Prizefighter
Mumford & Sons
“Prizefighter” is the sixth studio album by British folk-rock band Mumford & Sons, released on 20 February 2026 via Island Records and their own Gentlemen of the Road imprint. Written quickly after 2025’s “Rushmere” and recorded in just ten days with producer Aaron Dessner in New York, the album captures a band working at speed and trusting instinct, treating the “Prizefighter” character as a loose thread running through its songs about resilience and perseverance. Marcus Mumford has described it as a favorite in their catalogue, reflecting a renewed creative energy following their previous comeback.
Musically, “Prizefighter” blends the group’s trademark acoustic stomp and close harmonies with gentler indie-folk textures, subtle country influences, and a warmer, more spacious production style. Across its 14 tracks, including collaborations with artists like Hozier, Gracie Abrams, and Chris Stapleton, the record leans into themes of friendship, devotion, and emotional support, often foregrounding contentment and steady companionship over the yearning and turmoil that defined some earlier releases. The result is an album that feels both familiar and newly vulnerable: still unmistakably Mumford & Sons, but softer around the edges and more focused on quiet endurance than on cathartic drama.
“Prizefighter” is the sixth studio album by British folk-rock band Mumford & Sons, released on 20 February 2026 via Island Records and their own Gentlemen of the Road imprint. Written quickly after 2025’s “Rushmere” and recorded in just ten days with producer Aaron Dessner in New York, the album captures a band working at speed and trusting instinct, treating the “Prizefighter” character as a loose thread running through its songs about resilience and perseverance. Marcus Mumford has described it as a favorite in their catalogue, reflecting a renewed creative energy following their previous comeback.
Musically, “Prizefighter” blends the group’s trademark acoustic stomp and close harmonies with gentler indie-folk textures, subtle country influences, and a warmer, more spacious production style. Across its 14 tracks, including collaborations with artists like Hozier, Gracie Abrams, and Chris Stapleton, the record leans into themes of friendship, devotion, and emotional support, often foregrounding contentment and steady companionship over the yearning and turmoil that defined some earlier releases. The result is an album that feels both familiar and newly vulnerable: still unmistakably Mumford & Sons, but softer around the edges and more focused on quiet endurance than on cathartic drama.
“Prizefighter” is the sixth studio album by British folk-rock band Mumford & Sons, released on 20 February 2026 via Island Records and their own Gentlemen of the Road imprint. Written quickly after 2025’s “Rushmere” and recorded in just ten days with producer Aaron Dessner in New York, the album captures a band working at speed and trusting instinct, treating the “Prizefighter” character as a loose thread running through its songs about resilience and perseverance. Marcus Mumford has described it as a favorite in their catalogue, reflecting a renewed creative energy following their previous comeback.
Musically, “Prizefighter” blends the group’s trademark acoustic stomp and close harmonies with gentler indie-folk textures, subtle country influences, and a warmer, more spacious production style. Across its 14 tracks, including collaborations with artists like Hozier, Gracie Abrams, and Chris Stapleton, the record leans into themes of friendship, devotion, and emotional support, often foregrounding contentment and steady companionship over the yearning and turmoil that defined some earlier releases. The result is an album that feels both familiar and newly vulnerable: still unmistakably Mumford & Sons, but softer around the edges and more focused on quiet endurance than on cathartic drama.
“Prizefighter” is the sixth studio album by British folk-rock band Mumford & Sons, released on 20 February 2026 via Island Records and their own Gentlemen of the Road imprint. Written quickly after 2025’s “Rushmere” and recorded in just ten days with producer Aaron Dessner in New York, the album captures a band working at speed and trusting instinct, treating the “Prizefighter” character as a loose thread running through its songs about resilience and perseverance. Marcus Mumford has described it as a favorite in their catalogue, reflecting a renewed creative energy following their previous comeback.
Musically, “Prizefighter” blends the group’s trademark acoustic stomp and close harmonies with gentler indie-folk textures, subtle country influences, and a warmer, more spacious production style. Across its 14 tracks, including collaborations with artists like Hozier, Gracie Abrams, and Chris Stapleton, the record leans into themes of friendship, devotion, and emotional support, often foregrounding contentment and steady companionship over the yearning and turmoil that defined some earlier releases. The result is an album that feels both familiar and newly vulnerable: still unmistakably Mumford & Sons, but softer around the edges and more focused on quiet endurance than on cathartic drama.
