Tag: Single Review

New Audio: Brisbane’s The Valery Trails Share an Anthemic Ode to Nostalgia and Aging

Formed back in 2011, Brisbane-based indie rock outfit The Valery Trails — currently, Andrew Bower (vocals, guitar), Sean Bower (bass), Dan McNaulty (drums) and longtime collaborators Screamfeeder‘s Tim Steward (guitar, vocals) and We All Want To‘s Skye Staniford (vocals) — traces their origins back to when the band’s frontman, Andrew Bower, an expatriate Aussie then residing in Houston, enlisted his brother Sean Bower and Dan McNaulty to start the band.

With the assistance of file-sharing through the internet and some occasional intercontinental travel, the trio develop da set of songs started in Andrew Bower’s home studio into the band’s full-length debut, 2012’s Ghosts and Gravity.

2014’s Buffalo Speedway and 2016’s Chameleon Bones further cemented their melodic and atmospheric rock sound while receiving college and speciality airplay in the States and critical applause from media outlets like PopMatters, The Big Takeover and many others across the globe.

Following Andrew Bower’s return to Brisbane in 2020, the band began their transition to writing in a much more conventional manner, gathering to to record 2022’s The Sky Is Blue with long-time collaborators Steward taking a more active role in the band while Staniford continued to provide backing vocals, as she has since the band’s second album. Radio airplay in several Aussie cities and an east coast tour helped to increase the band’s profile at home, while The Sky Is Blue charted on Stateside college and specialty radio.

The band’s extended lineup gathered last year to work on a set of songs, which would become the band’s forthcoming album, Winter Palace. Slated for a September 12, 2025 release, the Aussie indie rock outfit’s fifth album continues the eclectic approach of its immediate predecessor, with the material seeing the band explore synth-pop stylings, horn-driven retro flavors and some straightforward rock and roll sprinkled among the band’s long-held power pop crunch and jangle.

“Everything Is Temporary” Winter Palace‘s breakneck first single continues a remarkable run of hook-driven, crunchy, 120 Minutes-era MTV alt-rock-meets-Husker Dü -like rock. Thematically, the song leans a bit on familiar nostalgia while also viewing with a healthy and wizened suspicion of too much nostalgia. As LCD Soundsystem‘s James Murphy once sang “I wouldn’t trade one stupid decision for another five minutes of life” and maybe that’s a healthier way of looking back on things.

New Audio: LohArano Shares Bruising “Rodo (The Reign of Outlaws)”

Over the past couple of years of this site’s 15 year history, I’ve managed to spill copious amounts of virtual ink covering Antananarivo, Madagascar-based JOVM mainstays LohArano. Since their formation, the Malagasy metal outfit  — Mahalia Ravoajanahary (vocals, guitar), Michael Raveloson (bass, vocals) and Natiana Randrianasoloson (drums, vocals) — have received attention both nationally and internationally for a unique, boundary pushing sound that features elements of popular and beloved Malagasy musical styles like Tsapiky  and Salegy with heavy metal. 

The Madagascar-based outfit’s sound and approach represents a bold generation of Malagasy youth that still honors, reveres and respects the traditions and practices of their culture and elders, while also being deeply inspired by contemporary, Western genres and styles. 

The JOVM’s latest EP YMAIMA as the band explains is “a mirror. It’s a finger pointed at a truth we’d rather keep quiet.” Thematically and lyrically, the EP’s material takes an unvarnished and unflinchingly honest look at the often brutal reality of their homeland, “which bleeds between muffled cries and complicit silence” they say.

Earlier this month I wrote about “Mpaka Taova (Organ Dealer),” arguably one of the most abrasive, Suicidal Tendencies-meets-Body Count-like tracks that they’ve released to date while retaining the accessible, mosh pit friendliness that they’ve long been known for. The song as the band explains talks about organ dealers who kidnap children. Frequently, these child victims are later found mutated — or never found at all. The song serves as a forceful refusal to forget these victims and cries out for justice for them.

YMAIMA EP‘s latest single “Rodo” is a System of a Down-like ripper full of weird time signature and tempo changes, bruising riffage, thunderous drumming paired with Ravoajanahary punchily delivered shouts and howls. The song as the band explains shines a spotlight on the dahalo (traditionally zebu thieves), who have transformed into more organized and violent groups, quickly become a symbol of the country’s disorder and insecurity, as these groups pillage communities across the island nation. The band mentions that musically, the song is inspired by Kilalaky music and dance, which originated in southwestern Madagascar. The music is frequently played during dahalo celebrations after a successful zebu theft.

