The Elephant Man – Sister of War
A Fury Born in Shadows
“Sister of War” is The Elephant Man at their most unapologetically feral — a track that doesn’t just knock on the door of your psyche but kicks it wide open and strides in with fire in its eyes. From the very first grinding ripple of guitar, you feel the band pushing into a heavier, more visceral territory, the kind that makes your pulse thrum like you’re standing in the middle of some cosmic battlefield.
Maximilian’s voice is a force all its own here — deep, urgent, and strangely intimate, like he’s pulling you into the storm rather than performing it at a distance. Behind him, the band tightens into something fierce and singular: TMY’s guitars snarl with a cinematic sense of tension, Halle’s drums rumble like distant thunder, and Ivan’s bass lines glue everything together with a menacing pulse that never loosens its grip.
What makes “Sister of War” hit even harder is the emotional architecture beneath all that power. There’s rage, yes, and an undeniable invocation of chaos — but threaded through it is that sudden gleam of something bright, a reminder that even within destruction, the will to rise remains. It’s that clash — darkness locking eyes with the possibility of redemption — that gives the song its teeth.
Bold, immersive, and absolutely unafraid to get loud in all the right ways, “Sister of War” is the kind of track that demands you surrender to it. And honestly? You’ll want to.
Scott’s Tees – We Move As Fast As Storms Allow
Chasing Thunder in the Dark
Scott’s Tees’ We Move As Fast As Storms Allow feels like stumbling into someone’s half-remembered dream and realizing they’ve turned it into music before it could fade. There’s a tender scrappiness to the track—an honest, bedroom-born kind of magic that can’t be faked, no matter how polished a studio might be. You can practically sense the Tascam recorder humming in the corner, catching every breath, every ghostly harmony, as if the song itself were whispering its way into existence.
What makes the track glow is its balance of grit and softness. You hear that alt-rock weight—those Pearl Jam and Soundgarden shadows drifting underneath—but it’s woven with a gentler folk thread, something intimate and inward-looking. The harmonies in the chorus don’t just lift the song; they widen it, like a window thrown open right before a storm breaks. It’s raw, sure, but that rawness feels intentional, like part of its charm is the unfiltered emotion.
There’s also a sweet bravery in the simplicity of the project. One person, one bedroom, one dream—yet there’s a universe pulsing beneath the lo-fi edges. Scott’s Tees isn’t just writing a song about dreams; they’re making something that feels like one, flickering and vivid and a little bit vulnerable.
We Move As Fast As Storms Allow doesn’t rush. It lingers. And by the final note, you kind of want to linger with it too.
My State – It’s Whatever
“Fuel for the Fed-Up”
My State’s “It’s Whatever” hits like that perfect moment when you finally stop overthinking and start taking your power back—messy emotions, sharp attitude, and all. Heth and Pablo bottle that exact energy into a track that feels half battle cry, half cathartic eye-roll, the kind you throw at someone who’s officially used up the last of your patience. There’s a spark in the way the song moves, like it was born in a rush of adrenaline and built to be blasted at full volume with windows down.
Heth’s vocal presence is fierce and unapologetic, buzzing with the rawness of someone who walked straight out of a bad situation and didn’t bother to look back. You can feel the origin story in her delivery—the living-room frustration, the beer on the side table, the “enough is enough” moment that flips a switch. Pablo meets that fire with a guitar tone that snarls just right, riffs that dart in like little lightning strikes, and drum fills that punch up the momentum rather than clutter it.
What makes “It’s Whatever” stand out isn’t just its attitude, though—it’s the fun in the fury. You hear two artists who clearly had a blast shaping every jagged edge and bright spark, turning personal frustration into something wildly infectious. The track radiates that “dance while you shake it off” energy, and by the end, you’re not just listening—you’re right there with them, shrugging, smirking, and feeling a lot lighter.
