Indie Dock Music Blog

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April 11, 2026
Eddie Cohn – Weight of the World
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There is a particular kind of courage required to make a quiet record when the world is screaming. Eddie Cohn, the self-taught Los Angeles polymath who has spent the better part of two decades threading grunge instincts through folk-rock sensibilities, demonstrates precisely that courage on "Weight of the World" — a song that arrives not with a fist raised but with a hand open, palm upward, exhausted.
CAYNE – Outcast   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Twenty-five years is a long time to carry a wound. And Cayne — the Milan-born alternative metal outfit that has spent the better part of three decades navigating grief, lineup upheaval, and the perpetual shadow of their Lacuna Coil connections — arrive at "Outcast" with the particular authority of a band that has genuinely earned every scar advertised on the tin. This is not a comeback forged from nostalgia or commercial calculation. It is something rarer and considerably more interesting: a resurrection that sounds like it was always inevitable.
DownTown Mystic – On E Street Remix
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There is a peculiar alchemy at work on *On E Street Remix*, the new EP from DownTown Mystic — born Robert Allen — and it smells unmistakably of New Jersey asphalt, river-damp rehearsal rooms, and the particular electricity that crackles only when truly great musicians occupy the same space at the same time. This is not nostalgia. This is something altogether more dangerous and alive.
Eoin Shannon – Every Drunk’s Gotta Story
By indiedockmusicblog | |
It is half past midnight somewhere on the Lee, and the last punter has not yet stumbled home. That, precisely, is the world Eoin Shannon has conjured with this remarkable debut — a smoke-yellowed lounge bar populated by gamblers, adulterers, hopeless romantics and men whose only remaining confessor is the bottle. Every Drunk's Gotta Story is that rarest of things: a concept album that actually earns its concept.
M0n0 jay – L.L.L. (Lift, Lift, Lick It) 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Pop music has always had a complicated relationship with the body. Too often it fetishises it, punishes it, or drapes it in aspirational misery — the before-and-after narrative dressed up in a four-four beat. It takes genuine nerve, then, for a Stockholm-based powerlifter operating under the alias m0n0 jay to stride onto the dancefloor, chalk on her hands and a xylophone hook in her pocket, and refuse entirely to play that game. *L.L.L. (Lift, Lift, Lick It)* is not a redemption song. It is something far more interesting: a celebration of the body mid-effort, mid-sweat, mid-joy — unconcerned with where it's headed and thoroughly delighted with where it already is.
Boey – The False Prince
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Vulnerability, it turns out, is a high-wire act. One slip and the whole thing collapses into self-pity; hold your nerve and you might just make something genuinely moving. Boey, the Malaysian-born, UK-based singer-songwriter born out of Ipoh's quieter corners, holds his nerve throughout The False Prince — an album that announces itself not as a debut statement so much as a reckoning.
Earl Patrick – Conditioned By Machines
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Nobody asked Portland's Earl Patrick to make this record. Nobody asked him to abandon the guitar, to set aside the singer-songwriter persona he has refined across six albums and a piano sonata, and to spend his airplane journeys tapping flute-and-piano compositions into an iPad app called Symphony Pro. Nobody asked him to then drag those compositions through the splintered architecture of nineties sample-based hip-hop, to press public domain film dialogue and Libravox audiobook readers into service as rhythmic texture. Nobody asked — and that, precisely, is what makes *Conditioned By Machines* one of the more genuinely disorienting and rewarding listens of the year.