The indie artist's latest drop bridges the intimate polish of Harry's House with the confident pop sheen of Sabrina Carpenter and Dua Lipa.
Cheyenne has made it clear that in 2026, she's here to smolder and wow audiences, and she is not holding back. With her latest single “Anticipating You”, the rising singer-songwriter blends the sensual pulse of retro inspired synth-pop with fun, modern textures. Built around shimmering synths, sun drenched guitar strums, and a radiant vocal, “Anticipating You” sounds like radio ready, chartworthy pop. Think Steve Lacy by candlelight or Harry Styles in his late-night, off-the-record era. “Itʼs craving this personʼs touch, intimacy, closeness, personality. Itʼs being so in love you canʼt get enough. You crave their touch and everything about them. Itʼs also craving the emotional intimacy that comes with sex and being intimate" Cheyenne says.
The track traces that longing with the perfect lyrics: “Lying wide awake, while you saturate every part of my brain…” she croons. There's a commanding, confident ownership in the way Cheyenne delivers on “Anticipating You.” She's unapologetically open to pleasure and that magnetic pull that changes your chemistry. As she readies a new body of work for 2026, her sound is expanding, her vision is sharpening, and her message is clear: vulnerability is power, and self-expression is sacred.
Coming off a standout Pirate Studios showcase and four previous singles that mapped her evolution, Anticipating You marks Cheyenne's fifth and final release before a new musical era begins in 2026. With upcoming shows slated across the East Coast, she's inviting fans into the next chapter of her story.
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The Jack Rubies - Be Good Or Be Gone.
With their new album Visions In The Bowling Alley announced at the end of last year and set for release on Vinyl, CD and Streaming in late January (23rd), UK postpunk veterans The Jack Rubies ofer up one more single to preview the record. “Be Good Or Be Gone,” a slice of groovy guitar pop as danceable and hook-heavy as anything from the band's four-decade history, is out today January 9, 2026.
may have emerged from the British C86 scene and be more often thought amongst the likes of Shriekback or Nick Cave, but there's something about the groove and hooks of “Be Good Or Be Gone” that whispers “Madchester” – think “Fool's Gold,” “Step On” or “Groovy Train”. You can most certainly dance to it, and the vocal interplay between Rubies frontman Wright and guest Cat Henry(returning after the last album's hit single “I'll Give You More”) is thrilling. It sounds like a party, and while the words betray an underlying darkness, it's of an almost pop-classicist bent, as direct as a set of Johnny Cash lyrics: “You crucify me then you dance up and down on my grave/That’s what I say even though it isn’t true.” Taken together, it's the stuf of which enduring hit singles are made.
“It's based on an almost forgotten sketch from yesteryear and with a nod to our past,” the band ofers, “a dance-favored and nostalgic meditation on the closing of a chapter.” The Rubies' SD Ineson features on harmonica, adding to the rootsy favor, and delivers signature guitar lines that complement Wright’s slide guitar and and tight postpunk funk rhythms. Drummer/producer Peter Maxted’s keyboard textures foat, then punctuate, while bass and percussion hold the beat close until gradually letting go as the track wistfully concludes. “It’s time to move on. Two empty deck chairs are all that’s left on a deserted beach,” the band says in summary.
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Mesh - Exile.
Mesh unveil the stylish music video 'Exile' as the first new song from the UK alternative electronic duo since nine years! This single is an edit of the opening track of the English band's forthcoming new album "The Truth Doesn't Matter", which has been scheduled for release on March 27, 2026.
Mesh comment on 'Exile': "I was trying to write some music that was uplifting but had a dark and moody undertone", Richard explains. "I had the chord structure and the chorus, but felt something was missing. That's when I added the arpeggio type line at the start. This changed the character of the song and gave it that hypnotic, driving feel. It is the glue that holds it all together. After we had finished mixing the album and almost a year after the music was written, Mark sent me the track with the vocals added. It was one of those moments when I knew immediately that this track had to be the single. It was as quick as that."
"We were about to go to Germany to mix the album with Olaf", Mark adds. "I still had a couple of instrumentals from Rich which had no lyrics or vocals. I loaded one into Cubasis on my phone and started working on it in dead time during the mixing. I needed inspiration, and Judit, the wife of our producer Olaf, gave me the only English books that she had: 'Chicken Soup for the Soul – Stories for a Better World' by various authors, and 'The Man Who Fell to Earth', which is a Bowie biography. I was also reading Heinlein's 'Stranger in a Strange Land' on my pad. The lyrics kind of just fell out of those influences. I recorded the vocals on the phone outside on Olaf's balcony and recorded them properly when I got home. It was all very last minute, but worth that last push."
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Alice Costelloe - How Can I.
