Upper Wilds
Mercury
Thrill Jockey
/
2026
Includes Instant Download
LP (silver)
29.99
thrill659lpx / Includes Download Code
Pre-Order: Available on / around Aug 28th 2026
CD
15.99
thrill659cd
Pre-Order: Available on / around Aug 28th 2026
Incl. VAT plus shipping / Orders from outside the EU are exempt from VAT
Tracklist
1Mercury
2Fever 3:33
3Death Song #3
4Burning Bright
5Reaper
6Green-Wood Cemetery
7Timekeeper
8Dark Road
9Hellfire
10Dying Star

Stargazing Brooklyn noise-rock cosmonauts Upper Wilds — the powertrio led by Parts & Labor co-founder Dan Friel — return with another set of lean anthems filtered through a flamethrower. Their speediest, most explosive album yet, Mercury, is a meditation on death, with Friel expounding on his brush with skin cancer, climate change, funerals, Henry Kissinger, and a world seemingly on fire. Buoyed by recent tours with acts like Pelican, Uniform, Psychic Graveyard and Savak, the trio’s increased speed is met with a precision that gives every hairpin turn more wallop.

Mercury’s molten, non-stop riffing is captured with grit and punch by engineer Travis Harrison (Guided By Voices, The Men) and is bolstered by longtime collaborator/saxophonist and fellow-New York mainstay Jeff Tobias (Sunwatchers) and vocalist Erin Dawson of LA-based experimental black metal band Genital Shame. Jason Binnick’s basslines shine brighter than before dancing in tandem with Friel’s guitar licks on “Death Song #3” and bringing equal parts melody and thunderous weight to “Green- Wood Cemetery.” Jeff Ottenbacher’s drumming oscillates between machine gun fills and sledge hammer pounding, giving each riff more momentum and bite.

Upper Wilds’ space-rock adventures through their recent albums Mars, Venus, & Jupiter came replete with stories of the heavens and humanity alike. On this fourth installment, the closest planet to the sun, things take a darker turn. The small, barren planet Mercury was named after the gods’ speedy messenger and guide to the underworld, and the album syphons Upper Wilds’ fuzz-pop aesthetics into concise, scorched anthems about the brevity and fragility of life with the ferocity of a band playing on the edge of extinction.