Indie Dock Music Blog

Latest:
Grainville Train - New Hand to Hold (single)              Remora Beach - Tired Heart (single)              Judith Owen - Suit Yourself (album)              K-Iai - Do & Don‘t (single)              Richy McLoughlin - A Will To Survive (single)              Stefan Elbl - Chungungo (album)                         
Video Reviews
Audio Graffiti Society – Nope   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The Lincoln, California-based Audio Graffiti Society—essentially the creative vehicle of Aaron Douglas—arrives with "Nope," the first video release from the ambitious double-album *Human Ponzis*, and it announces itself with the subtlety of a brick through a smartphone screen. Released on October 17th, 2025, this track positions itself as both diagnosis and refusal, a middle finger raised to the dopamine-engineered hellscape of social media culture.
FireBug – Time Marches On
By indiedockmusicblog | |
From the vast, mystical expanse of Joshua Tree, California—a landscape that has long served as a crucible for sonic experimentation—emerges FireBug's latest offering, "Time Marches On," a track that refuses to genuflect at the altar of contemporary musical convention. This is a band unafraid to synthesize seemingly disparate elements into a coherent whole, and the results prove absolutely arresting.
Dan Gober – My October Rose
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Dan Gober has delivered something genuinely stirring with "My October Rose," an acoustic symphonic ballad that manages to feel both timeless and urgently present. This is songwriting that understands the power of metaphor, the resonance of seasonal imagery, and the profound beauty of devotion rendered without irony or hesitation.
Dymytry Paradox – Red Sky Remains 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There's a curious alchemy at work when a band sheds its skin entirely. Dymytry Paradox isn't merely a rebranding exercise or cynical attempt at international crossover—it's a parallel reality spun from the DNA of Czech metal stalwarts Dymytry, yet possessed of its own voice, vision, and volcanic intensity. With 'Red Sky Remains', released 18 September with accompanying visuals, this masked quintet announces not just a new single, but a manifesto for the disenfranchised.
Julie July Band – Seven Cities of Gold
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There's a moment, roughly thirty seconds into "Seven Cities of Gold," when the guitar tone shifts into something unmistakably Knopfler-esque – that clean, singing quality that defined Dire Straits' finest work – and you realize the Julie July Band aren't merely trafficking in folk-rock nostalgia. They're synthesizing it, reimagining it, making it speak to 2025 with the confidence of musicians who've truly mastered their craft.
Love Ghost – Worth It
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The third collision between Los Angeles alt-rock shapeshifters Love Ghost and Manchester's resolutely gritty Skinner Brothers arrives like "the splintering crack of a door being kicked off its hinges" – and frankly, it's about time someone kicked down a few doors around here.
Seven Shades Of Nothing – When The Lights Go Down
By indiedockmusicblog | |
James Cole's Seven Shades of Nothing arrives with the kind of fully-formed artistic vision that feels increasingly rare. "When The Lights Go Down," the project's second single, emerges not from the typical songwriter's notebook but from a moment of profound disillusionment—a poem scribbled while gazing across Port Phillip Bay at Melbourne's distant glow, wishing the city would simply vanish so the stars could reclaim their rightful dominance.
Kelsie Kimberlin – Dream of Peace
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Kelsie Kimberlin's "Dream of Peace" stands as a remarkable achievement in contemporary pop artistry, fusing sophisticated musical craftsmanship with visually stunning cinematic storytelling. Both the song and its accompanying music video demonstrate the heights that popular music can reach when artistic ambition meets genuine emotional conviction.
JeezJesus – Work to Die
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Joe McIntosh's latest manifestation as JeezJesus arrives with the blunt force trauma of economic anxiety made manifest. "Work to Die" is a brutalist anthem for the dispossessed, wrapped in the kind of synth-heavy industrial framework that would make Depeche Mode's darker moments seem positively buoyant.
Lost Velvet – Make It Alright
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Reading duo Lost Velvet have arrived at something genuinely arresting with 'Make It Alright,' a track that closes their debut EP trilogy with the kind of considered finality that marks bands destined for larger canvases. Robert Butcher and Melissa Morris have constructed a piece of music that breathes with the unhurried confidence of artists who understand that the most profound statements often emerge from restraint rather than volume.
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