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.
Various artists, All These Things I Thought I Knew: A Compilation Tribute to the Late LD Beghtol
This tribute to the late songwriter and Magnetic Fields collaborator is something of a family affair, with close friends and clever familiars gathering to celebrate the artist’s dearly dour discography.
Portrayal of Guilt, …Beginning of the End
The Austin trio pushes into new territories within the frameworks of hardcore and metal, inserting flourishes of trip-hop, nu metal, and even Memphis rap into their aggressive package.
VINSON, Raw Honey
The debut album from the Detroit-reared artist jumps from jazz to electronica to R&B while always maintaining a cohesive structure of easy Sunday-morning vibes.
Mike LeSuer
The East Coast’s noisiest collab are teaming up for their second Sacred Bones LP, “Everything That Dies Someday Comes Back.”
The Boston slowcore three-piece list their go-to drinking songs, doom-not-black metal tracks, and more.
The Chicago Latinx punks liven up the dreamy “Foam” single with a bummed-out flamingo.
After dropping a pair of singles, the Aussie art rockers have settled on August 23 for their second Joyful Noise release.
An animated picture book recounting an ill-advised camping trip serves as the Toronto punks’ latest visual treatment.
Marisa Dabice unpacks the self-acceptance, self-hatred, and freedom of individuality that went into writing the punk band’s new album, “Patience.”
On the release day of “Hard Pop,” the Milwaukee pop-punk quintet contextualize their indisputably fun sounds.
The Chicago rapper and his co-pilot turn the “Shoulder You Lean On” single into an aerial stress dream.
Sonny Smith’s label preps a festival in his native SF and an accompanying compilation LP.
Misha Lindes details the story behind each of the debut record’s ten songs.
Lætitia Tamko’s second album will arrive September 27 via Nonesuch Records.
As they blitzkrieg the U.S. with a quick slew of tour dates, the post-punks smuggle us a list of the hottest bands making waves in their native land.
The emo first-wavers ready their first album in nearly five years with another track unveil.
The former Speedy Ortiz guitarist has “Devin” scheduled for a July 26 release via Exploding in Sound.
The “Jerry Maguire”–hoarding collective invites you to break in their new East LA storefront with them July 6.
Thirty years later, the black comedy remains among the most underrated films in the Cage canon.
An auditory illusion that sparked an internet phenomenon wasn’t the only influence on the LA psych trio’s fourth album.
The hypnagogic pop experimentalist unpacks themes of life, death, and bodiless existence on her third solo album.
The new single from the Connecticut rockers further distances Zackery Abramo from his experimental pop past in Vundabar.
Ellen Kempner cites eleven songwriting influences on the Boston trio’s latest LP for Polyvinyl.
