1 2

Topshelf Records

Ekko Astral - the beltway is burning Ekko Astral

£27.99 Pre-Order
Condition: Brand New
Release date: Apr 24, 2026
Catalogue number: LPTSR290C
Barcode: 0634457234871
Condition: Brand New
Release date: Apr 24, 2026
Catalogue number: CSTSR290
Barcode: 0634457234895
Condition: Brand New
Release date: Apr 24, 2026
Catalogue number: CDTSR290
Barcode: 0634457234888
Format: Red in Red LP

Pickup available at Truck Oxford or Witney

Usually ready in 2-4 days

Delivery options at checkout:

Store Collection
Oxford or Witney

Local Courier
OX1-OX4 postcode

Delivery
UK postage

When Ekko Astral dropped their searing debut pink balloons in 2024, it would be another year and change before Trump took office and deployed the National Guard to Washington, D.C. Recorded immediately after the 2024 U.S. General Election, Ekko Astral’s second album the beltway is burning was always intended as a real-time historical document in the form of a dark comedy. Each song plays out like a vignette, with Ekko Astral beckoning listeners into their fictionalized version of The Beltway, in which Adam Sandler is a god-president and the DMV has become a demilitarized zone, a wasteland run by butt rockers and Soundcloud rappers. On the surrealist lead single “lil xan goes to washington,” the titular character travels to D.C. to lobby for addiction assistance legislation before succumbing to the cartoonish horror that is K Street, ultimately becoming a sellout himself. Such noisy, absurd caricatures abound on beltway, whose anchors are simultaneously heavier, poppier, and more complex than on predecessor pink balloons. Take the album’s pop diamond “lovesick american romance”: a 90s rock-indebted anthem that snarls at mainstream culture’s embrace of the manosphere. And then there’s the album’s centerpiece, “this is not a call to action but a lamentation on the situation at hand (or, capital riot),” which sees the band take an entirely new direction in a stretched-out, climactic barn-burner that invites listeners into the band’s funhouse version of D.C. Where pink balloons was written to uplift, the beltway is burning is meant to remind you of the stakes. On penultimate track “blood mountain,” Holzman asks “if I don’t know what’s wrong / how can it be righted?” This kind of tension is omnipresent in Ekko Astral’s work, grounding beltway in our present reality, injecting urgency and realism into each song despite their surrealist contours.

Share
Format: Red in Red LP

Items in stock on the website may not be in stock in both shops, if you would like to check ahead of your visit please contact us.

Orders can be placed to collect from either shop.