Single: Onesie – Meetcha at Minnies (The Captain’s Song)
A harrowing hostage tale from Ben Haberland’s history gets set to sensational song in the Brooklyn band’s first single from their upcoming album.
A harrowing hostage tale from Ben Haberland’s history gets set to sensational song in the Brooklyn band’s first single from their upcoming album.
“Time To Fight” is exactly what it sounds like: A call to action, a song for revolution.
Hampi’s latest instrumental dreamscape opens with all nostalgia before culminating in a euphoric sound collage of a post-rock haze.
Summery and somewhat vintage, the second track from Australia’s Sunkicker takes a dip into the waters of healing.
Kvisa, in Hebrew – כביסה – means “laundry” or “washing”. I did not know that
Chill out with bedroom pop from Hong Kong that finds peace with the current moment.
The first single from Auld’s upcoming second album, “Red Bandana” jumps in immediately with bubblegum vocals over crunchy guitars.
A bit of a banger, the new one from Brooklyn quintet Two-Man Giant Squid is unique, humorous and full of character and personality.
Incorporating all sorts of sounds – from electronica to shoegaze – Slow Decay blends them beautifully into something beguiling and intriguing.
A polished emo-inflected home run, the second single from The Lonely Surf’s debut album is “a stream of consciousness set to music”.
Captured live in studio, this recording documents the magic of 5th PROJEKT and showcases the undeniable harmony they have when working together.
The most recent single from the Utah-based five-piece known collectively as Krooked Kings is a
The melody has a delicate, heartbreaking beauty. It rises and falls with effortless fluidity, before resolving in a wonderfully satisfying way.
Imbued with tons of energy and emotion, test is a pop-punk/emo tune you can’t help but scream along to.
Dystopia Gently debuts with a queer indie-rock single about the perils of infatuation.
Hana la Rene’s new single unfolds into a symphony reflecting the eyes of the Panopticon back at itself.
Just in time for warmer days, a slouchy summer drawl makes way for a vocal melody that feels familiar yet new.
Rootsy, gritty guitars help cement Croaker’s new single as a hidden indie rock gem.
Common Loon’s airy timeless slice of soft rock caters to all in different ways, even in its loneliness.
So, suddenly, the conversation about what happened to rock has turned… obnoxious. For the sake