Nada Surf - Never Not Together

Nada Surf return with news of their ninth studio album 'Never Not Together', which is set for release Feb 7th via City Slang. The band are sharing the lead single & video from the record "Something I Should Do" online now.

"Empathy is good, lack of empathy is bad, holy math says we're never not together," singer Matthew Caws declares at the end of "Something I Should Do," a crashing powerpop track with an insistent melody that adds urgency to his thoughts about 21st-century life.

By Surprise - Cosmic Latte

Chicago area label Jetsam-Flotsam is excited to announce the newest full-length album by New Jersey's By Surprise. Titled Cosmic Latte, it's the band's most recent full-length album Mountain Smashers was released on Topshelf Records in 2011; since then, the band has released a 2013 EP titled Criteria (also on Topshelf) and a 2016 split with Aspiga (on Asian Man Records).

The Reaganomics - The Aging Punk

The Reaganomics have been kicking around the Red Scare roster for about 10 years and they only show their faces when they feel there’s a need to mock Republicans and/or ladder-climbing scenester punks. And let’s be honest: there’s currently a need. These dudes are from Joliet, Illinois (hold your applause), and they don’t ever tour because they have weird jobs like… music teacher and stuff. Their rare live shows are half laughs and half a display of exorbitant musicianship.

Caspian - On Circles

Caspian, the symphonic Massachusetts-based band who have been dubbed “the most regal of the instrumental new rock school” (Pitchfork) and post-rock cosmonauts (Spin), return with their first album in over four years, releasing On Circles on Jan. 24 via Triple Crown Records.

Ratboys - Printer's Devil

“I’m lost, but I’m not afraid.” As Ratboys’ Julia Steiner began to write the skeletons of the songs that would make up their new album Printer’s Devil, those six words, originally sung by David Byrne, meant everything. They became a mantra for the transformative nature of Printer’s Devil, an album that finds the Chicago band achieving entirely new heights as a four-piece and peaks of vulnerability in what is undoubtedly their strongest and most cohesive endeavor yet.