They go on to say that the song thematically recounts a day in the life of a fictional dahalo, delving into the mental, spiritual and physical preparation until the moment he and his crew clash with locals and police officers in the village they wanted to pillage. The song — with an almost lived-in accuracy — describes the chaos of these violent clashes, including manhunts across the countryside, members of the crew getting caught and burned alive by villagers and ad desperately hasty retreat into the bush. This leads to a vicious and seemingly endless cycle of vengeance for our song’s narrator.

New Audio: Detroit Punks The Lowcocks Share a Cheeky Cover of Dolly Parton’s “9 to 5”

Founded back in 2017, the Detroit-based punk outfit The Lowcocks have established their own sound while sharing stages with several national touring acts, including The CasualtiesTotal ChaosNekromantixThe Koffin KatsMenstrual TrampsGBHThe Suicide Machines and The Exploited.

The Detroit-based punks latest single is a deliriously fun and cheeky, straightforward bruising cover of Dolly Parton‘s beloved 1980 smash-hit “9 to 5.” If you somehow didn’t know, “9 to 5” is a defiant feminist anthem, capturing the ambition, chutzpah and the bitter frustrations of its narrator/songwriter. But what makes it truly great is that what the song expresses and evokes is something that generations of working women know exactly what Dolly is talking about in the song. And in some small way, The Lowcocks cover feels like a passing of the torch for a younger generation, who will have to maneuver and fight an altogether different yet similar fight.

New Audio: LCD Soundsystem and Tom Sharkett Share a Lovingly Club Friendly Edit of “Home”

Back in 2010, LCD Soundsystem released their critically applauded third album This Is Happening, an album that landed on the Best Of lists of countless publications and blogs across the world.

Tom Sharkett is an acclaimed Manchester, UK-based producer, engineer, remixer, songwriter and sound designer, who has released an array of music that has landed on the UK Album Charts while receiving airplay from BBC Radio 1, BBC 6 Music and KEXP. His work has been featured in publications on both side of the pond, including The Guardian, Stereogum, Loud and Quiet and others. But Sharkett may be best known for being a member of Manchester-based dance punks W.H. Lung and the touring band for Julie Byrne.

Quietly, Sharkett released an edit of This Is Happening album closer “Home,” creating a thumping, deep house-meets –Echoes-era The Rapture/early DFA Records-meets ambient dream pop take on the song — purely out of love for song and for the band. Initially sitting online unnoticed, Sharkett’s edit caught the attention of NTS Radio Breakfast Show DJ Flo Dill, who played the track twice in one show.

Eventually, the Sharkett edit caught the attention of the members of the acclaimed band, worming its way into their hearts. So, they felt there was only one thing they could do — bless it with an official release digitally on all the DSPs and on 12″ vinyl.

New Audio: Flooding Shares Woozy and Bruising “depictions of the female body”

Fronted by Rose Brown, the Lawrence, KS-based indie trio Flooding formed back in 2021. That same year, the trio released self-titled full-length debut, which featured fan favorites “Insure Me, Procure Me” and “Delayed Gratification” and an attention grabbing sound that ranged from whispers and airy guitar riffs to intense lyricism and distorted blasts of noise.

The Kansas trio’s sophomore album, 2023’s Silhouette Machine received praise from Rolling Stone, Treble Zine, New Noise Magazine and others for a heavy soothing and otherworldly sound that brought in pummeling drums and guitars, just when the listener was getting comfortable.

Flooding kicked off the year, opening for Los Angeles-based outfit Cryogeyser‘s national tour. And building upon that momentum, the trio will be releasing the object 1 EP on July 11, 2025. The EP, which will feature the previously released “your silence is my favorite song” reportedly sees the Lawrence-based trio infusing pop-leaning songwriting into their sound, trading spoken word for melodies and thinking like pop stars when cultivating the energy of their live show.

The EP’s latest single “depictions of the female body”  is a bruising and grungy bit of 120 Minutes-era MTV alt rock that delves into the hope and desperation of unreciprocated desire, capturing the woozy and bitter ache of heartsickness in a deeply lived-in fashion.

“Sexual fantasies are a form of hope,” Flooding’s Rose Brown explains. “If you’re ever horribly depressed, you should try having a crush on someone.”

