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The Sounding Board

It's just a rank, bro: A rundown of The Sounding Board's 2026 so far

This week I'm breaking format to rank the albums I've written about this year.

Every Tuesday, the Sounding Board is a space for a short-ish review of a recent-ish release and conversations about new-to-you music. We’ll get things started with a write-up about a newer, likely under-heard album, and invite you to share your music musings in the comments. This week I’m breaking format to rank the albums I’ve written about this year.

In addition to being a basketball player of some renown, Larry Bird was an all-world trash talker. 

Bird had the sort of penchant for verbal barbs and the on-court skills to back it up that continue to inspire listicles and Reddit threads decades after Bird last stepped foot on the hardwood. My personal favorite of these widely circulated stories concerns the omnidirectional venom Bird spat at his competitors ahead of an NBA 3-point shooting contest in the late โ€˜80s. Bird reportedly walked into the locker room, took stock of his competition and before even taking off his warm-up gear, let the room know the shooting title was already his. He asked the gathered accomplished marksmen a simple question: โ€œWho’s coming in second?โ€ย 

Bird, of course, went on to win the contest.

Different tellings of this apparently not apocryphal story vary on when this occurred and whether Bird was being serious, but every version agrees that Bird said his sharpshooting coronation was a forgone conclusion, and he was right. 

In this mid-year ranking of Sounding Board material, Genesis Owusu is Larry Bird. Redstar Wu & the Worldwide Scourge, my personal album of the year so far, is head and shoulders better than any album I’ve written about in this space and obviously going to conclude my ranking of current-year releases covered in this column. 

That might sap some intrigue from this exercise, but 2026 has been a good year for music, and The Sounding Board exclusively focuses on albums I at least kind of like, so it was still tough to figure out who was coming in second.

If mildly spoiled mid-year lists aren’t your thing, it’s still worth scrolling to the end of this piece for quick hits on the albums I’m most excited for in the second half of this year. That’s doubly true if lists are your jam, since I’ve also compiled a short list of Best of 2026 So Far lists that aren’t limited to albums covered in this column.

26. Hard-Fi – Sweating Someone Else’s Fever

What I wrote: The 2026 iteration of the band shows off some hard-earned wisdom and worldliness on the album, which takes its name from a Central American idiom meaning to fret over someone elseโ€™s worries, but for the most part, Hard-Fi sound just like the band responsible for some ripping singles during Tony Blairโ€™s time in 10 Downing Street.

25. Hush – For Dolly

What I wrote: Itโ€™s a near certainty that whatever sounds the words โ€œpsychedelic indie popโ€ evoke for you are somewhere on For Dolly.

24. Some Fear – Word Eater

What I wrote: Word Eater‘s eight songs can all be found somewhere in the vast, foggy quagmire between slowcore and shoegaze. Some Fear imbues the tracks with a sense of dogged determination and weary resolve in the face of heavy headwinds, but a certain sluggishness and gloom is inherent to the chosen sound. 

23. This House – Soft Rains Will Come

What I wrote: On certain stressful, over-caffeinated days, I can feel my pulse in my glasses. Itโ€™s a fluttering throb of tension at my temples that registers as external stimulus but is all internal pressure. 

Itโ€™s the same spot tickled by the noise blasts and spasmodic rhythms of Soft Rains Will Come.

22. 2070 – Big Blue

What I wrote: Big Blue is a slightly shambolic collection of sun-bleached garage rock songs with a light infusion of psychedelia that sounds like it was played through a tape deck and recorded on a second, shittier tape deck.

21. Peaer – Doppelgรคnger

What I wrote: While Doppelgรคnger isnโ€™t especially flashy, those who seek it out will find nothing more or less than a well-made, fairly low-key indie rock album and the

20. Dari Bay – Surprise Wish

What I wrote: Surprise Wish, which came together as James wrapped up college,3 is an agreeable riff-centric slab of slacker rock dappled with flecks of Midwest emo. The emo bits come into focus when acoustic guitar or Jamesโ€™ upper register manage to take suction-cup steps atop thrumming electric guitar gloop that provides the LPโ€™s foundation. 

