Cartamira’s Downtempo Synth Pop Single “Look at Me” Captures the Yearning Hopefulness of Unrequited Love

Cartamira, photo courtesy the artist

Cartamira’s “Look at Me” is a downtempo pop song about unrequited love and yearning. In evoking these feelings it captures the emotional intensity of that headspace and how you can feel like you’re perpetually in an unresolved dream and sitting between hopeful and resigned melancholy. Musically the song utilizes light dance beats and luminous and lush melodic, lingering chords to frame vocals processed to be slightly out of phase with everyday reality. It enhances the sense of floating between fascination and a blind hope for connection and recognition that may or may not manifest. Watch the video for “Look at Me” on YouTube and follow the Italian experimental pop project Cartamira at the links provided.

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lylyn’s IDM Single “4m Hiero” Flows From Digital to Analog Sounds and Back in its Sparkling Evocation of Joy

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“4m Hiero” sounds like something constantly unfolding in chapters. On this track lynlyn seems to cernter each section around a tone that expands and blossoms carried by finely accented rhythms. The song slowly accelerates and then pulls back to passages with an aspect of reflection, floating without the rhythm propelling the atmospherics forward, allowed to drift in space. In the video companion we see the visual representation of this with images more rounded before the rhythm reasserts itself in the end into a more angular, digital representation although like a fractal that freely dissolves and takes on coherence to match the beat. By the song’s end it all fades to a restful abstraction. The song is part of lylyn’s new IDM-adjacent album Ixona due out September 5, 2025 on digital, CD and LP. Watch the video for “4m Hiero” on YouTube and follow lynlyn at the links below.

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S.C.A.B.’s Warmly Melancholic “4th of July” is a Song About Lingering and Unresolved Affection

S.C.A.B., photo courtesy the artists

S.C.A.B. seems to be in a mode of writing songs about complex and nuanced moments in relationships. Its single “4th of July” has melancholic yet warm, splayed, expanding guitar work with each riff trailing off before repeating like a persistent lingering memory of someone that unravels into an unresolved moment in the end. It’s a perfect dynamic for capturing the essence of a relationship that feels so intense and close in moments but in which each person withdraws even as they yearn for each other because the connection seems so special. The song’s conclusion actually leaves you wondering how the story ends. Listen to “4th of July” on YouTube and follow S.C.A.B. at the links provided.

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Mary Middlefield Indulges in the Joys of a Casual Romance on “Summer Affair”

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Mary Middlefield looks like she’s frolicking at some kind of adult summer camp in the video for “Summer Affair” including a rope swing and a hedgerow pathway. The song and its luminous melody and lively energy is a full embrace of following wherever one’s impulses take one emotionally and spending time indulging hedonistic pursuits of all kinds with someone of choice and take those moments for what they are and not imbuing them with more significance than appropriate. Sometimes you end up in a short term relationship with someone for fun and then it stops being as fun and then as the song suggests maybe you’ve had a second thought about that person with whom you had some light fun and an enjoyable dalliance. Will it lead to more? Does it have to? Middlefield seems content to not have to have those questions answered after all not all relationships need to lead to a serious or forever situation and better off as something casual. Watch the video for “Summer Affair” on YouTube and follow Mary Middlefield at the links below.

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Tim Car’s Low Key Chillwave Single “Pleasure Drives” is a Song About the Joys of Traveling Without Having to Have a Set Destination

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Tim Carr’s hazy backdrop, minimalist percussion and introspective vocals on “Pleasure Drives” sounds like an even more lo-fi chillwave celebration of the charms of being able to get in a car and head to no destination in particular. This is not the emotional disconnect and alienation depicted in Gary Numan’s “Cars,” this is more the relaxing and escapist possibilities of driving without an agenda but taking in some of your favorite tunes while your mind wanders in the realm of putting behind you the immediate context of the sources of any anxiety and taking some time to forget about it all while your focus is on the road ahead. It’s definitely a phenomenon not just of decades past but of the present if you’re in a place where you can go some distance and have the option of turning back easily if you’ve sufficiently unraveled what’s unsettling your mind. Driving for pleasure is not as cheap as it once was and most cities don’t have a lot at the edges that don’t seem completely taken over by private equity firm development but you can still take those rides on your terms. It’s a lower key work for the songwriter whose tonally rich synth pop is transporting, but this song accomplishes much the same with a different sound palette that feels like its marking the miles between you and more familiar environs with a relaxed but direct pacing. Listen to “Pleasure Drives” on YouTube and connect with Tim Car at the links below.