New Audio: Allegories Return with Dreamy and Mournful “DREAMCRUSHER”

Canadian experimental pop outfit Allegories — childhood friends Adam Bentley and Jordan Mitchell — can trace their project’s origins to their members’ penchant for indulging in unconventional musical pursuits. Bentley and Mitchell founded anthemic indie rock outfit The Rest — but after doing that, they happily embraced any opportunity to indulge their more outeé inclinations and desires. 

Back in 2014, Bentley and Mitchell began writing and recording material with no clear destination in mind, dabbling in everything from neoclassical compositions to hip hop. Gathering further inspiration from DJ’ing house and hip-hop nights, the act began to create electronic music that often shifts between the mainstream and underground spectrum. 

Throughout the past decade plus or so, the duo have had extremely busy schedules: Currently, Bentley works behind the scene in the music industry. Mitchell operates a restaurant. And yet, Allegories almost always found a way to creep back into lives — even if only as a private amusement between the pair.

During that same decade or so period, the pair winnowed down 35 song ideas into their nine song album, 2022’s  2022’s Endless. Endless marked their first full-length album in over 14 years. “There’s a moment during the makng of an album, where you don’t know if you’ll finish it,” the duo say.“Endless was riddled with these cynical epiphanies. It’s unavoidable when you’ve spent over half a decade tinkering away. But as we closed in on the finish line, there was a sense that this could be the last work you ever complete. That spurs the process on, giving urgency. If you spend 14 years between albums, you want to make every note count.”

Since the release of Endless, the JOVM mainstays have released a growing collection of standalone singles, including their first cover, their take on Talk Talk’s 1984 smash-hit “It’s My Life,” which was also famously covered by No Doubt back in 2003.

The duo’s latest single “DREAMCRUSHER” a dreamy and ethereal, lullaby of a track that sees the duo meshing elements of ambient electronica, dream pop, shoegaze and experimental pop in a way that’s simultaneously mournful yet contented, anchored around a lived-in, hard-won wisdom. Thematically, the song is reflects on ambition, failure, disillusionment and the inherent hope of creative rebirth, of a new door opening towards something better — or bigger.

Initially conceived as a simple ukulele sketch, “DREAMCRUSHER” took on a life of its own through the duo’s unorthodox creative process. Without hearing any melody or lyrics, Mitchell built an entirely new arrangement, based on Bentley’s initial chord progression. Bentley then responded with a final version that drew from his original version and Mitchell’s atmospheric reimagining.

“I think there’s an almost conflicting nature to the song in both the overall narrative and the sound design,” the duo’s Bentley says, “This song embraces the annihilation of dreams but also the beauty of what grows in their place.”

The song’s title turns out to be a recurring personal moniker that Bentley uses with tongue-in-cheek self-awareness. “I have jokingly referred to myself as the ‘DREAMCRUSHER,’ not because I’m cynical, but because of my own outsized goals and working with others. who also chase wildly ambitious dreams,” he explains. “The song holds both the devastation and the quiet hope that something even more magical might emerge.”

The accompanying visual features the duo performing the song in studio, as reel-to-reel tape machines run.

New Audio: N3WYRKLA Returns with Swaggering and Defiant “Bad Luck”

Philadelphia-born N3WYRKLA (pronounced New York L.A.) is a rising pop artist: “Outside All Night,” her collaboration with Brent Faiyaz and A$AP Rocky earned RIAA Gold Certification and has led to over one million monthly listeners on DSPs.

Earlier this year, the Philadelphia-based phenom opened for FERG on the North American leg of his The Darold Tour. And back in May, she released the lead single from her highly-anticipated full-length debut, “Plastic Cup.” “Plastic Cup” is burning up the charts right now: the track jumped to #15 on the Urban Radio Charts.

Building upon a rapidly growing profile, the Philadelphia-born artist shared her latest single, the Hitmaka-produced “BAD LUCK,” which features her honey-soaked vocal paired with a contemporary retro/old-school soul-inspired production that brings the likes of Monophonics, Bobby Oroza, Daptone Records, Colemine Records and others to mind.

Ironically, the song isn’t a lament on the narrator’s bad luck, whether personally or romantically or on superstitions; but rather, a self-assured side-eye to fuckbois, players, flops, deadbeats that open says that trusting these dudes out there is just going to get you a case of bad luck — and perhaps worse. At its core, it’s a feminist anthem that says “you don’t have to deal with bullshit, ever.”