19. The Paranoid Style – Known Associates

What I wrote: Known Associates, the latest album from the Paranoid Style, is most likely to be a hit with people who definitely think too much about pop culture and probably overanalyze everything else. It has enough evident charms to win over others, too.

18. Jenny on Holiday – Quicksand Heart

What I wrote: Quicksand Heart is an album incredibly indebted to the music of the 1980s, and not just the cool stuff thatโ€™s regularly cited as an inspiration by synth-driven bands. The album takes some cues from the likes of the Cure, Kate Bush, the Cocteau Twins and early Depeche Mode, but thereโ€™s also big globs of molten โ€™80s cheese in its cardiac-fixated songs, earnest lyrics and busy, layered sounds. Itโ€™s the legacy of mall conquerorsIrishmen rapidly getting too big for college radio and Don Johnson.

17. Surfbort – Reality Star

What I wrote: On Reality Star, Surfbort proves its brand of agitated dirtbag rock takes a long, long time to go bad. Aside from allusions to Nirvana and the B-52s, thereโ€™s little to place the gleefully bashed-out bursts of id, burnt-out spleen venting and adenoidal odes to alienation that comprise the album on a timeline.

16. Victoryland – My Heart Is A Room With No Cameras In It

What I wrote: The latest release from Julian McCammanโ€™s Brooklyn-based project2 is loaded with layered, gradually evolving and decidedly mid-fi songs. Tracks tend to start at a simple center and reveal their full bloom petal by scruffy petal. 

15. Gumshoes – Happy New Year

What I wrote: A deep, pitiful ache is the connective tissue of the new Gumshoes album, ironically titled Happy New Year. Like each of UK-based singer-songwriter Sam Sparksโ€™ last few albums as Gumshoes, the LPโ€™s release coincides with the arrival of the new year, and it is a concept album. For 2026, Sparks leaned heavily into both bits, penning nine tunes from nine different points of view inspired by the same central thought: โ€œI must be the worldโ€™s loneliest son of a bitch.โ€

14. Pope – BFM

What I wrote: The trio, with help from some friends, has broken the long silence with BFM,2 an album as likely to get heads bobbing and shoulders swaying today as it would have been as a more timely follow-up released several years ago โ€“ or really any point in the last 35 years. Pope has homed in on a charmingly shaggy and warm sound that exists at the Four Corners-esque boundary shared by college rock, alt-country, bookish โ€˜00s indie rock and lo-fi. 

13. Softcult – When a Flower Doesn’t Grow

What I wrote: While riotgaze is a kind of clumsy portmanteau, it is an instructive shoutout to the fuzzy guitars and fiery women of yesteryear that clearly had a profound influence on When a Flower Doesnโ€™t Grow.

12. Midwest, Post Death – Post Recovery

What I wrote: Nearly every trait I find charming in an indie rock record is represented somewhere in this LPโ€™s 10 folk-punk-leaning tracks. Big hooks, plenty of feedback, arbitrary studio chatter, lead vocals that occasionally sound like they were shouted through a wrapping paper tube that was forced into a kazoo, surprisingly sweet background harmonies, bouts of strident shouting, drastic swings in tempo and intensity, a sprawling assortment of instruments and tongue-in-cheek existentialism are all present on post recovery.

11. COLA – Cost of Living Adjustment

What I wrote: Colaโ€™s latest bears the genetic markers of Television, the Modern Lovers, the Cure, the Smiths, the Talking Heads, Wire, Killing Joke and the myriad bands who have revived, remixed or ripped off elements from those luminaries. Cost of Living Adjustment is an album packed with lead vocalist Tim Darcyโ€™s droll-but-not-dispassionate observations about how the world works and abstract imagery, backed by a blend of Ben Stidworthyโ€™s sonorous, impellent bass, Evan Cartwrightโ€™s lively drums, and Darcyโ€™s chiming guitar, all kept firmly tethered to earth by a spacious, artfully muddy mix.

10. Feeble Little Horse – Bitknot

What I wrote: Those who decide to check out bitknot based on strong word of mouth, positive but limited press or pure happenstance are in for a thoughtful, noisy treat. Itโ€™s an album that opens with an abrasive blast of feedback and is preoccupied with the odd intersectionality of existence.5 Harsh noise, sing-song melodies, pneumatic bounce and all manner of glitched-out electronic fractals are part of the frequently shifting, sometimes hostile soundscape. 

