Indie Dock Music Blog

Latest:
Luca Cruz - Walls Fall Down (single)              A.E.R.O. FLYNN - Gunz Blazin (single)              FATECRIMES - BOTH ENDS (single)              Strange Divine - Buried Deep (single)              FLORENT ADROIT - A CONTRE COURANT (single)              Fierce Friend - Put You Right (single)                         
July 1, 2026
The Black Plague Doctors – DYNAMITE! (Audio Cinema)
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There's a particular species of British music writing — the kind that used to fill the back pages of the *NME* in ink-stained fury — that reserves its highest praise for records that refuse to behave. *DYNAMITE! (Audio Cinema)*, the latest and most audacious outing from Atlanta's Jo-Fi and St. Gabe, operating under the deliciously ominous banner of The Black Plague Doctors, is exactly that sort of record: unruly, unwashed in the best possible sense, and gloriously indifferent to the sterile perfectionism that has calcified so much contemporary production.
The Colinizers – Gravitational Bull
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Six years may have passed since "Gravitational Bull" first appeared, but the single loses none of its strange, cartoonish gravity on revisit. Released in June 2019 and animated in Berlin rather than filmed in some cramped Philly basement, the video is a far stranger beast than its title suggests — less bar-band swagger, more fever-dream fable, and all the better for it.
Bardi Johannsson X d’Ant – Staring at Nothing
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Reykjavík has always bred musicians who understand the value of silence, and on "Staring at Nothing," Bardi Johannsson and David Antonsson prove themselves fluent in that particular dialect of restraint. This is a debut collaboration that arrives fully formed, unhurried, and confident enough to let its atmosphere do the heavy lifting rather than reaching for anthemic gestures.
Reetoxa – Bottle   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Steam pours from the ears of the girl on the sleeve, and by the second chorus you understand exactly why. "Bottle" arrives like a slammed cupboard door, all rattling nerves and chemical fizz, and Reetoxa treats restraint the way a shaken can treats a ring-pull.
FLORENT ADROIT – A CONTRE COURANT
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Florent Adroit has never been a man to chase the crowd, and the title of his new single confirms it before a single note is played: to go against the current, deliberately, unfashionably, and with conviction. On the strength of what precedes it — the sleeper success of "Tout Va Bien" — this feels less like a follow-up single than a statement of artistic identity, arriving on the twenty-first of June with the confidence of someone who knows exactly what he's building.
Strange Divine – Buried Deep
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Debut singles rarely arrive this sure of their own silences. *Buried Deep*, the first offering from Strange Divine, doesn't so much introduce a band as withhold one, and the withholding is the point. Recorded somewhere in the industrial hinterlands of Birmingham — a city that has been quietly producing menace and melancholy in equal measure since the days of Sabbath — the track refuses the usual debut-single handshake. No hooks thrust forward for approval. No chorus arrives to reassure you that everything will resolve. Instead, a slow, deliberate descent, and a band confident enough to let a song simply exist in its own murk.
FATECRIMES – BOTH ENDS
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Brighton has a way of producing bands who sound like they've spent too long staring at the sea and come back furious about it. FATECRIMES belong squarely in that lineage, and "Both Ends," the fifth cut from their forthcoming debut "As Above / So Below," is the sound of a duo who understand that restraint is only interesting when it's a prelude to violence.
A.E.R.O. FLYNN – Gunz Blazin
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Pennsylvania does not, on the whole, announce itself as fertile ground for G-Funk. The genre's spiritual home has always been somewhere sun-bleached and low-slung, all hydraulics and heat haze, not the steel-town grit of Harrisburg. And yet here comes A.E.R.O. FLYNN, cruising in from the Keystone State with "Gunz Blazin," a record that borrows the West Coast's laziest, sweetest swagger and refuses to apologise for the geography.
Fiona Amaka – Justified   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Patience, it turns out, pays. Fiona Amaka first floated "Justified" into the world two years ago in its "Cosmic" guise — all haze and hush, a meditative sketch rather than a statement. Now the guitar-driven original has finally landed, and the wait clarifies rather than dilutes it. This is the version her audience has been circling for months, the one glimpsed in bootleg clips of solo sets and full-throttle outings with the Amaka Band, each performance sharpening the song's edges a little further until the studio cut could do nothing but arrive fully formed.
Luca Cruz – Walls Fall Down
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Sixteen years old, and already he plays like the amplifier owes him money. That's the first impression "Walls Fall Down" leaves, and it doesn't soften on repeat listens — if anything it hardens, the way good blues-rock always does, into something you trust rather than merely enjoy. Luca Cruz has written, played, sung and produced this single alone, which ought to sound like a boast on paper and instead sounds like a fact you'd have guessed anyway, because the whole thing has the unmistakable coherence of a single stubborn vision rather than a committee's compromise.