Danielle Whalebone Yearns for the Solace and Comfort in Tactile, Mundane Normalcy in the Discordant, Industrial Post-punk of “Ordinary Things”

Danielle Whalebone, photo courtesy the artist

Danielle Whalebone’s “Ordinary Things” begins by providing texture and tactile sounds with what sounds like a metallic object being crafted and formed with the repeated sound of metal on metal and resonating drones. There is a chain-like rattle that sounds throughout like a mechanical mantra. Whalebone’s vocals, when they enter the song provides a human touch to what feel like inorganic objects interacting. She sings of being aware of an immense aspect of existence but now she seeks “peace in ordinary things.” The industrial sounds of the song have a post-apocalyptic menace that contrast with that message which is the point. In extraordinary times in the way they are now in all the ways they have been there is a solace to be found in ordinary things and situations. When one has spent much of one’s life in pursuit of the un-ordinary and the remarkable because of how mundane and uninspiring everyday life can be and making art to take one out of those circumstances only to find oneself in situations that set a different standard for what is the usual one can yearn for perceived comfort and stability of ordinary things. Whalebone’s discordant and gloriously noisy song expresses well that contrast and reconciliation of former conflict with instincts and impulses. Listen to “Ordinary Things” on Spotify and follow Whalebone at the links below. Her new album Whispers of Shadows released on May 17, 2024 on streaming, for digital download and as a limited edition vinyl LP.

Danielle Whalebone on Facebook

Danielle Whalebone on YouTube

Danielle Whalebone on Wikipedia

Danielle Whalebone on Instagram


Dick Dudley Dark Surf Rock Post-punk “Meditation” is a Surreal Yet Sincere Inducement to Living in the Moment

“Meditation” is a very different kind of song for Australian post-punk band Dick Dudley. Its lyrics are a kind of guided meditation but one that goes beyond the tranquil self-care of a New Age or non-Western spirituality type of exercise. There is an undercurrent of intensity that suits the slinking sense of menace in the music. The latter sounds like the kind of surf rock you’d hear in Apocalypse Now. If Charlie surfed, that is. Dick Dudley hasn’t been short on irony and subversive humor but this song seems to be playing the messaging fairly straightforward while subverting the form of the guided meditation which can benefit anyone needing to focus on living in this current moment rather than being distracted by the forces that take us out of living in the moment. Listen to “Meditation” on Spotify and follow Dick Dudley on Instagram.

KYCTO’s Progressive Noise Rock “War” is a Musical Embodiment of Chaos and Breakdowns of Widespread Conflict

The angular breakdowns and resolves from direct guitar lines into splayed percussion that KYCTO uses throughout “War” reflects well the horrific subject of the song. The drama, chaos and violence punctuated by periods of deceptive silence finds itself embodied elegantly in the song which introduces some melodic then blaring saxophone that joins the rest of the instrumentation to create an entrancing cacophony with a paradoxically non-linear precision. The song is at the intersection of progressive black metal and noise rock. Like this band listened to a lot of Last Exit and later period Daughters and in moments its reminiscent of the less hyperkinetic and industrial moments of Killl. Listgen to “War” on Spotify and follow KYCTO on Instagram. The project’s album A concert for guitar, voice and drums released May 3, 2024.

Carlos Antonio’s Cinematic and Soulful Downtempo Art Pop Single “Rhodes” is a Song About the Complexities of Being Open About Intimacy

Carlos Antonio, photo courtesy the artist

Carlos Antonio’s breathy vocals seem to come from shadow places in in a late night lounge on “Rhodes.” The downtempo beat, moody strings, horns and harmonic drones flow like a slow moving fog with rhythm and tone integrating perfectly to lend the song a cinematic, orchestral aspect like an especially lush trip-hop song. Although the song has a soulful and vulnerable quality its lyrics outline the complicated social aspects of LGBT intimacy even in the twenty-first century. Antonio’s vocals sound like someone who has long been in the practice of shielding their true self but is now sharing a raw yet sophisticated glimpse into the mixture of passion, fear and desperation that comes from being uncertain how one’s authentic self will be received. Listen to “Rhodes” on Spotify and follow Carlos Antonio on Instagram.

snō Embraces Uncertainty as a Feature of Human Existence on Ambient Pop Single “unsure”

snō, photo courtesy the artist

“unsure” by snō is a song seemingly about a tentative relationship with the world around oneself with all its demands and contradictory expectations making it sometimes challenging to have a solid and assured sense of self. The simple guitar figure that runs through the song beginning with the echo of an input jack being plugged in. Though abstract and repetitive the guitar line gives the song a tactile quality while Jacquelin Turner’s vocals flow and drift with an introspective and expressive vulnerability. The song does feel like a journey from uncertainty to acceptance but not one driven by a need to find absolute solutions, rather leaning into the process and into feeling and being because in life your experiences are part of a continuity of existence that don’t always lend themselves well to an outlook oriented toward linear problem solving. The song is part of the EP processing (released April 24, 2024) which has similar themes throughout of coming to terms with not always having the answers or not having any that are enduring all assembled with beautiful ambient soundscapes and gentle textures. Listen to “unsure” and the rest of processing on Spotify and follow snō at the links below.

