Indie Dock Music Blog

Latest:
Amarah - Invisible Light (video)              Christopher Hawkins - Where the world can't find you (album)              GIANFRANCO GFN - TRACES OF THE WORLD (video)              RSM - Life is… (album)              The Big East - Shiny Satellites  (single)              Yung Yuee - The Real Yuee (video)                         
October 19, 2025
Last Relapse – Everyone Dances Outside of Their Bodies
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Thirteen years is a lifetime in rock music—long enough for entire scenes to rise and crumble, for streaming to devour the album format, for a generation of bands to form, burn out, and reform for the nostalgia circuit. So when an Atlanta outfit called Last Relapse emerges from over a decade of silence with "Everyone Dances Outside of Their Bodies," the cynic's first instinct is to check the sell-by date. Has the moment passed? Did they miss the train?
Clinton Belcher – Scars and Six Strings 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Clinton Belcher doesn't arrive quietly. "Scars and Six Strings" announces itself with the kind of guitar-driven fury that recalls when country music still remembered it was related to rock and roll, before Nashville decided to sand down every rough edge in pursuit of crossover appeal. This is music for the unconverted, the unpolished, the unrepentant—and it carries the weight of someone who's lived the stories he's telling.
RISE – Lost for words
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There's a particular breed of rock band that emerges from Liverpool with an innate understanding of melody and momentum, and RISE belong firmly to that lineage. "Lost For Words," their latest single, crackles with the kind of restless energy that demands your attention from the first bar and refuses to relinquish it. This is a band firing on all cylinders, their individual talents coalescing into something that feels both urgent and meticulously crafted.
Tlön – Reality   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The debut album from Sara Övinge and Gregor Riddell arrives as a fully formed proposition, the kind of assured statement that suggests years of gestation rather than tentative first steps. *Reality* marks the convergence of two formidable classical talents who have clearly spent considerable time contemplating how to dismantle and reassemble their traditional training into something genuinely progressive.
Ezra Vancil – Babylove   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There's a peculiar alchemy that occurs when an artist stops performing for an audience and starts excavating their own psyche with a pickaxe and a prayer. Ezra Vancil's "Babylove" achieves precisely this—a soul-baring excavation that feels less like a professional studio session and more like a séance with one's own ghost.
Niel Lian – Resilience in a world on fire
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The debut EP from Italian pianist-composer Niel Lian arrives with the kind of understated gravity that contemporary classical music too rarely permits itself. Here is a musician unafraid to speak plainly about emotional territory that others might obscure behind conceptual smokescreens or technical virtuosity. *Resilience in a World on Fire* occupies that distinctive space between the confessional and the universal, where personal testimony becomes collective experience.
HamHead – Sling   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The resurrection story behind HamHead's "Sling" reads like the plot of a particularly ambitious concept album: three musicians who cut their teeth together in the late 1980s, separated by geography and circumstance when drummer Jeff Plate departed for the bright lights of New York and a tenure with heavy metal stalwarts Savatage, now reunited through the democratic miracle of broadband connectivity. What emerges from this digital séance is an instrumental piece that manages to honour the ambitious architectonics of 1970s progressive rock whilst sidestepping the genre's tendency toward self-indulgent excess.
Satellite Train – James Dean  
By indiedockmusicblog | |
To invoke James Dean is to summon more than just a name—it's to conjure an entire mythology of beautiful wreckage, of youth burning too bright and too briefly. That Satellite Train secured the blessing of the Dean family for their latest single suggests they understand this weight. What's remarkable is how thoroughly they've earned that privilege.
Dan McKean – Didn’t Know About Andy
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Oxford's Dan McKean has crafted something quietly remarkable with "Didn't Know About Andy," a single that reveals its considerable depths through careful, repeated listening. Released this October, the track positions itself at an intriguing crossroads between the bucolic melancholy of early-70s English folk and the meticulous studio craft of West Coast harmony merchants – yet it never feels derivative, instead carving out territory distinctly its own. The production choices here demand immediate attention.
Lennart Jönsson feat. Josh St Germain, David Kroon, Eric Eklund – Cure Your Fear
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The provenance of "Cure Your Fear" matters. This isn't a track born from vague disillusionment or fashionable cynicism, but from specific, documented grievances. Jönsson cites Hans Rosling's Factfulness and the Swedish media outlet Kvartal.se as intellectual kindling for this particular fire—a fire that's been smoldering for years before finally igniting into song form. The late Professor Rosling's insistence on data-driven optimism, his challenge to see the world "as it truly is—not as we're scared into believing it is," provides the philosophical scaffolding for a track that dares to question the media's addiction to catastrophe.