“Blue Tapestry” - VERONNEAU
With their seventh album, VERONNEAU—the transatlantic duo of Québécoise vocalist Lynn Veronneau and British guitarist Ken Avis—step into sacred territory. Blue Tapestry isn’t just a tribute; it’s a love letter to two of the most transformative albums ever recorded, Joni Mitchell’s Blue and Carole King’s Tapestry—records that didn’t just soundtrack a generation, but redefined what songwriting could be.
“Holding Pattern” - Max Macready
“Holding Pattern” feels like a message intercepted from another dimension — a neon-lit fever dream where longing meets circuitry, and emotion hums beneath the static. Max Macready’s latest transmission, with Kurt Precinct handling vocals and guitar, is a slow-burn synthwave vignette that pulses with both retro heart and future tension.
“Sweat Drips” - Paul Louis Villani
Paul Louis Villani doesn’t just make music — he detonates it. With his new single “Sweat Drips,” the Melbourne-based musical maverick throws genre caution to the wind and launches a full-blown groove riot. It’s Funkadelic hip-hop at its most unhinged — a deliriously sweaty mix of brass swagger, elastic basslines, and lyrical chaos.
“The Journey” - Lene
Italian-born, Austin-based Lene isn’t just writing songs — she’s composing emotional vignettes that live somewhere between memory and motion. Her latest single, “The Journey,” feels like a letter to herself, and to anyone who’s ever stood on the edge of something uncertain, equal parts terrified and hopeful.
“Breathe” - Serotone
After turning heads with the snarling grunge energy of their debut “Fool’s Paradise,” Belfast trio Serotone return with a song that trades fury for fragility — without losing any of their bite. Their new single, “Breathe,” arriving October 22, 2025, is a cathartic dive into the emotional aftermath of isolation and internal struggle.
“Come Back”- AUNCE
When you first press play on AUNCE’s new single “Come Back,” you’re not just listening to music — you’re stepping into a living, breathing atmosphere. The track unfolds like a memory suspended in fog; it’s less a song in the traditional sense and more an experience.
“Fear and Control” - NIEVES
There’s something electric about a band’s comeback — especially when it feels earned. After a six-year break, Glasgow’s NIEVES return with “Fear and Control,” a song that channels every drop of pent-up energy, creative hunger, and emotional honesty that’s been simmering beneath the surface since their hiatus.
“Changing Tides” - Pool Club
There are some bands that sound like the moment the sun breaks through the clouds — and Pool Club is absolutely one of them. With their new single “Changing Tides,” the Kent-based quintet deliver a gleaming, feel-good indie pop anthem that manages to be both nostalgic and refreshingly modern.
“Invention” - Pragma Enigma
With “Invention,” Paris-based musician, vocalist, and producer Pragma Enigma doesn’t just release a song — he unveils a blueprint for a new sonic language. This is not your typical single; it’s a manifesto disguised as music. A collision of electronic brutality, trap swagger, and industrial rock theatrics.
“PeachTree” - The Rainy Season
Every so often, a song comes along that feels like the emotional equivalent of finding an old photograph in a drawer you forgot existed. “PeachTree,” the latest single from Tampa-based trio The Rainy Season, is exactly that kind of track — tender, reflective, and drenched in the bittersweet glow of growing up and moving on.
“Breathe For Her” - Mercy Kelly
Originating from Oldham, Mercy Kelly have been quietly building a reputation for emotionally charged, stadium-ready indie that doesn’t chase trends — it bleeds them dry. With echoes of U2’s sweeping emotional landscapes and The Killers’ cinematic urgency, “Breathe For Her” pushes Mercy Kelly into that sweet spot between heartbreak and euphoria.
“Tidal Reflections” - FICMARO
With Tidal Reflections, Toronto-born, Barcelona-based producer FICMARO doesn’t just release a debut LP — he curates an experience. Across thirteen tracks (and a beautifully cut 12-inch vinyl edition), the artist constructs a sonic landscape that drifts effortlessly between organic tech-house grooves, ambient euphoria, and cinematic dreamscapes.