Tag: Video Review

New Video: Fotoform Shares Lush and Woozy “Grief is a Garden”

Deriving their name from a mid-century, avant-garde photography movement, Seattle-based post punk outfit Fotoform — longtime collaborators and married couple Kim House (bass, vocals, synths) and Geoffrey Cox (guitar), along with  Death Cab for Cutie‘s and The Long Winters‘ Michael Schorr (drums) — can trace their origins back to the formation of a previous project,  the goth-adjacent dream pop act C’est la Mort, which formed shortly after House and Cox married. 

Specializing in what they dubbed “pointy-shoegaze,” C’est la Mort released their full-length debut through their own Dismal Nitch label, as well as various compilation tracks, including a limited split 7 inch with Stars for American Laundromat‘s The Smiths‘ tribute Please PleasPlease. After a series of lineup changes, House and Cox re-emerged as Fotoform in late 2016. 

House and Cox released their Fotoform self-titled debut in 2017. Supported with tours of the West Coast and Europe, the album received airplay and praise both locally and nationally: Album single “I Know You’re Charming” was featured as a KEXP Song of The Day. The self-titled album was voted as one of KEXP Listeners’ Top 90.3 Albums of 2017 and it landed on several year-end lists, including The Big Takeover and Part-Time Punks

Building upon a growing profile, the band followed up with 2018’s Part-Time Punks EP, which was selected as one of The Big Takeover’s EPs of 2018. Schorr joined the band back in 2019 and by the following year, they released two benefit singles as a newly minted trio “Yves Klein Blue,” which was recored for voter outreach and the Christmas-themed “They Say It’s Always Lonely” to benefit local food banks. Both singles found the trio expanding upon their sound with the addition of synths. 

In early 2020, the trio went into the studio with Evan Foster to record the material for their sophomore album, Horizons. Recording sessions were interrupted as a result of COVID-19 pandemic-enforced quarantines and restrictions and continued a year later with Foster and Matt Bayles recording drum parts. The album saw the band pivoting from the towering wall of guitars-driven sound of their previously released work and towards a much more nuanced sound that drew equally from shoegaze, dream pop and post-punk with the band continuing to pair synths with layers of guitars and driving bass lines.

The Seattle-based trio’s third album Grief is a Garden (Forever in Bloom) is slated for an April 18, 2025 release. The album reportedly sees the band’s evolving yet again, with the band further refining their long-held crystalline sound into a lush and introspective soundscape that blends the emotional weight of post-punk with the ethereal beauty of shoegaze with the album’s material increasingly drawing from classic 4AD heyday artists like This Moral Coil, Pale Saints and Lush.

The album’s material thematically touches upon loss, change, heartache, pain and transformation, while tackling the big existential questions. The album, also features some of the band’s most vulnerable and disarmingly honest lyrics of their growing catalog.

Album title track “Grief is a Garden,’ is a brooding slow-burning tune anchored around shimmering and reverb-drenched guitars, Kim House’s yearning and ethereal delivery paired with a soaring hook and chorus. Sounding a bit like Garlands-era Cocteau Twins and 4AD Records classic heyday period, “Grief is a Garden” sees the band thematically into delving deeply into personal themes of grief, loss, and in time, gradual acceptance.

“The title track to our upcoming album, ‘Grief is a Garden’ reflects on the enduring, ever-evolving nature of grief and how it changes over time,” Fotoform’s Kim House explains. “Grief blooms, decays and nourishes itself, embodying love, beauty, pain and transformation. As we move through life, we accumulate grief, and the song contemplates the evolving nature of our relationship to loss and love, as grief becomes a part of us, forever changing us and informing our new selves as we continue with life after loss.

“My brother Jeff passed away suddenly and unexpectedly at the end of February, right after we released our first single. I am still trying to absorb the devastating reality that he is gone. I never could have imagined I would lose another brother just as we are starting to release songs off our album, which is centered around grief, loss, resilience and healing. The lyric ‘Waves keep crashing, unforeseen, losing someone is never what it seems‘ has been swirling around me as I feel blindsided by the loss of my brother. We’d been planning on talking about grief with the new record, but it’s another thing to suddenly find yourself newly grieving again. 

“The longing for answers to life’s unknowable questions is palpable throughout this song, as I’ve wrestled with existential doubts since childhood, questioning everything from the stories I was raised with to the mysteries of life and death itself. ‘Into the ether, we all call out‘ is a reference to the unknowable place we enter when we die – an acknowledgement and a cry for connection.

