The new eon begins.
The post The Ocean Announce Their New Lineup And Album “Solaris”, Debut “Light Pollution” Music Video appeared first on Theprp.com.
The new eon begins.
The post The Ocean Announce Their New Lineup And Album “Solaris”, Debut “Light Pollution” Music Video appeared first on Theprp.com.
How does this happen? Tomorrow, the great and reclusive Scottish electronic duo Boards Of Canada will release Inferno, their first album in 13 years. Last night, Donald Trump’s White House set its latest social-media propaganda video to the group’s new track “Deep Time,” initially mailed to fans on VHS tapes under the title “Tape 05.” The White House video even adapts the song’s crackly VHS aesthetic. If you’re keeping up with new Boards Of Canada releases and also cranking out Trump administration online propaganda, then you’re a real piece of shit.
The post Unsurprisingly, Boards Of Canada Aren’t Happy About Their Music’s Use In A Trump Video appeared first on Stereogum.
About two years ago, Special Interest’s Alli Logout teamed up with producer Margo XS to form the hi-octane duo deBasement; they released their self-titled debut EP last year. (Margo XS has been on an absolute tear lately, working with Zara Larsson on her megahit “Midnight Sun” and contributing heavily to Kim Petras’ forthcoming album Detour.)…
The post deBasement – “STAY IN UR LANE” appeared first on Stereogum.
It’s hard to believe that it’s been two years since immensely talented Chicago musician Ravyn Lenae dropped her sophomore album, Bird’s Eye. She had a collab-heavy 2025, working with Kali Uchis and PinkPantheress, before coming back at the top of this year with new songs made with Dominic Fike. That’s also not to gloss over…
The post Ravyn Lenae Announces New Album <em>Blue Island</em>: Hear “Handle” appeared first on Stereogum.
A heartbeat beneath wooden floorboards. A woman buried while still breathing. A mind collapsing inside endless darkness while reality slowly fractures apart. Edgar Allan Poe understood something terrifying long before modern psychology and neuroscience began studying fear scientifically: the human mind itself is capable of becoming a living nightmare. Rather than relying entirely on monsters or supernatural creatures, Poe transformed paranoia, obsession, guilt, trauma, and scientific anxiety into some of the most psychologically disturbing horror ever written.
Edgar Allan Poe’s horror feels disturbingly modern because it attacks readers psychologically rather than physically. His stories rarely depend on external monsters alone. Instead, terror emerges slowly through unstable perception, emotional collapse, claustrophobic environments, and minds poisoned by obsession. Long before psychology textbooks attempted explaining paranoia and hallucinations clinically, Poe was already exploring them through fiction.
“All that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream.”
That famous line captures the unstable reality surrounding much of Poe’s work. Throughout his fiction, rationality slowly deteriorates beneath emotional pressure. Silence becomes unbearable. Shadows feel alive. Ordinary sounds transform into threats echoing through dark corridors and candlelit chambers. Poe understood that fear becomes most powerful when readers can no longer trust perception itself.
One of Poe’s greatest psychological achievements appears in The Tell-Tale Heart. The narrator insists repeatedly that he is sane while simultaneously revealing profound instability. Poe understood something modern psychology later confirmed: guilt can distort perception itself. The famous heartbeat beneath the floorboards becomes a manifestation of unbearable paranoia and emotional collapse.
Poe’s narrators rarely encounter external monsters. Instead, they become trapped inside their own consciousness while paranoia slowly poisons reality itself. The walls close inward. Silence grows oppressive. Flickering candlelight transforms ordinary rooms into psychological prisons. By the time terror fully emerges, the human mind has already become the true haunted house.
Modern neuroscience recognizes how anxiety and trauma can heighten sensory perception during extreme emotional stress. Poe explored these psychological reactions decades before science formally explained them. Rather than describing madness abstractly, he forced readers directly inside fractured consciousness where reality itself becomes unstable.
Few fears haunted nineteenth-century society more intensely than premature burial. Medical science remained uncertain in many areas, and documented cases occasionally emerged involving people mistakenly declared dead. Poe absorbed this cultural anxiety and transformed it into one of the most psychologically devastating themes in Gothic horror.
