Joyfully encapsulating the weight of daily frustrations, songwriter and performer Wai Lana delivers the fearlessly colorful, catchy and unexpectedly gripping single River Of Forgiveness.
Music
The infamous events of November ’63 still reappear throughout literature, film and conversation, and the way Mutton Xops has framed the whole discussion adds a little more nuance to proceedings.
Familiar but fresh, uniquely produced from both rhythm to vocal mixing – Anjalts creates a haunting ambiance and uplifting core, with Heaven Has Another Door.
Conceptually unexpected in its lyrical depth of questions on life, death, and the role of the self, Summer Smile proves a consistently unpredictable, unorthodox yet effective trip hop offering.
Aruba’s activemirror. light up the indie rock space with atmospheric and conceptual intention, for the immersive and dreamy new single I Wouldn’t Be Caught Dead Around Here.
Alan Romero is crafting the Bolivian metal world with his relentless and pioneering sound. As the mastermind, producer, writer and instrumentalist behind some of Bolivia’s most extreme (and successful) rock bands.
Country and pop join forces with ease, for the catchy and heartfelt new single from New South Wales artist Megan Baragry.
Arena rock meets electronic nostalgia, as rising trio My My Sugar release the evocative and passionate new single Robot.
Intimate musicianship and storytelling to match, NICE is a brief but effective collection of live performances – a band united in this lo-fi-inspired expression of self and groove.
Legends of the scene Tinok and Sprock recapture the essence of the eighties, with their anthemic fusion of stadium rock and EDM.
Personal healing gifted as intricate audio escapism that embraces its audience – a new project from Darren J Harris (Ambient Counsel) always means a worthy break from the weight of the world, and Passages gorgeously illuminates that truth.
Introducing a creative rap force to be reckoned with – Summer Solow and Nissi Nicole launch an anthemic and addictive new sound, with the gritty confidence and sharp wordplay of Dead Image.