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The Long Wait May Finally Be Over: On As Yet Unreleased Slipknot Album

For years, Slipknot fans have spoken in hushed tones about Look Outside Your Window — the band’s long-mythologised “lost” album recorded during the All Hope Is Gone sessions in 2008. Now, after more than a decade and a half of rumours, delays, and endless speculation, founding member Shawn “Clown” Crahan has confirmed that 2026 is finally the year.

The album has been completed for years, yet never released, and has grown into one of modern metal’s most intriguing mysteries.

A Secret 2008 Recording With a Very Different Sound

Back in 2008, while Slipknot was working on All Hope Is Gone, four members — Clown, Corey Taylor, Jim Root, and Sid Wilson — broke away to record a separate set of songs. These tracks reportedly sounded nothing like Slipknot, leaning instead into atmospheric, experimental rock textures.

Clown and Taylor have both described the music as melodic, artistic, solemn, and even somewhat comparable to alternative and art-rock influences rather than the band’s usual metal assault.

The only song from those sessions that fans have ever heard is “‘Til We Die,” released as a bonus track on the All Hope Is Gone special edition. Everything else has remained locked away — fueling endless fan speculation.

A History of Delays: 2019, 2023, 2024… and Now 2026

Look Outside Your Window has had more projected release windows than almost any shelved album in metal history. It was originally expected in late 2019, but Slipknot decided not to overshadow We Are Not Your Kind. Later, Corey Taylor suggested it might arrive around 2023. Clown later said the album was fully mixed, mastered, with artwork ready, yet still unreleased.

Each time momentum built, something stalled the release once again.

Finally, in a recent update, Clown stated plainly that 2026 is the real release year, saying he’s “tired of waiting” and wants fans to finally hear the project.

What to Expect: Not a Slipknot Album — and That’s the Point

Clown has repeatedly emphasised that Look Outside Your Window is not a Slipknot album at all. It was never meant to be. The material wasn’t created with Slipknot’s sound, structure, or creative identity in mind.

Corey Taylor has described it as emotional and experimental, with a very different vocal and songwriting approach. Fans should expect something atmospheric and introspective rather than anything resembling Iowa or The Subliminal Verses.

For some, that’s exactly what makes the album so exciting.

Why It Matters: A Final Piece of Slipknot Lore

Look Outside Your Window has become more than an unreleased album — it’s practically Slipknot folklore. Entire forum threads are dedicated to it. Fan rumours have circulated for a decade. Some doubted it would ever see the light of day.

Now, with a 2026 release finally on the horizon, fans may finally get to hear this fabled piece of the band’s history — a rare glimpse into an alternate creative direction explored by four of its most influential members.

Clown’s message to fans? “Have faith.”

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On A New Compilation Of Rare Tracks By Legends Talking Heads

Talking Heads fans, rejoice: this year’s Record Store Day Black Friday is bringing a rare gift from the archives. The band is releasing Tentative Decisions: Demos & Live, a collection of long-lost demos, early versions, and live recordings from the earliest years of their existence.

The recordings date from 1974–1976 — a period when David Byrne, Chris Frantz, and Tina Weymouth were still shaping their sound and, at times, still performing as The Artistics, the pre-Talking Heads college-era band that laid the foundation for their future. These early sessions include original demo versions of “Psycho Killer” and “Warning Sign,” recorded before the band officially became Talking Heads.

What’s on the Release

The compilation includes an LP plus a bonus 7-inch, offering:

  • 1975–1976 demos that predate the band’s debut album Talking Heads: 77.

  • A 1976 live performance from the Ocean Club in New York, including a raw early take of “Artists Only.”

  • The earliest known recordings from their Artistics era, including proto-versions of future Talking Heads classics.

The collection captures the band in their formative, exploratory stage — when their tight, minimalist sound was still emerging from scrappy, inventive jam sessions and grainy basement tapes.

Why This Release Matters

For longtime listeners, Tentative Decisions is a rare archival deep dive.

