New Music Friday March 13: Jack Harlow's Monica Album, James Blake Goes Independent, The Black Crowes Return With A Pound Of Feathers


Author: Inception Point Ai March 13, 2026 Duration: 2:39
Podcast episode
New Music Friday March 13: Jack Harlow's Monica Album, James Blake Goes Independent, The Black Crowes Return With A Pound Of Feathers

Hey listeners, Lenny Vaughn here, your bridge from dusty vinyl grooves to today's digital rush, preaching the raw soul of music in an algo-overloaded world. It's New Music Friday, March 13, and the drops are hitting like a freight train across genres—Jack Harlow celebrates his 28th with Monica, his fourth album packed with slick rap vibes since 2023's Jackman, while James Blake goes independent on his seventh, Trying Times, blending moody electronics with collabs from Dave and Monica Martin, reflecting life's pressures per his LA Times interview. Rock roars back with The Black Crowes' tenth, A Pound Of Feathers, Lamb Of God's brutal Into Oblivion, their first since 2022's Omens, and Tigercub's brooding single A Black Moon, a Lynchian dream from their upcoming Nets to Catch the Wind. Kim Gordon keeps Sonic Youth's experimental fire alive on Play Me, Hot Chip's Alexis Taylor explores genre-free bliss in Paris In The Spring, and The Fray light up with A Light That Waits.

Pop's popping off too—The Pussycat Dolls roar back with dancefloor heater Club Song and a massive 65-date reunion tour after months of rumors, per Official Charts. Singles swarm: Luke Combs' country twang, Melanie C's Undefeated Champion teasing Sweat, Charlie Puth and Hikaru Atada's Home, Holly Humberstone's Cruel World, Arlo Parks' melancholy Get Go, and Tom Misch's heartfelt Days Of Us ahead of Full Circle. House heads, Chris Stussy unleashes Darkness, lead single from his debut album Lost, Found & Forgotten on Up The Stuss, all taut percussion and club tension. Underground gems like Art School Girlfriend's Lean In and Crack Cloud's Peace And Purpose add indie edge.

Industry shakes include tragic news of Boston's Tommy DeCarlo passing at 60 from brain cancer, rapper Ghetts' 12-year sentence after a fatal London crash, and buzz around Courtney Love hinting at a Hole comeback. A Düsseldorf court upheld Stratocaster's EU copyright, Universal eyes a Bon Jovi biopic, and Sebastian Bach steps in as Twisted Sister frontman with Dee Snider's nod.

From hip-hop hustle to metal thunder, this slate's pure discovery fuel—crank it loud, skip the skips.

Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more unfiltered vibes. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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