New Audio: Faetooth Returns with Bruising “White Noise”

Led by Jenna Garcia (vocals, bass), Los Angeles-based outfit Faetooth specializes in a sound that they’ve dubbed “fairy-doom:” a unique and eclectic amalgamation of doom metal paired with vocals that alternate between spellbinding melodies to guttural shrieks and howls. 

Right as last week closed out, the Los Angeles-based outfit announced that their highly-anticipated sophomore album Labyrinthine will be slated for a September 5 release digitally through AWAL and on vinyl and CD by Flenser. The sophomore album will reportedly see the band further establishing their “fairy-doom” sound while embracing a newly softened, more intimate tone, anchored around emotional rawness. Throughout the album, the material touches upon themes of loss, self-pity, personal relationships and more. The inmate balance doesn’t dilute their intensity; rather it reframes it, offering listeners a haunting yet delicate atmosphere, layered with entrancing textures that build up to explosive catharsis. The result is an album that’s a hauntingly visceral and disturbing vision, anchored by deep introspection.

Labyrinthine will feature the previously released, “Death of Day,” a slow-burning and forceful dirge anchored a classic grunge song structure that features swirling shoegazer-like guitar textures, thunderous drumming, enormous power chords and eerie, banshee-like wailing paired with Garcia’s sonorous croon.

While channeling the likes of Tool, JOVM mainstays Slumbering Sun and others, “Death of Day” the song as the band’s Jenna Garcia explains “came to be after reading into the deity, Lilith. I was initially transfixed to the myth of her spawning from the ‘dregs,’ or lowest realm of evil. I perceived that as her coming from the dirt, the earth, and having to confront a life where her very existence is viewed as malevolence, as ugliness. She is cast out into isolation from the moment she came into being. I began to view that as a strong parallel to the existence of queer and trans people in a world that is constantly trying to exterminate and diminish them.”

Faetooth’s frontperson adds that the song’s lyrics “are written as a bit of ode to the Lilith archetype, and simultaneously celebrating and lamenting her forced seclusion from society. The first verse is about her coming into being, how she can only come out at night, and then the second verse is like, yeah, you all hate me, I’m gonna bring all my friends that you also deem as a scourge on society, f*** you.”

The album’s latest single “White Noise” is a bruising ripper, rooted in a palpable and unsettling mix of anguish, despair, loathing and fury that feels both lived in and deeply familiar. The band explains that the song emerged from a diary entry and is a relentless and intense reflection on inner turmoil. We’re often drawn to the familiar, when we don’t quite know why and even when we don’t immediately realize that we’re reaching out for it. And as a result, the song is an emotional upheaval, carrying the sort of harsh and uneasy truths that weigh heavily on one’s heart and soul.

The band’s guitarist Ari May says, “Performing the song always takes me back to a specific place, even if just for a moment.”
 

New Audio: Boris Métreaux Shares Lush “Nena”

Boris Métraux is a Swiss-born, Playa Venao, Panama-based electronic music producer, whose sound and approach sees him drawing from and blending ambient music, tribal house, jazz, electronica and house music.

Back in 2023, Métraux delved into the study of plant frequency waves. These explorations led him to incorporate the cosmic and mind-bending sounds of plants in his music, adding an ethereal dimension to his work.

Métreaux’s latest single “Nena” is a slick blend of Afro house rhythms, twinkling keys and skittering beats serving as a lush bed for soulful vocals. The result is a song that showcases the Swiss-born, Panamanian-based artist’s ability to craft summery, club and lounge friendly material and a remarkably catchy hook.

“The inspiration came from a healing moment — the track tells a story of resilience and inner strength, echoing through tribal percussion and atmospheric synths,” Métreaux explains.

Lyric Video: Velatine Teams Up with Nocturna on Brooding and Cinematic “Till Death We Do Art”

Melbourne-based songwriter and producer Loki Lockwood is the creative mastermind behind the darkwave/goth recording project Velatine, which sees him crafting a unique and fresh take on a familiar and beloved sound. In fact, with Velatine, Lockwood is unafraid to experiment and works with different vocalists while weaving aspects from goth, Darkwave, post-punk and industrial music.

