The Music Of Sound out there slamming the gas pedal with their new gift “Love Me”, out June 7th via Monochrome Motif Records. Following the 18.5K-stream success of “Cold Weather Man”, this track raises the energy, coupling hypnosis with rock swag that captures your soul.

Fronted by Sherin, the South Indian tour de force whose voice is somewhere between silk and ruggedness, the band coats their signature Dream Pop with a fresh, danceable pulse. Sherin’s delivery drips with charisma, balancing sweet promises (“I’ll never ever break your sweet heart”) with sly danger (“I’m gonna tear your world apart”). It’s a sonic tightrope walk that’s seductive and volatile—a vibe Sherin owns like a boss.

Neil March (words/music) spun lyrics that flirt with duality—angelic devotion meets chaotic rebellion—while the instrumentation seethes. The track’s uptempo rhythm section thumps like a live wire, but the secret weapon? Ellie, the band’s Goldsmiths University flautist, whose otherworldly lines mesh through the mix like smoke, adding a surreal, cosmic edge. Her imminent graduation (BA finals, folks!) means the trio’s early summer tour is about to ignite stages with this newfound ferocity.

“Love Me” isn’t a plea; it’s a dare. The chorus—“Take me higher”—is a command, not a request, fueled by a groove so good, standing still isn’t an option. The Music Of Sound splices cultural threads (Welsh moodiness, South Indian soul) into a sound that’s global and gutsy.

With a music video dropping alongside the single, and tour dates looming, these three are primed to blow up. Need a band that’s equally brain and brawn? Check out The Music Of Sound and get ready to play it loud. “Love Me” doesn’t just knock—it kicks the door down.

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