9. WU LYF – A Wave That Will Never Break

What I wrote: A Wave That Will Never Break pulls off a nifty feat. It’s an exceptional art-rock album that is unmistakably by WU LYF and also uses its seven songs to gently redefine what a WU LYF album sounds like. Band-defining features, like anthemic song structure, Roberts’ arresting yowl, Evans Kati’s emotive guitar, Tom McClung’s prominent, hyperkinetic bass playing and Joe Manning’s versatile, frequently busy drumming are fully intact. However, one difference is immediately apparent: The cathedral-rattling reverb synonymous with Go Tell Fire is essentially absent from A Wave.

8. Dry Socket – Self Defense Techniques

What I wrote: If blistering hardcore is something you’re in the market for, Dry Socketโ€™s intensity and sense of musicality make Self Defense Techniques a bracing, exhilarating, truly exceptional example of the form.

7. Cootie Catcher – Something We All Got

What I Wrote: Cootie Catcher guitarist Nolan Jakupovski, one of the Toronto quartet’s three songwriters, is being facetious when he sings “A little effort goes a long way/ Oh, it’s too much to ask,โ€ on late-album highlight โ€œPuzzle Pop,โ€ but it’s a succinct summation of Something We All Got‘s atmosphere. Thatโ€™s highlighted and underlined when Jakupovskiโ€™s voice is joined by the band’s other voices, Sophia Chavez and Anita Fowl, in almost-harmonizing, โ€œLet’s just let nature run its course.โ€ 

6. Zoh Amba – Eyes Full

What I wrote: Eyes Full, Zoh Ambaโ€™s debut long-player as a singer-songwriter, is built on an intriguing premise.

Amba is a renowned avant-garde saxophonist. They’re also a small-town Tennessee native who at the age of 17, left their hometown of Kingsport for the big city. After spending time and making music in San Francisco and New York City, Amba, now in their mid-20s, reconnected with their first instrument, guitar, and with the help of a couple of close collaborators, turned an observational lens toward the people and place that evidently remain important to Amba.

5. The Bug Club – Every Single Muscle

What I wrote: Less than 12 months after their last long-player, the U.K.-based band is back with a new, very good and anatomy-fixated album, Every Single Muscle.

It would be impressive enough if vocalist-guitarist Sam Willmett and vocalist-bassist Tilly Harris cranked out 10 to 12 songs for the album. Still, Every Single Muscle is an 18-song behemoth as towering and odd as the looksmaxxed cow with a John Kricfalusi-style mug on the albumโ€™s cover. 

4. Cardinals – Masquerade

What I wrote: In the wrong hands, an omnipresent squeeze box could be a tacky gimmick or downright hellish.

In Finn Manning’s hands, the accordion is noticeable but not overpowering. It both complements and improves the more standard rock instrumentation, adding a rich droning texture to what is otherwise a fine collection of sadboy rock songs. Each track has a warm, welcoming, hearth that the guitar, bass and drums can mingle around. It’s a lovely effect and helps mark Masquerade as one of the best debuts of the young year, and one of 2026โ€™s most enjoyable albums overall. 

3. Gladie – No Need to Be Lonely

What I wrote: When we last heard from the Philadelphia-based five-piece, snotty sneer and reverb were still pillars of the bandโ€™s sound. Nearly four years have passed since then, and Gladie is back with the bandโ€™s biggest, best, and most mature album, No Need to Be Lonely.

That maturation comes with a few pit stops in warm, roots music-influenced terrain, but for the most part, it doesn’t rob Gladie of any feistiness. It’s still a band with energy and tight riffs to spare, and most of No Need to Be Lonelyโ€™s songs qualify as uptempo, if not outright rave-ups that would have made sense on a previous Gladie album. They just sound fuller, richer, and clearer than the hypothetical earlier version. It’s an upgrade that allows lead vocalist Augusta Koch to shine, emphasizing her cleverness as a lyricist and the voice-cracking emotionality of her singing voice.

