘Might See You There’ is about going back to visit my hometown and being flooded with teenage nostalgia,” Edkins explains. “Small-town boredom and isolation almost feel like a gift in today’s highly connected world. I feel fortunate for that time spent idly, down in the basement, learning the entire Rancid Let’s Go album on guitar with my friends. I find it easy to romanticise that time in my life, even though I was, without question, a disgruntled kid who badly wanted to escape my surroundings and see the world.
 
“I was listening to a lot of the Irish bands The Undertones and Protex while writing this one, and I think there is a fair bit of their influence,” the JOVM mainstay adds. “Just the simplicity and big bar chords mostly. Seth Manchester and I were very into the idea of adding piano and bells to the outro, akin to the Phil Spector-produced End of the Century album by The Ramones. The great Julianna Riolino sings with me on the choruses, too!”

The mind-bending, animated accompanying video was directed and edited by CC Mulligan.

New Audio: BLXCKFLAMINGO Tackles a Beloved Post-Punk Classic

BLXCKFLAMINGO is a Jersey City-based goth/darkwave duo, who over the course of the past year have released a handful of singles, which saw them quickly establish an urgent and intense sound featuring driving drum machines, thumping ass lines, ethereal shoegazer textures and pain-fueled riffs paired with an eerily cold and brooding baritone vocal.

The New Jersey-based duo begin 2026 with a goth/darkwave-tinged yet lovingly straightforward cover of Joy Division‘s 1980 signature tune, “Love Will Tear Us Apart” that maintains the song’s conflicted, heartache and remarkably catchy hook.

New Audio: Moulod Shares Sparse, Hook-Driven “Socialites”

Moulod is an emerging Stockholm-born artist. And for the Swedish artist, his music typically begins with lyrics. He writes constantly, using his lyrics as a way to strip down experiencers and uncover what’s real. Only the rare songs that carry honesty are released, for him about 10% of anything he writes, with each carrying his raw vocal delivery at the center. His words are paired with productions that run the gamut from lo-fi, hip-hop, R&B, indie rock and blues — or whatever best carries the story and song forward.

The Swedish artist’s latest single “Socialites” feat. Rûn is a sparse tune that’s simultaneously menacing and sultry, warmly introspective yet chilly and evasive. And while showcasing an artist, who cab pair unflinchingly honest lyrics with sleek production and incredibly catchy hook.

At its core, “Socialites” feat. Rûn conveys the uneasy contrasts between one’s public image and private life, and the demands and sacrifices that public image requires.

New Video: BUÑUEL Shares Bruising and Breakneck “High. Speed. Chase.”

BUÑUEL — OXBOW‘s Eugene S. Robinson, Afterhours and A Short Apnea‘s Xabier Iriondo (guitar), The Framers‘ Andrea Lombardini (bass) and Il Teatro Degli Orroris Franz Valente (drums) — is a transatlantic supergroup that specializes in heavy music that’s been described as beautiful, merciless and unforgiving. 

Creatively, the band has always been led by instinct and the id-like impulse to expressed completely unfiltered and unvarnished emotion through song. And through their close musical alliance, they’ve displayed a seemingly innate ability to craft material that warps and buckles with complexity, freedom, tenderness and primeval energy — simultaneously. 

“BUÑUEL is a name that embodies a certain cultural and literary reference, which evokes an entire world,” the band’s Franz Valente says. “Like his films, our Buñuel is surrealism. We take the listeners into a place that’s suspended between dream and reality.” Eugene S. Robinson adds “What we’re doing with BUÑUEL is to carve out a very specific glimpse… partly into hearts of darkness, but more specifically into the depth of our secrets. Secrets we keep from each other, ourselves and whatever futures we’ve imagined for ourselves. We are ultimately trying to communicate something direct and deadly about the human condition.”

The transatlantic supergroup’s latest album, 2024’s Timo Ellis-produced Mansuetude derived its title from an archaic word which means “meekness” or “gentleness.” For a band known for being punishingly heavy, the title is an ironic juxtaposition. Firmly anchored in their long-held penchant for surrealism, the album saw the band taking every possible opportunity toad stretch their musical tendrils towards discomfort and deconstruction of tradition, while pushing towards absolute abandon.

Sonically, the album’s material encompassed many moods — sometimes simultaneously — while blurring elements of post-hardcore, avant-noise, hard blues, post-industrial, symphonic thrash, metal and free-jazz. The record is, in Robinson’s words “extreme but articulate.” 

