
Photo Credit: Tina Brugnoletti
New Album What Happens in the Dark Releases April 14, 2026
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Watch the Video for “What Happens In The Dark”
Los Angeles post-punk trio Black Market Heart return April 14, 2026 with their new full-length, What Happens in the Dark, arriving alongside a new video for the title track. Forged in the pink smog glow of a Southern California sunset and the low hum of the 101 at dusk, the record finds guitarist and vocalist Spencer Robinson and drummer Shawn Medina, both formerly of The Lords of Altamont, joined by bassist and vocalist Tina Brugnoletti, pushing deeper into a sound that feels wired, nocturnal, and slightly unhinged. It isn’t beach postcard LA. It’s downtown after midnight, Echo Park liquor stores buzzing under fluorescent light and Silver Lake sidewalks still radiating heat. Maybe you’re holding it together on the sidewalk outside The Dresden, sunglasses still on at 11pm, a few too many Manhattans deep, cigarettes stacking up in the ashtray. You probably shouldn’t be driving, but you’re merging onto the freeway anyway, windows down, smoke whipping out into the warm air.
Public Stream Album April 14, 2026
Taking cues from the feedback haze of The Jesus and Mary Chain and the cold pulse of Joy Division, Black Market Heart thrive in that tight space between distortion and melody. Tina’s basslines grind and move with purpose, Medina’s drums hit with stripped-down force, and Robinson’s guitar cuts sharp and bright through the fog. It’s music designed for low lights, empty overpasses, and that stretch of road where the city opens up and you can almost pretend you’re alone. Recorded in just two days at Kitten Robot Studios with Los Angeles underground mainstay Paul Roessler, known for his work with The Screamers and 45 Grave, What Happens in the Dark captures the band in a live-wire state. Minimal takes. No studio gloss. Just volume, tape, and instinct. The vocals, often submerged in earlier recordings, are more exposed this time. Brugnoletti’s added harmonies bring a heavier presence, giving the songs weight without sanding down their edge.
The title track, “What Happens in the Dark,” clocks in at a lean 1:40 and sets the tone immediately. It’s a desperate reach for connection, even if it’s temporary, even if it’s imagined. “I don’t have to be alone for a little while,” Robinson sings, his voice cutting clean through the distortion. The accompanying video, shot in Brugnoletti’s 1967 Dodge Coronet, feels like The Cramps dropped into a Tarantino getaway scene with DOA’s Hardcore ’81 blasting on the tape deck. All grit, all forward motion, no looking back. Elsewhere, “Radio Smash” leans into repetition like a mantra unraveling, while “Coyote” prowls with quiet menace, stalking empty streets and streetlight shadows. “Self-Destruct With Me” barrels straight into gasoline-soaked chaos. “Without My Pills” and “My Brain is Poison” strip everything down to exposed nerves, tackling isolation and chemical imbalance without flinching. The album also tips its hat to lineage without getting precious about it. A reworked “Girl Dreams,” originally recorded by Beck with roots in The Carter Family, and a distorted take on The Stingers’ 1971 reggae cut “Give Me Power,” produced by Lee Perry, both get pulled through Black Market Heart’s darker lens. They don’t feel like nostalgia pieces. They feel like transmissions rerouted through cracked amps and midnight air.
Order Black Market Heart’s Music and Merchandise
What Happens in the Dark doesn’t romanticize the night. It lives in it. It’s the sound of someone driving too fast down the 110 with the windows down, city lights smeared across the windshield, knowing full well the sun is coming but not caring yet. It’s headlights slicing through smog, cigarettes burning down to the filter, and a band that knows exactly what kind of night they’re walking into.
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