FEATURE:
One for the Record Collection!
IN THIS PHOTO: Leigh-Anne releases her debut solo album, My Ego Told Me, on 20th February
Essential February Releases
__________
THERE are some…
IN THIS PHOTO: Hilary Duff/PHOTO CREDIT: Aaron Idelson for Vogue
must-own albums out next month that I want to highlight. Although a lot of the biggest albums are going to arrive in the spring and summer, there are some great ones coming out before then. I am going to start out with albums due on 6th February. An album from a wonderful band you should know about, Mandy, Indiana’s URGH is one I am looking forward to. You can pre-order it here. Out through Sacred Bones Records, here is some more information about an album that is among the highlights of the first quarter of this year:
“For Mandy, Indiana, the truth is the only way through. On their Sacred Bones debut URGH, the four-piece - vocalist Valentine Caulfield, guitarist and producer Scott Fair, synth player Simon Catling, and drummer Alex Macdougall - are a force of uncanny nature, grafting together a record that is as much a call to action as a parlay into oblivion and transcendence. Across the ten tracks, the band interpolate their own unconventional language into a mantra for self-determination and resilience, forging a template for a brighter future before it fades to black.
Much of the album was written during a residency at an eerie studio house in the outskirts of Leeds, then recorded across Berlin and Greater Manchester. It was an intense environment partially due to the health issues faced by Caulfield and Macdougall during the writing and recording process.
Yet Mandy, Indiana remain uncompromising. Caulfield uses her voice as a distorted instrument and a weapon, oscillating between playful and eviscerating. The throbbing siren-sound of “Magazine” stands alongside the cut-up vocal fry of “try saying” and the shapeshifting ferocity of “ist halt so,” which channels the urgency of protes movements, referencing resistance to the genocide in Gaza while speaking to struggles more broadly, while final track “I’ll Ask Her” is a deliberate directness calling out toxic boy’s club culture and a tenacious reckoning that hangs over the album at large.
Although there are still undeniable “bangers” (like the frazzled rap of “Sicko!” featuring billy woods), URGH often feels hewn with precise cinema. From the bristling techno of “Cursive” to the deconstructed feedback loops of “Life Hex,” the album moves between industrial catharsis and cinematic unease, threading a tension that Fair describes as “a remix of itself.” This contrasting palette is both a necessary aspect of the record as well as the underlyin connective tissue. Though deeply personal, URGH reflects the violent, fractured state of the wider world. Caulfield’s lyrics grapple with assault, systemic indifference, and the omnipresence of pain, while also insisting on moments of beauty and solidarity. URGH belongs in the physical world, and the artwork by Carnovsky, featuring an anatomical illustration of Andreas Vesalius, underscores the record’s visceral confrontation with the body and its limits. URGH is both otherworldly, and physical and cathartic, both a first step toward healing and a refusal to let the conversation die”.
Another album from 6th February that you need to check out is Puma Blue’s Croak Dream. It can be pre-ordered here. Though I am new to this artist, Croak Dream is an album that sounds fascinating and well worth investigating. In terms of their previous music, Puma Blue has taken a step into new territory by the sound of things. This is someone that you need to put on your radar:
“With his new record Croak Dream, Puma Blue (real name Jacob Allen) returns to the spectral intimacy that first won him a cult following, now reimagined with the raw, instinctive energy of his live band. The album fuses lo-fi jazz balladry with jungle breaks, krautrock textures and trip-hop atmosphere, drawing comparisons to Portishead, Jeff Buckley, and D’Angelo.
Written in solitude and brought to life in collaboration, Croak Dream was conjured from tape loop sessions at Peter Gabriel’s Real World Studios, co-produced and engineered by Sam Petts-Davies (The Smile, Frank Ocean) where the band improvised to fragments of Allen’s songs they’d never fully heard. The result is a dreamlike collage of baritone sax-drenched ballads and restless grooves: tender, feverish, and alive.
This record marks a daring evolution for Puma Blue, balancing bold sonic experimentation with raw emotional clarity, tailor-made for the stage”.
