Indie Dock Music Blog

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April 8, 2026
Rhys Hurd – Who the hell am I?
By indiedockmusicblog | |
**By the time the opening synth line of Rhys Hurd's comeback single has finished unfurling itself into the room, you already know exactly where you stand — and more importantly, where Hurd wants to take you.** That place is somewhere between a rain-slicked Tokyo arcade circa 1987 and the fluorescent fever dream of a Tron sequel nobody commissioned but everybody secretly wanted. *Who the Hell Am I?* is Hurd's boldest statement yet: a Synthwave broadside wrapped in the glittering armour of vintage video game soundtracks, arriving just as the conversation around modern masculinity has grown both louder and considerably more confused.
JD Hinton – Someday is Today
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Let us dispense, immediately, with the caveats. JD Hinton is not a new proposition. The press releases have been arriving for long enough to fill a small filing cabinet, and critics have been reaching for the same dog-eared comparison notes — Leonard Cohen, Tom Waits, the brooding American male with a philosophically dented heart — long enough that the shorthand risks becoming wallpaper. And yet. *And yet.* "Someday Is Today" demands you put down the filing cabinet, sit in a chair, and reckon with something that functions, against all reasonable expectation, as a genuinely urgent piece of music.
V.E.N! – THE BEAUTY OF DANGER
By indiedockmusicblog | |
**Edu Campoy arrives from Seville with a pocketful of the past and a politics for the present** Let us be frank about the state of the guitar EP in 2026: it has become a form so exhausted, so comprehensively strip-mined by a thousand hopeful bedroom auteurs, that the arrival of anything genuinely melodic and alive feels almost transgressive. And yet here, from the sun-scorched back streets of Seville, comes Edu Campoy — operating under the banner V.E.N!, which unpacks as Virtual Emotions Network, a name that sounds like a post-punk fanzine from 1983 and is all the better for it — to remind us precisely what the form is capable of when handled by someone who actually understands the difference between influence and imitation.
Cogley – Deep Blue Sky
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Paul Cogley — now trading simply as Cogley, a streamlining that suggests both artistic confidence and a healthy irritation with administrative confusion — has done something quietly remarkable with this re-release. He has taken an album that already carried genuine emotional weight, added four new songs, handed the masters to Robert L. Smith (a man whose CV reads like a roll call of rock's untouchable titans), and arrived at something that demands to be heard at volume, preferably in the dark.
KHROTO – AGAKI (feat. Kiyo a.k.a. Nakid)
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The word *agaki* translates from Japanese as struggle — a writhing, desperate kind of movement against constraint. It is a word that carries weight in its syllables, a compressed coil of effort and futility. KHROTO, the Tokyo-based producer who lends his name to this collaboration with U250, has chosen his title wisely. Nothing here is gratuitous. Nothing here is wasted. And that restraint alone marks "AGAKI" as something worth sitting with.
Shortout Kid – Pet Song
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Consider the following thought experiment. Take Mozart — and teach him to play a chainsaw. Take Kurt Cobain — and have him get addicted to a sampler. Take the softest sound you can catch from an exploding amplifier, and turn it into a ballad. Take Jimi Hendrix, and have him come up with an instrument to play the noise of a much harsher era. If any of those propositions excite rather than alarm you, then Shortout Kid may be precisely the artist you have been waiting for. If they alarm you, he may be the artist you most need.
Bethany Lyn – Get Set 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
**Oxford's most precocious eighteen-year-old arrives fully formed, armed with jazz chords, a saxophone, and the audacity to mean every single word.** The debut album is, by tradition, the most treacherous of all musical formats. Too raw and you're dismissed as unfinished. Too polished and you're accused of corporate interference. Bethany Lyn, an Oxford teenager who wrote, produced, mixed, mastered and largely performed this entire eleven-track record herself, has somehow avoided both pitfalls — not through compromise, but through the kind of self-possession that most artists spend a decade trying to fake.
PJ Abrol – The Good Static
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Some singles announce themselves. Others detonate. "Airspace," the lead single from PJ Abrol's *The Good Static*, belongs firmly in the second category — a track that opens its doors with the quiet confidence of someone who already knows they've won the argument before you've even sat down.
The Yacht Club – The Greatest Misadventure (Anniversary Edition)
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Some songs refuse to stay buried. They haunt the bands that made them, tugging at sleeves during soundchecks, whispering from the back of rehearsal rooms, demanding to be reconsidered. Marcus Gooda and his Bristol outfit The Yacht Club know this particular ghost intimately — "The Greatest Misadventure" has followed them for years, beloved and abandoned in equal measure, a song they apparently loved but, by their own admission, eventually forgot how to play. The anniversary edition, then, is less a reissue than an exhumation. And what they've pulled from the ground is still breathing.
Alimba – Resonance   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There is a particular kind of album that can only be made by someone who has waited too long to make it. Not through laziness or indifference, but through the accumulation of lived experience — the sort that cannot be rushed, cannot be faked, and absolutely cannot be manufactured by an algorithm. *Resonance*, the long-gestating full-length from Greek-born, UK-based producer Alimba, is precisely that record. Delayed by the unglamorous machinery of real life — immigration, employment, the grinding practicalities of building an existence in a foreign country — it arrives in early 2026 not merely as an album, but as a document of survival.