Loved ones who touch our souls meld with our spirit and never leave us. Tethers to those we’ve lost surround us when we open our hearts. We often feel these connections after we lose someone: a certain song comes on the radio or a shared symbol appears at the most poignant time. Heightened awareness of these synchronicities tethers us to those we’ve lost.

“Grief, so deeply personal yet also universal, is hanging heavy for so many of us these days. We all find ourselves in mourning, whether for loved ones, the erosion of societal values, social injustice, dismantling of democracy, upheaval from natural disasters and the intensifying climate crisis, loss of relationships, former versions of ourselves after injury and disability and anticipatory grief of what’s to come – the list is endless.

Creating this album was a ritual in reflecting on grief, sitting with it, metabolizing, and letting it sink into all the cracks and crevices, fully absorbing grief to understand – and eventually release – some of its tight hold / energy. As I return to this familiar and tender state of fresh sorrow and loss, I take comfort in the knowledge that with time, grief will soften around the edges and the warmth of love will reclaim its position in the foreground.”

Directed by Erik Foster, the accompanying video for “Grief is a Garden” is a lush and woozy fever dream shot in a verdant garden that would have been perfect in an Edgar Allan Poe short story or in a Mary Shelley novel.

New Video: Pelican Shares Swaggering and Expansive “Indelible”

Flickering Resonance is the Chicago-based outfit Pelican‘s first full-length album in six years. Slated for a May 16, 2025 release through Run for Cover, the album sees the return of founding guitarist Laurent Schroeder-Lebec, who makes his first appearance on a Pelican album since 2009’s What We All Come To Need.

The forthcoming eight-song album also reportedly taps into the spirit of the band’s formative era when Schroder-Lebec along with Trevor Shelley de Brauw (guitar) and siblings Bryan (bass) and Larry Herweg (drums) played shows during the heyday of Chicago’s all-ages club Fireside Bowl.

Fireside Bowl’s booking would often result in post-hardcore, space rock, indie, metal and emo bands sharing bills, which also unwittingly provided a vast array of influences for the then-young band. “A lot of people didn’t hear it at first,” says Schroeder-Lebec of the band’s roots in a panoply of punk-related subgenres. “I was like, well, I guess the metal world is where we fit. But now we’re more willing to acknowledge all the suits we’re wearing.”

Recorded by longtime collaborator Sanford ParkerFlickering Resonance sees the band’s long-known thick sonic backbone remaining intact, but while demonstrating a more humanistic side for the band. 

“When Laurent left and we were able to carry it through, there became a real sense of gratitude for the fact we still have this artistic outlet and a community of people who want to support it,” the band’s Shelley de Brauw says of Schroeder-Lebec’s ten year sabbatical from the group. Fittingly, that feeling of deep, grounded appreciation doesn’t just reside within the band’s members, it’s expressed on every track of the album. 

Last month, I wrote about “Cascading Crescent,” a forceful, cinematic yet soulful ripper that recalls The Sword and others, while anchored around some scorching riffage and thunderous drumming. 

“Indelible,” Flickering Resonance‘s latest single continues a run of expansive, cinematic rippers that seemingly draws from desert and stoner rock, psych rock, Hawkwind and others, anchored around forcefully scorching and swaggering riffage paired with thunderous drumming and big hooks and choruses.

Much like its predecessor, “Indelible” is accompanying with a mind-bending psychedelic visual by multidisciplinary artist Joshua Ford that features geometric shapes and seemingly supernatural and natural phenomena.

New Video: Night Beats Shares Slinky “Behind The Green Door”

As the creative mastermind of Night Beats, Texas-born Danny Lee Blackwell has spent the past 15 years exploring a nexus of vintage rhythm and blues, after-midnight soul and sun-scorched psychedelia.

Slated for an April 11, 2025 release through Suicide Squeeze, the “Behind The Green Door”/”Behind The Green Door (Rah John Version)” 7″ sees Blackwell presenting two markedly different renditions of “Behind The Green Door.” The A-side single “Behind The Green Door” is a slinky, late night psych soul/psych blues number that sounds like the soundtrack to dimly lit, smokey bars and dance halls filled with drunken revelers swaying to the beat in unison; sultry, late night drives in which you’re hypnotized by brush and trees and white lines on hot blacktop, lost in thought or memory.

“This song started as a lone star instrumental, something I pieced together in my studio in 2024,” Blackwell explains. “I imagined dusty roads and dimly lit dance halls. I wanted the guitars to shimmer like heat waves on an openroad. The rhythm to pull like footsteps across a wooden floor, soaked in smoke and neon. The lyrics followed, drawn from past and present—unwavering love, transcendence. The ‘green door’ is that threshold between devotion and disillusionment. The story lives not just in the words, but in the tones and textures, if uncovered.”

