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
Andy Smythe – Emergency   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The opening bars of 'Emergency' arrive with the kind of deliberate poise that suggests Andy Smythe knows exactly what he's doing. This is not a songwriter fumbling toward a sound, but rather a craftsman who has spent years honing his voice—both literal and metaphorical—into something remarkably assured. The single, heralding his forthcoming album 'Quiet Revolution', positions Smythe as one of those rare British artists willing to embrace the unfashionable virtues of melody, arrangement, and emotional honesty without apology.
Guild Theory – The Statesman
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The English duo Guild Theory have long operated in the shadows of the indie-folk landscape, and with "The Statesman," they emerge with a statement of intent that refuses to play by conventional rules. Matt Smith's vocals and Rob's instrumental arrangements converge to create a piece that exists in the liminal space between folk tradition and experimental post-rock ambition.
Konrad Kinard – War Is Family (Surviving the Cold War and the Unraveling of an Imagined America)
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There exists a particular brand of American mythos—one forged in duck-and-cover drills, backyard fallout shelters, and the perpetual hum of existential dread—that has rarely been interrogated with the sort of sonic sophistication Konrad Kinard brings to *War Is Family*. This isn't merely an album; it's an archaeological dig through the sediment of post-war American consciousness, conducted with the tools of avant-garde composition, spoken word, and what Kinard himself describes as "a radio drama without the drama or the radio."
Chloe Hawes – James Dean
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The opening bars of "James Dean" arrive like a confession whispered in a darkened room, all cigarette smoke and raw nerve endings. Chloe Hawes has never been one for artifice, but here the Essex-born, Manchester-based songwriter strips away even the modest defences that held previous work at arm's length. This is punk in its truest, least stylised form – not as hairspray and safety pins, but as an unvarnished confrontation with the self.
Samuel Carrancho – Ghosts in a glass  
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The peculiar anguish of feeling fundamentally insufficient—whilst simultaneously craving what you're certain you'll destroy—has long been fertile territory for songwriters. Yet few manage to capture this paradox with the raw vulnerability Samuel Carrancho achieves in "Ghosts in a Glass," a track that strips away the pop-funk exuberance of his earlier work to reveal the anxious heart beating beneath.
TaniA Kyllikki – I Promise I’ll Wait For You
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The peculiar alchemy of distance and devotion has long provided fertile ground for popular music's most affecting moments. TaniA Kyllikki's latest single proves that this territory, far from exhausted, continues to yield emotional gold when approached with sufficient craft and conviction. "I Promise I'll Wait For You" arrives not merely as another entry in the long-distance love song canon, but as a fully realised artistic statement that marries classical sensibility with contemporary production values.
West Wickhams – Sakura   
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The Richmond-based duo West Wickhams arrive with their latest offering, a five-track meditation on impermanence that marries lo-fi bedroom production values to a distinctly British take on post-punk atmospherics. Jon Othello and Elle Flores, who claim origins on Tresco in the Isles of Scilly—that famously haunted repository of shipwrecked figureheads—have crafted a peculiar dreamscape that owes as much to the Bromley Contingent's spiky antagonism as it does to the gentler, more introspective corners of synth-pop's expansive universe.
Tom Leonard – What Has Been and What Will Be
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Manchester has long been a city that understands melancholy. From the grey skies that hang over its Victorian architecture to the rain-soaked streets that have birthed generations of introspective musicians, the city seems to breed artists who excel at transmuting emotional weight into sonic beauty. Tom Leonard, a singer-songwriter steeped in the hallowed traditions of British shoegaze, arrives with his latest single as both inheritor and innovator of this lineage.
The New Citizen Kane – PSYCHEDELIKA Pt.1
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Few artists possess the audacity to position a comeback as worldbuilding rather than mere musical resurrection, yet The New Citizen Kane approaches *Psychedelika Pt. 1* with precisely this ambition. This isn't simply a collection of seventeen tracks—it's a meticulously constructed universe that demands total immersion, complete with companion apps, holographic installations, and scented incense. The sheer scope might read as hubris on paper, but the music itself proves surprisingly worthy of such grand aspirations.
Mick J. Clark – It’s Christmas Party Time
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The seasonal single has become something of a poisoned chalice in contemporary music. For every 'Fairytale of New York' that transcends its festive trappings to achieve genuine artistic merit, there are countless saccharine travesties that pollute the airwaves from November onwards, cynical cash-grabs wrapped in tinsel and false cheer. Into this fraught landscape steps Mick J. Clark with 'It's Christmas Party Time', a track that announces its intentions with the subtlety of Santa Claus crashing through your ceiling astride a particularly determined reindeer.
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