The album featured the previously released “Class,” “American Steel,” feat. The Jesus Lizard‘s Tomahawk‘s and The Denison Kimball Trio‘s Duane Denison, “A Killing on the Beach,” and its latest single, “High. Speed. Chase.”

“High. Speed. Chase.” is a bruising and breakneck, mosh pit inducing ripper, anchored around a furious and unhinged Robinson vocal turn, scorching riffage and thunderous drumming. At its core, the song expresses a mix of rage, confusion and ad desire to defy death — and in some way, it also makes the song the perfect soundtrack for the titular high speed chase.

Directed by Annapaola Martin, the accompanying video for “High. Speed. Chase.” is split between footage shot on the road with city skylines, highways and convenience stores race by through the windows, and footage of the band destroying stages with their incendiary live show.

New Audio: Naza SYF Teams Up with Zikyre on Breezy “Active”

Naza SYF is an emerging Nigerian artist, who has released a handful of single over the past 18 months or so. His latest single “Active” feat. Zikyre is a breezy, slickly produced Afrobeats bop that effortlessly manages to be club and lounge friendly.

With the bitter cold temperatures across most of the United States right now, this song is a reminder of the rooftop parties, block parties, cookouts and beach hangouts we’ll be enjoying in a few short months.

New Audio: Lowly Light Teams Up with Mishell Ivon on infectiously Hopeful “Impossible Possibility”

Matt Gorny is an award-winning, New York-based songwriter and producer, best known as Lowly Light. As a songwriter and producer, Gorny’s work has shown continual evolution, ranging from tunes like “Get Over Yourself,” “Prayin,’” “Candy Lied” and “Down the Coast,” which bounce between nu-disco, chilled out grooves and energetic indie pop, while also collaborating with an growing number of dance music artists, including Ultra NatéAmanda LeporeLuca Perra and others.

Gorny’s latest Lowly Light single, “Impossible Possibility” feat. Mishell Ivon is a bit of French touch-like house/nu-disco that’s a much-needed hope and joy bomb in our desperate, uneasy moment. We have to hold tightly onto hope because the regime wants us to feel as though all is completely lost.

As the New York-based songwriter and producer explains, “Impossible Possibility” is a song about holding onto hope, bravely diving for the brand new and reaching for what may be the one-in-a-million shot.

New Video: Tom Woodward Shares BruIsing Neil Young-like “Phoney Messiah”

Over the course of the past two decades, Aussie singer/songwriter Tom Woodward has crafted a unique brand of baroque folk-rock, cosmic country psychedelia and fuzzed out lo-fi jams through the release of 11 albums and 10 EPs.

During that same period, Woodward has lived a deeply fascinating life, writing songs that document his thoughts and experiences: He cut his teeth and honed his craft in the Canberra and Melbourne music and arts scene in the mid-2000s before touring across Australia, Japan and the States.

2015’s Beautiful Shadows received critical acclaim from international media outlets including For Folk’s Sakes and The Huffington Post, and earned him a Canberra Critics Circle Award. Adding to a growing national and international platform, Woodward has played sets at the National Folk Festival and The Multicultural Fringe Festival, as well as opening slots for Abbe May, The Drones, Mikelangelo & the Black Sea Gentleman, Cash Savage & the Last Drinks, Machine Translations, Steve Poltz and a lengthy list of others.

Back in 2023, Woodward put down his guitar and embarked on a two-month walk up Australia’s east coast, which ended with a hospital stay and a hard-earned respect for the fragility of life. 18 months later, he got deported as an illegal alien from the USA.

Woodward’s 11th album, the recently released Adam Casey-produced Come Come Karma features the previously released “Termination Day” and “If You Wanna Stay Alive,” “Sails In Your Heart,” and the album’s latest single “Phoney Messiah.”

“Phoney Messiah,” is bruising song that seemingly channels Crazy Horse-era Neil Young, anchored a swirling haze of fuzzy power chords and Woodward’s urgent, incantatory delivery as his song’s narrator guides the listener through a world of conmen, carnival barkers, gurus, strongmen and internet demagogues prey on our hunger for meaning and her need for easy answers to deeply complex solutions.

The accompanying video is an uneasy, reeling fever dream featuring a collage of our current hellscape, presented as entertainment and clickbait, which further emphasizes the song’s critique’s of false prophets in the digital age.