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Josh Jacobs Takes Aim at Racism, Classism and Bigotry While Embracing His Cultural Heritage on “LANDfill”

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Josh Jacobs raps deftly with righteousness and swagger over a blend of bomba and trap beats on “LANDfill” taking on racist right wingers directly. But he doesn’t stop at the clever invective nor at racism but religious bigotry and classism. His flow and delivery is reminiscent of Vast Aire the way the latter will take some bars in a higher register and seem to answer back but elaborate in a different tone while maintaining a compelling narrative. It’s a refreshingly unapologetic song that embraces the the artist’s Hispanic heritage while calling out those who choose imagined safety in their relatively privileged economic status. Listen to “LANDfill” on Spotify and follow Josh Jacobs at the links provided.

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AUS!Funkt’s “Follow the Impulse to Insanity (Black and White)” is Subversive, Anti-Authoritarian, Krautrock Disco

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The motorik beats of “Follow the Impulse to Insanity (Black and White)” by AUS!Funkt accented by the fluid bass line are like a guide out of the straight jacket of late capitalist, technocratic control over too much of our lives. The vocals nearly whisper in the first half of the song but echo in near hysteria in the second half as though shaking off the “logic” of conforming to the dictates of “pure” economic decision making that isn’t done for the benefit of real humans but of a system that is designed to funnel the goods of society upward rather than distribute them in even a rational way that would ensure the well being of civilization. The sound of the song as it gets noisier and more psychedelic is a rebellion against your conditioning to go along with something bad for you. The title of the song spells that out and suggests that maybe “insanity” or the awakening to the “irrationality” of wanting to live as a human with the analog “flaws” and emotional responses to situations intact. The chorus of “I can’t accept these new conditions” speaks directly to how in corporate controlled environments parameters are changed regularly often to maximize your your use of time and demand increasingly more until you can give nothing else. The song is anti-authoritarian krautrock disco at its finest. Listen to “Follow the Impulse to Insanity (Black and White)” on Spotify and follow AUS!Funkt at the links below.

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Tan Cologne’s Dream Pop Single “In Resin” is an Enigmatically Evocative Summation of the Cosmology of One’s Life

Tan Cologne, photo courtesy the artists

Tan Cologne infuses into its dream pop single “In Resin” strands of hypnotically repetitive guitar figures under and over gossamer, melodic guitar drones and shimmery leads. In the middle of the song the main progression shifts from a melancholic augmented chord into a minor chord for an effect that stirs feelings of deep reflection. The whole song is reminiscent of a late-80s period Cocteau Twins but with a touch of desert rock shoegaze but think more like Morricone than Kyuss. The song’s twists and turns are gentle like it’s guiding you to a better place in your head. The song is the concluding track from the band’s new album Unknown Beyond which was released on June 20. 2025 and it’s hard to imagine the record going out on a more evocative note. Listen to “In Resin” on Spotify (where you can check out the rest of the album) and follow Tan Cologne on Instagram.

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Dumomi The Jig’s Dub Pop Ballad “My Own” is Tender Declaration of Romantic Devotion

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Dumomi The Jig’s “My Own” takes a fairly traditional approach to the subject of love for a woman with expressions of devotion, appeals to formal commitment and even declarations of wanting to meet her parents and introduce her to his own. It’s a tender gesture of getting approval of and sanction for what he already knows is real and enduring love. The song itself is like a dub ballad sung in both English and Nigerian Pidgin with layers of soft percussion and sensuous rhythms with luminous tones bursting softly in the background and sax adding a touch of dynamic mood that lingers and trails perfectly into a stream of sounds that fade into what is almost an unfinished sentence of music suggesting that this story of love is always going to be continued. Listen to “My Own” on YouTube and follow Dumomi The Jig at the links below.

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Freedom Fry’s Dark Disco Synth Pop Single “Best Friend” Is Imbued With an Air of Crime Noir

Freedom Fry, photo courtesy the artists

Sure the Freedom Fry song is titled “Best Friend” and superficially it sounds like the words of someone who wants to be more than a lover to someone but also, indeed, a best friend. The vocals are melodic and sweet but the bass line has a menace like something out of a crime or spy thriller soundtrack. It has a seductive tone especially with the dreamlike melodies and the sultry aspect of that bass line. But the lyrics contain promises and mentions of sticking a needle in one’s eye and hope to die rather than break the narrator’s word to the object of her affection. It’s reminiscent of an Air song through the filter of a darker LCD Soundsystem tune and something made for a skate disco party in a Guy Ritchie film. The surreal claymation style music video seems to confirm the suspicions of skullduggery or at least criminal conspiracy afoot and holding the couple together but fortunately it is that of the more musical variety and Freedom Fry offers yet another memorable song to its already impressive catalog. Watch the video for “Best Friend” on YouTube and follow Freedom Fry at the links provided.

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