The Smashing Pumpkins frontman Billy Corgan has announced a new solo album. It’s called Ogilala and it’s out October 13 via BMG. Corgan is also releasing it under his full name: William Patrick Corgan. The record, as promised, was produced by Rick Rubin. Below, listen to a new track from the LP, “Aeronaut.” The night after Ogilala’s release, Corgan is set to embark on a North American tour, beginning with two concerts in Brooklyn. Find his upcoming tour schedule below. In addition, check out the Ogilala tracklist and Corgan’s statement on the record.

Ogilala:

01 Zowie

02 Processional

03 The Spaniards

04 Aeronaut

05 The Long Goodbye

06 Half-Life of an Autodidact

07 Amarinthe

08 Antietam

09 Mandaryne

10 Shiloh

11 Archer

William Patrick Corgan:

For as long as I can remember the delineation point between songs I wrote for myself and songs I’d pen for whatever band was something I couldn’t explain. And it remains so, for they all feel quite personal to me, no matter their time orera. The lone difference on songs for Ogilala is that they seemed to want little in the way of adornment. Having written the songs for voice and guitar, I put myself in Rick’s hands to take the music wherever he’d like. Normally I would have done more, and tinkered more on production, but rather Rick put the onus on me to deliver at a molecular level via live takes. The rest was simply a reaction.

William Patrick Corgan:

10-14 Brooklyn, NY - Murmrr Theatre

10-15 Brooklyn, NY - Murmrr Theatre

10-18 Wilmington, DE - Grand Opera House

10-20 Toronto, Ontario - Queen Elizabeth Theatre

10-24 Chicago, IL - Athenaeum Theatre

10-25 Chicago, IL - Athenaeum Theatre

10-27 Nashville, TN - CMA Theater

10-29 Boulder, CO - Boulder Theater

11-01 San Francisco, CA - Herbst Theatre

11-02 San Francisco, CA - Herbst Theatre

11-09 Los Angeles, CA - The Masonic Lodge at Hollywood Forever Cemetery

11-10 Los Angeles, CA - The Masonic Lodge at Hollywood Forever Cemetery

11-11 Los Angeles, CA - The Masonic Lodge at Hollywood Forever Cemetery

Watch Pitchfork’s “Yearbook” video about Chicago in 1993, featuring the Pumpkins: