• Weekly Song Recommendations •

“Memo For A Friend” by dearborn is a delicate ache wrapped in quiet melodies, capturing the kind of love that lingers without asking for anything in return. It’s a gentle, beautifully restrained reflection on connection, where every note feels like a whispered truth you’re lucky to overhear.

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“Bet A Tooth” by Bearbonez snarls with swagger, fusing gritty riffs and razor-sharp grooves into a cathartic sonic punch. It’s the sound of chaos harnessed, dark, stylish, and stomping with the confidence of someone who’s got nothing left to lose.

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“Falling Dream” by Fastriser races forward with urgency, capturing the bittersweet tension between youthful invincibility and the weight of reality crashing in. Its raw, live-recorded energy pairs with emotionally charged vocals to deliver a punchy anthem for anyone navigating change, loss, and the strange beauty of holding on to love through it all.

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Jay Squire’s “2 Become 1” drifts like a soft-focus daydream, turning the classic into a tender swirl of glowing guitars and breathy nostalgia. It’s a cover that doesn’t just revisit the past, it melts it into something misty, intimate, and entirely its own.

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“Spend Your Days in the Sunshine” by Shake Some Action! shimmers with golden-hour warmth, wrapping jangly guitars and crisp harmonies into a feel-good breeze of retro-tinged joy. It’s the kind of song that turns a simple drive into a scene from a sunlit coming-of-age film.

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“My Town” by 7SA feels like a heartfelt road-trip memory materialized in sound, warm, grounded, and effortlessly vivid. With laid-back rhythms and lyrical snapshots of familiar corners, it invites you into a hometown isn’t just described, but vividly relived.

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When You Know, You Know” from Burn Kit detonates like a revelation in post-punk form, its haunting riffs bloom across cold imagery and emotional undertones that linger long after the track ends. The song pulses with raw conviction, its visceral energy carving space for listeners to stand tall in their own truths.

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“Nightmare Fuel” by Bill Fever sinks its teeth in with a sinister grin, blending shadowy synths and jittery beats into a soundscape that feels like a haunted carousel ride. It’s eerie, hypnotic, and weirdly addictive, perfect for when you want your music to crawl under your skin and stay there.

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New Math’s “Sometimes Good Guys Don’t Wear White, Live at Scorgies” is a raw, electrifying time capsule that crackles with the untamed spirit of a sweaty 1982 club night. With its raucous energy and punk-glazed swagger, it delivers garage rock nostalgia with the grit and glory of a band that lived every note like it mattered.

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“Factory” by In-Flight Movie hums with a steady melancholy, pairing moody textures with a driving rhythm that feels both mechanical and deeply human. It’s the kind of track that captures the quiet rebellion of everyday life, subtle, simmering, and hauntingly resonant.

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