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Best Australian and New Zealand Music of the Week: Julia Jacklin, Daine, Office Dog and More

Check out the best ANZ releases between June 15th-21st, featuring Mel Parsons, The Veils, Sonic Reducer, Miss Kaninna and more

Julia Jacklin press shot

Julia Jacklin

James J. Robinson

As the best place for music coverage in ANZ, Rolling Stone keeps you up to date with local music through our weekly release roundups.

We’ve combined our Australian and Aotearoa music roundups into one major list covering both countries, bringing the best local releases to more of our readers. Because why should Aussie music fans miss out on the incredible music being made by Kiwi artists, and vice versa?

Check out our new and improved roundup below, covering the best ANZ releases between June 15th-21st.

The Buoys press shot

Supplied

The Buoys’, ‘Kill You Back’

The Buoys are back with “Kill You Back”, a self-assured rock track built for the stage.

After having spent much of last year touring Lustre across UK and Europe, “Kill You Back” marks the Australian indie rock band’s first new music of 2026.

Lead singer and guitarist Zoe Catterall says the song was inspired by longtime admiration for Illuminati Hotties front-woman Sarah Tudzin, whose unpredictable songwriting helped shape the session.

“I’ve been sooo obsessed with Illuminati Hotties for years now, no one can write and produce chaotic sounds and ideas like Sarah Tudzin, what a legend. I came into the session with a plan to write about being murdered and haunting my murderer,” Catterall says.

Mel Parsons

Chloe Langley

Mel Parsons, ‘Not Enough’

Mel Parsons shares “Not Enough”, the final taste of her new album Castle Hill, out on August 7th.

“Writing songs like these sad ones is quite natural for me,” Parsons says of the emotional ballad. “It’s probably a bit incongruous when people know me as an upbeat optimistic kind of person, and then sometimes this quite dark stuff comes out in my work.

“It doesn’t phase me really, I think it’s part of being a normal, complicated multifaceted human. As always I hope this song can make people feel something – maybe even bring some comfort.”

Michèle Ducray press shot

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Michèle Ducray, ‘Like U Did B4’

Dark-pop artist Michèle Decry goes dream-pop on “Like U Did B4”.

“‘Like U Did B4’ is about missing the safety of how somebody used to love you,” the Sydney-based, NZ-born artist says.

“It’s nostalgic, emotional, euphoric, and heartbreaking all at once, like driving through the city at night replaying memories you can’t let go of.”

Stenn Francis-Deare press shot

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Stenn Francis-Deare, ‘Tales From the Pantry’

Genre-blending indie singer-songwriter Stenn Francis-Deare is stepping out on his own after years contributing as a sought-after studio musician.

“Tales From the Pantry”, inspired by the Bowie song “Five Years”, is the debut single from the Waikato-born, Melbourne-based artist’s forthcoming album There’s a Lot to Give, out August 14th.

Julia Jacklin press shot

Izzie Austin

Julia Jacklin, ‘Get Away From Me (I Think I’ll Love You Soon)’

The world is getting a new Julia Jacklin album this year.

The acclaimed Australian singer-songwriter announces The Gem, her fourth studio album, which will arrive on September 25th. It will be Jacklin’s debut release on 4AD / Remote Control Records

Arriving alongside the album announcement is lead single “Get Away From Me (I Think I’ll Love You Soon)”.

The track, which premiered on triple j, is described as “a bold and fun nod to eighties jangle rock and to the Melbourne sound she fell in love with.”

Yasmina Sadiki

Yasmina Sadiki, ‘Craving’

Sydney independent artist Yasmina Sadiki releases new single “Craving”.

It’s the lead single from hr debut EP Made for the Past.

“This track was organically born from improvisation — we just fed off each other’s energy,” Sadiki says about “Craving”, which she developed with close collaborators Marley Tupou, River Langford, Lorenzo Benatiro, and Ally McMahon.

Selve press shot

Joshua Tate

Selve, ‘Breaking Outta Heaven’

Did you love Selve’s Breaking Into Heaven? You’re in luck.

Selve share Breaking Outta Heaven, a companion EP to their well-received 2025 album, which was the first LP by an Aboriginal artist to be recorded at the iconic Abbey Road Studios.

“We have had a super fun and wild ride since the release of last year’s album ‘Breaking Into Heaven’. ‘Breaking Outta Heaven’ is a sneaky bonus chapter,” the band’s lead singer Loki Liddle says. “It is also a bit sexier, more spacious, a little more open, expansive and inviting.

“Perhaps even a little less antagonistic, but still as subversive – if you pay attention. It’s fun, a mix of something both new and familiar.”