Indie Dock Music Blog

Latest:
Grainville Train - New Hand to Hold (single)              Remora Beach - Tired Heart (single)              Judith Owen - Suit Yourself (album)              K-Iai - Do & Don‘t (single)              Richy McLoughlin - A Will To Survive (single)              Stefan Elbl - Chungungo (album)                         
indie pop
RetroBright – Honeyland
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The ghost of college radio haunts the opening bars of "Honeyland," RetroBright's latest dispatch from the sun-bleached boulevards of Los Angeles. Yet this is no mere séance with the spirits of alternative rock's past—rather, the trio have conjured something that manages to feel both nostalgic and vital, a trick that has eluded countless bands who mistake vintage gear for genuine inspiration.
Evan Bieber – Pick Myself Apart 
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Brooklyn's Evan Bieber has fashioned a peculiarly modern affliction into his most compelling work yet. "Pick Myself Apart" arrives as both confession and cure, mining the exhausting territory of millennial self-scrutiny with surprising musical sophistication and emotional intelligence that elevates it far beyond the typical indie-pop therapy session.
Roxane Tessier – J’ai créé un monstre
By indiedockmusicblog | |
The French chanson has always possessed an uncanny ability to transform personal anguish into universal truth, and Roxane Tessier's latest single "J'ai créé un monstre" stands as compelling proof of this enduring tradition. Released on August 15th, this haunting meditation on toxic love demonstrates that the art of confessional songwriting remains vibrantly alive.
Vogue Abyss – Girl in the Mirror
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Finland's Vogue Abyss have carved out a peculiar niche for themselves—one that sits comfortably between the windswept melancholy of Scandinavian indie pop and the more theatrical impulses of British alternative rock. Their latest single, "Girl in the Mirror," finds the quartet mining familiar territory while pushing their sound into more adventurous waters.
Formoe – Always
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Norwegian artist Formoe has crafted something rather special with "Always," a track that demonstrates how effective pop songwriting can elevate familiar themes into something genuinely moving. The collaboration between Formoe's lyrical and compositional instincts produces a song that feels both immediate and lasting—no mean feat when dealing with the well-trodden ground of romantic dissolution.
Andy Smith – The Best of Andy Smith (The Journey Man)
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Andy Smith's retrospective collection arrives like a weathered photograph discovered between the pages of a forgotten travelogue. The accompanying artwork—two silhouettes against crumbling stone and endless horizon—captures precisely the kind of existential wandering that permeates this compilation of his finest moments.
teenweek – The Kids Are Cruel
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Berlin's teenweek arrive with the kind of debut single that immediately signals both promise and the growing pains that define most fledgling acts. "The Kids Are Cruel" finds Rod and Phil channeling their shared obsession with indie rock through a lens that feels distinctly Germanic—all angular guitars and brooding introspection wrapped around a melody that burrows deep without ever quite exploding.
snow shack – Weekend
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There's something bracingly honest about a band that doesn't oversell itself. Snow Shack—the Jackson Hole trio of Alex Blackwelder, Colby Sandoval, and Nick Cottingham—could have easily branded themselves as the next great American indie hope, but instead they've quietly slipped "Weekend" into the world like a handwritten note passed between friends.
Sammm – you’Re nOt soRrY (it will haunt you)
By indiedockmusicblog | |
Nashville's Sammm arrives with the kind of wounded confidence that marks the most compelling singer-songwriters, delivering a single that cuts through the oversaturated Americana landscape with surgical precision. "you'Re nOt soRrY (it will haunt you)" – its deliberately mangled capitalisation a small act of defiance – transforms personal devastation into universal truth with the sort of alchemical skill that cannot be taught.
Ray Nita – The Idea of You
By indiedockmusicblog | |
There's something deliciously perverse about the way Ray Nita—the Puerto Rican-Californian duo of Tania "Ray Nita" Colón Morales and Snake Vélez—have constructed their latest offering. "The Idea of You" begins as a tender genuflection to the ballad tradition, all gossamer synths and confessional piano, before metamorphosing into something altogether more carnivorous: a disco-tinged meditation on the gulf between romantic fantasy and brutal reality.
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