“Enough of Your Love” exudes redolence and this laidback rock song successfully weaves grungy guitars and enticing female vocals into a song that sneaks up on you. The Wanes are from Nashville but this, fortunately, isn’t country.
Brooding electronica from Paradise Guerilla with the looped beats of “Intoxicated” roaming through the big city streets on the hunt for the ghosts of the past while classy female vocals interject with style. This one is for the cool kids.
“No More Waitin’” isn’t the kind of song to catch you by surprise and Vicious Kitty are the kind of band that know how to make the kind of music that goes well with beer on a Friday night but there’s a guitar solo in there so that works for me.
Another laid back song with, this time, Sara Lew moving her song “Shady Light” along at a leisurely pace whilst leaving plenty of space for listener contemplation. Her guitar leads and her languid vocals follows those chords to a mist covered nirvana.
An exercise in minor chord laconicism, “Last Time” is targeted at the urban coffee shop with Hunter & Wolfe’s downbeat lyrics leading the listener all the way to a piano break and something akin to a big chorus. If indie retro were a thing, this song would be it.
“Little things” has that laid back, post-midnight vibe with the shuffling electro beats and the wistful vocals combining to make a perfect soundtrack for a nighttime drive in your (hybrid) car. M.Rider knows where she is going with this one.
There will always be a place for a sentimental song and “Just Hold On” is such a song with Nico Ev singing sweetly all the way through it. The musical accompaniment may be sparse but her suitably expressed emotions fill the spaces nicely.
A solid reinvention of the brooding retro synth pop sound from Stirling band Transmission Suite with their laconically delivered song “Part of the Problem” looping the click track just like they used to do back in the bleak eighties.
Ironic in that distinctly British way, Diamond Country Dance Club steer their song “I Wanna Work in a Supermarket” straight along the river to sardonic nirvana. I’d call this song intelligent power punk and I would, as always, be right.
It Man successfully mixes some Britpop sensibilities into his quirkiness cake with “White Heat” coming out of the oven smelling like it was still 1992 whilst simultaneously proving that such sounds have a very long sell by date.
I didn’t know that soft rock still existed yet here we are with Davide Pannozzo and his song “Keep On Loving You”. The musicianship is on the money as is the melody and the polished lead vocals. That’s enough to take this song all the way from the bridge to FM radio.
“Otherworld” has a bit of that primal New Age vibe going for it with Celestial North’s almost not there voice weaving amongst the electronic fuzziness to get her message across. Not so much a song a short meditation on more ethereal matters.
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