Indie Dock Music Blog

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March 1, 2026
Anthony Johnson – Gossip In My Ear
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The great British tradition of whispered confidences, of secrets passed between cupped hands in draughty corridors, has always found its truest expression not in tabloid headlines but in music. And Anthony Johnson, arriving from Mississauga with the quiet confidence of someone who has been waiting patiently for the right moment to speak, understands this instinctively. "Gossip In My Ear" is a record that knows how to lean in close.
Alexander Joseph – Heading Home
By indiedockmusicblog | |
*There is a particular kind of English songwriter — unhurried, quietly certain, rooted in soil and faith rather than trend or spectacle — whose work asks nothing of you except your full attention. Alexander Joseph is emphatically one of them.*
Levi Sap Nei Thang – My Little Offering
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Gospel music has always occupied a peculiar position in the broader landscape of popular Christian worship — too raw for the polished megachurch circuit, too sincere for the cynical indie set, and perpetually underserved by critics who mistake emotional directness for artistic naivety. Levi Sap Nei Thang's debut album *My Little Offering* arrives not merely indifferent to this problem but apparently oblivious to it, which turns out to be precisely its greatest strength.
I.D.K. – Nark 5
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Punk rock has always thrived on borrowed mythology. From the Clash dragging Jamaican rebellion into the grey slabs of South London, to the Misfits ransacking B-movie horror for their imagery, the genre has never been shy about finding its fury somewhere other than the strictly autobiographical. So when North Jersey veterans I.D.K. announce their return after seventeen years of silence by planting their flag squarely inside the fictional prison complex of Narkina 5 — that salt-white hellhole from *Star Wars: Andor* — the move feels not merely defensible but genuinely inspired.
Rosso Tierney – This Gun
By indiedockmusicblog | |
British rock has always had a complicated relationship with sincerity. For decades, the genre's gatekeepers demanded a certain studied coolness, a performative detachment that kept genuine emotion at arm's length. Rosso Tierney, it seems, received none of those memos — and thank God for that.
Brother Dolly – Transmission Number 5 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There is a particular kind of audacity required to make history sound like the future. Most artists who reach backwards into the Cold War's long shadow do so with a kind of reverential nostalgia — trench coats, analogue dials, the romantic melancholy of espionage as aesthetic. Brother Dolly, bless them, are not interested in any of that. On *Transmission Number 5*, the trio — singer-songwriter Dan Whitehouse phoning in from the UK-Japan axis, producer Jason Tarver operating out of Barcelona, and Yorkshire's own sonic sculptor Tom Greenwood — take the Soviet Union's deliberate campaign of white noise jamming and transform it into something altogether more unsettling and alive. This is not a history lesson. This is a séance.
Caitlin Mae – If Barstools Could Talk
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Every so often a single arrives that feels less like a release and more like a confession — the kind you only make when the bar has emptied, the last punter has stumbled out into the cold, and the only audience left is the worn upholstery of a stool that has heard it all before. Caitlin Mae's "If Bar Stools Could Talk" is precisely that confession, and it is quite something.
Chris Ami – Temperament  
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Debut albums are confessions. Whether the artist intends them to be or not, they arrive stripped of the protective armour that experience eventually grants, raw with the accumulated weight of everything the maker has needed to say before the world had the decency to listen. Chris Ami's *Temperament* understands this condition acutely — and rather than shying from it, builds an entire philosophical architecture around the idea that our inner states are not incidental to who we are, but the very substance of us.