“DISCO Summer Dreams” - Julandjim
Step into the hazy heat of summer, pour yourself a cold drink, and press play on Julandjim’s debut single, DISCO Summer Dreams. Hailing from the idyllic corners of Chai, France, this brand-new project is already carving out a dreamy lane of its own—one where analog lo-fi textures, retro synths, and cinematic nostalgia swirl together like a half-remembered scene from a ‘60s beach movie scored by Daft Punk and Bossa Nova legends.
“Kuruvinda” - Kirsten Agresta-Copely
Let’s be honest: the harp doesn’t always get the love it deserves. But Kirsten Agresta-Copely isn’t here to play background music for your garden party—she’s here to shift your internal landscape. And with Kuruvinda, she does exactly that.
“Soul - Remix” - David English
David English’s “Soul – Remix” isn’t just a reworking of a song—it’s a personal evolution set to music.
This is a track born from quiet struggle, rewritten and reshaped over time—emotionally, spiritually, and musically. It started with just two lines and a melody, which is kind of beautiful when you think about it. No blueprint. No master plan. Just a seed. That seed grew into something that wrestles with some of life’s biggest, messiest questions: Why are we here? Why does life feel so heavy sometimes? Where is meaning hiding in all of this?
“Walking Through Walls” - AUNCE
There’s a moment, late at night or early in the quiet of morning, when the noise of the world fades and something else—quieter, deeper—starts to rise up. That’s where AUNCE’s new single “Walking Through Walls” lives. Not in the clubs, not even in the headphones of casual listeners. It lives in that space between thoughts, between expectations, between genres. And like its name suggests, this track doesn’t knock politely—it phases through the walls you didn’t even know you built.
“For You” - Just Arrogant Animals
Just Arrogant Animals might sound like the name of your favorite chaotic group chat, but in reality, it’s a genre-bending, emotionally-charged music project born in the scenic heart of Kawartha Lakes, Canada. Formed by longtime friends and sonic adventurers Kyle Knowles and Pat Sabyan, the duo has been on a mission since 2022 to explore the edges of musical expression—and if their latest single “For You” is any indication, they’re doing a damn good job of it.
“Das Geisterschiff” - Nordstahl
Every now and then, a song doesn’t just tell a story—it becomes one. That’s exactly what happens with Nordstahl’s chilling new German-language ballad, “Das Geisterschiff” (The Ghost Ship). Out of the fog comes a track that doesn’t just flirt with the macabre—it steers straight into it, full sail. This isn’t your average sea shanty or dramatic folk tune. This is a musical séance with guilt, loss, and the consequences that refuse to die.
“I Don't Miss That Woman” - Wattmore
Let’s be honest — the world doesn’t need another sad breakup song. But what it does need is a breakup song that doesn’t wallow, doesn’t sugarcoat, and doesn’t pretend like we haven’t all fantasized about driving off into the sunset with a middle finger in the rearview mirror. And on that front, Brisbane’s favorite brotherly duo Wattmore delivers hard.
“Fires Of The Blue Moon” - Medivh
Let’s just say it: Medivh isn’t your average rock band. In fact, calling them a “band” feels limiting. This Italian art rock duo—made up of brothers Emmanuele and Tommaso—is more like a sonic force of nature. They’re part dream, part nightmare, all passion. Born in the quiet cradle of the Tuscan countryside and raised on distortion pedals, experimental textures, and spiritual unrest, Medivh crafts music that doesn’t just demand your attention—it consumes it.
“Third Like” - WONDERLOST
Let’s get this out of the way: “Third Like” by WONDERLOST is not just a track — it’s a place. A humid, dreamy, salt-kissed destination you didn’t know you needed to visit. And once you’re there, you’re not going to want to leave.
“Rose-Colored Boy” - CROSSTOWN
Cover songs can be tricky territory. You’ve got to respect the original while somehow carving out your own identity within it — and that’s no easy feat, especially when you’re taking on something as beloved and punchy as Paramore’s “Rose-Colored Boy.” But CROSSTOWN, the Los Angeles-based duo made up of singer/producer/guitarist Danny Mitchell and bassist Lily Santos, doesn’t just cover the song. They reimagine it, dip it in glitter, give it a pulse, and set it free on the dancefloor.
“God of the Dead” - Rosetta West
If Rosetta West were a place, it would be a smoky dive bar on the edge of the universe—part haunted temple, part blues church, part punk asylum. Their latest album, God of the Dead, feels exactly like that: a spiritual odyssey that’s as raw as it is transcendent. It’s chaotic, it’s beautiful, it’s strange—and somehow, it works.
“The Other Side of Fear” - Edge of Paradise
Edge of Paradise has never been a band to do things halfway. They don’t just release songs — they build worlds. With their latest music video for “The Other Side of Fear,” they take their bold, cinematic vision one step further by handing the spotlight to their global fanbase — and the result is something uniquely raw, human, and surprisingly powerful.