2/24/2026

Mad Iris Announce First Album Release

Mad Iris Announce First Album Release

"Employee of the Month" Out Today: Listen/Watch Here

Mad Iris is out May 29th.

Photo by Sarah Elise Bauman

Mad Iris have announced their first album release, for May 29th, 2026. They also have released “Employee of the Month”, a new song and video from the album.

Toronto’s Mad Iris has been playing around Canada since 2023, incorporating noise rock, punk, shoegaze, and grunge, into a sound that honors progenitors like Sonic Youth, Swirlies, and early Jesus & Mary Chain.  Frontwomen Kaiya Rosie and Ela Hintasu blend bratty screams with hushed sighs, contrasting Parick Muldoon’s kaleidoscope guitar distortion and Josh Pryce’s roaring drum beats.

“Employee of the Month” captures the harnessed chaos the band does so well. Rosie and Hintasu’s dual lead vocals are as distorted as the electric guitars, which drive out a punk melody amidst a noise morassThe video is equally squalid, as the band performs in fields and forests through blurry imagery and quick jump cuts.

Mad Iris cover art

Mad Iris, out May 29, 2026, covers desire, obsession, jealousy, and pettiness, while taking place on back seats, night buses, and gas stations, with gum stuck to desks, and drinks spilled on sticky floors. Throughout, obsessive impulses spiral into emotional meltdowns, with songs lurching between restraint and eruption.

A Mad Iris song teeters on disaster, shifting from gritty feedback to a masterful, sloppy haze, employing distorted sounds as if recorded directly to cassette, and placing them in the context of strong, sparkling production. Complementing their music are walls of noisy visuals: videos that seem like coming from a worn VHS tape, scrapbook show flyers, and alleyway photoshoots. “Our visuals are an intricate part of the band’s style,” says bassist Ela Hintasu, who shares lead vocals with guitarist Kaiya Rosie, often on the same song. With a sound, style, and presence fully intentional, Mad Iris goes beyond being a band, becoming more an idea.

Opening track, “Daisy Don’t Take My Baby”, sets dreamy vocals floating over a jangly guitar line, played by Rosie and Patrick Muldoon, before collapsing into distorted, whiny grit and feral screams. The album oscillates between sweet and bitter, lustful and jealous, tender and chaotic. “Poor Baby” soaks in self-pity and pointed blame, building from scratchy dual vocals and warm analogue tones into a fever pitch, led by drummer Josh Pryce. “Goldfish” bursts with upbeat guitar riffs and thunderous energy, as sweet-and-bratty vocals cut through playful indie rock. The song strips the intensity and cattiness of other tracks, framing messy desire in a bright, chaotic context, with vocals bouncing between sharp and smooth, guitars continually weaving between jangly hooks.

On record, Mad Iris is raw, unpolished, and intimidatingly cool. Off-stage, they’re grounded and self-aware. As Pryce puts it, We’re just four friends hanging out and making music together. There’s lots of playful love in it.”  That chemistry drives their energetic debut.

Check out Mad Iris’ past videos, including “Name Tag” which has over 300k views


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