Stories such as The Premature Burial, Berenice, and The Fall of the House of Usher explore the terrifying possibility of consciousness trapped beneath death itself. Poe approached burial not simply as physical horror but as psychological annihilation. Darkness becomes suffocating. Silence feels infinite. Damp stone walls close inward while consciousness remains horrifyingly awake.
This terror still resonates today because it touches one of humanity’s deepest biological fears: losing control over one’s own body while remaining mentally aware. Poe instinctively understood that horror becomes unforgettable when it attacks primal psychological anxieties.
If you enjoy Gothic horror, psychological thrillers, noir atmosphere, and dark cinematic music inspired by Poe’s emotional universe, explore our official Edgar Allan Poets playlist.
Poe wrote during a period when science and pseudoscience fascinated the public imagination equally. Nineteenth-century audiences became obsessed with galvanism, mesmerism, hypnosis, electricity, and experiments involving consciousness after death. Medical science advanced rapidly, yet many discoveries also created profound anxiety about the hidden limits of the human body and mind.
Poe transformed these scientific fears into Gothic nightmares. In The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar, a dying man becomes suspended between life and death through mesmerism. The story feels horrifying precisely because Poe describes the experiment with clinical precision while surrounding it with existential terror. Readers cannot fully separate rational science from nightmare.
This blend of science and horror made Poe revolutionary. Rather than presenting terror as purely supernatural, he suggested that scientific discovery itself might expose terrifying truths hidden beneath reality. Knowledge becomes dangerous. Curiosity becomes psychologically destructive.
In our article Edgar Allan Poe and Physics, we explored how Poe frequently approached scientific ideas with remarkable philosophical depth. His stories constantly imply that humanity understands far less about consciousness, death, and reality than it desperately wants to believe.
Many of Poe’s stories resemble psychological experiences now associated with sleep paralysis and night terrors. Characters frequently awaken trapped between consciousness and nightmare while invisible terror surrounds them through darkness and silence. Reality feels dreamlike, unstable, and emotionally suffocating.
Modern psychology recognizes how sleep paralysis can produce terrifying hallucinations, feelings of pressure, distorted perception, and overwhelming panic. Poe instinctively captured these sensations long before science formally studied them. His stories often feel less like traditional narratives and more like waking nightmares unfolding inside emotionally trapped minds.
This dreamlike instability remains one of the reasons Poe still feels psychologically authentic today. His horror reflects fears people continue experiencing physically and emotionally in the modern world.
Poe’s protagonists frequently exist in profound isolation. Endless corridors, decaying mansions, black chambers, funeral drapery, and echoing silence surround characters already collapsing internally. The physical environment itself begins behaving like an extension of psychological deterioration.
In The Fall of the House of Usher, the mansion mirrors emotional collapse so completely that architecture and consciousness seem fused together. Poe understood something modern psychology later explored extensively: environments profoundly affect emotional stability and perception.
This connection between atmosphere and mental collapse still dominates modern psychological horror cinema today. Directors such as Alfred Hitchcock, David Lynch, and Darren Aronofsky continue building emotional tension using techniques Poe pioneered nearly two centuries ago.
Modern neuroscience and psychology continue confirming many fears Poe explored intuitively through fiction. Trauma alters perception. Isolation damages emotional stability. Anxiety distorts reality. Obsessive thoughts can consume consciousness completely. Poe understood these emotional truths long before science explained them clinically.
This is why Edgar Allan Poe’s horror continues feeling timeless. His stories do not rely entirely on supernatural creatures or violent spectacle. Instead, they expose the terrifying instability hidden inside the human mind itself.
In Edgar Allan Poe’s Influence on Modern Culture, we explored how his psychological darkness still shapes Gothic cinema, noir storytelling, psychological thrillers, and modern horror. His fears remain disturbingly relevant because the human mind itself has never stopped being fragile.
Poe understood that the most terrifying monsters are not hidden inside ancient graves or haunted mansions. They wait silently inside the human mind, watching reality slowly collapse from within.
If you enjoy psychological horror, Gothic atmosphere, noir storytelling, and dark cinematic music inspired by Poe’s emotional universe, explore our official Edgar Allan Poets playlist.
The post The Science and Psychology Behind Edgar Allan Poe’s Horror appeared first on Edgar Allan Poets – Noir Rock Band.