  • It reveals the evolution of some of their most iconic songs.

  • It preserves early chapters of their story that have long existed only as lore among fans.

  • It follows the 2024 deluxe reissue of Talking Heads: 77, continuing a renewed effort to open up the band’s archive.

Because it is a Record Store Day Black Friday exclusive, it’s also a limited pressing — meaning collectors will likely be lining up early.

What It Feels Like to Hear These Recordings

There’s something electric about listening to Talking Heads before they were Talking Heads.

You hear the beginnings of the nervous, angular rhythms that would define their later work. You hear the band experimenting with space, silence, and Byrne’s unmistakable vocal delivery as it was still taking shape.

A demo like the early 1975 “Psycho Killer” captures the band in black-and-white — before the polish, before the studio finesse, before the myth. And that’s the magic: it’s history with the dust still on it.

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De La Soul Bring Their New Chapter to Late-Night TV with Fire

Last night, hip-hop pioneers De La Soul lit up Jimmy Kimmel Live! with a powerful medley from their brand-new album, Cabin in the Sky. The performance wasn’t just a TV spot — it felt like a moment. A celebration, a tribute, and a re-awakening of one of rap’s most influential groups.

A New Album, a New Era

Cabin in the Sky — released November 21, 2025 — marks De La Soul’s first album in nine years and the first since the heartbreaking loss of founding member Trugoy the Dove (David Jolicoeur) in 2023. The trio’s remaining members, Posdnuos and Maseo, have described the record as living “in that space between loss and light,” balancing grief with gratitude, and reflection with the need to move forward.

The album blends classic De La Soul warmth with modern production and a deep emotional core — a testament to their resilience and their legacy.

A Performance Filled With Heart

On Kimmel, De La Soul opened with the explosive “Run It Back!!”, Posdnuos energizing the crowd while Maseo worked the boards with precision. The stage pulsed with live energy — the kind of performance that reminds you that hip-hop is as much about presence as it is about lyrics.

Then came “The Package”, elevated by the arrival of a full horn section. The brassy swell added warmth and soul, giving the track a dramatic, almost celebratory feel. As the horns moved, the group’s chemistry with them created a vibrant, communal energy that took the performance to another level.

But the most emotional moment arrived when the big screens illuminated Trugoy’s recorded verse, played in full as the group stood back to honor him. The crowd’s reaction said everything — it was a tribute that hit hard, a reminder of how deeply his voice shaped their sound.

More Than Just a Comeback

This performance carried weight. It symbolized healing, perseverance, and a renewed sense of purpose. De La Soul didn’t just show that they’re still here — they showed that they’re evolving, honoring the past while boldly stepping into a new chapter.

For longtime fans, it was cathartic. For newcomers, it was a perfect introduction to the group’s rich emotional depth. And for hip-hop as a whole, it was a celebration of legacy, memory, and artistry.

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Alan Vega’s Solo Legacy Reborn

In electrifying news for fans of post-punk, avant-garde rock, and experimental music, Sacred Bones Records, working closely with the Vega Vault Project, is reissuing the first two solo albums by Suicide co-founder Alan Vega. The remastered editions of Alan Vega (1980) and Collision Drive (1981) will arrive on January 23, 2026, in multiple formats — including vinyl, 8-track, and, for the first time ever, digital streaming.

Revisiting the Roots: Alan Vega (1980)

Alan Vega’s debut solo album marked a stark shift from the brutalist synth-punk of Suicide. Instead, Vega leaned into the raw spirits of rockabilly, blues, and early rock ’n’ roll, crafting a stripped-down, emotionally immediate sound.

For this reissue, the album has been remastered from the original tapes by Josh Bonati, giving renewed punch to standout tracks like “Jukebox Babe,” “Ice Drummer,” and “Bye Bye Bayou.”

Collectors have even more to look forward to: a deluxe 2×LP edition featuring previously unreleased demo recordings, offering a rare look into Vega’s earliest visions for the project.