There are a few albums from 13th February that are well worth pre-ordering. One is Ásgeir’s Julia. You can pre-order it here. This is an artist who I have been following for a little while, so I am excited to see what comes from Julia. The Icelandic artist is truly terrific. He is another artist I would recommend people check out. Julia is going to be a real treat. Rough Trade provide some details of what we can expect:
“On his fifth studio album, Julia, Icelandic singer-songwriter Ásgeir enters intriguing and uncharted territory. After years of engaging translators such as John Grant and working with the poetry of his father, Einar Georg Einarsson, Ásgeir has penned his lyrics by himself for the first time in his long and celebrated career. The result is a deeply contemplative body of work, steeped in nostalgia, that sees Ásgeir meditating on his past regrets as well as his hopes for the future, guided by the spectre of the album’s title character.
Ásgeir has long been lauded for his intricate folk-pop, lush production, and wistful, emotive falsetto. Julia marks a shift toward not just lyrical self-reliance but cathartic directness, songs that feel not just exquisitely performed, but lived in. “This was kind of the first time I was writing lyrics totally on my own,” he shares. “It was scary. I’m still trying to find myself within that. But I tried to open myself up and I learned a lot through that process, and it was definitely therapeutic for me.”
This new sense of vulnerability threads through the album’s ten tracks, written and recorded over the course of nearly two years. Many of the songs were first composed on guitar, with Ásgeir aiming for simplicity, prioritising melody, clarity, and meaning. The production, co-developed with longtime collaborator Guðm. “Kiddi” Kristinn Jónsson, remains organic and understated, allowing Ásgeir’s voice, and importantly his voice as a writer, to come forward”.
I would not normally highlight a soundtrack album as one to buy. However, as Charli xcx is providing the songs for Wuthering Heights, it is definitely one that everyone should buy. Available on beautiful black and green marble, you can pre-order it here. We have heard a couple of songs from it, including the incredible House featuring John Cale. Again, there are not really many details out there for the music and what the album will sound like. However, when news broke that Charli xcx would be providing original songs for the soundtrack, there was this positive and excited online reaction, as Grazia report:
“The first look at Emerald Fennell's adaption of Wuthering Heights has dropped and it's everything we could have hoped for - especially with cultural icon Charli XCX on board.
Yes, you heard that right - the official teaser of the film reveals that Charli will be contributing original songs to the film. Posting the clip on Instagram, she wrote 'new original songs by me for Emerald Fennell’s “Wuthering Heights” starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi. in theatres february 14th. happy early valentines <3'
Naturally, fans went into meltdown over the news, with many commenting on what a dreamy collab this is. 'Two of my fav artists together. This is insane,' wrote one. Another penned 'this insane crossover omg.' A third wrote 'Emerald Fennell, Charlixcx AND Margot?! I'm soo obsessed.'
They have a point. Both Emerald Fennell and Charli XCX have achieved huge cultural recognition with their respective projects, Saltburn and Brat. The two coming together to work on what's set to be one of 2026's most talked about films is genius.
Like Fennell's Saltburn, the film is set to be divisive, with the adaption anything but conventional. On release, the film was described as 'a compound of vulgar depravity and unnatural horrors.' Just last month, reports from a test screening found that viewers allegedly called it 'aggressively provocative and tonally abrasive' with one scene of a public hanging in which the 'condemned man ejaculates mid-execution.' But Fennell is never one to shy away from a fiery public debate - and neither is Charli.
When Charli's set at Glastonbury was met with criticism for using Auto-Tune and her style of dancing, she had the perfect response. Taking to X, she wrote that 'the best art is divisive and confrontational' and that she enjoys the discourse. 'like the idea that singing with deliberate autotune makes you a fraud or that not having a traditional band suddenly means you must not be a “real artist” is like, the most boring take ever. yawn sorry just fell asleep xx,' she wrote.
Like Fennell, she doesn't shy away from being too loud and her music pushes the boundaries of pop - yet her lyrics always manage to capture something of the zeitgeist. In fact, Charli has even commented on how much she admired Fennell in the past. In a 2023 interview, Charli spoke about how watching Saltburn 'triggered' her to her upbringing. 'Emerald Fennell IS the devil in the details,' she told The Line of Best Fit. 'Emerald's flair for delicious specifics really transports the audience back to THAT time.'
One thing's for sure - this could be pop culture's most fiery collab yet”.
