Music / New Music FridayMusic / New Music FridayNew Music Friday: 7 albums to stream this weekDrain Gang’s Bladee and Ecco2k share a joint release, Charli XCX drops her highly-anticipated album, and Rosalía flexes her vocal range on MotomamiShareLink copied ✔️March 18, 2022March 18, 2022TextGünseli Yalcinkaya “Here comes the feeling you should never let it go,” croons Bladee in the opening track of Crest, the rapper’s joint album with fellow Drain Gang member Ecco2k. Dropped at the height of the Swedish collective’s world tour, the album is the sound of disillusioned and terminally online youth everywhere. Across nine meandering tracks, Bladee and Ecco2k capture the elusive group’s youthful nihilism through existential-lite lyrics and trance-like synth lines. Divided into five parts, “5 Star Crest” embodies this sentiment most clearly. Dedicated to their friend and producer Vattenrum, who died in 2019, Bladee and Ecco2k merge religious iconography with playful nihilism. “We think we exist, that’s why we suffer, do we not?” contemplates Bladee against a backdrop of bubblegum pop. You can practically hear him shrugging. Later tracks like “Desire Is a Trap” and “Girls Just Want to Have Fun” are melodic dance-pop bangers imbued with a sense of dreaminess. With an extremely dedicated fanbase, endless meme accounts, and their own fashion line, Drain Gang already has a cult following. But Crest signals a LVL-up in the group’s move towards global domination. Elsewhere, Charli XCX drops her highly-anticipated album, Rosalía flexes her vocal range on Motomami, and Midwxst releases a frenetic EP. BLADEE & ECCO2K, CREST CHARLI XCX, CRASH DANNY L HARLE, HARLECORE REMIXES FRAXIOM, YOU HAVE COMPLETELY DESTROYED ME MIDWXST, BETTER LUCK NEXT TIME ROSALÍA, MOTOMAMI YOKAI JAKI, SNAKE444 Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREThe rise of ‘Britainicana’: How Westside Cowboy are reshaping UK indieR!R!Riot is Taiwan’s pluggnb princessWhen did UK underground rap get so Christian? Why listening parties are everywhere right nowA night out with Feng, the ‘positive punk’ of UK UgDoppel-gäng gäng gäng: 7 times artists used body doublesWesley Joseph is the Marty Supreme of R&B (only nicer) How Turnstile are reinventing hardcore for the internet ageWill these be the biggest musical moments of 2026?Rising singer Liim is the crooning voice of New York CityFrench producer Malibu is an ambient antidote for the chronically online10 musicians to watch in 2026