Indie Dock Music Blog

Latest:
JFK Blue - Restless City (single)              Harry Kappen - Distant Shore (single)              CDubs - Love Language - Original Mix (single)              Marry Me Emelie! - Flowers (single)              East Duo - Chubina Chill (video)              Franklin Gotham - Sunshine & Gasoline (single)                         
June 22, 2026
Los Guapos de Mamà – Vibra Alegria
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Cuba and Italy walk into a studio. One brings rum-soaked rhythm, the other brings a tailored suit and an opinion about reverb. Out comes "Vibra Alegria," a single that wears its cross-continental parentage on its sleeve like a carnation in a lapel.
Aeon Hyper – Space Cowboy 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Cyprus seems an unlikely launchpad for interstellar travel, but Aeon Hyper has never been much interested in the obvious route, and that's precisely his gift. A Greek-born former Cornell student of philosophy and literature, he arrives at synth-pop already fluent in its grammar, then bends that grammar into something distinctly his own. *Space Cowboy*, his debut, sets out to chart a journey from Earth into hyperspace, and it makes good on that promise with real confidence and considerable charm.
Franklin Gotham – Sunshine & Gasoline
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Two years is a long stretch to leave fans waiting, and Franklin Gotham have chosen to break the silence not with a whisper but with a sunburnt holler. "Sunshine & Gasoline" arrives less like a comeback single and more like a band flinging open the windows of a clapped-out estate car and gunning it down the nearest coastal road, windows down, decorum abandoned at the petrol station.
East Duo – Chubina Chill 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Tbilisi's East Duo arrive at this reworking with the confidence of a band who already know the tune works — their original "Chubina" did the improbable trick of colonising algorithmic feeds the world over, racking up streams in the hundreds of millions and prompting a frankly absurd quantity of strangers to film themselves dancing badly to it. The temptation, having stumbled into that kind of ubiquity, would be to chase the same rush twice. Instead, the duo have done something rather more interesting: they've taken the chassis of a viral hit and stripped it for parts, rebuilding it as something hushed, patient, almost devotional.
Marry Me Emelie! – Flowers
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There is a particular kind of English misery that wears velvet rather than sackcloth, and Marry Me Emelie! have spent two years quietly perfecting it. "Flowers," the duo's first single since last spring's quietly devastating EP, doesn't so much arrive as exhale. It is less a song than a held breath that finally, reluctantly, lets go.
CDubs – Love Language – Original Mix
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Southampton has given English music plenty over the years, though dance-floor mysticism has never been high on the list — that's normally Manchester's department, or Bristol's, cities that have built entire mythologies around a bassline and a smoke machine. CDubs, working out of a Hampshire studio rather than anywhere fashionable, has decided the south coast deserves its own contribution to the genre: a producer's confession dressed up as a single, built on the rather endearing premise that he has identified a sixth love language, and that language is, conveniently, the one he happens to speak professionally.
Harry Kappen – Distant Shore  
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Some songs announce themselves with a fanfare. Others arrive the way grief does — quietly, then all at once. "Distant Shore" belongs firmly to the second category, and Harry Kappen, a Groningen-born itinerant with a therapist's ear for human fracture, clearly knows the difference.
JFK Blue – Restless City  
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Six men in a room, the press notes insist, with no rhythm or reason to how the songs arrive — which is either disarming honesty or the oldest dodge in rock journalism, the one where "we just feel it, man" stands in for "we haven't thought about structure since 2019." Either way, "Restless City" is the sound of a band climbing back onto a stage they vacated seven years ago, and to their credit, they don't sneak back in quietly. They open with a police siren, which is the musical equivalent of clearing your throat with a foghorn.