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Future of Music 2026

Our annual Future of Music list returns with another crop of exciting Aotearoa and Australian acts ready for the global stage

Future of Music 2026 acts

Our annual Future of Music list returns with another crop of local acts ready for the global stage.

In conjunction with our global Rolling Stone partners, our editorial team has compiled a list of 25 acts who have us excited for what’s next in Aotearoa and Australian music, from pop-stars-in-waiting to rising rappers to thoughtful singer-songwriters and much more.

Now in its third year, our Future 25 has an excellent track record, with Dom Dolla, Teen Jesus and the Jean Teasers, Angie McMahon, and G Flip just some of the outstanding acts who have previously featured in the series.

No pressure then, Class of ’26.

“Our newsroom debates and discussions are always lively, but putting together the Future of Music Class of ’26 was arguably the toughest we’ve had to date,” says Editor-in-Chief Neil Griffiths. “That’s a testament to the calibre of talent we have in Australia and New Zealand right now.

“Whether it’s acts who are already gaining international traction like Balu Brigada and Keli Holiday, or ones who are already making waves locally like Folk Bitch Trio, BOY SODA, and Geneva AM, the 2026 class prove that our countries are producing music as good as anywhere else in the world.

“Our job is to spotlight and showcase these incredible artists. Get on board now before they become global superstars!”

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Meet this year’s Future 25 below!

We’ll also be publishing exclusive interviews and live sessions with all 25 acts throughout the next two weeks, which you can find at our Future of Music 2026 microsite. —Conor Lochrie

Shady Nasty

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Shady Nasty

Shady Nasty are the kind of band people struggle to describe, which is usually a good sign.

The Sydney trio — Kevin Stathis, Haydn Green, and Luca Watson — have carved out their own strange, serrated corner of Australian music, pulling punk, hip-hop, post-punk, and experimental sounds into something that feels both street-level and fully world-built. Their music is abrasive, funny, oddly beautiful, and unmistakably theirs.

Their debut album, TREK, arrived in February with production from The Presets’ Kim Moyes, who described the band as occupying a “unique place in Sydney” and praised their “uncompromising pursuit of individuality.” It’s a fitting summary for a group whose songs can feel like sketches from a cracked-open city: vivid, uneasy, poetic, and alive with weird detail.

That singularity has started travelling well beyond Australia. After touring TREK and supporting English band Shame in Sydney, Shady Nasty caught the ear of Fred again.., who played their track “SCREWDRIVA” to thousands of viewers on Twitch and called them “literally my favourite band in the world right now.”

His praise was not casual, either. Fred compared frontman Stathis’ writing to what he loved about The Streets’ Mike Skinner, calling the album “unbelievably beautiful” and singling out the way Stathis’ lines can feel like entire stories.

That co-sign soon turned into collaboration. Shady Nasty teamed up with Fred again.. and Irish producer KETTAMA on “Air Maxes”, a release that pairs the trio’s ambient, gentle original with a pulsating KETTAMA remix. They later reunited with both artists for “HARDSTYLE 2”, part of Fred again..’s acclaimed USB series.

For a band built on refusal — refusal to smooth the edges, refusal to fit neatly into genre, refusal to sound like anyone else — Shady Nasty’s rising international profile feels especially satisfying. —Jade Kennedy

Theia press shot

Ruby Harris

Theia

Things can change quickly in music — and often for the better.

As a straightforward alt-pop artist on a major label, Theia felt completely lost in her career, her true artistry diminished.

After going independent around the turn of the 2020s, surrounding herself with a “beautiful female team,” as she told us last year, Theia finally delivered the debut album of her dreams.

Girl, in a Savage World is big, bold, and one of the most overtly political albums in recent Aotearoa music. “I’m so proud that I trusted my gut and my vision, because I know it was a wacky freaking vibe!” she told us.

She still knows how to craft a delicious alt-pop gem, but Theia’s debut album is more powered by fierce punk spirit, indie musicianship, and folksy ballads.

