Indie Dock Music Blog

Latest:
Spottiswoode - IT WASN'T IN THE SCRIP (album)              Lotta Svart - Magi (single)              Books Of Moods - Dreams (album)              Introsoul - Teleology (album)              Mark Wink - Gimme Some Sugar (album)              Billy Chuck Da Goat - Mirror To Myself (single)                         
May 17, 2026
Tár – Dancing On The Event Horizon
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There is something audacious about naming your creative principle after a scientific inevitability. An event horizon, for the uninitiated, is the threshold beyond which escape becomes physically impossible — the point at which gravity wins, and everything that once had forward momentum surrenders entirely. That Tár, the Szczecin quartet who have been quietly detonating in Poland's alternative underground, have not only embraced this metaphor but chosen to dance at it tells you everything about their particular brand of doomed romanticism.
Danny Grove – You thought you won
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Some records smell of the studio — the careful polish, the producer's instinct, the label's nervousness. "You Thought You Won" smells of something altogether less comfortable: 3am, a bedroom, the particular silence that follows a relationship that has finally, definitively, ended. Danny Grove, a newcomer from Telford, has made something raw enough to leave a mark.
Matt Wolejsza – The Beast I’m Meant to Be
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Matt Wolejsza arrives bearing considerable emotional freight. A Gaithersburg singer-songwriter and guitarist whose formative years were spent in the company of Metallica's relentless riffery, he has spent what appears to be the better part of a decade refining his craft through the sort of communal, grassroots songwriter circle that rarely gets its due — the Baltimore group led by Diana Hanson-Young, where songs are not merely praised but interrogated. The results, gathered here on his debut long-player, suggest the process was entirely worth the patience demanded of it.
Billy Chuck Da Goat – Mirror To Myself 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The boldest thing an artist can do with their debts is declare them openly. Billy Chuck Da Goat, Charlotte's most cinematically ambitious hip-hop auteur, does precisely that on Mirror To Myself — a record that wears its debt to Michael Jackson's Man in the Mirror not as a borrowed coat but as a founding charter. The premise is older than pop music itself: before you rage at the world, check the face you shave every morning. But the execution here is decidedly, and impressively, his own.
Mark Wink – Gimme Some Sugar
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The premise sounds, at first blush, like a parlour game. One song. Seven styles. A waiter in the Maldives who simply would not take no for an answer. From this slender, almost farcical seed, Mark Wink has grown something genuinely disarming — an album-length conceptual experiment that asks a pointed question and answers it with considerable flair: does a great melody belong to a genre, or does it transcend genre entirely?
Books Of Moods – Dreams   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Hugo Sailer asks only one question on his debut album as Books Of Moods, and he asks it quietly, almost apologetically, as though afraid the answer might dissolve upon contact with daylight: *what if it was all a dream?* It is the kind of question that belongs to the small hours, to the half-lit space between waking and forgetting, and it is precisely that liminal territory that *Dreams* stakes out and inhabits for its thirty-five luminous minutes.
Lotta Svart – Magi   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Lotta Svart has waited a long time to say something entirely on her own terms. A veteran of the Finnish pop landscape — first with the early-2000s group I'DeeS, then the band Tears Apart — she arrives here not as a comeback artist but as something altogether more interesting: a woman who has shed every prior version of herself and stepped into the room she was always supposed to occupy. "Magi" is the first dispatch from a four-track body of work planned across 2026, and if this opening statement is anything to go by, the full sequence may prove to be one of the year's quietly essential listens.
Spottiswoode – IT WASN’T IN THE SCRIPT 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The great lie perpetuated by the rock and roll machine is that vulnerability is weakness. Spottiswoode has never believed it. For years the New York-by-way-of-London singer-songwriter has been making records that wear their hearts on their sleeves like medals — messy, wilful, intelligent records that the mainstream press consistently failed to notice and the independent music world quietly adored. Now, on his most nakedly personal work to date, he has done something genuinely radical: he has written an album about his daughter. Not a song. Not a touching bonus track. Twelve songs, front to back, one long love letter dressed in twelve different costumes.