Makthaverskan really don’t sound like many other groups at the moment. They very much remember that post-punk did indeed stem from punk, but not by cranking up the distortion. The guitars are all ...
We haven't heard much from the great Swedish indie-poppers Makthaverskan since they released their third album Ill back in 2017. But last week, Weskust, another great Swedish indie-pop band that ...
Swedish post-punks Makthaverskan put out their fantastic album II in 2013 and gave it a US release in 2014 via Run for Cover, and now they’re finally heading over to our shores for a tour here in ...
Makthaverskan's music is a blend of giddy chaos and beauty, with lead singer Maja Milner key to the high-wire balancing act. On new album III, due on October 20 via Run For Cover, the Swedish ...
Swedish sensations Makthaverskan pave the way for album three with a new song that will leave you swooning where you stand. Taking the turbulent and turning it into something transcendent, ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Hey everybody, it's another advance single from the new Makthaverskan album! As if "In My Dreams" and "Eden" didn't already have ...
Last year, Run For Cover reissued Swedish quintet Makthaverskan's sophomore album, Makthaverskan II, a record that manages to sound deafening and intimidating without trampling the lyricism that makes ...
Swedish post-punk band Makthaverskan have announced the release of their fourth studio album, För Allting, which will be out on November 12 via Run For Cover. They have subsequently shared the album’s ...
Makthaverskan's music sounds like dreaming — not the blurry memory post-slumber, but the act itself. There's a spectral presence to the Swedish post-punk band; songs pull from the subconscious to make ...
Down Is Up discusses music that falls slightly under the radar of our usual coverage: demos and self-releases, as well as output from small or overlooked labels and communities. This week, Jenn Pelly ...
There's a point when Maja Milner does the thing you wait for in nearly every Makthaverskan song — an octave jump from the void, absolutely reckless and ramshackle in its execution, like Nightcrawler ...