Indie Dock Music Blog

Latest:
Attack the Sound - Don't String Me Along (single)              Circle of Stone - Ghost of Tomorrow (album)              GOLEM DANCE CULT - Pretty at Dawn (video)              Antonio Celotto - Vishuddha (Throat Chakra) – Playlist Edit (single)              Mr.Rhame - Better tomorrow (single)              Sometimes Julie - Transition (album)                         
January 26, 2026
Circle of Stone – Ghost of Tomorrow
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The transatlantic collaboration between Russell Stewart and Joe Garmon has yielded a second offering that positions itself defiantly against the tide of digital artifice. Released on Christmas Day 2025, *Ghost of Tomorrow* arrives as both manifesto and meditation, a conscious rejection of algorithmic composition wrapped in the familiar textures of hard rock's storied lineage.
Attack the Sound – Don’t String Me Along
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Chicago's Attack the Sound have delivered a remarkably assured slice of pop confection with "Don't String Me Along," a track that manages the increasingly difficult feat of sounding both immediately accessible and emotionally substantial. The band's self-coined "Chi-Pop" moniker initially reads as marketing speak, but the music itself justifies the designation—this is indeed a sound rooted in American heartland earnestness while reaching for the kind of glossy production sheen that wouldn't sound out of place on Radio 2.
Bruno Tenório – Sleepless   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The opening salvo from Bruno Tenório's debut album *NAUPENC* arrives with the kind of restless energy its title suggests, though "Sleepless" proves far more architecturally sophisticated than any mere invocation of nocturnal anxiety might imply. This is music that understands the difference between insomnia and hypervigilance, between lying awake and being fundamentally, almost violently alert.
Garrett Anthony Rice – Purple Man (For Jimi Hendrix)
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Garrett Anthony Rice's "Purple Man" arrives with its influences worn openly, yet refuses the lazy cosplay that so often accompanies tributes to the gods of psychedelic rock. The title alone—a clear nod to Hendrix's "Purple Haze"—could have spelled disaster, the sort of reverential exercise that mistakes imitation for craft. Instead, Rice has produced a track that speaks to Hendrix's spirit without attempting to channel his ghost.