The best new rock songs you need to hear right now

· louder

By Polly Glass
( Classic Rock )
Contributions from
Fraser Lewry
published 28 October 2024

Including Larkin Poe, The Sheepdogs, Beth Hart (featuring Slash) and five other players, performers and portrayers, each another's audience outside the gilded cage

(Image credit: Press materials)

What a month it's been for new London band Leadfeather. A few weeks ago they played their first live show, a debut single followed, and now that very same song has topped our Tracks Of The Week poll. If they carry on with this extraordinary trajectory they'll be headlining Download by March, and the festival doesn't even take place until June. Literally wow.

So congratulations to them, and to The Struts and Devin Townsend, who managed to grimly hold on to Leadfeather's tailfeathers before falling away at the death. What a battle it was.

Ricky Warwick - Don't Leave Me in the Dark (feat. Lita Ford) [Official Video] - YouTube

Watch On

Here are our latest candidates. Look at them. Magnificent.

Larkin Poe - Mockingbird

The omens for the Lovell sisters’ next album, Bloom (due out in January 2025) continue to look seriously strong as they release this honeyed yet rollicking latest taste. Sumptuous, slide-tastic and lyrically commanding, the charismatic Mockingbird grabs you by the gut in a way that feels warm, rocking and introspective all at once. One of the best things they’ve done so far, for our money. Roll on, January.

Larkin Poe - "Mockingbird" (Official Music Video) - YouTube

Watch On


The Von Hertzen Brothers - Relapse

The opening track from the proggy Finnish brothers’ poppier, punchier new album In Murmuration is a driving whirlwind of big-stage rock, brooding but upbeat sentiments and 80s sax flourishes. “To us, it’s a mix of AC/DC, Queens of the Stone Age, Phil Collins, and maybe a bit of U2,” says guitarist/’rockiest’ sibling Kie Von Hertzen. “All of this is of course served to you with familiar von Hertzen-ian seasoning and a bit of Krautrock sprinkled on top.” If life was fair, they’d be headlining arenas with this stuff.

Von Hertzen Brothers - The Relapse (Official Music Video) - YouTube

Watch On


The Sheepdogs - Handle My Biz

Presenting their second EP in about five minutes (ok, a couple of months) The Sheepdogs’ hot independent streak continues with this gorgeously sweet, ruminative highlight from Hell Together, which is out in November. Sprinkled with moody-cowboy guitar twangs and a beautiful keyboard backbone, it finds frontman Ewan Currie looking honestly at the strange, intense, heightened yet often testing life of a full-time rocker in 2024 – the business of handling his “biz”, in other words. They never fail to deliver.

The Sheepdogs - Handle My Biz - YouTube

Watch On


Massive Wagons - Sleep Forever

“Aggressive, hard, fast... it’s like Motörhead meets Rainbow,” says singer Baz Mills, not unreasonably, of the fired-up, full-tilt opening track from the Lancashire heroes’ next album Earth To Grace. “It has everything to me: huge riffs, gnarly guitars, and Alex's drums are just blistering! Then you throw in the solos from Steve and Adam... it’s got it all I think - a proper headbanger! It was always going to be the album opener, a 100% kick in the face!" Well, who doesn't want that?

Massive Wagons - Sleep Forever (Official Video) - YouTube

Watch On


DeWolff - Natural Woman

The Cuban-heeled, moustachioed young Dutch dudes find a funky, 70s-rootsy space between The Black Keys and the soulful heritage of Muscle Shoals (where they recorded their upcoming album, also called Muscle Shoals) on this riffed up, organ-whirling new earworm. Cool animated video, too. “Natural Woman is another one of these songs that basically wrote itself,” the band say, “the big guitar riff, the verse and the chorus melodies came to us all at once, as if tapped from some kind of ancient rock ‘n roll well.” Nice.

DeWolff - Natural Woman (Official Music Video) - YouTube

Watch On


Mark Morton feat Neil Fallon - The Needle And The Spoon

Lamb Of God guitarist Mark Morton makes a dreamy pairing with Clutch mouthpiece Neil Fallon on this deliciously grungy yet swaggering, soulful take on the Lynyrd Skynyrd classic. Like stepping into a smoke-filled saloon and being handed a tasty bourbon at once. “As a small kid in the ‘70s and ‘80s, southern rock bands were the soundtrack of my youth,” says Morton, whose solo in this is predictably top-notch. “None of them resonated any deeper with me than Lynyrd Skynyrd. Their signature guitar driven blues-rock has had a profound influence on my playing.”

