Celebrate our tenth anniversary with the biggest issue we’ve ever made. FLOOD 13 is deluxe, 252-page commemorative edition—a collectible, coffee-table-style volume in a 12″ x 12″ format—packed with dynamic graphic design, stunning photography and artwork, and dozens of amazing artists representing the past, present, and future of FLOOD’s editorial spectrum, while also looking back at key moments and events in our history. Inside, you’ll find in-depth cover stories on Gorillaz and Magdalena Bay, plus interviews with Mac DeMarco, Lord Huron, Wolf Alice, Norman Reedus, The Zombies, Nation of Language, Bootsy Collins, Fred Armisen, Jazz Is Dead, Automatic, Rocket, and many more.
Depeche Mode, Memento Mori: Mexico City
The live album tied to the new-wave icons’ new concert film shows how a lifelong band persists through loss while maturing their dusky music and a deep connection to their audience.
Prince & The Revolution, Around the World in a Day [40th Anniversary Edition]
Besides its crystal-clear sound, the draw for this expanded singles collection is its curios such as the 22-minute “America” and Prince’s serpentine contribution to the We Are the World album.
La Luz, Extra! Extra!
Reworking tracks from 2024’s News of the Universe LP, Shana Cleveland emphasizes themes of change, non-determinism, and acceptance on an EP that aptly feels a little lonely.
A.D. Amorosi
Devo photosessions in Acron Ohio 1976
Mark Mothersbaugh gives us an oral history of his iconic new wave band, from their early-’70s origins on Kent State’s campus to their ongoing tour and various physical career retrospectives spanning vinyl box sets and documentaries landing 50 years later.
The lyrical vision and subtly memorable melodies on the Brockhampton founder’s latest solo LP feel more organic than those of his guitar-strewn hip-hop predecessors.
The music is more vivacious than its making-the-sausage backstory, and at least twice as solid than the last two “last” Beatles songs released in 1995.
This reissue of Prince’s early foray into new jack swing and various R&B trends of 1991 is bolstered by over 30 newly unveiled Vault tracks and a blistering 1992 concert film.
Eric Burton and Adrian Quesada talk reaching a new level of synchronicity on their long-anticipated sophomore album, Chronicles of a Diamond.
The synthpop icons exhibit their rarely witnessed sense of humor on these anxious new takes on old material emphasizing darker, simmering tones.
Ishmael Butler finds company to share his one-of-a-kind vision with on his brief sixth LP, making his quest for new Afrofuturistic frontiers something more communal.
Everything that defined Simone stems from these seven foundational albums, as her time at the Phillips label highlighted the sultry, soulful, and socially protesting heights of her music.
The tales told within the rock icons’ first new set of songs since 2005 speak to age and rage in a fashion that keeps them away from post-millennial blather or elder laments.
The Virginian quintet show off their love of warm, funky jazz and unpredictable fusion-electro while welcoming a team of alt-rap giants into the fold.
This third volume of Mitchell’s Archives series presents an artist’s sketchbook in full: the blossoming of fresh lyrics, vivid arrangements, and a more expansive vocal prowess.
On her fifth solo LP, the experimental harpist, composer, and vocalist finds uneasy solace in the shoegaze sound and goth gauziness of the late ’80s.
The Birthday Party; Tivoli Hotel; Adelaide; Jan 1981
The new Ian White–directed film portrays Nick Cave’s post-punk noise act during their fast, furious flame out between 1977 and 1983.
The musician, filmmaker, artist, and taste-maker discusses his debut solo album Outta Sync—and the lifetime of creative projects that preceded it.
Daniel Lopatin’s “speculatively autobiographical” tenth album marries a handful of his past styles, soulful vibes, and sample tricks into one future-forward, frothing, fluid stream of sound.
The jazz saxophonist sets his sights on gospel legend Mahalia Jackson with a holy, avant-garde litany of spiritually enhanced songs equally inspired by Coleman and Mingus.
With the aid of producer Cate Le Bon, the psych-folk songwriter’s Mexican Summer debut swaps crinkly textures for something uncharacteristically glossy.
The band’s surprise-released companion piece to First Two Pages of Frankenstein is the lonely monster’s book’s end—dogeared and bleaker, but somehow more dynamic.
The goal of this reissue of the band’s iconic 1971 LP is to fully present Townshend’s vision for the deity-driven conceptual production it replaced.
The trumpeter-composer formerly known as Christian Scott talks creating new worlds—and more new instruments—with his latest album Bark Out Thunder Roar Out Lightning.
