Indie Dock Music Blog

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C’batch - Song For God (single)              Christopher Peacock - Only The Good Die Young (video)              Satsuma - Anodyne (album)              Shmeisani Jazz Massive - As War Starts! (single)              Mermaid Avenue - Jacarandas (album)              PJD - On New Horizons (single)                         
April 20, 2026
Liri Dais – Counting Hours
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Twenty-five years is a long time to carry a song. Most of us, confronted with a cassette recording of our younger selves — the bum notes, the overreaching ambition, the unearned earnestness — would quietly bury the evidence and move on. Liri Dais has done the opposite. The Sevenoaks singer-songwriter has excavated "Counting Hours" from the ruins of their 2001 student band Landslide, dusted it off with modern production tools, and presented it to the world with something approaching defiance. The result is one of the more quietly remarkable debuts of this young year.
Signal-23 – Pillars   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
**The debut from this bi-coastal electronic duo is a remarkably assured statement of intent — austere, aching, and impossible to shake.** Geography has always haunted electronic music. Kraftwerk's motorways. Burial's sodden South London. The precise coordinates of a bedroom at 3am. Signal-23 — split between San Diego and New York, two cities that couldn't be more temperamentally opposed — have built their debut EP from that same kind of spatial tension. *Pillars* is a record about structures: the ones we construct, the ones that slowly fail us, and the ones we find ourselves standing inside long after we've forgotten how we got there.
PJD – On New Horizons
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Paul Julian Dennis — PJD to those already acquainted with his quietly industrious corner of the Birmingham music scene — is the sort of artist who makes critics nervous. Not because he is difficult or confrontational, but because he is *genuine*, and genuine is harder to write about than provocative. He carries no manufactured mythology, no PR-engineered origin story, no carefully curated Instagram vulnerability. What he does carry is decades of calluses, a studio of his own, and a philosophy — never record the same song twice — that would read as arrogance from a lesser talent and reads, from him, as simple discipline.
Lucian Lacewing – Land Of Enchantment
By indiedockmusicblog | |
**A bedroom conjurer from Bristol sends eight voices into the void, and the void hums back.** Released quietly on a Thursday in late March, with no fanfare and no live show to follow — Lucian Lacewing does not perform, a position he holds with the sort of principled stubbornness once championed by Brian Eno, his acknowledged patron saint — *Land Of Enchantment* is the kind of record that rewards the patient and baffles the impatient. It is ambient music with a gothic pulse, drone music that refuses to lie down quietly, and a debut single that announces its maker as someone far more interested in the texture of sound than in its conventional arrangement.
The Casbahs – Peasants of the Show
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Durham has never been the city that music journalists parachute into when filing dispatches from the North. That honour has historically fallen to Manchester, Liverpool, Sheffield — places whose mythologies have been so thoroughly canonised they've become almost a burden to the bands born within them. Durham gets on with it quietly. Which is, perhaps, exactly the disposition required to make a record as assured and unhurried as *Peasants of the Show*.
Ouroboric – Sin Eater
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There is a particular kind of courage required to make music about guilt — not the performative, chest-beating guilt of a thousand confessional singer-songwriters, but the quieter, more corrosive variety: the guilt of someone who watched a relationship curdle slowly, said nothing, and eventually met a version of themselves they no longer recognised. Ouroboric, the Adelaide-based alternative project built around the dual vocal axis of Phil Crowley and Stace, have made precisely that music with "Sin Eater," and the effect is genuinely unsettling in the way that the best alternative rock always should be.
Alla Igityan – Another Monday 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
*There is a particular cruelty to paradise.* You spend the grey, coffee-stained months of your ordinary life constructing it in your mind — the salt air, the unhurried mornings, the slow burn of a sun that feels personally generous — and then, should fortune actually deliver you there, you discover that you've packed yourself along for the trip. Your anxieties. Your restlessness. Your Mondays. Berlin-based singer-songwriter Alla Igityan has noticed this, and she has done something rather brave with the observation: she has written a folk song about it.
JT Catalano – Whiskey Neat, Pickle Back
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Let us begin with the name. "Whiskey Neat, Pickle Back." It sits in the mouth like the thing itself — bracing, slightly absurd, and oddly more sophisticated than it has any right to be. JT Catalano, a Connecticut man operating under the wide spiritual sky of Americana, has committed to a title that would send most A&R men reaching for their antacids, and he has done so with the cheerful confidence of someone who has absolutely nothing to prove and precisely everything to say.