Directed by Blackwell, the moody and hallucinatory accompanying video for “Behind The Green Door” is heavily inspired by giallo films.

New Video: Welsh Artist Mali Hâf Shares Boldly Feminist “HWFM”

With the release of her debut EP, 2023’s Jig-So, 24 year-old Cardiff, Wales, UK-based Celtic Soul singer/songwriter Mali Hâf quickly established a bold and remarkably modern yet anachronistic sound that sees her pairing traditional Welsh folk melodies with experimental electronic production. The result is an innovative approach on what contemporary Welsh music could be and sound like this century.

The rising Welsh artist is currently working on her highly-anticipated full-length debut, which is slated for an early 2026 release. The forthcoming album’s first single “HWFM,” is short for “Hen Wlad Mamau,” a boldly feminist reimagining of the Welsh National Anthem “Hen Wlad Fy Nhadhau” (Old Land of My Fathers).”

The song sees the Welsh artist flipping the song’s original perspective to celebrate and honor the contributions of women to the country’s history and culture, actively reframing Wales as the “Old Land of My Mothers.” Anchored around a hook-driven and brooding, Portishead meets Paramore-like production, “HWFM” sees the Welsh-based artist adopting a playfully cheeky and defiantly in-your-face delivery.

But underneath the cheekiness, Hâf expresses a deep, heartfelt longing for Wales — and all nations — to be places of true equality, to be safe havens for women and nurturing spaces for everyone. The song also challenges listeners to think beyond traditional gender roles and stereotypes, openly calling for empathy, care and compassion as a nation’s defining values.

“I wrote this song out of frustration – seeing women still unsafe inside and outside their homes, hearing the same stories about abusive behaviour on the news, and remembering my own experiences. These are highly painful personal experiences where the hurt will last a long time but now is not the time to mention details,” the Welsh artist says.

 “Wales may be small, but why can’t we lead the way?” She continues. “This song really isn’t just about women; it’s about creating a Wales where everyone, all genders and LGBTQ can feel emotionally and physically safe to be themselves. It’s cheeky and playful, with an unapologetic attitude and grit, but mainly Hopeful. I love Wales, our anthem, and our traditions, but it doesn’t help to sugarcoat things. So parts of the anthem, Land of my Fathers are name checked in the song.  If we call ourselves a land of poets, singers, and creatives, are we really listening to all the voices? Let’s ride the wave, the wave of change where diversity is welcomed and room is made for all, and make sure we are doing what ‘officially’ we say we’re doing. It should be obvious to all that respecting diversity and women’s rights are under real threat right now in most countries on this planet – not just the obvious example of the USA. Change starts somewhere – why not here in this country that we are so proud of”. 

Directed by Trigger Happy, the accompanying video features Mali Hâf as a mischievous and rebellious Harley Quinn-like character with her backing band. It captures the cheekiness of the song, as well as the bond she has with her band.

New Video: Bedridden Shares Roaring “Chainsaw”

Chicago-born, Brooklyn-based singer/songwriter and musician Jack Riley can trace the origins of his music career to when he was five and making music on a thrift-store emblazoned with Kurt Cobain‘s name. Riley moved to New Orleans for college, […]

New Video: Anika Shares Unflinchingly Honest “Walk Away”

Acclaimed British-born, Berlin-based singer/songwriter and musician Annika Henderson, best known as Anika will be releasing her fourth album Abyss through Sacred Bones on April 4, 2025. 

Abyss was born out of the frustration, anger and confusion Henderson feels from existing in our contemporary world. Reportedly much heavier than 2021’s Change, the 10-song album is raw, urgent and fueled by strong emotions, the album’s material takes the acclaimed British-born, Berlin-based artist on a new sonic journey. 

The forthcoming album was recorded live to tape at Berlin’s legendary Hansa Studios. Recording live and with minimal overdubs was an important decision, Henderson stresses, in order to capture the raw immediacy of the album. Much like previously released material, she wrote the songs herself before fleshing them out with Exploded View‘s Martin Thulin, and then assembled a live band to join the pair in the studio that included Andrea Belfi (drums), Mueran Humanos‘ Tomas Nochteff (bass) and The Pleasure Majenta‘s Lawrence Goodwin (guitar). Studio engineering was done by Nanni Johansson and Frida Claeson Johansson. “I always work with people I respect and admire,” Henderson says. “It’s very genuine in that way.” 

