Fakemink has set May 22 as the release date for his new album Terrified, Pitchfork reports. The project serves as a full-length expansion of his earlier Boy Who Cried Terrified EP, suggesting the artist is building out thematic material and sonic ideas first introduced on the shorter project.
The album announcement arrives as Fakemink continues building momentum in the indie music space. By structuring Terrified as a companion to the EP rather than a completely separate entity, the artist signals continuity in his creative vision while offering listeners an expanded version of his artistic statement. This approach, familiar in contemporary pop and indie circles, allows artists to deepen exploration of particular sonic territories or lyrical themes.
The May 22 date gives fans a concrete target while allowing the artist time to finalize production and promotion. In recent years, the EP-to-album pipeline has become increasingly common among emerging and mid-level independent artists, offering a way to test audience reception and refine material before committing to a larger body of work. Terrified follows this trajectory, building on the foundation Fakemink laid with Boy Who Cried Terrified.
The release underscores the continuing vitality of independent music channels like Pitchfork in breaking and tracking emerging artists. As streaming platforms continue to flatten release strategies, artists like Fakemink use strategic announcements and extended project cycles to maintain listener engagement and critical attention.
