Rubbing with grungy flavours of indie-rock against tinges of edgy prog-rock, Toy City delivers a refreshing array of innovative songs.
Belgian band KermesZ à l'Est has just unveiled their brand new album, ‘Octophilia,’ which lives somewhere at the intersection of jazz, metal and Eastern European traditions.
With ‘A Step Behind,’ Alex Blizzy offers a first-class array of alt-country, authentic and unpretentious, underscored by sonic charm.
Highlighted by “Lost for a While,” Little Misty’s ‘Nowhere Land’ is cap-a-pie haunting, dispensing lush leitmotifs, somewhere between a rift and a revelation.
Singer-songwriter, producer, screenwriter, and actress Roskamala drops her debut EP, Truth She Told, a six-track collection of existential narratives describing the complexities of being human and...
Drenched in the surging gloom of subterranean, glowering guitars, Lords of Dust’s ‘Kickin Dust Up’ churns up suppressed primal compulsions.
Pretty much rejecting easy categorization, Rum Buffalo delivers a sound best described as swanky progressive, big-band swing on ‘Blood Moon.’
Dispersing layers of bright leitmotifs riding swaggering percussion, Trendsettahs Sound System's “La Fiebre” (feat vocalist Sizzla Kalonji and Zalama Crew) conjures up a wild, party-like atmosphere.
Although The Western Civilization’ “Stitches” travels on intricate layers of harmonics, in the end, the song comes across as unpretentious and utterly charming.
Fox Apts.’ sound is difficult to describe because of its latent stormy surfaces, summoning up elemental spirits and their causes.
Brimming with heady indie-rock momentum and bright, wild energy, 87 and the Toys’s 'The Smile Room' delivers unbridled sonic swagger.
All together, alluring and elegantly effortless, Rory McBride’s “Stay Blue” offers a delicious divided moodiness, half melancholic and half expectant.
Imaginative and unlike most contemporary hip-hop, with “Affinity,” Pure Order offers a unique blend of hip-hop and psychedelia.
Simultaneously elegant and heavy with gloominess, with “Parasite,” Cosmopolis evokes an aching exegesis of brooding compulsion.
Singularly imaginative, 1st Base Runner’s (aka Tim Husmann) ‘Night Stalker’ hums with a sense of mounting unease on immersive synths, creating spectral, electro-organic soundscapes.