The acclaimed British-born, Berlin-based artist consciously sought to make an album that was inherently physical — one that would take the listener out of their heads and back into their body. The physicality of the album and its material is further emphasized by its album cover, which features androgynous bodies from a drawing by a teenage friend of Anika’s. Fittingly, teenage angst plays a part in the album. “These days it feels like you have to have very catered opinions – like language has gone out the window,” Henderson says. “It makes you feel very much like a restricted child again.” 

With Abyss, the acclaimed British-born, Berlin-based artist was determined to break free from holding back genuine emotions — even if they might seem uncomfortable or too much. “It’s like I’m doing all the things that I never allowed myself to do,” she says. Anika hopes this pure emotion will position the listener to fully immerse themselves in the album. “There needs to be room for people to put themselves in this album, and put their own narratives on it,” she says. “This is a space for you.”

“There’s so much going on in the world, and you have to sit there and watch it through a screen that you’ve allowed into your home, like a vampire who had been preying at your door, then immediately digest it, have an opinion, and publicly comment on it,” Henderson continues. “The state of the world just feels like an abyss right now.” With this new album, she wants to create a place where people can feel safe to be themselves, and to unite in their diversity. “Abyss is like a call to action,” she says. “To come and figure it out together.”

Last month, I wrote about Abyss‘ lead single and album opening track “Hearsay,” a gritty Joy Division– meets-PJ Harvey-like tune, anchored around an angular and driving bass line, stuttering four-on-the-floor and slashing guitars paired with Henderson’s melodic, Nico-like croon. The song hones in on the extreme divisions between the left and right in contemporary society with Anika explaining that “this song is about media moguls – about the power of the media, whether social, tv or beyond – we are as much under its spell as we ever were and some nasties are exploiting it for their own gains. Parasites feeding off the blood of the public — PJ Harvey inspired for sure.” 

Abyss‘ second and latest single “Walk Away” is a surprisingly upbeat 90s alt rock-influenced track that sounds a bit like a synthesis of Stories from the City, Stories from the Sea-era PJ Harvey and the likes of Hole/Courtney Love paired with the most blatant and unflinchingly honest lyrics of the British-born, German-based artist’s career. The song reveals an artist, who is no longer concerned with how others may think or feel about what she feels she has to say. It’s zero-fucks mode, informed by a world that’s gone to completely to hell anyway.

“This song is saying all the things I want to say but am too scared to say or that society doesn’t accept me to say. It is dealing with mental health – the state of poor mental health in these fucked up, divided, isolated, social media, war, pest, rise of the right times,” Anika explains. “It is the deconstruction of the feminine – of topics considered to be private realm.”

Henderson cites “the reckless nature of 90s/2000s Hole/Courtney Love records — of not giving a shit — telling it how it is, not scared to offend, not scared to be cancelled. We have also lost the space for healthy debate, for difference of opinion, shutting down those we don’t agree with, removing them from our social networks.”

Directed by Laura Martinova, the accompanying video was shot in and around a former brothel in Berlin and “plays with the socially constructed ideas of femininity, of sexuality, of sexual restriction and confronts them,” Henderson explains. “The character is quite sufficient by herself, sexually and socially liberated – and also a bit of a mess, destroying the prim and proper idea of how a good wifey should be. She is a hedonist, she lets herself go, she shows anger, she shows being drunk, she seems to enjoy dusting the pictures of the naked ladies very much, she is independent and breaking out of all the bars imposed by the patriarchy. The guy in the video never finds her, never even gets close, doesn’t in the slightest disrupt her life, he continues to look but she seems to always be a step ahead.”

New Video: Dutch Mustard Shares Hazy and Vulnerable “Dreaming”

Dutch-born, London-based artist Sarah-Jayne “SJ” Riedel is the creative mastermind behind the rising indie recording project Dutch Mustard. With Dutch Mustard, Riedel blends ethereal dream pop, 90s alt-rock with shoegaze touches to create a soundscape that features painterly and swirling guitar textures while the Dutch-born artist’s vocals drift between a near whisper and yearning, heavenly arching shouts. 

Riedel and Dutch Mustard exploded into the British scene with the release of 2022’s debut EP An Interpretation of Depersonalisation, an effort that was featured by the BBC while receiving airplay on BBC Radio 1’s Future Artists with Jack Saunders and a co-sign from the legendary Iggy Pop.