London singer-songwriter Alice Costelloe shares new track 'How Can I' this week, the final preview of debut album 'Move On With The Year' out 6th February via Moshi Moshi Records. One of the album's most revealing moments, new track 'How Can I' skips blithely, all honeyed harmonies and tambourine shakes, while Costelloe wrestles with a dichotomous truth, both a question and a statement: “How can I / Still adore / You know I still adore you”.
“So much of my childhood I had this feeling that something wasn’t right, but I just couldn’t put my finger on it,” Costelloe admits. “My dad was so different: he’d fall asleep mid-sentence with a lit cigarette in his mouth, he couldn’t be woken up no matter how much you tried, and when he wasn’t sleeping he’d take us on strange, and in retrospect, insanely dangerous adventures.” It wasn’t until her early teens, when her older sister confirmed his substance abuse, that those memories came into focus - an awakening that threads through the album’s writing.
Speaking more on the song release, Alice said: "When I was finishing the song, I read a quote from Feist where she said, ‘When you say something or sing something enough times, it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy – it’s almost like casting spells.’ It made me think about what it would feel like playing songs full of sadness, night after night, and whether those were the spells I wanted to be casting,” Costelloe explains. “So I added the line ‘I am good, I’m enough, I’m surrounded by love’. I know it’s unbearably cheesy, but I wanted a moment in the set that could counteract some of the darker parts of the record and manifest something more positive."
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| Photo - Ash Drummond. |
"Black Chimneys", is the second single from Hirta's new LP 'Soft Peaks' to be released in February 2026. The song is the perfect anthem for blessing your new year. In Alistair's own words, "...it feels appropriate to share the song 'Black Chimneys’ as a simple New Year greeting, as we all do the thing we do every year where we take stock of where we are in our lives and reset to begin another year.
The song itself is a reminder to myself of what’s important and, while not necessarily written as a new year song, has the recurring line, ‘Lang may yer lum reek’ - this is a traditional Scottish phrase that people use to toast or say farewell to friends and family around New Year. It translates as ‘long may your chimney smoke’ and symbolizes warmth, and having enough of what you need to be warm, safe and prosper, so it’s extra nice to be able to share it with you at this time."
Hirta is the solo project of multi-instrumentalist Alistair Paxton and this record hasn't left my rotation since I first heard it last autumn. Hirta’s ‘Soft Peaks’ finds solace in the natural world and comforts through an intriguing map of familiar trailheads and newly chartered terrain. The debut official release from Scottish - American multi instrumentalist, Alistair Paxton, ‘Soft Peaks’ casts a windswept and lonely spell yet retains an air of optimism across its ten warm and desolate tracks.
This album was self produced and recorded in 2025 in sessions split between the Hudson Valley town of Nyack, NY and rural Bovina in the Western Catskill mountains culminating in both vinyl and digital releases under Paxton’s own imprint, Half Painted Door.
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| Photo - Neelam Khan Vela. |
The Orielles have today shared double-single "You are Eating a Part of Yourself" and "To Undo the World Itself", two new tracks taken from their fourth studio album, Only You Left – out March 13 via Heavenly – a meticulous yet exploratory record which sees them emerge anew from their seven-year cycle where they began with Silver Dollar Moment (2018).
"To Undo the World Itself", has hints of Tara Clerkin Trio in the repeated, reverb-drenched vocal melodies, but also leans towards the expansive post-rock of Mogwai and Explosions in the Sky in its cathartic forward-motion and "You are Eating a Part of Yourself" shares a similar dark euphoria as both gradually submerge the listener in a glitch-laden tide of feedback and noise. Coupled with the rising harmonic progressions there’s a pervasive sense of bittersweetness, of time irrevocably passing by.
Accompanied by a video directed by Neelam Khan Vela which spans both tracks, the band said: "'You are Eating a Part of Yourself’ began when a durational guitar loop was released from the archive of improv’s recorded in Henry’s bedroom. The title, which comes from a video artwork dating 1996, captures the darkness emanating from the original recording, and reflects the clarity to be able to define that feeling some years later. Through music (and some words) we unfurled the emotion captured back then, as we put our ears up to the organs of the body orchestrating their own symphony and dissonance.
Closing track of the album ‘To Undo the World Itself’ sings of rebirth and reversal, or outstanding finality, depending on the impression that ‘Only You Left’ leaves you with. The cathartic crescendo meant that this was a favourite to play in the various live rooms that we wrote / recorded in, where it was trialled against the backdrops of thunderstorms and peaceful sunsets alike."
Neelam added about the video: "After almost a decade of collaborating with The Orielles, we share a connection that makes our creative process completely intuitive, like a long rally where ideas are passed back and forth without needing to be spoken. The band filmed with Lewis and Giulia in Manchester, and from that starting point I let the emotional pull of the tracks guide the edit, completing the video through what the music evoked and what the evolving images seemed to ask for."
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