B.F.S.F. Drop Long-Awaited Album “Everyone Everything”
I wanna ask, when you listen to music, do you sit down and think about how such songs came about? Or do you ask how these artists thought this could bang? Well I’ve got a story here for you. Now Big Fucking Sky Forever—or B.F.S.F. for short—is the kind of project that shouldn’t really work on paper. But here we are, the band is a duo consisting of two dads, Parker and Edward, living 5,000 miles apart in Oklahoma City and Sheffield, England.
Here comes the interesting part. They actually spent a decade talking about making an album before they actually sat down to do it. Crazy right, haha. Well what would you do if I tell you they did no ehearsal, had no managers, just a lot of late-night file swapping and soul-baring messages across time zones. Together they have given us an album that will leave you wanting for more.

Their debut album, “Everyone Everything“, finally landed on February 2nd, 2026. And man o man, this album brings together three EPs they released last year into one big, beautiful mess of a record. They chose to keep their faces hidden behind yellow jackets and ribcage sweaters, which is a nice change of pace. It lets you focus on the music rather than their haircuts.
Now welcoming listeners into an atmosphere of contemplation, reflection, and preparing listeners for an emotional rollercoaster journey is the opening track “Introduction”. What this one does is, it prepares you for what’s to come. It feels like a camera lens slowly clicking into focus and shooting us to track 2 titled “Fighting Talk“(Round 2), a track that perfectly captures that grit and DIY spirit they talk about. It’s got that indie rock edge but feels deeper, like it’s been marinating for ten years.
“Idiot” comes next, followed by the standout track, “Everyone You Love“. This one is the heart of the album. It’s a shoegaze-inspired dream that sounds like someone put a lullaby through a fuzz pedal. It hits that sweet spot between nostalgia and hope. It got this atmospheric synthesizers that brings this airy feel about it which makes it catchy and interesting. It pokes you and let’s you focus and look around you and think about those people that matters and what could have been.
As the record moves along, tracks like “Ghost stories” and “The Call” lean into a more cinematic vibe. It’s easy to see why they describe their sound as a score to an unwritten movie. “The Message” and “Survivor Guilt” keep that momentum going, dealing with the heavy stuff like loss and displacement without being a total drag. What I love about the latter is how emotional it gets when you begin to think about those moments where you think you could have been a better person, where you could have made a better choice. Regardless you live with that pain, that anguish.
“A Beautiful Man” and “YSBRFSOM (This Is A Warning)” show off their electronic influences. You can hear bits of Joy Division and New Order in the way they use synths and beats. Then you hit “God” and “Storm Oil”, which feel like the big, swelling emotional peaks of the journey. I love how “God” starts with this electronic beats, which drops into this soothing vocals and calm sounds. Then you’re allowed to float back into that switch in the beginning. Sometimes life hits us and then people begin to question us, where’s that you can rely on now, like where’s your God now? But to those that believe and never give up, they know God will deliver them. Man,this is a masterpiece. The arrangements are calculated and each deliver to expectation. Finally, “Conclusion” wraps it all up, leaving you in that quiet headspace you get after a long, intense film.
B.F.S.F. says they aren’t trying to be cool, but they accidentally ended up being very cool anyway.
Well “Everyone Everything” is patient and reflective. It doesn’t care about radio trends or being “hip.” It’s just two friends finally telling a story they’ve been carrying around for a long time. If you like music that shimmer and crashes in all the right places, give this a spin.
Enjoy More From B.F.S.F here;