Indie Dock Music Blog

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History of Ukrainian Rock and Roll Hall (music stories)              Celeste Marie Wilson - Willow (single)              R.Nelson - Gravity (single)              Greg Germain - Cloud Highways (single)              Novitza - From Darkness Unto Light (album)              Cat TV - Fun in the Ghost Town (album)                         
April 22, 2026
Audren – We Want Funkey!
By indiedockmusicblog | |
**The French artist delivers a shot of pure solar energy that bypasses the brain entirely and goes straight to the feet** Funk, at its most honest, has never been about sophistication. It is about surrender — the moment your body overrules your better judgment and you find yourself dancing in a supermarket aisle, or nodding so aggressively on the Tube that strangers begin to worry. Audren, the Paris-based indie-soul polymath, understands this covenant between music and muscle memory with an almost frightening clarity, and *We Want Funkey!* is the document of that understanding rendered in four gloriously irresistible minutes.
Fiori del Male – Allarme rosso nel golfo persico
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Some records arrive precisely on time. Not on time in the sense of a publicist's calendar or a streaming algorithm's quarterly push — but on time in the way that a telegram arrives bearing news you already half-knew, the kind that lands heavy in the chest because the world has been quietly arranging itself toward that exact moment of reckoning. *Allarme Rosso nel Golfo Persico* is one such record. Composed in the white heat of 1991 when the Persian Gulf burned on every television screen and conscience alike, the Roman collective Fiori del Male have pulled this track from the archive not as an act of nostalgia, but as a form of witness. The message, it turns out, kept.
Neon Diffraction – Iron River
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Ru Goddard has spent years operating under the Neon Transmission name, building a respectable house catalogue across Paper Recordings and Groove Foundation with the quiet diligence of a craftsman who knows his trade well. Then, without fanfare, he slips into a different skin entirely. Neon Diffraction is the alter ego, the dark mirror version — and *Iron River* is its opening statement. It arrives not with the glossy confidence of a well-managed career move, but with the slightly bewildering energy of someone who has heard something in their head for a long time and finally decided, quite possibly against reasonable advice, to go and make it.