Creative production blends retro and contemporary flavours, promising a strong groove and plenty to contemplate, as producer and artist Eddie Moore kicks off his jazz-fusing album Intuition.
Rebecca Cullen
Promising a wave of escapism that’s addictively powerful, leaving a sense of imaginative lostness that keeps the body calm yet the mind wandering through the various what-ifs and aches of modern life.
The ‘music as a gift’ company will be releasing response songs to chart-topping singles each month, and November sees the release of one in light of Morgan Wallen’s viral country breakup hit Wasted On You.
Out On A Whim serves as a fine introduction to Pirritu’s upcoming album, leading with delicacy and optimism to explore reflections on love and personal connection.
Guildford four-piece The Lunar Keys deliver a stellar performance, for their intensely memorable single MANIAC.
“People should start building instead of destroying. Reconnecting instead of disconnecting. Striving towards peace, not war. Because, unless we do so, all that’s left is destruction and a dead world.”
Elevate your own appreciation for the moment this November morning, with a vastly cinematic and emotive tech house remix of DREAMS.
Romain Axisa has built an impressive following over the years, thanks to his passionate devotion to the artform and his captivating street performances.
The various textures utilised feel decidedly unique – short lines of melody brought to life by versatility of sound and design.
Brilliantly-captured guitars lead with distortion and heavy riff-work, backed by the equally energising crash of live drums, as hard-rock outfit Signal Static craft an original song of both anthemic and emotionally poignant roots.
Masterful guitar-work incorporates not just a faultless command of the fretboard, but a limitless understanding of space and the emotion required to make music that hits with impact…
Creative tech-house production unites tribal flavours with trippy details and a heavy bassline and beat, as Ibericanism keeps things both soulful and industrially-rooted, for Who’s That Girl.