"The Needle And The Spoon" feat. Neil Fallon (Official Visualizer) - YouTube

Watch On


Beth Hart (featuring Slash) - Savior With A Razor

Possibly the most epic blues song of the year, Savior With A Razor kicks like a mule and punches like a heavyweight, with Slash going wild on the wah-wah and Beth Hart wailing as if she's teetering on the edge of the world, about to topple off into the darkness. “Beth Hart is one of my favourite artists to work with,” says Slash. “She is an incredible singer/lyricist on so many levels. But Beth is also as sincere and genuine a friend as they come. She’s amazing." "He’s just a badass with zero ego and knows a lot about the razor’s edge," Beth adds. "I got really lucky."

Beth Hart (featuring Slash) - "Savior With A Razor" (Official Music Video) - YouTube

Watch On


Jesse Malin - Argentina

In May 2023, singer-songwriter Jesse Malin collapsed after suffering a spinal stroke that left him paralysed from the waist down. Friends rallied around and organised a fundraiser to help pay for his care and rehabilitation, and last month a benefit album was released, featuring contributions from admirers like Bruce Springsteen, Billie Joe Armstrong, Lucinda Williams and Elvis Costello. He returns to the stage in December, but first there's Argentina, written during a six-month stay at a clinic in Buenos Aires and Malin's first new song since the stroke. It's simple, heartfelt, and rather beautiful. "I'm going to South America for reasons of repair" he sings, forlornly. "I'd be lying if I told you that I wasn't scared."


Classic Rock Tracks Of The Week: October 28 2024

Polly Glass
Deputy Editor, Classic Rock

Polly is deputy editor at Classic Rock magazine, where she writes and commissions regular pieces and longer reads (including new band coverage), and has interviewed rock's biggest and newest names. She also contributes to Louder, Prog and Metal Hammer and talks about songs on the 20 Minute Club podcast. Elsewhere she's had work published in The Musician, delicious. magazine and others, and written biographies for various album campaigns. In a previous life as a women's magazine junior she interviewed Tracey Emin and Lily James – and wangled Rival Sons into the arts pages. In her spare time she writes fiction and cooks.

With contributions from

More about classic rock

It's all gone spectacularly Halloween-shaped in the Fripp-Willcox household

Watch the spooky video for The Black Keys and Alice Cooper's Halloween-themed single Stay In Your Grave
Latest

"This is a fired-up performance - a man determined to prove everyone wrong": Paul McCartney rails against the critics, John Lennon, Fela Kuti and muggers on Wings' classic Band On The Run
See more latest ►

Most Popular

“We recorded it in 20 minutes. But then I am a genius”: The late, great Paul Di’Anno looks back on making Iron Maiden’s Running Free

“Lemmy and I got on fine most of the time, but we had our moments. Being in Motörhead was crazy 24 hours a day”: ex-Thin Lizzy guitarist Brian ‘Robbo’ Robertson’s wild tales of Phil Lynott, Lemmy, David Bowie and more

“The early days still feel like the biggest chapter of our band”: Biffy Clyro’s Simon Neil on how the band’s beginnings helped to define everything that came after

“We had a living, breathing Sex Pistol come in and play on it. He wanted $100 and some ‘suction’”: The insane story of Megadeth’s So Far, So Good… So What!, thrash metal’s most self-destructive album

“I’m lucky that I started using heroin otherwise I’d be so depressingly alcoholic”: Kelley Deal on the tumultuous period when she first joined The Breeders

“The only way of getting back on track was to regain control of just about every facet of the band”: When Mike Portnoy quit Dream Theater for the first time, the shakeup led to epic double-album Metropolis Pt. 2

The 13 best new metal songs you need to hear right now

Great new prog you must hear from Beardfish, Motorspcyho, Overhead, The Albatross and more in Prog's Tracks Of The Week

“We have to be true to ourselves and to the idea of Yes… we’re all aiming for the heart of the same sunrise”: Jon Anderson’s gratitude at returning from the edge of death to make latest solo album True

A beginner's guide to Jack Bruce in 10 classic tracks

“There’s not one lyric that’s light-hearted… We’ll see what the tear-shedding level for this album is!” Epica’s Simone Simons waited 20 years to make Vermillion