Rhys Buchanan
Page 7

Lindsey Buckingham – ‘Lindsey Buckingham’ review: Fleetwood Mac visionary’s stellar return
The artist's first solo album in a decade sticks to the world-beating path he’s mastered

Iron Maiden – ‘Senjutsu’ review: an imaginative instant classic
The metal titans look to the East for inspiration on their idea-packed 17th studio album, revisiting elements of past successes along the way

Indigo De Souza – ‘Any Shape You Take’ review: finding love through turmoil
The North Carolinian's second album is as a masterful slice of grunge pop that digs deep into human connection and love

DMA’s launch surprise EP with ‘We Are Midnight’ video: “It encapsulates everything we are”
Check out the new video here first, as guitarist Johnny Took tells us about their “return to roots” surprise EP ‘I Love You Unconditionally, Sure Am Going To Miss You’

David Crosby: “Making music is crucial – and it’s keeping me alive”
Just don't ask him about Phoebe Bridgers

Indigo De Souza: grunge pop dabbling in peace, love and existential doom
The US star is taking her humble living-room guitar anthems to soaring new heights, capturing every ounce of human emotion

Sea Girls launch new album with ‘Sick’: “It’s basically me listing everything I’m pissed off with”
Frontman Henry Camamile tells us about how a return home laid the foundations for their “grown up album” ‘Homesick’

Dexter: rebellious bedroom pop that champions self-expression
The south-west London teen discusses rejecting beauty standards and her sun-splashed debut EP, which looks to uplift and empower

David Crosby – ‘For Free’ review: countercultural icon faces mortality with grace
The hugely influential artist continues his late creative surge

Wavves – ‘Hideaway’ review: San Diego garage-pop dons’ most original and varied work yet
This Dave Sitek-produced seventh album finds the band maturing but still raw

Sam Fender: “This album is probably the best thing I’ve done in my life”
The upcoming ‘Seventeen Going Under’ boasts rites-of-passage yarns and colossal tunes aplenty

The Lounge Society – ‘Silk For The Starving’ review: refreshingly rural take on politically-loaded post-punk
The Lounge Society are blazing their own path in a busy British guitar scene by looking closer to home – the results are as raucous as they are rewarding