Girl, in a Savage World arrived during a time when New Zealand’s current conservative government is increasingly attempting to push back on Māori rights. Now based in Los Angeles, where she’s found a supportive community of fellow Indigenous people, she had to watch from afar as events like last year’s Hīkoi mō Te Tiriti happened in her homeland.

“I just threw everything away and started afresh when that new government came into power, and [I] was just filled with fury and passion,” she said.

That’s why the lyrics on her debut album are so in-your-face and incendiary.

My country, she burns, it’s a holy war / We cannot return where we were before / Let us look above to the parting skies / Look upon the face of our Jesus Christ,” she sings in “Holy War”. “You wield your guns, you shot our sons / You made us rot in all you’ve done / Cut down our trees, brought your disease / You will not bring us to our knees,” she sings in “Hoki Whenua Mai (Return the Land)”. The time to speak one’s mind, Theia shows on her debut, is now. —Conor Lochrie

There's a Tuesday

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There’s a Tuesday

2025 was one for the books for There’s a Tuesday.

The Ōtautahi Christchurch-born indie-pop band were selected for a prestigious Seoul residency, which led to them spending 10 days recording at professional studios and collaborating with local musicians. They also stopped by Australia for a headline show and BIGSOUND showcases.

There’s a Tuesday also found time to drop their second album. According to the Asia New Zealand Foundation, they stood out thanks to their dreamy sound and thoughtful approach to songwriting, and both of these things are on full display in Blush.

They flit between polished indie-pop gems and rawer, rockier moments, making for a record that is winning them many more overseas fans.

Ōtautahi’s music scene has been in a good place for a few years now, thanks in no small part to an ambitious band like There’s a Tuesday calling the city home. More global stages now beckon for the four-piece. —Conor Lochrie

Vera Ellen press shot

Nicola Sandford

Vera Ellen

In a music world filled with factory-produced, identical music stars, we’re lucky to have an artist as idiosyncratic as Vera Ellen.

Not every artist, for example, would casually drop a song like the alluring and absurd “gayfever” as the lead single from their new album, but Ellen has made a habit of proudly forging their own path through the music industry.

If 2021’s It’s Your Birthday hinted at much to come, and 2021’s Taite Music Prize-winning Ideal Home Noise confirmed her songwriting talent, new album Heaven Knows What Time is the assured and complete record Ellen’s been building towards for half a decade.

Born out of a period of “unconventionality” for the Aotearoa musician, during which she learned to “embrace the chaos that comes with being a self-sustained artist in today’s constantly driving culture,” Heaven Knows What Time contains some of Ellen’s most thoughtful songwriting to date.

Whether she’s pondering raw, all-consuming infatuation (“gayfever”) or exploring artifice in the entertainment industry (“walking in vegas”), Ellen is always her authentic self in the tracks.

Already a Taite Music Prize winner in 2024, expect her to be in with another chance of winning next year. —Conor Lochrie

Way Dynamic

Izzie Austin

Way Dynamic

MJ Lenderman. Waxahatchee’s Katie Crutchfield. Djo. Elton bloody John. All these musicians — and a hell of a lot of indie music fans in Australia and beyond — have quickly fallen in love with the throwback sound of Way Dynamic.

Dylan Young’s timeless project recalls songwriting stalwarts like Brian Wilson or Neil Young, updating classic ’60s and ’70s pop, folk, and soft-rock for modern audiences.

Young’s latest Way Dynamic album, Massive Shoe, broke out in a big way last year, deservedly earning a spot in the top 5 of our year-end Australian albums list.

Bright, blossoming tracks like “People Settle Down”, “Miffed It”, and “In Review” perform a similar magic track to The Lemon Twigs’ bewitching discography: sounding winsomely retro without ever dissolving into cheap nostalgia. Just like The Lemon Twigs, Dylan Young is much too talented for that. —Conor Lochrie