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* This item is for PRE-ORDER *All items are expected to ship by SEPTEMBER 5, 2025. Any orders containing a pre-order item will ship together when the pre-order ships. Please make a separate order if you wish to receive non pre-order items before the pre-order ship date.Vinyl✩ Shockwave Swirl color vinyl✩ Limited to 500
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* This item is for PRE-ORDER *
All items are expected to ship by SEPTEMBER 5, 2025. Any orders containing a pre-order item will ship together when the pre-order ships. Please make a separate order if you wish to receive non pre-order items before the pre-order ship date.
Vinyl
✩ Shockwave Swirl color vinyl
✩ Limited to 500
✩ Full color insert included
✩ Includes a FREE comic book companion piece (while supplies last)
CD
✩ 4 Panel Digipak
✩ Includes a FREE comic book companion piece (while supplies last)
International customers can purchase this title here:
Australia Store
Stream this title:
Bandcamp / Spotify / Apple Music / iTunes / Amazon Music / TIDAL / Deezer / YouTube
1. Obsolete
2. Violence Voyager
3. Earthshaped
4. Congratulations Champion
5. Human Bean Instruction Manual
6. Steps
7. Massive Everything
8. Infinite Trolley
✩ Fourth album by New Zealand multi-hyphenate Lukas Mayo (they/them)
✩ For fans of The Microphones, Sufjan Stevens, The Magnetic Fields, WHY?, Advance Base
✩ Genre: Indie, Bedroom Pop, Alternative
Pickle Darling has always existed just outside of the periphery. In a heightened time of fast music, algorithmic consumption and rapid virality, Lukas Mayo (they/them) has remained focused on the album. Their discography is a reflection of their creative evolution, and they deliberately look for ways to push sonic boundaries from release to release. Since debuting with Bigness in 2019 followed by Cosmonaut in 2021, Mayo has curated a catalog that is deeply personal and strangely tactile, where tiny, unexpected details—an off-kilter loop, a whispered aside, the warmth of an old Casio—become as crucial as melody itself. Their 2023 LP Laundromat was a precise and polished expansion of that world, a record that felt like it had been carefully placed behind glass. It garnered praise from Mojo, Rolling Stone Australia, The Line of Best Fit, and led to a live performance on the beloved New Zealand children’s TV program, What Now. Their forthcoming fourth album, Bots, by contrast, is unruly and full of static: a collection of songs that feel like they could only ever exist on scratched CD-Rs passed between friends. Self-recorded in their home studio in Christchurch, New Zealand, Bots finds Mayo taking a scalpel to their own songwriting. Instead of simply playing guitar, they recorded each note individually, then arranged them one by one. Songs were stretched, chopped, reversed. Some ideas started as "unlistenable garbage" before morphing into something unexpectedly beautiful. The result is an album that feels like a glitch in the system, pushing against past constraints while embracing the weird, beautiful mess of making something new.