Hall of Ukrainian Rock’n’Roll
In our traditional support of the Ukrainian rock scene, we would like to offer you a story about a remarkable event that took place in western Ukraine in the small town of Manevychi. Every year, at the end of May, all the world's museums hold a night at the museum, and such a night took place in Manevychi, where at the same time the soft opening of the first hall of the future Rock Capital museum took place. The hall is called The History of Ukrainian Rock and Roll and is the first of seven planned halls of the Rock Capital Museum. Perhaps it would not have been so attractive if the Rock Capital Museum had not truly been the first rock museum in Ukraine.
Do you know at least one Ukrainian punk rock band?
Do you know at least one Ukrainian punk rock band? Of course, no one asked me such a question, but I sometimes ask it to my friends. Talking about the glorious traditions of Ukrainian rock n roll, I don't want to miss punk itself. The first thing that comes to my mind is the band Borshch. Some people will say it's not punk rock, and maybe they're right. But musically and lyrically, Borshch has a spark that only lives in this style.
David Bowie’s first address
It remains interesting that even such alien rock stars as David Bowie had his parental home on our unfortunate planet. The future star lived the first 6 years of his life in 40 Stansfield Road, Brixton, London.
Formation of the Ukrainian rock n roll scene
2022 has become too difficult for one of the largest countries in Europe. It is about Ukraine and its heroic people. The passing year has brought devastation and tears, pain and suffering to the country. In its fight against the invaders, Ukraine is choosing its freedom and the right to a democratic future. Today we wanted to remember the glorious past of this musical nation and especially, we are interested in the development of the rock scene in Ukraine, in a country with its ancient roots and culture. How it was and how it was born.
TAKE OFF TO NOVA – Metopia
Most singles are content to occupy their allotted few minutes of your attention and leave it at that. "Metopia" runs a hearty five minutes and twelve seconds, and it earns every last one of them. TAKE OFF TO NOVA have crafted a progressive-alternative rock anthem that manages the rare trick of sounding both cavernous and intimate, a song that thunders through your speakers while whispering something uncomfortably close to the truth about how we live now.
Wax Bird – Misery’s Valet
Grief has a house style, and most of pop's practitioners furnish it the same way: candles, string arrangements, a single tasteful tear. Wax Bird burns the place down instead. "Misery's Valet," released on 13th September 2025 as part of the EP *Mood Swings & Middle Fingers*, refuses every polite convention of the confessional song, and in doing so becomes one of the more genuinely unsettling pieces of songwriting to surface this year.
A Project Called Love – Chance Encounter
Pop songs about serendipity are ten a penny, but the trick has always been persuading a listener that this particular meeting of eyes across a crowded room actually mattered. "Chance Encounter" pulls that trick off with a confidence that borders on cheek, opening not with a whisper but with a guitar line that announces itself like a friend bursting through your front door uninvited and welcome all the same.
Paul Garside – That There Is Our Problem
Every so often a record arrives that feels less written than excavated, dredged up from some domestic catastrophe too strange for fiction, and Paul Garside's "That There Is Our Problem" belongs firmly in that camp. Its genesis — a man so consumed by jealousy of his wife's faith that he tried to set the local church alight — sounds like a plot The Handsome Family might have rejected for being too on the nose. Garside, wisely, doesn't play it for melodrama. He plays it for ache.
Tony Sieber – Tides of Stillness
Certain records arrive feeling less composed than *weathered* — shaped by wind, salt spray and altitude rather than a click track. "Tides of Stillness" is exactly that kind of object. Sixteen tracks deep and built almost entirely from guitar, it plays like a diary smuggled out of three very different landscapes: the high pastures of Switzerland, the cracked salt flats of Chile's Atacama Desert, and the grey, foam-lashed cliffs of southern England. Few lo-fi ambient records this year have travelled so far to sound so still.
DownTown Mystic – Mystic Highway Road Trip
Six songs, one open road, and not a wasted second: DownTown Mystic's *Mystic Highway Road Trip* is the sound of a band who long ago worked out exactly what they do well and has spent every release since sharpening it rather than second-guessing it. Robert Allen, the writer and producer behind the project, has built a career on sync placements and roots-rock craftsmanship, and this EP feels like a victory lap dressed up as a summer playlist — generous, unpretentious, and knowing exactly where the guitar solo goes.
Andrei Marian – Ethics Unimposed
Vibraphone records tend to arrive either drenched in cocktail-lounge gloss or bristling with academic rigour, and it takes a rare confidence to sidestep both traps on a debut. Andrei Marian manages it on "Ethics Unimposed," the first full statement from the Moldovan vibraphonist and composer, recorded with his trio Triptology and released this April. The record wears its dual heritage plainly: trained across Moldova and Belgium, Marian writes music that keeps one foot inside jazz tradition even as the other reaches for something less settled, more inventive, harder to pin down.
Watch Me Die Inside – Infinity Fall III
Comfort, that band once suggested, might be the real enemy. On this three-track EP, Watch Me Die Inside make that argument with the conviction of people who've actually lived inside it, and the result is a record that unsettles far more than it soothes — deliberately, gorgeously so.
SPACE3GHXSTX – Full Metal
Heartbreak wearing armour makes for the most compelling kind of pop record, and "Full Metal" understands this instinctively. The single arrives dressed in designer plating — Saint Laurent, Moncler, the whole glittering exoskeleton of contemporary luxury — but underneath the metal sits something far more tender: a man trying to keep his heart from shattering in a city built entirely of glass and static.
ANNIE – (Bang, Bang) Down You Go
Estonia is not, on the whole, a country the pop world looks to for its verdicts on global catastrophe. That makes ANNIE's arrival with "(Bang, Bang) Down You Go" all the more striking a proposition: a debut-adjacent single that walks straight past the usual apparatus of heartbreak and hedonism and plants itself, unflinching, in the middle of a war.
Doctor Noize – Some People See, But I Don’t
Doctor Noize's new single refuses to sit quietly in its assigned corner of the industry. Titled "Some People See, But I Don't," it lands as the closing statement before his August full-length, *Positive Energy! (The Music of Doctor Noize)*, and it announces itself less like a promotional single and more like a manifesto set to horns.
Wax Bird – Heroes
Karlsruhe doesn't often make the shortlist of cities you'd expect a garage-rock uprising to spring from, but Wax Bird have never been much interested in doing things the expected way. "Heroes" opens their new EP like a door kicked off its hinges — three chords, a snarl, and a clarinet where you'd least expect one — and the effect is immediate: this is a band that plays as though the amplifiers might be repossessed by morning.