Two more albums to cover off before getting to albums from 20th and 27th. I want to move to Chet Faker’s A Love for Strangers. In order to get a bit more context and insight into this new album, I am highlighting this article. You can pre-order the album here. For some reason, Rough Trade are not stocking the album until April, and the release date has not been pushed back as far as I know, so I have included a link from HMV. In any case, this is an album that I am looking forward to, as Chet Faker is a remarkable artist. It seems like A Love for Strangers is going to be among his very best work:
“Nick Murphy, better known to many as Chet Faker, has announced a new studio album, A Love For Strangers, due February 13, 2026 on BMG, and has released a buoyant lead single, This Time For Real, to whet appetites. The single arrives with a playful, kinetic video that follows Murphy as Chet Faker tearing through New York City by jet ski, sports car and pedicab, a jaunty visual that matches the song’s anthemic, self-aware charm.
This Time For Real finds Murphy at his most immediately catchy, pairing an earworm chorus with lyrics that tip a hat to the pressures and pleasures of artistic success, all delivered in that warm, slightly sardonic voice that made him a global surprise after Built On Glass. The track’s swagger-free confidence is a neat scene setter for A Love For Strangers, a record the announcement frames as Murphy returning to the restless curiosity that birthed Chet Faker in the first place.
A Love For Strangers follows Hotel Surrender from 2021, and it arrives after a period of reflection marked by the 10 year anniversary of Murphy’s breakthrough, Built On Glass.
That 2014 record vaulted Chet Faker into the spotlight, blending soulful songwriting, electronic textures and a beautiful looseness that made songs like Smoke And Retribution and Talk Is Cheap fixtures across playlists and festival stages. Since then Murphy has alternated between releases under his stage name and work under his own name, including the more experimental instrumental Music For Silence, plus high-profile collaborations with artists such as Flume and Marcus Marr, showing a restless creative life that refuses to settle.
The announcement frames A Love For Strangers as a coming-full-circle moment, a project born of personal rediscovery and the recalibration that followed a decade of attention. Murphy’s trajectory is unusual, in that he has repeatedly shifted between the persona and the person, testing how far a stage name can carry new ideas, then stepping back to experiment away from expectation. That tug-of-war between identity and invention is audible in This Time For Real, which balances anthemic hooks with cheeky self-reference, and promises an album that looks outward, while reckoning with the burden of looking back.
Fans will recognise familiar strands in Murphy’s approach, the marriage of classic songwriting instincts with modern production smarts, but the tease suggests A Love For Strangers will also nudge into fresh territory. If Built On Glass announced him to the world, and Hotel Surrender broadened his palette, this next record sounds like an attempt to reconcile the two impulses, to make songs that hold immediate appeal, while rewarding listeners who follow the twists in his career”.
Two incredible Pop artists release albums on 20th February. One is the American icon, Hilary Duff. I am looking ahead to luck… or something. Available on C.D. and tape, I would advise people interested to get it on vinyl. Duff is an incredible artist. Promising something truly special and personal, you can pre-order luck… or something here. I do really like her music, and I think her forthcoming album will get a lot of critical love. And it will be a big commercial success:
“Multiplatinum global icon, Hilary Duff returns to the pop world with her sixth studio album, luck… or something, her boldest and most self-assured project yet. Co-written by Duff and her husband and Grammy®-winning songwriter/producer Matthew Koma, the album features 11 brand new tracks, including the critically acclaimed single “Mature”.
After rising to fame as the titular star of the Disney Channel blockbuster, Lizzie McGuire, Duff first kicked off her music career with 2003’s 4X platinum Metamorphosis (featuring the Top 40-charting “So Yesterday” and “Come Clean”), then released her platinum-selling 2004 self-titled LP and 2007 autobiographical dance-pop collection Dignity.
With those three albums alone selling a collective 15 million copies worldwide, she also established herself as a producer, entrepreneur, philanthropist, and New York Times-bestselling author, all while continuing to deliver standout performances in TV and film, including her award-nominated turn on Darren Star’s Younger.
Recently signed to Atlantic Records, Duff is now launching a thrilling new chapter and sharing her first new music since 2015’s Breathe In. Breathe Out”.
Not only one of the most anticipated debut albums of this year, Leigh-Anne’s My Ego Told Me To is going to be remarkable. The former Little Mix member is a phenomenal solo artist. In terms of albums that will define this year and be among the best-reviewed, I do think that My Ego Told Me To is going to be right up there. You can pre-order the album here. Even if you are not aware of Leigh-Anne or consider yourself a fan, this is an album that I think you need to hear. One of our most important Pop artists, there is going to be a huge critical reaction when this is released:
“Leigh-Anne Pinnock is ready to reintroduce herself. After conquering the pop world with one of the biggest groups on the planet and stepping out as a solo artist, she has reached a new clarity: no more compromises, no more limits.
