Tag: New Music

  • Weekday Social capture mid-twenties uncertainty on “Five Years Or So”

    Weekday Social capture mid-twenties uncertainty on “Five Years Or So”

    There’s something immediately familiar about Five Years Or So. Not in a tired way, but in the sense that it taps into a feeling most people recognize before they’ve even put words to it. Weekday Social lean into that space between restlessness and routine, where ambition hasn’t disappeared but direction still feels just out of…

  • Mick J. Clark puts the work on the table with Pole Position

    Mick J. Clark puts the work on the table with Pole Position

    There’s a humility running through Pole Position that I don’t hear often from artists with this much history behind them. Mick J. Clark doesn’t frame the album as a victory lap or a statement piece. He presents it simply as ten songs released into the world, and lets the audience decide what they’re worth. That…

  • La’ Von J finds clarity and purpose on “Thanking God”

    La’ Von J finds clarity and purpose on “Thanking God”

    There’s a quiet strength running through Thanking God that makes it feel less like a statement and more like a moment of alignment. La’ Von J doesn’t rush this record or dress it up with excess. Instead, he allows space for reflection, gratitude, and inner growth to lead the way. Hailing from Lufkin, Texas, La’…

  • Sean T MacLeod returns to instinct and clarity on “Take Control (Don’t Let ’Em)”

    Sean T MacLeod returns to instinct and clarity on “Take Control (Don’t Let ’Em)”

    There’s a sense of calm confidence running through Take Control (Don’t Let ’Em), a song that doesn’t try to reinvent Sean T MacLeod so much as realign him with his core instincts. As the opening track and fourth single from his upcoming album That’s When the Earth Becomes a Star, it sets the tone clearly…

  • Valiancy faces the noise within on “Voices”

    Valiancy faces the noise within on “Voices”

    There’s a certain stillness at the center of Voices that makes it hit harder than most songs dealing with heavy themes. Valiancy doesn’t dramatize pain or dress it up for effect. Instead, the track sits with discomfort and lets it speak for itself. Released on January 29, 2026, Voices is written, recorded, produced, and mixed…

  • SHASAU’s “Alicante”: emotion, memory, and the human hand behind the machine

    SHASAU’s “Alicante”: emotion, memory, and the human hand behind the machine

    The second music video from the Alicante single and EP doesn’t try to overwhelm you. Instead, it quietly pulls you in. On paper, the idea is simple. In practice, it’s surprisingly affecting. That contrast is exactly why Alicante works as well as it does. Created by SHASAU, the video feels immediately familiar without being obvious.…

  • King Paul: purpose-driven reggae from Kingston to Jamaica, Queens

    King Paul: purpose-driven reggae from Kingston to Jamaica, Queens

    What stands out immediately about King Paul is clarity. There’s no confusion about what he’s here to do or why the music exists. His work sits firmly at the crossroads of island tradition and city reality, shaped by roots in Kingston and a coming of age in Jamaica, Queens. That bridge isn’t just geographic. It’s…

  • RATFINK!: WHEN U WERE MINE

    RATFINK!: WHEN U WERE MINE

    Ratfink make music the way it’s supposed to be made. A little chaotic, slightly unhinged, and full of heart. WHEN U WERE MINE was recorded with a fifty-dollar mic, a hundred-dollar guitar, and a laptop that once had beer poured on it and never fully recovered. According to Ratfink, that probably added some flavour. They’re…

  • Tom Minor : Change It!

    Tom Minor : Change It!

    Tom Minor is a London N1–based singer-songwriter working in what he calls existential indie, a sharp-edged blend of indie rock, new wave, punk, power pop, garage, soul, and R&B. After years of writing songs for other artists, Minor has turned the focus fully onto his own work, where urgency, wit, and emotional restlessness sit front…

  • Brother Dolly Turns Interference Into Art on Transmission Number 5

    Brother Dolly Turns Interference Into Art on Transmission Number 5

    Brother Dolly arrive quietly, but they do not arrive small. Their first release, Transmission Number 5, feels like something intercepted rather than announced. It carries the energy of a project that is deliberately elusive, yet deeply intentional. From the first moments, it is clear this is not a conventional debut single. It is an atmosphere,…

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