2023’s sophomore EP, Beauty received airplay from BBC Radio 6’s Lauren Laverne and co-signs from Don Letts and Amy Lamé. Adding to a growing profile, The IndependentThe Line of Best FitClashDork and Notion have all covered her — and The Grammy Awards selected her a one of 6 Female Fronted Acts Reviving Rock, along with Wet Leg

Anchored around swirling guitar textures, propulsive and thunderous drumming SJ’s latest Dutch Mustard single, the hazy “Dreaming” not just showcases the rising Dutch-born, London-based artist’s gorgeous vocals, but reveals a songwriter with an unerring knack for pairing earnest, seemingly lived-in songwriting with catchy, rousingly anthemic hooks while subtly pushing the boundaries of shoegaze in new directions.

“’Dreaming’ captures that strange grey area at the start of a relationship—when you’re unsure if it’s real or just a dream,” SJ explains. “It’s about a rare, true connection and the vulnerability of opening yourself up, letting someone in, and wondering if they’ll meet you in the same world.”

Directed by Josiah Newbolt, the accompanying video for “Dreaming” is a hazily shot fever dream that shows the Dutch Mustard mastermind expressively dancing through screens in a moody lit room, a forest and elsewhere, which further emphasizes the vulnerability at the heart of the song.

New Video: DG Solaris Shares Warm and Heartfelt “I Believe in You”

London-based singer/songwriter and guitarist Danny Green’s career started in earnest as the frontman of acclaimed British folk pop act Laish. During his time with Laish, Green wrote and recorded four critically applauded albums, which were supported by extensive touring across the UK, the European Union and the States.

In 2019, Green went through a series of major life changes: That March, he met Leanna Green — and by the end of the year, they got married. For their honeymoon, the Greens decided to spend six months traveling across South America with a simple recording setup that they carried with them in a backpack. During that trip, the couple won dup and recording a series of demos that would eventually become the earliest DG Solaris songs. “In between swimming with sea-lions, exploring sacred plant medicines and climbing mountains, we had been searching for beautiful spaces to set up our backpack studio,” the Greens explained in press notes. “All of our recordings feature the sounds of birds, cicadas and crickets.”

Returning home to London after their honeymoon, Danny and Leanna recruited Tom Chadd, Matt Canty and Matt Hardy to help flesh out the material they demoed during their honeymoon. The end result was 2020’s full-length debut Spirit Glow, which drew from and meshed elements of 70s psych pop, synth pop, krautrock and prog rock in a unique and playful fashion — with the album’s material written as a textural journey through emotional realms. “We wanted to explore the idea of two voices, two spirits, two creative minds and see where this dynamic could take us,” DG Solaris’ Leanna Green says in press notes. Danny Green adds, “It has been an incredibly inspiring trip. We came back with over forty songs and it has been a challenge to chose our favourites for this first album.”

Green spent between 2021-2022 or so, collaborating with Somerset, UK-born, London-based singer/songwriter  Jeremy Tuplin. The pair’s collaboration can trace their origins through some unusual circumstances: Although Green and Tuplin have been writing and recording albums over the course of the past decade, they’ve only been vaguely aware of each other’s existence. One night in Peru, following an intense shamanic ceremony, Green had a vivid dream that he and Tuplin were floating high above the ocean. The next morning, Green contacted Tuplin to share his strange, astral encounter. The pair began a correspondence, which lead to their first EP together, Crashing In The Waves

Released earlier this year, “I Believe in You” sees Green’s warm, sonorous delivery with a lush, unhurried arrangement of strummed acoustic guitar, a regal horn solo and boy-girl harmonies for the song’s hook and chorus. But at its core, “I Believe in You,” is both a sweet, old-timey declaration of enduring love and devotion and a gentle, heartwarming recognition of self-acceptance of your foibles and of those whom you love, all while offering support when you might need it the most. And it’s done in a way that will remind some of The Beatles “When I’m 64,” with the same playfully bittersweet acknowledgement of aging.

The accompanying video features home footage of Danny Green, Leanna Green and their adorable family in their daily life both at home, going on hikes and what not, the inevitable leak at home, the family cat, Green performing live and recording sessions with fellow folkies Beth Rowley, Rachael Dadd and The Gentle Good.

New Video: France’s The Flying Bones Shares a Bruising Ripper

The Flying Bones — Fabien Joffard (drums, vocals) and Thibault Talmont (guitar, vocals) — are a St. Malo, France-based garage rock duo, whose work draws from and seamlessly meshes several influences including Thee Oh Sees, Pneu and Francky Goes To Pointe-à-Pitre among others.

Equipped with just drums, guitar, some effects pedals, guitar and bass amps and two microphones for vocals, the duo pairs the wildness of garage punk with live looping of guitar and other instruments when necessary to create a sound that can easily vacillating between fast and fierce to trance-inducing and contemplative within a musical phrase.