With the introduction of her debut album My Ego Told Me To, Leigh-Anne isn’t reinventing herself, she’s restoring the woman she always was. Bold, unapologetic and free, this album is the purest expression of her artistry to date and musically reflects every facet of Leigh-Anne Pinnock, unfiltered, independent and finally on her own terms. “Everything that has been in my heart, everything I’ve wanted to do, I’m doing now. It feels like freedom. It feels right”.
February is a bit of a quiet one for new albums, but there are some tremendous ones coming out. I am moving to 27th February and Bill Callahan’s My Days of 58. You can pre-order a copy here. This is what Rough Trade say: “Bill Callahan continues to open uncanny depths of expression, blazing one of the most original singer-songwriter trails out there. Applying the living, breathing energies of his concerts to this album production, he sharpens his slice-of-life portraiture to cut deeper, releasing a stream of singalong consciousness: poetic, cinematic, novelistic, comedic – and above all – musical”. The Quietus ran an article in November when news of the upcoming album was announced:
“Bill Callahan has shared details of his first studio album since 2022’s YTI⅃AƎЯ.
Spanning 12 tracks, My Days Of 58 was made by Callahan together with the band that backed him on his last tour in support of his previous LP: guitarist Matt Kinsey, saxophonist Dustin Laurenzi and drummer Jim White. The experience of touring with the three musicians showed the artist “that they could handle anything I threw at them,” he said.
Going into further detail, Callahan added: “Improv / unpredictability / the unknown is the thing that keeps me motivated to keep making music. It’s all about listening to yourself and others. A lot of the best parts of a recording are the mistakes – making them into strengths, using them as springboards into something human.”
To mark the announcement of My Days Of 58, Callahan has shared lead track ‘The Man I’m Supposed To Be’”.
The final album I am highlighting is Swet Deth by Crooked Fingers. You can pre-order the album here. Though this is an album new to me and I have had to do a bit of reading and listening back to Crooked Fingers, I was instantly intrigued. I do feel that Swet Death should be heard by everyone. One of the most interesting releases of next month. Well worth getting the album:
“One afternoon, Eric Bachmann’s son returned from school with a sheath of pictures he’d drawn, all of them macabre. “There were crows and sinister figures with scythes and tombstones,” he recalls. On one, he had written ‘Deth, Sweet Deth,’ and everything clicked in my head.”
Swet Deth, Bachmann’s first album under his Crooked Fingers moniker after a 15-year hiatus, organized itself around the image: its songs are about death, yes, but there’s a sweetness to them, a wry sensibility to his lyrics that comes from having experienced many kinds of death and the life that follows in its wake.
“Crooked Fingers” is a historically slippery concept — no two albums sound alike or feature the same lineup in studio or on tour. Hearing parts in these songs that called for instruments he didn’t play or vocals that weren’t in his register, he found himself expanding the roster of guest musicians further than he had on any album in his catalog, including Sharon Van Etten (“Haunted”), The National’s Matt Berninger (“From All Ways”), and Superchunk’s Mac McCaughan (“Cold Waves”). But first he started with family, friends, and frequent collaborators. Jon Rauhouse plays pedal steel. Bachmann’s wife, Liz Durrett, contributes vocals, as do members of his touring band, Skylar Gudasz and Avery Leigh Draut (of Night Palace).
There is a freedom to this collection of songs, a groove to them that would belie their agonies and anxieties were mere death the album’s point and not what comes before. For Eric Bachmann, that has been growth, as a musician and as a man. Like the tree sprouting from the graveyard on its cover, Swet Deth is surprising and lush, a shock of color against its morbid landscape, proof of life in the shadow of its opposite. “RIP Eric Bachmann,” one tombstone reads. As Crooked Fingers, he’s never felt more alive”.
Even if more albums will come out towards the spring, the ones I have spotlighted above are all worth seeking out. I am particularly excited by Leigh-Anne and her debut solo album, though Charli xcx, Hilary Duff and Robbie Williams are going to put out big albums, alongside some treats from smaller artists. A varied month with some great music due, I hope the recommendations above…
HAVE been of some use.
