Indie Dock Music Blog

Latest:
Plain Drifter - Canine Reputation (video)              Banquet Darling - Shivers and Echoes (single)              GIANFRANCO GFN - TRACES OF THE WORLD (video)              Hidden Sector - Harmonic Surrender (single)              Foxy Leopard - We keep Walking (single)              Praveen Koval - Goodnight My Love (video)                         
July 13, 2026
Matthew Phillips – BattleField Of Love
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Let it be said plainly: fidelity is unfashionable. The pop landscape has spent the better part of a decade rewarding detachment, teaching us to treat devotion as a punchline and permanence as a personality flaw. Into this rather cynical arena strides Matthew Phillips, San Diego's reigning purveyor of big-hearted alt-pop, with a single that dares to be sincere without once curdling into sentimentality. "Battlefield of Love" is a record built on a wager — that a listener still wants to believe two people can choose each other, deliberately, every single day — and Phillips wins that bet with room to spare.
Memoryy – snoopdoggguardianangel
By indiedockmusicblog | |
A hotel elevator door is an odd place for a life to quietly fall apart, and pop music rarely admits when it's laughing through tears — yet here, across six unhurried minutes, Memoryy manages both at once. "Snoopdoggguardianangel" is the sound of a man's worst day colliding with a stranger's unbothered cool, and somehow spinning that collision into one of the most quietly moving synth-pop moments of the year.
De Fans – Nights Machine
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There is a particular kind of record that doesn't so much arrive as *arrive late*, sliding into the room after the party has already found its rhythm, unbothered by the fact that everyone else got there first. "Nights Machine," the new single from German producer däh De's project De Fans, is exactly that record: unhurried, self-possessed, and entirely too cool to care whether you noticed it walk in.
Shortout Kid – Toy Shop
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Picture Mozart handed a chainsaw instead of a harpsichord. Picture Kurt Cobain developing a dependency on a sampler rather than anything more predictable. Picture the softest note salvaged from an amplifier mid-explosion, somehow coaxed into a ballad. Picture Jimi Hendrix, asked to invent a new instrument capable of channelling a far more brutal century. None of these images quite prepares you for Shortout Kid, and yet all of them circle close to what he's actually done.
Kim McClay – So Close
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Kim McClay knows that love makes liars of us all, and "So Close" is her way of setting the record straight. She doesn't so much confess to two wasted years pining after a man she never technically dated as she does perform the autopsy on them, scalpel in one hand, tambourine in the other. The song arrives dressed as catharsis but behaves like a séance — she's summoning a ghost just to prove, once and for all, that she can look it in the eye without flinching.
ELTUS – CAN’T OWN ME
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Paris breeds a particular strain of electronic producer: unshowy, fastidiously precise, allergic to spectacle for its own sake. ELTUS belongs to that lineage, and "Can't Own Me" arrives as a bracing reminder of what club music can achieve when it refuses to settle for mere function.
Plain Drifter – Canine Reputation  
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Sam Lillicrap builds his records the way old dogs build their reputations — through repetition, through consequence, through refusing to bolt the first time someone raises a hand. "Canine Reputation" is a home-studio production that doesn't sound like one, a Sunshine Coast riff dispatched with the swagger of a band that's spent decades on arena stages, and it announces Plain Drifter as an act with a proper ear for the difference between loud and forceful.