Indie Dock Music Blog

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Cries of Redemption - Patterns (album)              Jacob's Cry - You Don't Know (single)              Lee Switzer-Woolf - I Might Be An Alien (single)              Cello - Vitamins (single)              Mardi Gras Live in Rome Auditorium Parco della Musica 2025 (video)              Jana Pochop - Powerlines (album)                         
March 24, 2026
Dub Colossus – Dub Will Keep Us Together
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Nick Page — Count Dubulah to those who knew his work through Transglobal Underground and a sprawling catalogue of over 200 recordings — died in May 2021 with unfinished business. Not the anxious, unresolved kind: the joyful, purposeful kind. He was, by all accounts, always making music right up until the end, and *Dub Will Keep Us Together*, completed posthumously by his life partner Cristina Morán (Dubulette) and collaborator Toby Mills, carries none of the valedictory gloom one might expect from an album conceived under such circumstances. It sounds, rather defiantly, like a party to which death was not invited.
PILL-BOX – Cost Of Living
By indiedockmusicblog | |
**By the time the opening chord lands, you already know exactly what kind of people made this record. And you want to be their friend immediately.** Luke Mortimore and James Mcrea — operating under the gloriously deadpan banner of PILL-BOX — have arrived with the sort of debut single that makes you wonder why anyone bothers writing anything other than post-punk kitchen-sink comedy. *Cost Of Living* is three minutes or so of Berkshire-brewed agitation, a lovingly sarcastic dispatch from the frontline of modern British mediocrity, and it is, frankly, a bit of a triumph.
Fish And Scale – Tapestry   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Few artists dare to excavate the truly undefended territories of the self — not the performative wounds so fashionable in contemporary folk, but the kind of raw, pre-verbal terror that lodges itself in the body before language has a chance to explain it away. With *Tapestry*, Fish And Scale — the artist name under which German-born Roland Wälzlein has quietly built one of the more compelling independent folk catalogues of recent years — does precisely that, and the results are quietly, stubbornly extraordinary.
Radical Man – Power Systems 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Colorado has always been a state that resists easy categorisation — mile-high and landlocked, neither coastal cool nor heartland plainness, suspended between wilderness and grid. It is fitting, then, that Radical Man should emerge from its western reaches with a record that refuses every available category and quietly builds its own, brick by disciplined brick.
Joseph Turner & The Dudes of Hazard – A New Moon 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The Dutch delta is not, historically, territory one associates with the slow-burning romanticism of American folk music. Yet Joseph Turner has built something quietly remarkable from those flat, rain-soaked lowlands — a sound that borrows from the Appalachian songbook, bends it through a European sensibility, and arrives somewhere altogether more intimate and strange. *A New Moon*, the opening salvo from his forthcoming thirteen-track debut, announces a songwriter who understands the most important lesson in the genre: restraint is not the absence of emotion but its most precise delivery mechanism.
Odd Little Thrills – There Was, There Wasn’t  
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There is a particular kind of longing that has no clean translation in English. The Portuguese have *saudade*. The Welsh have *hiraeth*. Odd Little Thrills — a Prague-based dreampop duo whose members hail from Istanbul and Arkansas — seem to have built a whole sonic architecture around exactly that feeling, a feeling the rest of us have been fumbling to name for years. On *There Was, There Wasn't*, their quietly stunning debut EP, they don't bother naming it. They simply play it back to you, slow and close, like a home video you don't remember making.
Max Restaino – Girls of My Dreams
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Pop music, at its most honest, is the art of the confessional dressed in its Sunday best. It is the ache beneath the melody, the longing that hides inside a good chorus, the peculiar bravado of a man who picks up an instrument and insists — against all probability — that the feeling he carries is worth your time. Max Restaino, the Sheffield-bred multi-instrumentalist, singer, and songwriter whose Italian grandmother unknowingly launched a career by bringing a button accordion back from the old country, has built his entire artistic identity on precisely this proposition. And with *Girl of My Dreams*, he makes it stick.
Brock Davis – Nothing Lasts Forever 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Death has always been rock and roll's most reliable muse. From Johnny Cash staring down the grave on *American Recordings* to Warren Zevon composing his farewell with trembling, defiant hands, the greatest Americana artists have drawn their most luminous work from the darkest possible wells. Brock Davis — the Santa Cruz-based singer-songwriter who spent years raising a family before returning to music with the kind of purposeful hunger that younger artists simply cannot manufacture — has now delivered his own contribution to that venerable tradition, and it is, by any honest measure, a remarkable one.
Grey Jacks – With Who
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Rock criticism has always had a complicated relationship with the live recording. The studio album is a controlled argument; the live document is a confession. Microphones catch what the mixing desk cannot — the breath before a difficult line, the slight hesitation of a musician finding something unexpected in familiar material, the audience's silence, which is its own kind of instrument. The video for "With Who," filmed at THEARC in Washington DC on the 28th of February, understands all of this instinctively. It does not dress itself up. It does not need to.