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)                         
UK
Sandro Ferro – Going Wild
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Twenty years into a career built on precision and cross-genre audacity, Sandro Ferro delivers 'Going Wild' with the assurance of a producer who has nothing left to prove and everything still to say. The Swiss-British artist's latest single exemplifies why longevity in electronic music demands more than mere technical competence—it requires vision, adaptability, and an unwavering commitment to craftsmanship.
AKA PrimeTime – Electric Blue
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Kelly Appleton has spent years in the shadows—literally. As a touring session guitarist, she's been the invisible engine behind other people's visions, the reliable pair of hands that makes everyone else sound better. With "Electric Blue," her latest offering under the AKA Primetime banner, she finally steps into the light with a track that doesn't just announce her presence—it demands you pay attention.
Suris – Rare Brew 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The Mackies have always operated outside the conventional machinery of the music industry, and *Rare Brew* stands as defiant proof that such independence can yield extraordinary results. This remastered anthology, drawing from recordings spanning 2005 to 2015—with roots reaching back to 1992—captures a husband-and-wife duo who've spent thirty years refining their singular aesthetic while the world moved on without them. That they've persisted is admirable; that the music remains this compelling is remarkable.
Joel Paul – Roots   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The piano trio remains jazz's most demanding format—three voices, nowhere to hide, every note accountable. On *Roots*, his latest release, London-based pianist Joel Paul demonstrates why this seemingly spare instrumentation continues to captivate, crafting a six-track collection that speaks with clarity and conviction about identity, memory, and the fertile ground where musical traditions intersect.
Scott Swain – There’s Something In The Wind 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
London's Scott Swain emerges from the shadows with a debut single that refuses to play by contemporary rules. "There's Something In The Wind," released on Halloween 2025, is a deliberate act of defiance against the algorithmic placation that dominates modern music—a slow-burning meditation on dread that owes more to the psychological horror of Stephen King than to any chart-chasing formula.
The Marsh Family – Keeping the Dream Alive
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The Marsh Family have built their reputation on two seemingly contradictory pillars: razor-sharp political satire and an almost unsettling capacity for vocal perfection. Their pandemic-era parodies showcased a family who could skewer the absurdities of lockdown life while delivering harmonies that would make the von Trapps weep into their lederhosen. Now, with their Christmas charity single 'Keeping the Dream Alive', they've stripped away the satirical armour entirely, revealing something far more vulnerable and, ultimately, more affecting.
The Baby Seals – Tamoo Trance 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The Baby Seals have never been a band to pull their punches, but 'Tamoo Trance' lands with the kind of focused fury that suggests Cambridgeshire's premier garage-punk provocateurs have found their sharpest weapon yet. Released via Trapped Animal Records on 18th November, this savage little number—the perfect format for a band who understand that rage, like a good espresso, works best when concentrated.
Steve White & The Protest Family – Evidence-Based Punk Rock
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There's a particular breed of British protest music that refuses to die quietly, despite every attempt by algorithms and streaming platforms to suffocate it with playlists and bite-sized consumption. Steve White & The Protest Family's *Evidence-Based Punk Rock* belongs to this stubborn lineage, standing defiantly at the crossroads where Billy Bragg's righteous fury meets the Manic Street Preachers' conceptual ambition.
Hallucinophonics – Born on a Train
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The first thing you notice about "Born On a Train" isn't the music at all—it's the silence that precedes it. That pregnant pause before the acoustic guitar enters feels deliberate, almost confrontational, as if Hallucinophonics are daring you to settle into comfort before they systematically dismantle it over the next few minutes.
VANILLA.6 – LAST DANCE
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Ten years into their existence, VANILLA.6 has delivered an album that feels simultaneously like a vindication and a revelation. *Last Dance* arrives as both commemoration and rebirth—a stadium-sized statement from ook-boy, the project's sole remaining architect, now operating from UK soil and mining the territory between Japanese neopop sensibilities and the bass-heavy undercurrents of British electronic music.
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