His latest single “Till Death We Do Art” feat. Nocturna is a slow-burning, and brooding bit of goth-tinged post punk which features Nocturna’s Anika-meet-Nico-like delivery paired with layers of eerie synths, bursts of strummed guitar and cinematic strings. “Till Death Do We Art” may arguably be the most cinematic-leaning post punk song I’ve heard in sometime, while showcasing Lockwood’s penchant for catchy and anthemic hooks.

Lockwood explains that “Till Death We Do Art” is for the creatives of the world, focusing on the highs and lows creative endure while following their muses. He adds that the song is dedicated to a Ukrainian painter named Ksenia, who regularly shared Velatine’s music with posts featuring her art on Instagram before the project was on the platform. He got to know her a little through the site, but because he’s an Australian, who is often far from any sort of violent conflict, it was the first time he knew someone living in the middle of war.

“Having that ever present threat as part of your life, disruption to normality, what we take for granted here and the devastation of losing her lover I found her often in my thoughts. If I didn’t see her post, I’d check to see if she was alive.” He adds that song was largely written before all of this but the chorus wasn’t there. One time, he checked in on Ksenia on Instagram and her instagram tag “Till Death We Do Art” jumped out of him. He was convinced that was the missing piece that summed up the emotion of the song. ” I’d read these words before on her page but this time I saw them in a new light, I knew immediately where they also belonged. Everything fell into place and the last lines, “we’re upset by war, and worry for them all” are for her,” he explains.

Lyric Video: Tomás Jensen and Bïa Team up on Flirty and Breezy “Boum Boum Boum”

Tomás Jensen is a true global citizen: The Argentine-born artist has lived in Brazil and France, before settling permanently in Québec. Over the course of a 25-year career, Jensen has released 12 albums either in a band or as solo artist, which have seen him explore his eclectic influences.

Back in the early 2000s, Jensen first became known for being the frontman of Les Faux-Monnayeurs, releasing four albums that he and his band supported with touring extensively across Canada and the European Union. He solo debut, Quelqu’un d’autre won the Songwriter of the Year Award at the 2008 Canadian Folk Music Awards.

Jensen went on to collaborate in a number of projects including the band Hombre, which received nominations for an Association québécoise de l’industrie du disque, du spectacle et de la vidéo (ADISQ) Award and won a Gala Alternatif da la Musique Indépendante du Quèbec (GAMIQ) Best World Music Award album.

In 2015, Jensen returned home to Argentina for the first time in over 20 years and recorded his 2016 effort Retour, which received an ADISQ Award nomination. Documentary filmmaker Martin Bourgault accompanied Jensen on that trip and made a film that was screened at FIFA and other documentary festivals around the globe.

2020’s Les rêves sont faits was the first album in which he was the sole arranger and producer, received a GAMIQ Folk Album of the Year Award, while reflecting both his cultural diversity and artistic freedom.

Since then, he founded Studio La Maison Ronde, where he records, mixes and produces work for several artists. Late last year, he reunited with Les Faux-Monnayeurs on a reunion tour and live album to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the release of Tomás Jensen & Les Faux-Monnayeurs.

Slated for a fall 2025 release, Jensen’s 13th album À l’humain! À la vertu! (To humanity! To virtue!) is an album of original material that sees the Argentine-born, Canadian-based artist collaborating with a collection of supremely talented collaborators on what will be the first album he’ll be releasing on his own label. Jensen explains that the album’s title is derived from the lyrics of the album’s second single “Big Bro,” ” . . .which carries some optimism with it . . . something we all need right now!”

À l’humain! À la vertu!‘s first single “Boum Boum Boum” is a breezy and flirty Bossa nova duet that features Brazilian Canadian artist Bïa. Anchored around Bossa nova’s famous, gently swaying rhythms and a gorgeous, jazzy arrangement featuring strummed acoustic guitar and twinkling piano, “Boum Boum Boum” imagines a scenario in which for the song’s romantic couple, samba is more important than anything else. Certainly in parts of South America, that’s a fact.

New Audio: Beth Gladden Shares Rousingly Anthemic “Subdued Madness”

Beth Gladen is a Cleveland-born, Miami-based singer/songwriter, musician, producer and audio engineer, who works and records out of her Miami-based studio, Sweet Spot Recording.

Following on the heels of “Re-birth,” Gladen’s latest single “Subdued Madness” is a decided change in sonic direction. “Subdued Madness” is a hard-charging and anthemic, 1990s grunge/120 Minutes MTV-era rocker, featuring fuzzy power chords, woozy and eerie bursts of keys thunderous drumming, a supple bass line and some enormous, arena rock friendly hooks and choruses paired with Gladen’s impassioned shouts and crooning. Play loud, reminisce about the 90s if you were around then and rock out.

