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.
Boards of Canada, Inferno
The Scottish duo’s first album in 13 years is their most evocative yet, presenting a series of down-tuned tones and dark chordal scores rippling with cryptic samples and robo-voice blips.
Paul McCartney, The Boys of Dungeon Lane
On his 20th album, the octogenarian pop-rock architect builds a time machine out of scuffed acoustic guitars, warm tape hiss, and the kind of indelible melodies that cast a long shadow.
Iceage, For Love of Grace & the Hereafter
By returning to the rustic environment that birthed their mid-career peak, the Danish post-punks rekindle their core artistic flame with a masterclass in controlled chaos.
Mike LeSuer
Karl Kuehn shares how memories of his late mother and an impressive set of collaborators helped him bring this project to fruition after nearly a decade.
Dominique Gomez shares her band’s origin story ahead of the release of her debut full-length Honky Tonk Queen, out June 26.
With the post-hardcore band recently reissuing their fourth LP for its 10th anniversary, guitarist Nick Steinhardt shares how gardening, collage-making, and more provided a sense of grounding during the record’s making.
One half of Blue Sky Black Death, the producer’s latest solo effort Trapper Keeper drops in full tomorrow.
The emcee/producer duo share how Black Thought, Jean Dawson, Aceyalone, and more laid the groundwork for their fourth collaborative album.
Roger Sellers also shares that his fourth album, Filters, will arrive in September via Nettwerk.
The art-pop duo’s Amanda Kramer–directed feature will premiere at the annual film festival in June.
Adrianne Lenker, Fcukers, and Kamasi Washington—as well as DJ sets from Tinashe and Disclosure—will take over the Arizona desert on the weekend of October 9.
The Wolf Parade co-leader is joined by Elbow Kiss on the latest cut from his solo album Same Fangs, arriving May 15.
The Montreal-based songwriter returns with his second single of the year following February’s “Over/Over.”
Sam Ray and Kitty trade off reference points for their latest LP, including Shellac, Christina Aguilera, and Tom Waits.
The self-titled debut from Xay Young and Enumclaw’s Eli Edwards will arrive on June 19 via Carpark.
The San Diego rockers’ Alive EP will be released on April 24 via Quiet Panic.
Sound Therapy, Jennifer Hernandez’s new collection of Jersey-club-inspired hip-hop, arrives May 8.
The single arrives as the band makes their way across the US on their “No Place I’d Rather Be” tour.
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.
The Brooklyn trio reveal a video for the lead track from their newly announced Pathetic LP, out July 24 via AWAL.
The alt-R&B artist shares how Sampha, Jai Paul, King Krule, and more helped inspire his debut full-length for Secretly Canadian, out this week.
The Washingtonian psych-pop band will release their debut album Music for Heads on April 24 via Father/Daughter.
The indie-folk songwriter’s first new material of 2026 is out now via Dualtone.
