A few more releases to graze upon this week. Here is our guide:

The Weather Station               Humanhood 

Written during one of the most difficult periods of Lindeman’s life and rendered with a rock band with improvisational chops just as she began to recover by reckoning with a complicated truth: Sometimes, life simply tries to dismantle us, no matter how good everything may seem, and we must accept that in order to survive.

jasmine.4.t     You Are The Morning               

The debut album from trans woman and singer-songwriter jasmine.4.t. who is the first UK signing to Phoebe Bridgers label, Saddest Factory Records.

Band of Holy Joy         Scorched Jerusalem              

Removed from the romanticism of their recent albums, side one matches Mark Stewart/Adrian Sherwood style production with the grim politics of recent years before moving onto Weimar-era waltzes.

Helen McCookerybook         Showtunes from the Shadows       

Her songs are replete the same sort of charm, alluring personality and minimalism of peers like Marine Girls, The Raincoats & Television Personalities.

Parchman Prison Prayer      Another Mississippi Sunday Morning        

A second collection of raw and haunting performances from the prison’s Sunday gospel service.

Some Fear      Some Fear     

Their sound can be described as chill and melancholic, a blend of slowcore and lo-fi rock that resonates with a profound sense of introspection.

Songhoy Blues            Héritage          

The Mali 4-piece embrace a more acoustic, creative re-imaging of their signature “desert blues” sound.

Sophie Jamieson       I Still Want To Share

A deeply personal reflection on the cyclical nature of loving and losing from an artist who has drawn comparisons to Sharon van Etten, PJ Harvey and Lisa Germano.

Rose Gray        Louder, Please           

It pairs home truths with dance hedonism, summoning not just a transformative night out – the new faces and chosen family, ecstatic highs and crushing lows – but also telling Rose Gray’s story: a life lived through club music, and always to its fullest.

Delivery            Force Majeure             

A twelve-track battering ram of an album that only lets up for journeys into Television and Wire territory.

Ex-Void              In Love              

Their second album sees the band flourish from a chaotic power punk group into a fully-fledged pop behemoth. Taking in elements of shoegaze, country and 90s indie rock.

Geowulf            The Child         

Across “The Child’s” timeless-sounding psych-pop songs, Kendrick sings of friendships, familial ties and new motherhood with clarity and profound confidence.

Ela Minus         DIA      

Electronic music, where cutting-edge production and space-shuddering sonics meet a burgeoning singer-songwriter’s real sense of self-reflection and private reckoning.

Blue Lake         Weft    

Mini-album of off-kilter folk, country and left-field ambience.

Lots of hands                Into A Pretty Room  

Newcastle duo whose songs span from touching instrumentals written for family, meant to help usher them through a chapter of monumental loss, to whispered ballads sung with loved ones.

Sarcator           Swarming Angels & Flies    

Swedish group who are at the forefront of an emergent, highly determined new generation of Scandinavian extreme metal bands

20/20                  Back to California    

Their first album in over 25 years and its hooks, harmonies and instantly memorable tunes stand with the late ‘70s/early ’80s work that won the band an inaugural induction into the Power Pop Hall Of Fame.

Greg Freeman              I Looked Up   

Across ten songs that meld knotty indie rock with pastoral twang, he sings with a zealous urgency of shipwrecks, biblical visions, doomed drifters, dams breaking, and lives left in rearview mirrors.

David Gray      Dear Life          

A return for the songwriter’s songwriter who broadens his musical palette with rich orchestral strings, horns and woodwind arrangements to correspond with the scale of the themes.

Delights            If Heaven Looks A Little Like This 

Manchester band nodding to psychedelia, funk and soul, disco and stadium-sized indie pop, with wide-ranging influence spanning Metronomy, Cut Copy, Empire Of The Sun, Prefab Sprout and Supergrass, to Wings, Daft Punk, 10cc, Justice, MGMT & more.