Indie Dock Music Blog

Latest:
Ephemera Veil - MomentuM (album)              Kindred Found - Fractured Hearts (album)              Neodym - Midnight Flow (single)              Leaone - Goodbyes & Goodtimes (video)              Anders Ekblad - Early Mornings (single)              tcr! - On Vancouver Island (single)                         
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Joshua Pearlstein – Just The Feeling
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Boston's Joshua Pearlstein arrives with the kind of brazen confidence that either crashes spectacularly or announces the birth of something genuinely compelling. "Just The Feeling" firmly plants itself in the latter camp, delivering a piece of uncompromising electronic pop that refuses to apologize for its own darkness.
Bromsen – Data Highway
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The Berlin-based Bromsen brothers have crafted a gloriously overwrought meditation on modern disconnection with "Data Highway," their latest collaboration with producer Robert "Reatsch" Eydner. Like a lovechild of early Human League and contemporary Chvrches, this track pulses with the kind of synthetic urgency that made the 1980s feel both utopian and apocalyptic.
Prince of Sweden – James, I Can’t Stay
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The second single from Prince of Sweden's forthcoming album The Start of Something Beautiful arrives as a gorgeously disheveled meditation on abandonment and longing. "James, I Can't Stay" unfolds like a crumpled love letter discovered in a Parisian hotel room, its narrative emerging through layers of bourbon-soaked melancholy and continental drift.
Sabrina Nejmah – Deep End
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There's a particular kind of ennui that afflicts the social media generation—a restless dissatisfaction with the endless scroll of superficial connections and algorithmic entertainment. It's this existential malaise that seventeen-year-old Hamburg singer Sabrina Nejmah tackles head-on in "Deep End," her debut single that doubles as both manifesto and musical maturation.
Make Believe Love – Delay Deny Depose
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Lucas Berman possesses the sort of mordant wit that transforms tragedy into teatime conversation. His latest offering as Make Believe Love, "Delay Deny Depose," arrives with the subtlety of a brick through a boardroom window—and proves twice as effective.
Mary Beth Orr – The Singing Horn
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Mary Beth Orr's The Singing Horn presents itself as an ambitious meditation on the ancient kinship between brass and larynx, a relationship that has haunted composers from Bach to Britten but rarely received such intimate, sustained examination. The Grand Rapids Symphony's third horn—a finalist for The American Prize in instrumental performance and multiple international competition winner—transforms her instrument into confidant, narrator, and sometimes adversary in a musical autobiography that never quite tips into self-indulgence.
Captain Mantis – Vice Market
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Captain Mantis have fashioned a debut that refuses the comfortable predictability of heritage rock pastiche. This Monterrey quartet's Vice Market EP emerges not as nostalgic genuflection but as spirited conversation between past and present, conducted with the confidence of musicians who understand that reverence need not preclude invention.
Threegonos – Questioni Di Pensiero
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Twenty years into their collective journey, Toni Armetta's Threegonos have emerged with "Questioni di Pensiero" – a recording that demonstrates how contemporary jazz can embrace global traditions without sacrificing its essential character. This Italian sextet's second album reveals a mature ensemble unafraid to let their Mediterranean roots inform their musical wanderings across continents and cultures.
David Alex-Barton – Nothin’ But Moonlight
By indiedockmusicblog | |
David Alex-Barton's latest offering arrives like a wistful December breeze, carrying with it the kind of melancholic beauty that transforms ordinary heartbreak into something approaching the sublime. The New England-born, Nashville-based troubadour has crafted a piece that sits comfortably between the windswept romanticism of early Springsteen and the more contemplative moments of Keith Whitley's catalogue.
Kissing The Flint – Windscreen Dream
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Leah Chynoweth-Tidy's latest offering under her Kissing The Flint moniker arrives with the dust of Queensland still clinging to its metaphorical tyres, yet polished to a gleam by the accomplished hands of Unit 7 Studio's Huey Dowling. "Windscreen Dream" represents both a geographical and artistic journey - from the blues-rock territories of her previous EP toward sunnier country-pop pastures, with the artist's Scottish base providing an intriguing sonic counterpoint to her Australian roots.
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