The French duo spent several years refining their live show and they recently managed to compile the best tracks from their garage punk and math fuzz periods into a collection of nine muscular and abrasive tracks — the pair’s forthcoming album Who Are The Flying Bones.

Who Are The Flying Bones‘ latest single “Muscles” is a bruising and forceful ripper that brings DEVO, Frankie and the Witch Fingers, The Oh Sees and even Cinemechanica to mind while displaying the duo’s remarkable musicianship and penchants for motorik-lke groove paired with punchily delivered vocals.

Directed by Thibault Talmont, the accompanying video follows Arthur Boury, a nerdy and nebbishy sort of guy, desperate to turn into a muscle man through weights, exercise, powders and the like — until his dopplegänger shows up to wreck havoc.

New Video: Miki Berenyi Trio Shares Dance Floor Friendly “Big I Am”

Miki Berenyi Trio features an acclaimed and accomplished group of artists:

  • Miki Berenyi (vocals/ guitar), a founding member, frontperson and rhythm guitarist of acclaimed and iconic shoegazer outfit Lush — and the founder and frontperson of acclaimed outfit Piroshka
  • Kevin “Moose” McKillop (guitar), a founding member of acclaimed shoegazers Moose, Berenyi’s spouse and Piroshka bandmate 
  • Oliver Cherer (bass)

The band is named after its lead singer — a direct way to convey the presence of former Lush frontperson Miki Berenyi, one of the most beloved figures and recognizable faces of 1990s alternative rock and shoeegaze. Their highly-anticipated full-length debut, Tripla derives it name from the Hungarian word for “triple” acknowledging that the band’s songwriting is entirely a three-way collaboration.

Slated for an April 4, 2025 release through Bella Union, the trio’s debut album, is reportedly a landmark album for the acclaimed trio that sees the trio crafting a rich and lushly layered, imaginative and uniquely slanted take on dream pop that features an often euphoric and occasionally melancholic mix of guitars and electronics paired with Berenyi’s imitable vocal and a worldview that vacillates between profound, yearning and abrasive — perhaps from lived-in experience and wisdom.

Interestingly, despite the album’s sophisticated sound, the trio have done so with a focus on the basics, not only recording at home, but driving around in a car packed with their gear, loading in and out of venues themselves — much like in the old days. “There is something very ‘grass roots’ about what we’re doing,” Miki Berenyi Trio’s Miki Berenyi says.  “There’s no point following the ‘announce the album, then tour, then record the next album’ route – we just want to wring as much enjoyment out of this as we can, and hope that it resonates somewhere!”

Tripla‘s latest single “Big I Am” sees the trio pairing dance floor New Wave-meets-electro pop beats, shoegazer textures and a slick motorik groove but the song eviscerates the pretend alpha/macho aggression of social media creeps like Andrew Tate and others, revealing that they’re insecure, frightened buffoons.

“I’ve witnessed 50+ years of the trends in masculinity and frankly, nothing much changes – as ever, there are good men and there are shit men, and there are boys who can be misguided but easily mature into the best of their sex,” Miki Berenyi says. “But this latest incarnation of ‘winning’ the sex war is a laughably infantile and willfully regressive new low.”

Directed by Sébastien Faits-Divers, the accompanying video was filmed at the Consortium Museum (Contemporary Art Center) in Dijon, France, in one of the Isabella Ducrot “Profusione” exhibition rooms, and features the band performing the song and includes some trippy fish-eye lens shots.

New Video: Andy Korg Shares Cinematic Yet intimate “Echoes of Yesterday”

Jürgen Oman, a.k.a. Andy Korg is an Austrian electronic music producer and artist, who made a name for himself his homeland’s and the international house and pop scene as a member of A.G Trio and as the co-founder of Ages.

Alongside his bandmates Roland von der Aist and AKA Tell, A.G. Trio landed a number one hit on Austrian Radio FM4. The band was named Soundpark Act of the Year and received three Amadeus Music Award nominations. The trio also landed several tracks on international dance charts. Adding to a growing profile, the trio supported their material with international tours between Mexico and South Korea. But after some time, the trio went through a massive change in sonic direction that necessitated a rebrand.

As Ages, the trio of Oman/Korg, von der Aist and AKA Tell released the critically applauded Roots. But when they artistic paths diverged, the trio went on hiatus.

After a several year hiatus, Oman felt the itch to create again. “The most important thing for me is that I‘m enjoying producing again,” he says. This time with new energy and a fresh approach, Oman is stepping out into the spotlight as a solo artist, who refuses to be pigeonholed into a specific genre or style.