Pushing Boundaries Again: Collision Drive (1981)

If his debut felt rooted in primal rock history, Collision Drive blasted into a wilder orbit. Vega embraced a raw, full-band setup, swapping drum machines for a live drummer and a gritty hard-rock ensemble. The result is an album that fuses psychobilly, proto-industrial textures, street poetry, and sci-fi surrealism.

Like the debut, Collision Drive has been freshly remastered from its original tapes, bringing new clarity to one of Vega’s most explosive solo statements.

Why These Reissues Matter

  • First-Ever Streaming Release: Despite their cult status, neither album has ever been available on streaming platforms until now.

  • High-Fidelity Remastering: The new editions revive the original tapes with modern sonic precision.

  • Unreleased Archival Material: The deluxe version of Alan Vega includes previously unheard demos.

  • Curated Legacy: The reissues are part of an ongoing archival project overseen by Vega’s widow Liz Lamere, collaborator Jared Artaud, and designer Michael Handis.

  • Multi-Format Release: Vinyl, streaming, and even an 8-track edition, paying homage to Vega’s era-spanning influences.

A Voice That Invited Interpretation

Liz Lamere has emphasized Vega’s belief that art belongs to the listener. He rarely explained his lyrics or imagery, preferring that fans bring their own emotions and imagination to the music. That principle lives on through these reissues — they aren’t just archival recordings; they’re open invitations for rediscovery.

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Fleet Foxes Put Their Gentle Spin on “Angel in the Snow” by Elliott Smith

In a beautifully understated turn of events, Fleet Foxes — led by Robin Pecknold — have released a tender and faithful cover of Elliott Smith’s “Angel in the Snow,” the quietly shimmering track originally included on Smith’s New Mooncompilation. The cover appears on the soundtrack for the upcoming holiday comedy Oh. What. Fun.

A Cover That Hits Home

Pecknold’s admiration for Smith comes through instantly. Rather than reinventing the song, he treats it with the kind of reverence usually reserved for sacred texts — keeping the structure intact while lending it Fleet Foxes’ signature warmth and layered harmonic glow.

In a recent statement, Pecknold said the song had long been a personal holiday favorite, making the opportunity to record it feel “like a huge joy.” He also shared a poignant memory from his teenage years: distributing “RIP Elliott” flyers at his high-school graduation in 2004, a moment that speaks to how deeply Smith’s songwriting impacted him.

Fleet Foxes’ version unfolds gently — vocals fading back as shimmering instrumentation takes the foreground, giving the track an almost wintry glow. It’s delicate, devotional, and unmistakably Fleet Foxes.

Why This Cover Matters Now

This isn’t just a nod from one admired artist to another — it’s a cross-generational connection between two pillars of indie folk. Smith’s influence runs deep in the genre, and Fleet Foxes’ interpretation brings that legacy into the present with care and nuance.

The release also arrives alongside a star-studded soundtrack. Oh. What. Fun., directed by Michael Showalter, features contributions from St. Vincent, Gwen Stefani, Jeff Tweedy, Weyes Blood, and more. Both the film and its accompanying soundtrack are set for release on December 3, with the soundtrack arriving via Sony Music Masterworks.

A Personal Tribute, Not Just a Song

Pecknold has said he’s “very literal” about covers — he thinks of them almost like historical reenactments. That approach works beautifully here. It’s not flashy, not embellished, but deeply sincere.

And because Smith’s work shaped Pecknold’s formative years, the cover becomes more than an homage. It’s a musical thank-you letter, delivered with restraint and affection.

The Takeaway

For longtime Elliott Smith fans, this is a touching, respectful tribute. For Fleet Foxes listeners, it’s another reminder of how gracefully the band can channel vulnerability. And for anyone planning to watch Oh. What. Fun., it’s an unexpectedly emotional highlight tucked into a holiday soundtrack.

If you haven’t heard it yet, it’s absolutely worth your time — a quiet moment of beauty from one artist honoring another.

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