• Weekly Song Recommendations •

Brett Adam Sherman’s Feels Like Home bursts out of the speakers with a sun-soaked swagger, wrapping sharp surf-rock riffs and punchy grooves into a feel-good rush that’s impossible to resist. It’s the kind of track that turns any room into a celebration, radiating warmth, motion, and a sense of belonging that lingers long after the last note fades.

Socials:   InstagramFacebook  

Year of the Rabbit arrive swinging with I AM LIAM GALLAGHER’S SON, a snarling, no-filter blast that fuses sharp wit with raw post-punk energy and zero interest in playing nice. It’s provocative, loud, and deliberately uncomfortable—an opening statement that demands attention and leaves a dent rather than a handshake.

Socials:   Instagram

Modern Plastics’ The Well sinks into a thick haze of drifting melodies and crushing guitar weight, moving slowly but with an emotional pull that’s hard to escape. It feels like staring into something deep and unresolved, where beauty and heaviness blur into one hypnotic, late-night listen.

  Socials: SOUNDCLOUD

The Invisible Man’s Only the Birds unfolds with a quiet, observational grace, letting its mood breathe and linger rather than rushing toward resolution. There’s something intimate and slightly haunting in its restraint, as if the song is listening to the world as much as it’s singing about it.

Socials: Facebook

Crá Croí’s Fires at Dawn moves like a slow-burning vision, layering shadowy textures with an undercurrent of resolve that feels both fragile and defiant. It’s a song that stands in the aftermath of collapse, finding beauty in the smoke and momentum in the act of enduring.

Socials:   InstagramFacebook 

Dam CPH’s Whisper Desire glides through the night with a velvety pulse, wrapping intimate vocals in a glowing, retro-tinged soundscape that feels both nostalgic and dangerously close. It’s the kind of track that blurs longing and rhythm, inviting you to linger in its soft-focus emotions rather than rush toward daylight.

Socials:  Youtube  

Nothing But Joy’s There’s Blood moves with an unbroken momentum, pulling you forward on a steady, hypnotic drive while layers of haze and melody wrestle between despair and resolve. It’s emotionally open yet elusive, letting hope and doubt coexist in a way that feels deeply human and quietly powerful.

Socials:  Spotify

Wrecked Sun’s Heaven Is a Parking Lot blankets the listener in dense, shimmering noise while a strangely serene vocal presence drifts through the wreckage. The contrast between its soothing surface and the bitterness underneath makes the track hit harder, like a quiet confession shouted through distortion.

Socials:   Instagram 

Manali Guest House’s Always drifts in with a gentle confidence, unfolding slowly and letting its mood settle rather than demand attention. It’s a quietly immersive listen, the kind of song that stays with you through its subtle textures and unforced emotional pull.

Socials:   InstagramFacebook

Day Friend’s BRAINWORM pt.1 latches on fast, riding a gritty groove and warped energy that feels both loose and sharply intentional. It’s raw, restless, and oddly addictive, the kind of track that burrows into your head and refuses to leave without a fight.

Socials: Instagram