Cat Clyde - Mud Blood Bone (2026) [Hi-Res]

Artist: Cat Clyde
Title: Mud Blood Bone
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: Concord
Genre: Folk, Blues, Indie, Roots
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks) / 24bit-96kHz FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 33:12
Total Size: 81.8 / 187 / 792 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Mud Blood Bone
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: Concord
Genre: Folk, Blues, Indie, Roots
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks) / 24bit-96kHz FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 33:12
Total Size: 81.8 / 187 / 792 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Where Is My love (3:19)
2. Man's World (2:42)
3. Wild One (2:23)
4. Dark Back (2:57)
5. Hold My Hand (3:15)
6. I Am Now (5:21)
7. My Love (3:23)
8. Wanna Ride (1:40)
9. Night Eyes (2:21)
10. Press Down (2:14)
11. Another Time (3:40)
Produced with Drew Vandenberg (Toro Y Moi, Faye Webster, S.G. Goodman) and including a co-write with Courtney Marie Andrews, Clyde’s fourth full-length and first release with Concord arrives in a sonic overlap: the rockabilly grit of contemporaries like Sierra Ferrell, The Deslondes, or Nick Shoulders, meets the vulnerable, folk rock volatility of Big Thief or Angel Olsen. It’s a trudge through the swamp and into vast, cleansing waters that finds Clyde at a critical point of personal evolution—equal parts despair, invocation, discovery, and celebration.
Ahead of and throughout her writing sessions for Mud Blood Bone, Clyde looked to her indigenous Métis roots and invoked a deep reverence for nature in efforts to redefine her relationship with love in her life. Learning from the natural world, she took solace in its cyclicality.
The new songs exude nomadic independence: penned in her 1973 Boler trailer on a farm in Ontario, on a narrow boat in England, or in transit from one festival to another, letting lyrics stream freely from a jetlagged dream state. The result is uninhibited, raw, pure; it’s the sound of personal truth discovered in real time.
Ahead of and throughout her writing sessions for Mud Blood Bone, Clyde looked to her indigenous Métis roots and invoked a deep reverence for nature in efforts to redefine her relationship with love in her life. Learning from the natural world, she took solace in its cyclicality.
The new songs exude nomadic independence: penned in her 1973 Boler trailer on a farm in Ontario, on a narrow boat in England, or in transit from one festival to another, letting lyrics stream freely from a jetlagged dream state. The result is uninhibited, raw, pure; it’s the sound of personal truth discovered in real time.