Prizefighter
Mumford & Sons
“Prizefighter” is the sixth studio album by British folk-rock band Mumford & Sons, released on 20 February 2026 via Island Records and their own Gentlemen of the Road imprint. Written quickly after 2025’s “Rushmere” and recorded in just ten days with producer Aaron Dessner in New York, the album captures a band working at speed and trusting instinct, treating the “Prizefighter” character as a loose thread running through its songs about resilience and perseverance. Marcus Mumford has described it as a favorite in their catalogue, reflecting a renewed creative energy following their previous comeback.
Musically, “Prizefighter” blends the group’s trademark acoustic stomp and close harmonies with gentler indie-folk textures, subtle country influences, and a warmer, more spacious production style. Across its 14 tracks, including collaborations with artists like Hozier, Gracie Abrams, and Chris Stapleton, the record leans into themes of friendship, devotion, and emotional support, often foregrounding contentment and steady companionship over the yearning and turmoil that defined some earlier releases. The result is an album that feels both familiar and newly vulnerable: still unmistakably Mumford & Sons, but softer around the edges and more focused on quiet endurance than on cathartic drama.
“Prizefighter” is the sixth studio album by British folk-rock band Mumford & Sons, released on 20 February 2026 via Island Records and their own Gentlemen of the Road imprint. Written quickly after 2025’s “Rushmere” and recorded in just ten days with producer Aaron Dessner in New York, the album captures a band working at speed and trusting instinct, treating the “Prizefighter” character as a loose thread running through its songs about resilience and perseverance. Marcus Mumford has described it as a favorite in their catalogue, reflecting a renewed creative energy following their previous comeback.
Musically, “Prizefighter” blends the group’s trademark acoustic stomp and close harmonies with gentler indie-folk textures, subtle country influences, and a warmer, more spacious production style. Across its 14 tracks, including collaborations with artists like Hozier, Gracie Abrams, and Chris Stapleton, the record leans into themes of friendship, devotion, and emotional support, often foregrounding contentment and steady companionship over the yearning and turmoil that defined some earlier releases. The result is an album that feels both familiar and newly vulnerable: still unmistakably Mumford & Sons, but softer around the edges and more focused on quiet endurance than on cathartic drama.
“Prizefighter” is the sixth studio album by British folk-rock band Mumford & Sons, released on 20 February 2026 via Island Records and their own Gentlemen of the Road imprint. Written quickly after 2025’s “Rushmere” and recorded in just ten days with producer Aaron Dessner in New York, the album captures a band working at speed and trusting instinct, treating the “Prizefighter” character as a loose thread running through its songs about resilience and perseverance. Marcus Mumford has described it as a favorite in their catalogue, reflecting a renewed creative energy following their previous comeback.
Musically, “Prizefighter” blends the group’s trademark acoustic stomp and close harmonies with gentler indie-folk textures, subtle country influences, and a warmer, more spacious production style. Across its 14 tracks, including collaborations with artists like Hozier, Gracie Abrams, and Chris Stapleton, the record leans into themes of friendship, devotion, and emotional support, often foregrounding contentment and steady companionship over the yearning and turmoil that defined some earlier releases. The result is an album that feels both familiar and newly vulnerable: still unmistakably Mumford & Sons, but softer around the edges and more focused on quiet endurance than on cathartic drama.
“Prizefighter” is the sixth studio album by British folk-rock band Mumford & Sons, released on 20 February 2026 via Island Records and their own Gentlemen of the Road imprint. Written quickly after 2025’s “Rushmere” and recorded in just ten days with producer Aaron Dessner in New York, the album captures a band working at speed and trusting instinct, treating the “Prizefighter” character as a loose thread running through its songs about resilience and perseverance. Marcus Mumford has described it as a favorite in their catalogue, reflecting a renewed creative energy following their previous comeback.
Musically, “Prizefighter” blends the group’s trademark acoustic stomp and close harmonies with gentler indie-folk textures, subtle country influences, and a warmer, more spacious production style. Across its 14 tracks, including collaborations with artists like Hozier, Gracie Abrams, and Chris Stapleton, the record leans into themes of friendship, devotion, and emotional support, often foregrounding contentment and steady companionship over the yearning and turmoil that defined some earlier releases. The result is an album that feels both familiar and newly vulnerable: still unmistakably Mumford & Sons, but softer around the edges and more focused on quiet endurance than on cathartic drama.