ESTRADA Music Project – I don’t need to hide anymore
Quiet Bravery
ESTRADA Music Project’s I Don’t Need to Hide Anymore is a gentle, confident bloom — a song that doesn’t shout its arrival but steadily demands your attention. Right away the arrangement sets a warm, intimate scene: restrained instrumentation, soft percussive nudges, and an airy bed of synths that lets each tone breathe. It’s cinematic in a low-key way, the kind of production that gives space for small moments to land and linger.
The vocal performance is the heart of the track — measured, honest, and tenderly assured. There’s no dramatic excess here; instead, the voice carries the weight of the song’s emotion through nuance and clarity. As the layers accumulate, they never overwhelm; they reassure. Subtle harmonic touches and tasteful dynamic shifts create the sense of someone stepping forward at their own pace, not sprinting toward catharsis but choosing steady presence instead.
What feels most refreshing is the song’s emotional economy. It trusts quietness as a form of strength. The bridge and build are satisfying precisely because they honor restraint, turning small melodic decisions into meaningful emotional payoffs. By the close, the track leaves you with a sincere warmth — the afterglow of someone who’s reclaimed a piece of themselves.
In a landscape that often prizes spectacle, this single is a reminder that courage can arrive as a whisper. ESTRADA Music Project delivers a humane, uplifting piece that feels both intimate and quietly triumphant.
The Mustard – The Sign
A Funk-Infused Reflection on Modern Life
The Mustard’s latest single, “The Sign,” doesn’t just groove — it glimmers. The Bracknell-based band has built a reputation for blending sharp lyricism with rich, textured sound, and this release takes that balance to new heights. Written by bassist Mike Jackson, the track captures humanity’s restless tendency to take shortcuts, only to face the fallout later — but rather than lecture, it invites reflection through rhythm.
From the first pulse of the bassline, you sense The Mustard’s Duran Duran and Level 42 influences, yet they twist that familiar 80s shimmer into something distinctly their own. Charles’s vocals ring out with crystalline clarity, cutting cleanly through the funk-laced instrumentation like sunlight through glass. The live-recorded feel adds an honest warmth — you can almost imagine the band feeding off each other’s energy in the studio.
Produced by Steve “Smiley” Barnard at Sunshine Corner Studios, “The Sign” carries an effortless polish that never overshadows its heart. There’s a tension between smooth production and raw intent — a sonic tug-of-war that makes the song linger long after it ends.
If The Mustard’s goal was to push boundaries while staying true to their core sound, they’ve nailed it. “The Sign” stands as both a philosophical nudge and a dance-floor call — a reminder that even in the shortcuts we take, there’s rhythm worth noticing.
Omnesia – Days and Nights
Future Vintage Feelings — Omnesia’s “Days and Nights”
Omnesia’s latest single, “Days and Nights,” is a lush, time-bending trip through emotion and atmosphere — the kind of song that feels both handcrafted and cosmically engineered. The duo, comprised of androgynous vocalist Medella Kingston and guitarist/producer M2, blends genres with the ease of artists who know exactly what they’re chasing and have no need to explain it.
Recorded in a cavernous Oakland warehouse, the track carries the warmth of brick walls and the pulse of live instruments played without a click track — a rare, organic heartbeat in an age of digital polish. You can hear that authenticity in every layer: Eric Slick’s dynamic drumming, Stephen Goodwin’s fluid bass lines, and Tal Ariel’s expansive keys give the song an analog soul wrapped in modern shimmer.
What makes “Days and Nights” linger isn’t just its craftsmanship, but its emotional honesty. Born from the ache of separation and the quiet joy of reunion, it captures love’s long-distance heartbeat — the waiting, the return, the quiet spaces in between. Kingston’s vocals glide between fragility and strength, threading nostalgia through the song’s “future vintage” soundscape — a blend of nu wave cool, electro-pop warmth, and a touch of rock intimacy.
Omnesia isn’t chasing trends; they’re building their own world — one where memory and melody collide, and time itself feels like it’s swaying in rhythm.
