̸ August 2023
Ziúr lands on Ugandan label Hakuna Kulala for her fifth and most punk LP to date, joined by Juliana Huxtable, Iceboy Violet and more.
Soaring emotions, breakbeat grandeur, and the occasional banjo on Nathan Micay's best record yet.
̸ July 2023
Singing songs originally written for others, Jessy Lanza comes up with her tightest, catchiest and somehow most personal record yet.
Experimental techno and underground rap collide.
The Wisdom Teeth cofounder loosens up on his second album.
A titan of Detroit returns with aerodynamic techno that shows off his controlled abandon and technical mastery.
Lunice keeps it brief but explosive on his latest LP of inventive, ahead-of-the-curve hip-hop.
Gabber Modus Operandi cofounder Kasimyn goes solo for an LP of cutting club music that interrogates Indonesia's history of colonisation and conflict.
A hugely important retrospective that captures the early years of Baltimore club music.
The Ugandan dancer and producer blends styles from across East Africa to electrifying effect.
Music for after the end of the world.
̸ June 2023
A collection of tracks made between 2002 and 2007 that show the footwork pioneer at his rawest, darkest and most inventive.
Jam City's latest LP highlights the overlooked, sometimes unglamorous parts of formative clubbing experiences via sprightly, engaging pop music.
The Giant Swan member's debut solo album uses playful, fragmented electronica to explore tragic loss.
̸ May 2023
Melancholy textures fuse with home-grown influences on the Vietnamese quintet's second album, which is still rooted in the band's cutting, improvised origins.
Punch-drunk batida that takes the Príncipe sound somewhere a lot more introspective.
Intricate synthetic landscapes emerge on an IDM record that moves from the micro to the macro.
Overmono make the leap for the mainstream with their long-awaited debut album, which ups the ante when it comes to melody, hooks and all things pop.
A moody, footwork-infused reflection of what it's like to live in a city with a history of disaster.
Shackleton meets his match in Japanese artist Scotch Rolex for what becomes one of the UK producer's most approachable records in years.