The Trusted – Spin
Caught in the Whirl
With Spin, The Trusted delivers a shot of pure momentum that grabs you from the first beat and refuses to let go. This is a song that moves fast but thinks deeply, balancing restless energy with emotional clarity. Everything feels tightly wound and intentionally sharp, as if the band is daring the track to run wild while keeping it firmly under control.
The rhythm section drives the song forward with breathless urgency, locking into a pulse that feels almost physical. Above it, bright guitar lines shimmer and clash, creating a sense of motion that mirrors the track’s central tension — the need to feel grounded while everything seems to be spinning at once. It’s pop at heart, but never hollow; there’s a nervous edge here that keeps the listener alert and invested.
What really elevates Spin is its emotional core. There’s an honesty running through the performance that makes the song feel human rather than polished for polish’s sake. You can sense the push and pull between confidence and vulnerability, between wanting to be heard and fearing being overlooked. That tension gives the track weight, even as it remains irresistibly catchy.
The structure is cleverly handled, building toward moments of release before pulling the rug out just when you think you’ve settled in. By the time it ends, it feels less like a conclusion and more like a challenge to press play again. Spin is vibrant, urgent, and deeply felt — a track that proves The Trusted know exactly how to make emotion move at full speed.
Mutant Thoughts – Inner Prison
Locked Grooves, Open Wounds
Mutant Thoughts return with Inner Prison, a groove-driven electro-rock single that feels both urgent and eerily introspective. Built on Latin-tinged rhythmic patterns and tightly coiled bass lines, the track pulses with kinetic energy while carrying a heavy emotional undertow. From the outset, shimmering synth textures hover like neon fog over a restless beat, creating a dystopian soundscape that mirrors the song’s fractured communication.
There’s a mechanical precision to the production—unsurprising given the band’s self-recorded, self-produced ethos—but it never feels cold. Instead, analog warmth seeps through the digital sheen, especially in the layered vocal harmonies that rise and fall with restrained intensity. The hooks arrive subtly at first, then burrow deep, locking into a hypnotic groove that feels almost ritualistic.
What makes Inner Prison particularly compelling is its tension between movement and isolation. The rhythm section drives forward with danceable momentum, yet the lyrical theme circles the emotional distance between people—the invisible walls we build and the words we fail to find. That push-and-pull gives the song its bite.
As the first glimpse of the upcoming Makeshift_DNA, this track positions Mutant Thoughts as architects of a sound that’s both cerebral and visceral. It’s futuristic prog with a pop heartbeat—dark, immersive, and impossible to ignore.
Sean MacLeod – Take Control (Don’t Let ‘Em)
Taking the Wheel Back
Sean MacLeod opens the door to his upcoming album with Take Control (Don’t Let ’Em), and it immediately feels like a steadying hand on the shoulder. There’s something refreshingly grounded about this track—no excess, no distractions—just a clear-eyed return to MacLeod’s indie instincts, delivered with confidence and quiet fire.
From the first moments, the song leans into shimmering guitar textures that feel both familiar and alive, carrying a sense of forward motion without ever rushing. The production keeps things raw and uncluttered, allowing the melody to breathe and the hook to land naturally. It’s the kind of chorus that stays with you not because it shouts, but because it knows exactly when to step forward and when to pull back.
What really makes Take Control (Don’t Let ’Em) resonate is its emotional clarity. There’s an undercurrent of resolve running through the track, a feeling of reclaiming space and standing firm, delivered without melodrama. MacLeod’s vocal performance sits comfortably in the center, warm and assured, giving the song its human pulse.
As the opening track of That’s When the Earth Becomes a Star, this release feels purposeful. It signals an artist reconnecting with his core while still sounding present and relevant. Take Control (Don’t Let ’Em) isn’t just a strong single—it’s a statement of intent, setting the tone for what promises to be a thoughtful and compelling album journey.
BLOCK – Over And Over
Haunted in the Best Way
BLOCK’s “Over And Over” doesn’t just play—it lingers. It circles your mind the same way the thoughts at its core seem to circle his. From the very first moments, there’s a restless pulse running underneath the track, like a heartbeat that refuses to steady. It’s intimate, unfiltered, and almost uncomfortably honest in the way it opens a window into BLOCK’s inner world.
Something is gripping about how immediate it feels. You can sense that this wasn’t polished into perfection over months—it feels lived-in, captured in a flash of emotional urgency. The production keeps things raw but intentional, giving space for the vulnerability to breathe while still driving forward with a steady momentum. That tension between fragility and control becomes the song’s most compelling feature.
BLOCK has always thrived in that space between wit and wound, but here he leans fully into the darker corners without flinching. The result is a track that feels less like a performance and more like a confession. It’s not dramatic for the sake of drama; it’s real, messy, and brave.
“Over And Over” stands as one of BLOCK’s most emotionally exposed moments yet—haunting, cathartic, and deeply human. It doesn’t just invite you to listen; it asks you to sit with it. And long after it ends, you probably will.
The Lovely Sparrows – Edge of the Collapse
Hovering at the Brink
With Edge of the Collapse, The Lovely Sparrows offer a quietly arresting piece of music that feels less like a statement and more like a slow realization settling in. The song unfolds with a deliberate calm, drawing the listener into a soundscape that feels suspended between motion and stillness. There’s a subtle tension at play — not explosive or dramatic, but persistent, like the awareness that something familiar is gradually slipping away.
Musically, the track reflects the band’s long-standing talent for balance. Layers emerge patiently, allowing space for atmosphere to breathe while maintaining a steady sense of forward movement. The arrangement feels thoughtful and unhurried, inviting listeners to sit with its mood rather than rush toward resolution. It’s the kind of song that rewards close listening, revealing emotional depth through restraint rather than volume.
What truly stands out is the emotional tone. Edge of the Collapse doesn’t shout its concerns or wrap them in urgency; instead, it observes. There’s a reflective quality that mirrors the feeling of watching change happen in real time — uncertain, unsettling, yet strangely hypnotic. The Lovely Sparrows capture that uneasy calm with remarkable grace, letting the song linger long after it ends.
As an introduction to what lies ahead, this release feels purposeful and confident. It signals an artist comfortable with ambiguity, willing to explore discomfort without offering easy answers. Edge of the Collapse is introspective, immersive, and quietly powerful — a song that drifts rather than demands, and in doing so, leaves a lasting impression.
Studious B – About Me
Strut, Swagger, and Self-Awareness
Studious B’s “About Me” is the kind of song that walks into the room before you do. It arrives with confidence, sparkle, and a knowing smirk, blending alternative pop, new wave flair, and synth-rock energy into a track that feels instantly alive. There’s a playful tension at the heart of it—dancefloor-ready on the surface, quietly sharp underneath—and that contrast is where the song really shines.
Built around a bold, strutting groove, “About Me” thrives on momentum. The production feels deliberately theatrical, echoing classic pop bravado while keeping one foot planted firmly in the present. Harmonies glide in with a boy-band gloss, while the back-and-forth vocal structure adds character and motion, like two perspectives circling each other under strobe lights. It’s polished without being stiff, cheeky without being careless.
What makes the track especially compelling is its self-aware edge. Beneath the catchy exterior lies an examination of misplaced confidence and social misfires—the kind that play out in small-town nights where everyone thinks they’re the smartest person in the room. Studious B leans into that irony with charm, letting the groove do the heavy lifting while the concept quietly lands its punch.
“About Me” doesn’t ask you to overthink it. It invites you to move, to smile, and maybe to recognize a little of yourself in the bravado. It’s an earworm with brains, and a standout moment that hints at the bigger, bolder world Studious B is building.