Oman’s latest Andy Korg single “Echoes of Yesterday” is dreamy and meditative track that to my ears sounds a bit like a synthesis of Pavo Pavo and Depeche Mode — and in some way as though it could have been released sometime in 1983. The track is anchored around a lush production that pairs layers of glistening synth pulse, skittering beats, some remarkably catchy hooks paired with a dreamy falsetto, creating a song that’s both cinematic and intimate.

As Oman explains, the song “is a meditation on memory, time and the fleeting nature of moments.” Throughout the lines between dreams, reality, the past and the future intertwine and blur creating a sense of experiencing a vivid yet half-remembered dream.

The accompanying video follows a beautiful Black man as he heads to the dance studio where he elegantly dances to the song.

New Video: MAGON Returns with Trippy Yet Introspective “Outer Darkness”

Wildly prolific Israeli-born, Costa Rican-based singer/songwriter, musician and JOVM mainstay MAGON will be releasing his 11th album Tales of a Mountain Child in March.

Earlier this year, I wrote about the album’s first single, album title track “Tales of a Mountain Child,” a track that possesses the same sort of freewheeling, restless nature reminiscent of early Bob DylanHarvest-era Neil Young and Inner Journey Out-era Psychic Ills. While continuing upon the JOVM’s mainstay reputation for his uncanny knack for catchy hooks, the song captures a familiar feeling for me — the seemingly irresistible push and pull of a life on the road. 

Tales of a Mountain Child‘s second and latest single “Outer Darkness” continues a run of material that’s seemingly indebted to 60s psych rock and 70s album rock, with a dreamy yet introspective air. The result is a song that evokes nostalgia while anchored around a modern sensibility.

The accompanying video features footage from Len Lye’s 1946 animated film Rainbow Dance, further emphasizing the dreamy, psilocybin-like vibe of the song.

New Video: Brighton’s Slung Shares Brooding “Collider”

Brighton, UK-based outfit Slung was initially the brainchild of its founding member and Small Pond Records label head Vlad Matveikov (bass) with the band actually being some time in the making: Mateikov randomly met Ali Johnson (guitar) at an Australian campground back in 2009. He fell in love with Katie Oldham (vocals) during COVID-19 related lockdowns. He had been familiar with drummer Ravi Martin through his work with his previous band, which he heard demos through his role with Small Pond.

But the actual genesis of Slung began when Mateikov’s previous band InTechnicolour broke up, and he began formulating new musical ideas without knowing where exactly they would lead him. Matveikov started out working with a series of like-minded vocalists including Sugar Horse‘s Ash Tubb, El Moono‘s Zac Jackson, Projector‘s Lucy Sheehan, CTRL DRP‘s Annie Dorret and Sick Joy’s Michael Barton before Oldham joined.

According to the band, bringing Oldham was its own journey. “First thing you need to know is that Vlad is an absolute machine,” Katie Oldham says matter-of-factly. “He has creativity, passion and drive like nothing else, and an ability to ‘get shit done’ that is second to none. He approached me about two years ago with these demos to see if I wanted to work with him as a vocalist, and maybe try turning them into a band. I *totally* bitched out,” she admits, laughing. “My previous band (Sit Down) had only very recently fallen apart and my confidence was in the gutter – I just didn’t feel ready. But immediately from working with him (on just one track to begin with), I felt incredibly reassured and encouraged by him, and it was such a different songwriting experience than I’d had before. After about a year of convincing and with Vlad having successfully recruited Ali and Ravi, I finally took the plunge and joined.” 

Last year, the Brighton-based outfit released their first two singles, which captured the attention of folks across the music industry and the internet. But before that, they earned fans the old fashioned way — hitting the road before they officially released a note of music. Building upon the growing buzz surrounding the band, the Brighton-based band’s highly-anticipated full-length debut In Ways is slated for a May 2, 2025 release through Fat Dracula Records

Drawing from an eclectic array of influences including like Deftones, BaronessWednesdayMJ Lenderman, Queens of the Stone Age, Chappell Roan and Fleetwood Mac, the Brighton-based band’s debut album is a collaborative meshing of the band’s members’ experiences, circumstances and musical prowess. 

The album’s material lyrically and thematically sees the band’s Oldham brining together personal, lived-in experience with more abstract, conceptual ideas and characters. Thematically, Oldham’s inspirations range from sex workers and the power dynamics that come along with the profession; the tragic occurrences of bull fights in Spain and more. 

The album also features contributions from the band’s former collaborators including Sick Joy’s Micheal Barton, Projector’s Lucy Sheehan and CTRL DRP’s Annie Dorret. 