snō on Apple Music

Kabusa Oriental Choir Brings Commanding Choral Arrangements to its Interpretation of South African Pop Banger “Tshwala Bam”

Kabusa Oriental Choir hails from the Federal Capital Territory of Nigeria known for creative, choir adaptations of popular songs. “Tshawala Bam” was and is a 2024 TikTok viral sensation by South African duo TitoM & Yuppe. Kabusa Oriental Choir turn the relatively pulsating dance pop song very much of its time and place into something that feels slightly more traditional without sacrificing the vitality of the original and its fantastic low end. This version of the song expands upon the vocal possibilities inherent in the song and gives it an even more celebratory spin with multiple voices dropping in to switch up the flavor and tenor throughout further proving the song’s adaptability to multiple contexts and interpretations as evidenced by the more conventional production style remixes of the song that have already come about.

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Angelikah Fahray and SeepeopleS Neo Soul Trip Hop Single “If I Would Die” is a Lush and Affectionate Tribute to Love and Devotion

Angelikah Fahray, photo by Caitlin Carolan

Angelikah Fahray’s soulfully expressive vocals in “If I Would Die” are served well by the lush and exquisitely detailed production including contributions from Will Bradford (SeepeopleS, theWorst etc.). It’s a deeply affectionate tribute to love and devotion in a neo soul and trip hop vein and one that feels like a guided journey along Fahray’s poetic, emotional paces and her crafting of a mood you’d want to live in as long as you can surrounded by warmly resonant melodies and soft percussive textures. Fans of Sudan Archives and Erykah Badu will appreciate Fahray’s inspired songcraft and performance here. Watch the entrancing video for “If I Would Die” on YouTube and follow Angelikah Fahray at the links below.

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Annabelle Paige’s Exultant Pop Single is a Celebration of Breaking Free of Situations of Low Self-Expectations

Annabelle Paige, photo courtesy the artist

Annabelle Paige structures her song “Glimpse” as a journey from delicate spareness and vulnerability with acoustic guitar and vocals to a sonically dense and rich passages of exulting in personal liberation. And as the song goes back to the more acoustic side of things we hear more confidence and a sense of self in the lyrics before launching again into the emotional epic ending of the song with what feels like granular and distorted tones like a sense of burning off the limitations of a perspective that holds one back from one’s potential and often that can mean personal connections with people who don’t want you to grow because it means they might be forced to see how they’re not trying to develop beyond their current, stifling status quo. But you can’t live your life trapped by the low grade expectations of others and Paige’s song is about breaking free of situations like that. Listen to “Glimpse” on Spotify and follow the songwriter at the links provided.

Annabelle Paige on Apple Music

Annabelle Paige on TikTok

Annabelle Paige on Instagram

The Hypnogogic Drones of Hidden Blindness’ “Breathing Out” is a Welcome Break From Mundane Reality

Hidden Blindness, photo by Tom Law

Harmonic drones and hazy textures usher in the soundscape of “Breathing Out” by Hidden Blindness. When the slow moving melodies drift in as layers and then out the song conveys a sense of stillness like sunrise over a frozen pond in mid-winter. Gently rising flares of tone intermingle with icy synth swells like voices. A sustained brightness of tone that flows throughout the song lends it a quality like coming out of a long period of restful slumber with the mind free of the daily concerns that can anchor it to immediate wakefulness in which one is expected to perform some mundane workday duty. It’s a refreshing bit of music that can take you out of the everyday moment for a few minutes. If this is music as escapism your brain is probably better for it. Listen to “Breathing Out” at the links below and follow Hidden Blindness on Instagram.

Soft Cotton Candy’s Gauzy Dream Pop Single “It Could Happen To You” Explores the Light and Dark Sides of the Creative Imagination

Soft Cotton Candy, photo courtesy the artists

Soft Cotton Candy released its first album since its 2010 self-titled offering with 10 Years of Travel (out April 5, 2024). The single that leads off the album “It Could Happen To You” embodies the elegance of songcraft and soundscaping on the rest of the songs ahead. Acoustic and electric guitars set a languid pace, gentle textures and transporting moods that pair well with the breathy vocals that seem to tell a narrative about getting lost in fantasy and imagination in aspects both beneficial and as a path to delusional behavior. That emotional complexity though is cast in gorgeous, gentle and warm tones that don’t soften the impact of the song’s critical words when they appear, rather it highlights the sentiments. Musically the hazy melodies and downtempo pace is reminiscent of a Julee Cruise song or an unlikely collaboration between Yo La Tengo and Low awash in ethereal melodies. Listen to “It Could Happen To You” on Spotify where you can listen to the rest of 10 Years of Travel.