Castle are dropping a new track along an official video for “Carry Chains” Check it out here. The song is from their album Carrie Chains, dropping September 4 via Hammerheart Records.
“We spent so many years on the road in the early days of Castle, we’d riff on song ideas through night drives and backstage hangs… a lot of the song ideas like ‘Truckgrinder,’ ‘Carry Chains,’ and ‘Goat Vision’ all originated back then and have the classic theme of the underdog rising up against all odds, including the albums main character, Carrie Chains—It’s a great inspiration in these times,” says vocalist and bassist Liz Blackwell.
U.S. TOUR DATES:
9/3 Detroit, MI – Smalls
9/4 Cleveland, OH – Maple Grove Tavern
9/5 Montague, MA – RPM Fest
9/6 Brooklyn, NY – Woodshop
9/7 York, PA – Collusion Tap Works
9/9 Washington D.C. – Pie Shop
9/10 Pittsburgh, PA – Poetry Lounge
9/11 Indianapolis IN – Black Circle
9/12 Nashville, TN – Cobra Lounge
9/14 Dallas, TX – Dusty’s
9/15 Austin, TX – Valhalla
9/16 Tulsa, OK – Whittier Bar
9/17 Des Moines, IA – Locals Bar
9/18 Chicago, IL – Reggies
8/19 Madison, WI – Blades Of Steel Fest
10/23 Seattle, WA – El Corazon
10/24 Portland, OR – High Water Mark
10/25 San Francisco, CA – Bottom Of The Hill
10/26 Palmdale, CA – Transplants Brewery
10/27 Las Vegas, NV – The Griffin
10/28 Phoenix, AZ – Last Exit
10/29 Los Angeles, CA – Knucklehead
10/30 San Diego, CA – Tower Bar
10/31 TBA
The post Video Premiere: Castle – “Carry Chains” appeared first on Decibel Magazine.
(written by Islander) We had an 11th-hour cancellation of a premiere I had committed to write for today. With the unexpected free time dropping in my lap like that, I thought I ought to get a head-start on the coming weekend roundups. A head-start is sorely needed because the backlog of new music I haven’t […]
The post SEEN AND HEARD: PSYCROPTIC, FEN, CONDUIT, SUFFERING QUOTA, SKELETAL SERPENT, THEURGIA appeared first on NO CLEAN SINGING.
Plus Thrice, GWAR, Fleshwater, Chat Pile, Show Me The Body, Haywire and more.
The post Tool, Pierce The Veil, Rise Against, Angine De Poitrine, Etc. Booked For 2026 ‘Riot Fest’ appeared first on Theprp.com.
What is even happening with this year’s Riot Fest lineup? Who is it for? What was the booking philosophy? Riot Fest started off as a punk-centric event and then grew into one of the country’s biggest straight-up rock festivals, so this year’s newly unveiled festival lineup might make sense from a distance. But It’s truly jarring to see so many of these names on the same poster.
The post Riot Fest Announces Absolutely Baffling 2026 Lineup appeared first on Stereogum.
RØRY has shared all the details of their upcoming album, as well as an unstoppable new single.

Titled ‘BLOODLETTING’, the full-length is set to arrive on September 4 via RØRY’s own SADCØRE Records.
The follow-up to 2025’s ‘RESTORATION’, the album will include previously released singles DEGRADATION, DEAD GIRL WALKING and KIDS THESE DAYS, as well as the freshly dropped ‘STRANGE’.
Speaking on their latest project, RØRY has said:
“I realised I was sick from being nice… I’d spent so much of my life being the bigger person, forgiving people, understanding people, making excuses for people. I’d become disconnected from huge parts of myself. BLOODLETTING was about reclaiming them.”
Take a listen to ‘STRANGE’ below.
Take a look at the artwork and full tracklisting for ‘BLOODLETTING’ below.

1. [welcome to bloodletting]
2. DEGRADATION
3. SWALLOW
4. a cure for cancer
5. MORTAL
6. [the death of a people pleaser]
7. KIDS THESE DAYS
8. DEAD GIRL WALKING
9. GREY
10. [oh when the saints]
11. hometown
12. STRANGE
13. [do you want to live?]
RØRY is set to play Download Festival next month.
The post RØRY Announces New Album ‘BLOODLETTING’ appeared first on Rock Sound.