
“Just A Kiss” - K-Syran & Stonebridge
When StoneBridge links up with someone, you already know it’s going to be big. The legendary Swedish DJ and producer has been shaping house music for over three decades, but with Just A Kiss he proves once again that his sound is timeless. Add in powerhouse Norwegian artist K-Syran, and what you’ve got is a straight-up club anthem designed for both peak-time festival sets and your late-night headphone sessions.

“Electric Eliminator” - A:M Club
If retro-futurism had a soundtrack, it would probably sound like this. A:M Club, the solo project out of Darwen, England, has dropped Electric Eliminator — a bold, self-produced EP that arrived on September 19, 2025 — and it’s as much a cinematic journey as it is a dance record. Imagine the pulse of a Berlin club colliding with the neon-soaked paranoia of a 1980s sci-fi thriller.

“Together” - For Old Time's Sake
There’s something special about bands that grow, take detours, face life’s pauses, and then circle back with music that feels both nostalgic and brand new. Perth-based For Old Time’s Sake is exactly that kind of band. Born in 2007 from the friendship and songwriting chemistry of Darwin D. Dacanay and Whet Crisostomo, their sound has always been steeped in warm folk-pop, Beatles-esque melodies, and heartfelt storytelling.

“War Within (Radio Edit)” - HZPROD
Every once in a while, a hip-hop track comes along that doesn’t just slap through the speakers — it feels like a statement. War Within (Radio Edit), the latest cut from Bosnian-born, New York-raised producer Hadzilla (HZPROD), is one of those. Packing the raw lyrical fire of Flatbush Zombies’ Zombie Juice and the razor-sharp delivery of West Coast heavyweights ShoeGang, this track doesn’t just hit hard — it cuts deep.

“Smash Hits” - Stephanie Happening
Stephanie Happening is not here to play small. With their latest single Smash Hits, the London-based alt-pop disruptor has unleashed a track that feels like both a battle cry and a victory lap — a song that dares you to stand taller, move louder, and take up space unapologetically.

“Underwater City” - Florent C.
Every now and then, an album comes along that feels less like a collection of songs and more like an environment — a place you can step into and get lost in. Belgian artist Florent C.’s new record Underwater City is exactly that kind of project. It’s not just music, it’s an ecosystem.

“The Good Road” - Audren
Some songs arrive like letters from the soul — intimate, vulnerable, yet universal enough to belong to everyone who listens. The Good Road, the latest single from French-born songwriter, novelist, and self-proclaimed “good witch” Audren, is exactly that kind of track. It’s tender and nostalgic, but also powerful in its call to rediscover beauty, solidarity, and trust in a world that feels increasingly fractured.

“Sliding Door” - The Gerry Farrow Band (Feat. Rainbow Frog Biscuits)
Sometimes the best musical pairings aren’t born in boardrooms or label strategy meetings, but in the most unassuming of places — like an open mic night in Loughborough. That’s where the seasoned pros of The Gerry Farrow Band crossed paths with TikTok-era rising star Rainbow Frog Biscuits, and the chemistry was immediate.

“Look Me In the Eye” - Edie Yvonne
There’s something kind of poetic about dropping your boldest track yet on your 17th birthday. Most teenagers are still figuring out who they are, but Edie Yvonne? She’s turning self-doubt and growing pains into anthems, and her latest single Look Me in the Eye is the clearest sign yet that she’s stepping into a whole new lane.

“Flat Circle” - HMRC
There’s nothing polite about HMRC — and that’s exactly what makes them essential. The Newcastle four-piece have been building a reputation as one of the sharpest, most politically biting bands to rise out of the UK’s current chaos, and their latest single, Flat Circle, shows a new side of that rage: the existential one.

“Lost & Found 1981-1985” - Personal Column
There’s a certain kind of magic when music you thought was lost to the passage of time suddenly resurfaces decades later — not as a nostalgia trip, but as a reminder that great songs never really age. That’s exactly the case with Lost & Found 1981–1985, the long-overdue collection from Liverpool’s Personal Column, a band that once seemed on the brink of making it big but ended up slipping through the cracks of the industry machine.

“Who I Am” - Big Rome
One thing you can always expect from Big Rome, is raw honesty — the kind that doesn’t just touch the surface but digs down into the bones. His latest EP, Mentally Disturbed / Scarred 4 Life (out September 11, 2025), is exactly that: a heavy, unflinching look at the scars we carry, the demons we fight, and the resilience it takes to keep standing.