Finally, my last recommendation is the fantastic solo work from Daughters frontman Alexis Marshall. His debut House Of Lull. House Of When is out very soon on Sargent House, and is a scathing, harsh and chaotically beautiful work of art. He went into a studio with nothing and left with powerful slab of musique concrete, played by the hand of chance. It's nine spacious yet claustrophobic tracks that see Alexis' howling vitriol married to the gritty field recordings and Neubauten-esque vistas he’s conjured, along with the help of Daughters collaborator Jon Syverson and Jaye Jayle frontman Evan Patterson. There are tracks that feel kind of like a fever dream about attending an Appalachian tent revival, and others that are the internal dialogue during your toughest moments, manifesting as an album. At times it's a punishing listen, both sonically and lyrically, which makes it all the more rewarding. Enjoy!