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.
Ella Langley, Dandelion
The pop-country songwriter understands the human weight of the American South’s emotionally rich tableau of high-speed heartbreak and low-light bars, as demonstrated on a resilient second album.
Sugar Horse, Not a Sound in Heaven
On their cleanest-sounding record yet, the doomy Bristol band’s idea of dance music feels perfectly suitable for the turbulent year 2026 has already proven to be.
Lime Garden, Maybe Not Tonight
The cocktail of frustration, insecurity, and lust that courses through the Brighton quartet’s buzzing and adventurous second album mirrors the trajectory of an energetic night out.
Kyle Lemmon
Sophie Allison follows up “color theory” with a compilation featuring Jay Som, SASAMI, and more.
The piano is the torch guiding Jones through the darkness on her eighth solo album.
Sumney brings shards of art rock, R&B, classical, electronic, jazz, and soul into one beautiful piece of musical kintsugi.
Thundercat continues to alchemize his inimitable style as a honeyed singer, whipsmart producer, and lithe bassist.
A track-by-track ranking of the album that made me realize it was OK to be anxious.
Mackenzie Scott has always been a sharp and economical lyricist with a variety of personas at her disposal.
The cousins discuss inverting genre tropes, their first embarrassing movie, and the evergreen influence of “Columbo.”
William Tyler // Modern Country
The Nashville guitarist continues his streak as an accomplished folk storyteller with or without words.
The Numero Group focuses its lens on the pivotal country music made between 1969 and 1980, when many smaller musicians were directly inspired by Gram Parsons and The Flying Burrito Brothers.
2016. La Sera, “Music for Listening to Music to”
This isn’t Music Appreciation 101.
2015. Wild Nothing, “Life of Pause” album art
Jack Tatum leans further into the synth-pop landscape than ever before on his third album as Wild Nothing, “Life of Pause.”
2016. Field Music Commontime cover hi-res
On “Commontime,” the brothers Brewis double down on this concept by settling into a few more, well, common time signatures alongside their usual pop-funk trappings.
2016. Shearwater Jet Plane and Oxbow cover hi-res
“Jet Plane and Oxbow”’s fist-raising peaks are sadly rare, but the craft of the production is still worthy of admiration.
2016. PCPC, “Ramsgate”
In the fall of 2014, Parquet Courts announced a tour with fellow New York band PC Worship under the nondescript stage name PCPC.
2015. Mark Kozelek and Nicolas Pauls Dreams of Childhood cover hi-res
The result is “Dreams of Childhood,” a charity spoken-word album whose proceeds go to La Casa de la Cultura de la Calle (The Street House of Culture).
2015. Deerhunter, “Fading Frontier”
Welcome back, Bradford. Long live, Deerhunter!
2015. Julia Holter Have You In My Wilderness hi-res
With “Have You in My Wilderness,” Holter’s musical worlds continue to engross.
2015. Beirut No No No cover high resolution
The group’s previous calling cards—swelling brass or the romantic swoop of an orchestra’s strings—are only seldom heard throughout “No No No.”
La Luz // photo by Andrew Imanaka
Shana Cleveland, leader of the Seattle surf-rock band, talks about being inspired by the emotional riptides of life.
Deradoorian 2015 The Expanding Flower Planet cover high res
“The Expanding Flower Planet” is a sun-dappled, cosmic exploration of moods that succeeds, not in spite of, but partially because of its obfuscated nature.
