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
E.L.W.12 – Unfiltered
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There's something rather touching about an artist who admits they spent sleepless nights wrestling with feedback, who confesses that "More Than Enough" still isn't quite right, who acknowledges their limitations whilst simultaneously transcending them. Frank, the Markkleeberg-based creator behind E.L.W.12, has fashioned something genuinely disarming with *Unfiltered* – an album that wears its imperfections not as badges of honour, but as honest markers of the creative struggle itself.
DIV1NE – talk2u
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The most striking aspect of DIV1NE's 'talk2u' is how it subverts expectation. Where the title suggests vulnerability and the yearning for connection, the 21-year-old UK producer-vocalist has crafted a declaration of hard-won autonomy—a track that chronicles not the desperation of loss, but the peculiar clarity that emerges when you finally excise toxicity from your life.
Alwyn Morrison – Lenox Hill (Stefan Storm Remix) [Those Nights]
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The opening seconds of Alwyn Morrison's "Lenox Hill (Stefan Storm Remix)" arrive like headlights through rain-streaked glass: diffuse, luminous, and utterly transfixing. Swedish producer Stefan Storm—one half of The Sound of Arrows and a veteran hand behind hits for Alison Goldfrapp and Lady Gaga—has taken Morrison's original and refracted it through a prism of shimmering synths and pulsating basslines, creating a piece that feels simultaneously ancient and urgently contemporary. This is electropop as emotional archaeology, excavating memories of young love with the precision of a jeweler and the abandon of a romantic.
DEAN RÖK – Falling in the Dark
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Portugal's Dean RÖK arrives with the kind of assurance that makes you sit up and listen. "Falling in the Dark" announces this artist's reinvention with a prowling confidence, the sound of a musician who has shed previous skins to reveal something altogether more formidable. This is modern rock that refuses to apologize for its heft, blues-soaked and emotionally unsparing, delivered with the conviction of someone who has genuinely lived through the darkness the lyrics describe.
Ulrich Jannert – Two Men by the Harbor
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Ulrich Jannert's latest single arrives like a postcard from the edge of indecision, where land meets water and the oldest human dilemma—security versus adventure—plays out in miniature. "Two Men by the Harbor" presents itself as a parable wrapped in soft soul-rock textures, and for the most part, it delivers on this modest but resonant promise.
Hollow Shift – Reload   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Hollow Shift have always understood that darkness isn't just an aesthetic—it's a topology. Their previous work mapped the contours of post-punk melancholia with a precision that recalled the best of the genre's gothic inclinations, but *RELOAD* suggests a band less interested in tracing old maps than redrawing them entirely. The duo have tilted decisively toward the floor, toward pulse, toward the kind of rhythmic insistence that forces the body into complicity even as the mind recoils.
Mogipbob – Unemotional Rollercoaster
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The title alone deserves a moment's consideration: "Unemotional Rollercoaster" presents itself as a contradiction wrapped in steel rails and safety harnesses, much like the song itself—a three-minute meditation on feeling everything and nothing simultaneously, delivered with the steady hand of a municipal worker who moonlights as a prairie philosopher.
Blue Sinclair – When the Disco Ball Crashed Down 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Blue Sinclair's debut arrives with the kind of quiet confidence that belies its self-recorded origins. *When the Disco Ball Crashed Down* presents itself as both confession and manifesto, a collection that refuses to settle into any single groove whilst maintaining a remarkable cohesive vision throughout its runtime.
Brian Hunsaker – Edge Of The World
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Twenty years. That's how long it took Brian Hunsaker to write the acoustic bridge that anchors "Edge Of The World," and one can hear every moment of that gestation period in the song's confident architecture. This Texas-based metal practitioner has delivered his most ambitious statement yet—a five-and-a-half-minute odyssey that dares to marry the brutish immediacy of modern metal with the kind of narrative grandeur that harks back to the genre's more theatrical forebears.
Arcas and the Bear – Seven twelve
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Dan Patmore has emerged from silence with purpose. Recording under the Arcas and the Bear moniker since 2020, the Milton Keynes producer returns with "Seven Twelve," a single that marks both rupture and continuity with his established aesthetic. Where previous work—particularly the meditative sprawl of 2024's "Stage 1: Complete"—invited listeners into contemplative spaces, this latest offering pulses with a different energy entirely.
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