Indie Dock Music Blog

Latest:
Ephemera Veil - MomentuM (album)              Kindred Found - Fractured Hearts (album)              Teto - About me and you  (album)              Agnes Fred - After Death (video)              Motihari Brigade - Fortunate Son (single)              Stefan Elbl - Chungungo (album)                         
indiedockmusicblog
Attack the Sound – Don’t String Me Along
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Chicago's Attack the Sound have delivered a remarkably assured slice of pop confection with "Don't String Me Along," a track that manages the increasingly difficult feat of sounding both immediately accessible and emotionally substantial. The band's self-coined "Chi-Pop" moniker initially reads as marketing speak, but the music itself justifies the designation—this is indeed a sound rooted in American heartland earnestness while reaching for the kind of glossy production sheen that wouldn't sound out of place on Radio 2.
Bruno Tenório – Sleepless   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The opening salvo from Bruno Tenório's debut album *NAUPENC* arrives with the kind of restless energy its title suggests, though "Sleepless" proves far more architecturally sophisticated than any mere invocation of nocturnal anxiety might imply. This is music that understands the difference between insomnia and hypervigilance, between lying awake and being fundamentally, almost violently alert.
Garrett Anthony Rice – Purple Man (For Jimi Hendrix)
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Garrett Anthony Rice's "Purple Man" arrives with its influences worn openly, yet refuses the lazy cosplay that so often accompanies tributes to the gods of psychedelic rock. The title alone—a clear nod to Hendrix's "Purple Haze"—could have spelled disaster, the sort of reverential exercise that mistakes imitation for craft. Instead, Rice has produced a track that speaks to Hendrix's spirit without attempting to channel his ghost.
Home Hearing Records Presents – Adventures in Sound Vol.2 (Various Artists Compilation)
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The compilation album has always occupied a peculiar position in the musical ecosystem. Too often dismissed as mere samplers or promotional vehicles, the format at its best functions as cartography—mapping territories both geographical and aesthetic that might otherwise remain unexplored. Home Hearing Records' *Adventures in Sound Vol.2* operates firmly within this latter tradition, presenting ten tracks that share little beyond their refusal to compromise and their commitment to the vital, messy business of making music that matters.
The Amanda Emblem Experiment – Ancient Dingo
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The Amanda Emblem Experiment's latest release arrives with the weight of cultural history and ecological urgency strapped to its back like a swagman's bundle. "Ancient Dingo" represents that rarest of artistic achievements: a song that manages to be both politically engaged and musically compelling, avoiding the sermonic pitfalls that typically plague such endeavours.
SEBASTIAN RYDGREN – how i wanna die 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The notion of dying happy might seem macabre dinner conversation, yet Swedish artist Sebastian Rydgren transforms this contemplation into something altogether more life-affirming on his latest single. "how i wanna die" arrives not as a morbid meditation but as a celebration of those fleeting moments when existence aligns perfectly—when the present feels so complete that eternity itself would pale by comparison.
Kat Kikta – Story
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Kat Kikta emerges from the frozen earth with 'Story', a track that refuses easy categorisation while demanding your full attention. This is music that operates on its own frequencies, dwelling somewhere between the primordial and the post-modern, where ancient ritual meets contemporary sound art with startling coherence.
7Sven – But Live It
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There's something quietly audacious about an independent German artist in 2026 crafting an album that sounds like it was unearthed from a dusty crate in a Laurel Canyon estate sale. 7Sven's *But Live It* doesn't so much ignore contemporary trends as politely sidestep them, opting instead for the sort of sophisticated, jazz-inflected pop that dominated the AM airwaves when musicianship still mattered and albums were designed to be experienced rather than skipped through.
LUNA & The Gents – SECOND LIFE (PART I)  
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Basel's LUNA & The Gents arrive with their debut EP like guests at a garden party who've dressed impeccably for the wrong decade – and somehow made everyone else feel underdressed. "SECOND LIFE (PART I)" is a curious proposition: a virtual band wielding real instruments, a modern project steeped in bygone aesthetics, five previously released singles bundled with an extended chanson – the whole enterprise balances precariously between pastiche and genuine artistry.
Coolonaut – Karma Smile 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The third long-player from Scotland-born, Australia-based Coolonaut arrives like a Molotov cocktail wrapped in paisley silk. Recording to analogue 8-track in splendid rural isolation, this artist has fashioned a record that deliberately thumbs its nose at contemporary production values while delivering a furious moral statement about our present moment.
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