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
zukrassverliebt – Hold Me 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The opening bars of "Hold Me" arrive like a confession whispered in half-light, zukrassverliebt crafting an atmosphere so delicate it threatens to dissolve at the slightest provocation. This is indie-pop stripped of artifice, where vulnerability becomes not merely theme but structural principle. The production breathes with a hushed intimacy, as though we've stumbled upon something never meant for public consumption—a private moment of collapse and recovery, now set to soft synthesizers and trembling vocals.
Hachè Costa – L’Atlantique
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Spanish composer Hachè Costa's latest single, "L'Atlantique," emerges as the opening statement from his ambitious album *Memoria del Océano*, a work that confronts humanity's relationship with the natural world through an unexpected fusion of minimalist piano, electronica, and reimagined Spanish folk traditions. Mastered at Abbey Road Studios by Alex Wharton—a detail that lends the piece a gravitas befitting its weighty subject matter—the track positions itself not merely as music, but as an act of cultural archaeology and environmental witness.
Riffindots – Everytime   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Britta Pejic, the singular force behind Riffindots, has unleashed "Everytime" upon an unsuspecting world, and the result is nothing short of magnificent chaos. This is rock music stripped of pretension and rebuilt from scrap metal, volcanic ash, and the kind of reckless abandon that made the genre dangerous in the first place.
Kate Stanford – O Holy Night 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The perennial challenge facing any artist who dares approach "O Holy Night" lies not in technical execution but in resisting the gravitational pull toward bombast. This 19th-century French carol, with its soaring melodic architecture and theological gravitas, has suffered countless indignities at the hands of performers who mistake volume for profundity. Kate Stanford, the Nashville-based Christian singer-songwriter, has produced a recording that succeeds precisely because it understands what so many interpretations fail to grasp: that reverence requires restraint, and that power often manifests most potently in quietude.
ALEN HIT – Love Is the Answer (Christmas Version)
By indiedockmusicblog | |
After a hiatus from the music scene, ALEN HIT returns with a single that positions itself squarely within the festive pop tradition whilst attempting to carve out its own emotional territory. "Love Is the Answer (Christmas Version)" arrives as both seasonal offering and personal statement—the opening salvo of a new studio album promised for 2026—and the question facing any returning artist is whether absence has sharpened or dulled their creative edge.
Julian Peterson – Since I Left You   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The peculiar alchemy of heartbreak has long provided the raw material for our most enduring popular music, yet rarely does a song manage to exist simultaneously as artefact of pain and testament to survival quite like Julian Peterson's "Since I Left You." The Toronto artist's latest single arrives with biographical weight that threatens to overwhelm it—he eventually married the woman who inspired this meditation on loss—but the track itself proves sturdy enough to bear such freight without collapsing into mere footnote or curiosity.
Lezararth – Nervous Vision
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There's something profoundly unsettling about displacement, isn't there? That gnawing sensation of being unmoored from everything familiar, cast adrift in a landscape that refuses to make sense. It's a feeling that permeates every shadowy corner of "Nervous Vision," the debut single from Lezarath, an artist who seems less interested in conventional songcraft than in mapping the topography of psychological disintegration.
JeezJesus – Somewhere Between Love & Misery
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Joe McIntosh's latest incarnation as JeezJesus arrives with all the subtlety of a sledgehammer wrapped in barbed wire. 'Somewhere Between Love & Misery' is an uncompromising slab of industrial-tinged darkness that owes as much to the Mute Records catalogue as it does to the grimy underbelly of Manchester's post-punk heritage. This is music for flickering strip lights and 3am existential crises, delivered with the kind of bloody-minded conviction that British alternative music does best when it stops apologizing for itself.
CHRIS OLEDUDE – WE WILL GET THROUGH THIS
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The opening bars of Chris Oledude's "We Will Get Through This" arrive with the kind of unassuming gentleness that belies the emotional weight it carries. Here is a songwriter unafraid to wear vulnerability as a badge of honour, crafting a duet with Yanitza Lee that speaks to the peculiar alchemy of friendship forged in the crucible of another's suffering. This is not your standard fare of romantic entreaty or sentimental platitude; rather, it positions itself as something altogether more demanding—a meditation on unconditional presence, on the exhausting, essential work of simply being there.
Eternal Mourning – Father Shoes
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Philippe Mourani has never been one for easy consolations. Across two albums now—2024's *A Draft* and *What I Saw Is History*—the Montreal songwriter has carved out a singular space where folk's intimate confessionalism collides with the textural ambition of baroque pop and the raw, unvarnished truth-telling of grunge. "Father Shoes," the lead single from this new collection, finds him at his most vulnerable and most assured, a paradox that defines the very best of his work.
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