Seán R. McLaughlin and his band have put together a track that came from getting punched on an Aberdeen street but grew into a bigger reflection on leaving places and trying to figure out where you fit. The song starts small and builds up over its three and a half minutes, Andy Monaghan from Frightened …
“Get Back My Way” by Eddie Cohn
Eddie Cohn’s new single “Get Back My Way” starts quiet and ends loud, which is exactly how he wanted it. The Los Angeles musician spent the early part of 2025 getting his real estate license, and this song is basically him admitting that was a mistake, not the license itself, but trying to ignore the …
“Plastic Bits” by Ratfink!
“Plastic Bits” runs on three chords and some surf guitar sparkle, and honestly, that’s all it needs. The whole thing started when they were hanging out by the Merri, looking at all the junk floating around, and somehow that turned into this. You can hear the frustration about pollution in there, but they’re not getting …
“Speaker” by JNZI
At 14, this Australian kid isn’t trying to sound older than he is, which makes “Speaker” work better than it probably should. He raps about believing in yourself and speaking up, but he does it without sounding like he’s reading from a motivational poster. The beat lets him breathe between bars, and JNZI uses that …
“V.I.P.” by Exzenya
Exzenya flips the whole VIP thing on its head with this track, and it’s pretty clever, the talented artist delivered something unique and meaningful, and the beat hits hard while Exzenya spits bars about courtrooms and mandatory seminars like she’s recapping the world’s most uncomfortable field trip. She’s got this knack for taking crappy situations …
“The Unreasonables” by Rusty Reid
So this album sat in storage for forty years. Wild, right? Rusty Reid recorded a full rock record back in the day, then just shelved it. Now it’s finally out, and honestly, it rocks harder than his usual stuff. Rusty Reid trades his folk guitar for electric mayhem here, “Attitude Change” has this bouncy, sarcastic …
“Far-Off Summer’s Night” by MAHUNA
MAHUNA, the Berlin-based Irish songwriter pulled this one straight from a dream, and honestly, it shows – there’s that hazy quality dreams have, where everything feels important but you can’t quite explain why. He keeps things simple here, just voice and folk instruments doing their thing without any fancy production tricks. You can tell it …
“Take A Chance” by Ball in the House
“Take A Chance” has this crazy cool thing going on where every sound you hear comes from human voices, but they’ve made it sound like a full ’80s synth-pop production. Kevin wrote this about those early days with his wife, and man, you can tell. Tyler’s vocals hit just right, not too smooth, not trying …
“Sliding Door” by The Gerry Farrow Band
“Sliding Door” starts with a guitar riff that grabs your attention immediately. This song doesn’t mess around with puzzles or riddles like the band usually does, you know exactly where you stand from the first verse. Gerry sings the main parts while Amber jumps in at just the right moments. Her voice doesn’t clash with …
“Lesser Than” by Stephanie Westdal
When most artists avoid heavy topics, she decided to write about sexual violence. The song came from her own rough patch, where she felt betrayed and powerless. You can hear that anger and hurt in every line, but she doesn’t leave you hanging in the darkness, its beautiful. The song confronts sexual violence head-on, exploring …
“terminal” by Wotts
Ottawa’s indie pop duo Wotts digs back into their hip-hop past with “terminal”, a song about the weird limbo you get stuck in after a breakup. The beat hits with these lush synths that wrap around your head while keeping things bouncy enough to nod along to. Those Childish Gambino vibes come through in the …
“Marzanna” by Marianne Nowottny
Marianne Nowottny’s covers album under her Marzanna alias takes on some serious heavyweights like Kate Bush, David Bowie, Joni Mitchell, Siouxsie and the Banshees and somehow makes them all sound like her own creations. After a brutal five-year recording process that included multiple hard drive crashes, she finally got this thing finished. Her voice is …
“Something New” by Kaia Fincher
Kaia Fincher has crafted a debut that sneaks up on you with its quiet power, as “Something New” wraps listeners in warm synth textures and honest vocals that feel like late-night conversations with your best friend, and there’s a real sense that she’s sharing something personal without oversharing or being too precious about it. You …
“Dark Charm” by Sugar Scars
The El Paso/Juarez duo knows how to build tension without getting too heavy-handed about it, layering in dance elements and shoegaze textures while keeping those gothic vibes running underneath everything. You can tell these guys learned a lot from their last album, “Rhythmic Body Reflexes” because they’re playing with sounds here that feel both experimental …
“Great Progress (2013) Remastered” by Jack Agdur
This was 2013 Jack figuring out new ways to approach the piano, and hearing it now with better sound quality makes you appreciate how bold he was being back then. The track builds slowly, the way Jack always does, but there’s something different here. Maybe it’s because he was still experimenting, still pushing boundaries he …
“Elephant in the Room” by Chloe Tsangaris
Chloe Tsangaris gets messy with the truth on her latest single, calling out a friend who was playing both sides while keeping secrets. This track hits hard because it’s about that awkward moment when you finally confront someone who’s been messing you around and we’ve all been there. The talented artist’s voice sounds fierce and …
“Bad Dreams” by Katie Belle
The Atlanta singer-songwriter Katie Belle takes her real struggles with insomnia and wraps them up in synth-heavy beats that’ll get your head nodding whether you want it to or not. Her voice has this scratchy quality that works perfectly over the electronic layers, like she’s singing from that weird space between being awake and asleep. …
New Track Alert: Check Out “Loving You” by Janeuary!
In her latest single “Loving You”, Janeuary delves into the enigmatic realm of love with a composition that resonates deeply. The track, a standout from her album “Nineteen Nights”, weaves a tapestry of melancholic and mature alternative pop. With her signature instruments, the piano and viola, Janeuary explores new sonic territories that complement the song’s …

