Additionally for the band’s Katie Oldham, one of her personal missions for the band relates to representation, sisterhood and women being a more dominant force within the music industry, whether on stage, behind the scenes or in the crowd. “My love for women knows no bounds. Everything I do, I do for the girlies, the women and the female gaze exclusively. (This extends of course to ALL women inclusively, no TERF bullshit here.) There is just an unparalleled magical feeling when you’re around liberated, electrifying women who speak with honesty and clarity and without fear,” Oldham says. “The world is built to try and make us resent, envy and destroy each other, and I LOVE those moments where we realise we are more alike than what divides us. I want to be around women all the time, to be inspired by them, to connect with them and to share and to bond and unite.” 

Earlier this year, I wrote about “Laughter,” a swaggering and pummeling, most pit friendly anthem that struck me as being a sort of synthesis of Queens of the Stone Age, Deftones and Paramore anchored around scorching power chords, thunderous drumming, heavy down-tuned bass and enormous arena rock friendly hooks and choruses paired with Oldham’s impassioned, powerhouse vocal. 

“This song is about a face-off that’s been a long time coming, and the difficult relationships we can have with members of our family, especially our parents,” Slung’s Katie Oldham says. ” When we’re children we’re so desperate for our parents’ attention and approval that their dismissal or rejection can feel agonising. With an emotionally absent parent, trying desperately to earn love or consideration from someone who isn’t capable of giving it can be so destructive. This hurt can often develop into resentment as we age and we may even later villainise this person, wanting to fight, confront, defeat them.”

In Ways’ latest single “Collider” is a bass heavy, stoner rocker/desert rock-like dirge that brings back memories of Soundgarden, Alice in Chains and 90s grunge that also manages to perfectly complement and showcase Oldham’s powerhouse vocals.

Originally worked on by founding member Vlad Matveikov and El Moono’s Zac Jackson, the song was reworked a bit. “I kept most of Zac’s melodies as I really like the simplicity and drawn out syllables,” Katie Oldham says. “For the lyrics, I came up with a new narrative for this one based on the psych-infused nature of the tune. They tell the story of a cult who are ruled by a deity they refer to as the ‘ritual prophet’ and whom they converse with through the use of psychedelics.”

Shot by David Neale and edited by James Eldridge, the accompanying video for “Collider” is shot a moody, black and white silhouette with trippy bursts of color during the song’s chorus and guitar solo.

New Video: Moonbird Shares Lush and Yearning “Silence”

Rising French electronic producer Pierre Charmot, best known as Moonbird emerged into the scene back in 2021 and he quickly established his sound, which sees him pairing hard-hitting techno beats with ethereal vocals. That same […]

New Video: Thaïs Shares a Club Friendly Bop

Rising Paris-born, Montréal-based singer/songwriter and JOVM mainstay Thaïs specializes in an atmospheric and delicate pop sound, which compliments her ethereal delivery. Thematically, her work typically focuses on melancholy, loneliness and dysfunctional, confusing, heartbreaking love.

Now, if you’ve been frequenting this site over the past handful of years, you may recall that 2022 was a breakthrough year for the JOVM mainstay: She signed with Bravo Musique, who released her highly anticipated full-length debut, Tout est parfait.

Since then the French Canadian artist has had busy couple of years: She has expanded upon her growing profile, opening for KYO, M, Arianne Moffatt, Dumas and Suzane while working on her Blaise Borboën and Thaïs co-produced sophomore album Personne. The album also features contributions from La Faune’s multi-instrumentalist Jay Essiambre and bassist Émile Farley.

Slated for an April 4, 2025 release, the rising JOVM mainstay’s sophomore album will reportedly be “extroverted music for introverts” — energetic tracks that lead towards self-affirmation while allowing listeners to delve deeper into her universe.

Personne’s fourth single “Taxi” is a slickly produced, dance floor friendly bop that sounds as though it were inspired by Robyn. And while arguably being the most club ready songs of her growing catalog, the song is anchored by her penchant for pairing introspective lyrics with remarkably catchy hooks. The song’s narrator is on her way back from a night out, sitting in the backseat of the titular taxi, when she’s caught the ghost of a past relationship — through a favorite song or a passing by a place that reminds of her this past lover or something along those lines.

Directed by Alexis Boudrias, the accompanying video introduces us to a bruised and battered Thaïs waking up from some sort of accident and then performing the song in a bare studio. We also see the rising French-Canadian heading to a party and when she arrives, quickly realizes that she doesn’t belong. She makes an attempt to leave and winds up in the studio, where she presumably feels more like herself.