2. Lime Garden – Maybe Not Tonight

What I wrote: Like Lime Gardenโ€™s likeable 2024 debut, the Brighton-formed quartetโ€™s second long-player is a 10-song dispatch of sometimes moody, usually dance-y indie rock that bears the influence of music that either did or could have scored an iPod commercial in the Apple device’s heyday, sprinkled with a scintilla of hyper pop fairy dust. However, Maybe Not Tonight is an improved execution of that formula in nearly every way. 

To borrow some modifiers from a couple of trailblazing robots who feel like a precedent for some of Lime Garden’s most dance club-friendly moments: It’s a harder, better, faster, stronger album. It’s clearer, more confident, catchier and more emotive, too. 

1. Genesis Owusu – Redstar Wu & the Worldwide Scourge

What I wrote: Whether he’s rapping, singing, waxing philosophic, raging against racism or making uneasy peace with the inherent unfairness of life, Owusu is excellent. He can double-time over a frenetic beat, lead a sing-along over a funky synth line, create mania while rocking out and even convincingly embrace a country-adjacent croon using his lower register. When performing live, he’s an obvious star, a throwback bandleader bursting with the kind of energy and off-the-charts charisma needed to blow crowds away. During a 2021 interview with the Guardian, Owusu  compared himself to Prince, and the consensus seemed to be โ€œfair enough.โ€ 

That staggering talent was readily apparent upon the release of his excellent and eclectic first album, 2021โ€™s Smiling With No Teeth, which includes both a fiery rebuke of neo-Nazis and an interpolation of the Full House theme song. Owusu’s versatility and virtuosity were reinforced by the well-reviewed 2023 concept album, Struggler, which assumed the point of view of an indomitable cockroach. While still genre-agnostic, it toned down the stylistic swerves to emphasize post-punk tones. Redstar Wu & the Worldwide Scourge, Owusuโ€™s recently released third album, is varied, vibrant, loud, often angry and one of the yearโ€™s absolute best long-players. It’s a deft combination of the genre-hopping bombast of his debut, the darker, โ€˜80s influence of his sophomore album and au courant commentary.


This Year (So Far) in Lists

As a rule of thumb, I try to limit The Sounding Board’s focus to LPs released within the past month that I at least kind of like with no more than five aggregated reviews at the time of writing. Sometimes I bend the rules a little, but the year’s most notable and gushed-about albums have nearly no shot at appearing in this column.

However, I’m not the only person with opinions about music on the internet (or even this site). If you’re looking for thoughtful analysis of the best at-large releases from the first six months of 2026, here are some of the lists that I most enjoyed reading, and in one case, listening to.


Looking ahead

The music release calendar now broadly mirrors the established movie release pattern. Big-budget crowd-pleasers drop in the summer months to hopefully mint Song of the Summer contenders. Meanwhile, critical catnip tends to land toward the end of the year when it will be fresher in mind for award nominations and year-end lists.

That means while some excellent music was released in the first half of 2026, the best stuff is likely ahead of us. While publicly available release schedules for October and beyond are currently sparse, announced releases over the next few months look promising.

July: Jack White – Frozen Charlotte, Panda Bear and Sonic Boom – A ? of WHEN, Buju Banton – Too Too Bad, Yard Act – You’re Gonna Need a Little Music, Charli XCX – Music, Fashion, Film, Tom Tom Club – Let There Be Love, Cheekface – Podium.

August: Margaret Glaspy- I Am Both, Becky G – Baraja Bendita, Kiwi Jr. – Blowin’ Up, Open Mike Eagle and Kenny Segal – DOOMED!, Squirrel Flower – Say A Prayer to the Gods of Getting Going, Wild Pink – Still Coming Down, Dinosaur Jr. – There Near, Ty Segall – Chrome.

September: Arab Strap – Half-Told Tales, Chat Pile – Who Loves the Sun, The Thermals – Under Crushing Rain, This is Lorelei – The Singer in My Band, The Tubs – Hard Life, Frankie Rose – Hila, Smidley – Murphy House, Adult DVD – Adult DVD, Blondeshell – Violins.

October: Fat Dog – Cancel Me (I’m Tired), Eels – Cookie Happened.

I know I intentionally omitted some big releases I’m not especially excited about and probably unintentionally overlooked some worthy albums. Just know it’s absolutely intended to be a personal slight to your specific tastes.