New Audio: Dublin’s Galia Arad Shares Brooding and Intimate “This Close”

Galia Arad is an emerging Dublin-based singer/songwriter, who recently signed Dublin-based artist development label Rubarb Music. Arad’s Rubarb Music debut, the self-penned and self-produced “This Close” is anchored around strummed and plucked acoustic guitar, bursts of twinkling synths and skittering beats.

The broodingly intimate track is a a bit of a change in sonic direction for Arad, as the track sees her blending her long-held Americana-inspired songwriting with an alt-pop sensibility: Strummed and plucked, Country Western-styled guitar, bursts of twinkling synths and skittering beats create a broodingly intimate and lush bed for the Irish artist’s breathy cooing.

“This Close” showcases an artist, who can pair heartfelt, seemingly lived-in lyrics with a remarkably catchy hooks. Arad explains that “This Close explores the tension between craving and control- using vulnerability as a tool to capture after an endless game of chase. The production is inspired by that push/pull, and of course my own desires to kick off my pop girlie era.”

New Audio: rhythmspitter Shares Dreamily Hypnotic “Eastern Advance”

Arguably better known for playing bass in Red Thread Theory, Michael Mosley is a San Francisco-based musician, composer, producer and creative mastermind behind rhythmspltter. With rhythmspitter, Mosley explores instrumental indie rock and lo-fi beat-driven material that’s influenced from an eclectic array of sources, including Bill Laswell’Material and Jah Wobble‘s Invaders of the Heart. 

Each rhythmspitter composition sees Mosley weaving together a rich tapestry of instruments and rhythms from across the world. Each composition is meticulously crafted to resonate with listeners while providing a chill and captivating vibe that’s entrancing. With rhythmspitter, Mosley seeks to break down barriers and introduce audiences to a world of sonic exploration that they may not have encountered before — but he also hopes to open minds to the beauty of different styles and instruments.

Mosely’s latest rhythmspitter EP, The Antique Land is inspired by Alexander the Great and Percy Bysshe Shelley’s “Ozymandias.” “Eastern Advance,” the EP’s third and latest single is a percussive and hypnotic track featuring shimmering Middle Eastern-styled instrumentation and a hauntingly eerie vocal sample. The result is a composition that recalls the hypnotic and dreamy beauty of gnawa — but while possessing a modern, almost hip-hop like swagger.

New Audio: Bedolina Shares Rousingly Anthemic “We Are the Clock Ourselves Again”

Ken Gould is a Philadelphia-based singer/songwriter, musician, frontman and creative mastermind behind the emerging, experimental rock project Bedolina. The project’s name is derived from the Bedolina Map, a rock in the Italian Alps engraved with a complex topographical map and petroglyphs of people and animals amidst villages and roads, created between 1000 and 200 BC.

The Philadelphia-based band can trace its origins back to just before COVID-19 lockdowns: Gould brought four songs to Miner Street Recording‘s Brian McTear (Kurt Vile, Sharon van Etten) and Matt Poirier. When pandemic lockdowns caused the world to grind to a halt, Gould was allowed the opportunity to create a new, diverse set of introspective songs.

Tour cancellations allowed The War on Drugs‘ Charlie Hall (drums) and Robbie Bennet (drums), along with Dr. Dog‘s Frank McElroy to participate in the recording sessions for the material that would eventually comprise the band’s recently released sophomore album Sun and Flamingoes.

Sun and Flamingoes touches upon themes of surrealism, fascist dystopia and the unsettling nature of the modern world, while socially, the album’s material sees Gould and company establishing a sound that weaves together elements of experimental electronica, indie rock and classic pop among others.

The sophomore EP’s first single “We Are the Clock Ourselves Again” is a woozy rock anthem that showcases Gould’s unerring knack for pairing rousing and remarkably catch hooks and choruses with a relentless, driving rhythm and Dire Straits-like guitars. Featuring The War On Drugs’ Robbie Bennett (keys) and Charlie Hall (drums), “We Are the Clock Ourselves Again” as Gould explains is about “perceiving life through your innate sense of right and wrong.” Highlighting self-reliance, the song encourages those listening to march to the beat of their own “clock.”