Paste magazine has curated a list of 12 compelling new albums to stream this week, featuring artists like Tony Bontana, Mitski, and Bill Callahan. The roundup highlights diverse genres from indie-folk to pop, encouraging listeners to discover fresh sounds on New Music Friday.
Paste magazine's latest New Music Friday feature spotlights 12 new albums released on February 27, 2026, offering a mix of introspective folk, vibrant pop, and experimental sounds. The selection begins with Bill Callahan's 'My Days of 58' on Drag City, described as a 'living room record' that builds atmosphere through tracks like the desolate 'Lonely City' and the masterful 'Stepping Out for Air,' where horns evoke a northerly wind.
Bruno Mars returns after a decade with 'The Romantic' on Atlantic, following his Grammy-winning '24K Magic' and collaborations like Silk Sonic. The album confirms his talent for vintage grooves, with standout 'Dance With Me' pulling infectious rhythms from classic influences. Buck Meek's 'The Mirror' on 4AD features collaborators including Big Thief members Adrianne Lenker and James Krivchenia, who produced it, incorporating modular synths and textures reminiscent of their band's 2022 release 'Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe in You.'
Other highlights include cootie catcher's twitchy 'Something We All Got' on Carpark, blending post-modern pop with frustrations of young adulthood; Gorillaz's 'The Mountain' on Kong, a melancholic bookend to their location-based trilogy exploring loss; and Heavenly's long-awaited 'Highway to Heavenly' on Skep Wax, their first since the 1990s, praised for timeless indie-pop hooks in songs like 'Excuse Me' and grief-tinged 'The Last Day.'
Iron & Wine's 'Hen’s Teeth' on Sub Pop delves into sorrow and devotion with embellishments like violin and mandola; Lala Lala's 'Heaven 2' on Sub Pop mixes glossy '90s pop with gutted lyrics on epiphanies and hangovers; Maria BC's 'Marathon' on Sacred Bones focuses on concise songwriting with drone-metal elements; Mitski's 'Nothing’s About to Happen to Me' on Dead Oceans weaves haunted narratives of isolation; Nothing's 'a short history of decay' on Run For Cover balances noise and dreaminess; and Tony Bontana's 'My Name' on Everything Is Perfect showcases brevity in addressing grief and activism, as in 'Soft Dreams' calling for 'Free Palestine.'
This roundup positions these releases at the top of streaming queues, emphasizing their role in contemporary music discovery.