The English rock group Muse‘s tenth studio album, “The Wow! Signal”, is scheduled for release on June 26, 2026. The Wow! signal, a narrowband radio transmission discovered in 1977 that raised the possibility of extraterrestrial intelligence, is the source of the album’s name. The band has also unveiled a new single titled “Be With You“, with an official video. Get your copy of the album by clicking here.
Tracklist:

Pre-order ‘The Wow! Signal’ from the band’s official UK/EU store to get first access to tickets for their O2 Academy Brixton show on April 3rd, 2026. Offer ends at 11:59am (GMT) 24 March: https://wmg.lnk.to/MuseBrixtonPresale
Pre-sale begins 10:00am (GMT) 25 March. General sale is open 27 March at 10:00am (GMT).
The English rock group Muse was founded in 1994 and is based in Teignmouth, Devon. Chris Wolstenholme (bass guitar, backing vocals), Dominic Howard (drums, percussion), and Matt Bellamy (lead vocals, guitar, keyboards) make up the band. Bellamy’s falsetto and a somber alternative rock sound were featured on Muse‘s 1999 debut album, “Showbiz”. They gained a reputation for their upbeat live performances with their second album, “Origin of Symmetry” (2001), which featured broader instrumentation and romantic classical influences. “Absolution” (2003), the first of seven straight UK number-one albums, had additional classical influences, including violins on songs like “Butterflies and Hurricanes.”
Pop and electronic elements were included in “Black Holes and Revelations “(2006), which featured singles like “Supermassive Black Hole” and helped Muse achieve greater international recognition. Muse established itself as one of the biggest stadium acts in the world with “The Resistance” (2009) and “The 2nd Law” (2012), which examined themes of government tyranny and public insurrection. Their seventh album, “Drones” (2015), a concept album about drone warfare that went back to a harsher rock sound, peaked at the top of the US Billboard 200. Science fiction and the simulation hypothesis served as inspiration for their eighth album, “Simulation Theory” (2018), which heavily used synthesisers. “Will of the People” (2022), their ninth album, blended a number of themes and genres from their earlier releases.