Jordana Moon and Tom Aries join forces as the indie duo Moon and Aries, promising originals that fuse retro tones and contemporary, sci-fi-style intricacies, with a clear thread of identity.
Electronica
Intriguing sound-design of retro and industrial flavours meets with the weight and presence of nostalgic dance – Suck the Bunny crafts an arena of poetically conceptual appeal and infectious rhythms alike.
Genre-fusing indie alternatives Land craft an EP of originals that stand tall on their strength of songwriting, unique vocals, and multi-layered ambiances of nostalgic origins.
Dreamy electro vibes meet with heavy bass and the subtle crackle of creative distortion, as a deeply contemplative Yoblin utilises poetry and soothing vocals for an immersive, beautifully unique hit of escapism.
The latter half is sensational, superb production lights up the room, leaving you in a celebration of optimism that’s broadly juxtaposed by the insult and unsettling self-awareness of the lyric.
Uniquely creative, blending emo-rap tones with industrial production and organic layers of creativity all at once.
Readapting the 1981 queer anthem that was Homosapien, by Pete Shelley of The Buzzcocks, the unmistakable Ladonna Rama settles into the groove with a natural air of connection and colour.
Stylishly combining the warm embrace of down-tempo dance with a clearly melodic edge and fragments of hypnotic, immersive detail – producer and artist Mønochef re-sets your mood with ease.
Featuring industrial details and simplicity intertwined with complexity of concept and design, Lucid and the track faze troy draw focus to a producer making the very most out of the moment.
Stunning, in short – a defiant highlight from the year so far, rooted amidst some legendary sounds but more firmly connected to the clear identity and artistic intention of the band.
Varied in mood, emotion, pace, detail, weight and intrigue – life is such a bother cleverly proves a reliable antidote or method for drowning out and relieving the weight of a bothersome life.
An ever-unpredictable Matt Reilly takes things down a boldly rhythmic, bass-heavy and synth-soaked pathway for this latest conceptually intriguing instrumental.