Add to playlist: the beautifully dazed, countrified indie-rock of Tracey Nelson and the week’s best new tracks | Music

From New York City, New York
Recommended if you like The Clean, This is Lorelei, The Feelies
Up next Debut album Hercules out 10 July

Tracey Nelson’s self-titled 2025 debut EP was one of the year’s best lesser-heard gems: Five tracks of sparkling, winsome indie-rock that recalled classic antipodean jangle bands the Clean, Twerps and Dick Diver. Tracks such as New Years Flowers and Just Shoot Me Now suggested that Austin Noll – the NYC-based singer-songwriter behind the project – was a classicist with a keen sense for bright melodies and self-deprecating one-liners.

This July, Noll will release Hercules, his first full-length, on Perennial, an imprint of the beloved Olympia, Washington label K Records, which in recent years has released great LPs by garage rockers Sharp Pins and the amorphous Los Angeles band Dummy. Co-produced by the North Carolina musicians MJ Lenderman and Colin Miller – and performed by a murderers row that includes Lenderman and Miller alongside Landon George, Wednesday’s Karly Hartzman, Xandy Chelmis, Ethan Baechtold and former Hotline TNT guitarist Jack Kraus – Hercules amps up the country elements of last year’s EP while giving Noll and his band more space to breathe.

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Tracks such as Two Feet and St John’s River amble about in a dazed, friendly way that makes the record’s summer release date a no-brainer; lead single Hercules is a warm spotlight for Noll’s warbling, characterful voice. “I’ll carry you with me wherever I go,” he sings, drawing out each word with a faint sense of adoration and affirmation. The whole of Hercules balances deftly on this tightrope between melancholy and geniality, establishing Noll as an unshowy songwriter with a deeply clarified sense of self. Shaad D’Souza

This week’s best new tracks

Pozer. Photograph: Henry Goodfellow

Pozer – Hulk Hogan (ft AJ Tracey)
Delivering social realism over Jersey club beats, the Croydon MC is in a class of one in the UK scene, and AJ Tracey turns in an excellent verse as he locks in alongside Pozer’s galloping pace. BBT

Zoh Amba – Another Time
The remarkable free jazz saxophonist turns equally remarkable songwriter for a record that twists their Appalachian roots with open-hearted, choppy indie rock, backed by Jim White on drums. LS

One Leg One Eye – Many Are My Names Besides
One to drag you back to the cruelest depths of winter: George Brennan and Lankum’s Ian Lynch twist scratchy drone and distorted wailing into true willies-inducing horror. LS

Enter Shikari – Dead in the Water
A highlight from the rave-rockers’ surprise and brilliantly overstimulated new album Lose Your Self out today: imagine Everything Everything spliced with the Prodigy and Bring Me the Horizon. BBT

James K – Peel (Loidis remix)
Loidis (also known as ambient-techno master Huerco S) turns in a 14-minute remix of James K’s ethereal dancehall-pop tune, turning it into snappy Luomo-esque microhouse – and perfect beach sunset fodder. BBT

Ambrose Akinmusire and Mary Halvorson – Soundcheck
You could discern the sound of breathing or a distant siren in Akinmusire’s disarming trumpet playing, further unsettled by the arrival of Halvorson’s guitar – before both get down to skittish play. LS

Max F – Dream Channel (Space Ghost Club Remix)
The kind of piano-centred house instrumental that you play as the sun is filtering through the warehouse rave windows, with everyone air-plinking along to its detailing: life-affirming music. BBT

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