Allan Jamisen – The Coalition
A Shadowy Soundtrack to Power and Pretense
Allan Jamisen’s The Coalition arrives like a slow-burning film reel, dark, deliberate, and impossible to ignore. From the outset, the track establishes a tense, nocturnal atmosphere, pulling the listener into a world where authority, ambition, and manipulation quietly intertwine. The production feels meticulously controlled yet emotionally raw, balancing trip-hop precision with industrial grit and flashes of jazz-inflected sophistication.
There’s a cinematic quality to the song that never feels ornamental. Heavy, measured rhythms press forward with a sense of inevitability, while eerie synths and textured percussion create a claustrophobic mood. Subtle brass and woodwind accents slip in and out, adding a strangely elegant contrast to the track’s ominous core. This interplay gives the music a restless momentum, as if it’s constantly circling an uncomfortable truth.
Jamisen’s vocal presence is a standout—cool, restrained, and sharply focused. Rather than overpowering the arrangement, the delivery feels embedded within it, reinforcing the song’s sense of observation and critique. The spoken-word and rap-inflected approach adds urgency without sacrificing clarity, making the message feel intentional rather than explosive.
At its heart, The Coalition is a bold political statement, confronting the systems that manufacture conflict and dress violence in convincing rhetoric. Yet it never feels preachy. Instead, it invites reflection, letting atmosphere and tone do much of the work. This is challenging music that rewards attention, proving once again that Jamisen is unafraid to fuse art, ideology, and experimentation into something both unsettling and compelling.
WOOF – Careless
Static in the Heart
WOOF’s “Careless” lands like a late-night confession you weren’t prepared for, but somehow needed to hear. From the first wash of distorted guitars, the song pulls you into a world where emotion is loud, unresolved, and unapologetically raw. There’s a restless energy here—tense yet vulnerable—that feels less like performance and more like a release.
The production leans into grit without losing clarity. The guitars churn with a bruised intensity, while the rhythm section keeps everything moving forward, as if refusing to let the weight of feeling completely take over. Over this, WOOF’s vocals arrive strained in the best possible way, carrying a sense of exhaustion and longing that feels earned rather than theatrical. It’s the sound of someone standing in the aftermath, surveying what’s broken, and deciding not to look away.
What makes “Careless” resonate is its emotional honesty. The track doesn’t rush toward closure or easy comfort. Instead, it sits with the discomfort of distance, of things unraveling, and allows that tension to breathe. There’s melancholy here, but also a quiet defiance—a sense that self-understanding can grow even in emotional ruins.
This is a song best experienced in solitude, when the world is hushed and thoughts feel heavier than usual. “Careless” doesn’t just tell a story of loss; it creates a space where reflection becomes possible. With this release, WOOF proves that intensity and introspection can coexist beautifully, leaving a mark that lingers long after the final note fades.
Powers of the Monk – Sleepy Fields
Dreamlike Resonance
“Sleepy Fields” by Powers of the Monk is a mesmerizing journey that effortlessly blends introspection with expansive sonic textures. From the very first notes, the track envelops the listener in a lush, almost cinematic atmosphere, where delicate violin lines intertwine with rich keyboard layers, creating a soundscape that feels both intimate and vast. There’s a meditative quality to the pacing, a gentle ebb and flow that mirrors the tranquility suggested by the title, yet it’s punctuated with moments of subtle intensity that keep the ear engaged.
The vocal interplay in the song is particularly striking. Powers of the Monk demonstrates an innate understanding of harmony, layering voices in a way that feels organic rather than calculated, giving each phrase emotional weight and resonance. The production amplifies this effect, with a clarity that allows every instrument and nuance to breathe, while the rhythmic undercurrent—soft yet deliberate—anchors the track without ever overshadowing its dreamlike qualities.
“Sleepy Fields” manages to balance restraint with expressive depth, creating a listening experience that invites repeated exploration. It’s a piece that rewards patience, revealing new textures and layers with each listen, and leaving a lingering sense of calm reflection. Powers of the Monk has crafted a work that feels timeless, a contemplative sonic landscape that both soothes and stirs the imagination. This is a song that lingers long after the final note, inviting listeners back into its serene, immersive world.
Audren – We’re All Lost
Finding Light While Admitting the Dark
Audren’s We’re All Lost feels less like a song and more like a gentle hand on the shoulder at the exact moment you didn’t realize you needed one. Rooted in indie pop with a clear jazz soul, the track opens in quiet intimacy and slowly unfurls into something broader and deeply reassuring. There’s a lived-in honesty here — not dramatic, not performative — just calm, brave acknowledgment of how unsteady the world can feel.
The arrangement breathes. Piano leads with patience, never rushing the story, while subtle instrumental conversations build an atmosphere that feels both personal and communal. As the song progresses, the sound grows warmer and fuller, creating a sense of movement without losing its reflective core. Every musical choice seems intentional, designed to hold space rather than demand attention. The fretless bass adds a tender emotional undercurrent, and the drums remain light yet grounding, giving the song its quiet sense of forward motion.
Audren’s voice is the anchor. It carries experience, vulnerability, and resolve in equal measure, sounding neither defeated nor falsely optimistic. Instead, it invites listeners to sit with uncertainty — and then gently nudges them toward hope. The improvisational spirit woven into the performance adds an organic, human quality, as if the music itself is discovering its way forward in real time.
We’re All Lost doesn’t offer easy answers, but it offers something better: comfort, clarity, and the reminder that connection and compassion still matter. It’s a healing listen — subtle, thoughtful, and quietly powerful.
ReeToxA – HMAS CERBERUS
Steel Hulls and Soft Scars
ReeToxA’s HMAS CERBERUS arrives with the weight of lived experience and the raw pulse of ’90s Oz rock, sharpened by a modern edge. From the opening moments, the track feels weathered and restless, like salt-stained memories refusing to stay buried. There’s a familiar grunge grit here, but it’s not nostalgia for its own sake—it’s a vessel for something far more personal and confronting.
What makes HMAS CERBERUS stand out is its emotional honesty. The song moves through themes of alcohol abuse, mental strain, and the long shadows cast by life in the defence force without ever sounding preachy or staged. ReeToxA leans into brutal truth, letting the music carry the tension between survival and self-reckoning. The guitars are thick and driving, anchored by a rhythm section that keeps things grounded even as the emotional current pulls hard in every direction.
Despite its heavy subject, there’s an undeniable momentum running through the track. It manages that rare balancing act—deeply reflective yet strangely energising. You can feel the push and pull between darkness and release, introspection and motion. It’s the kind of song that invites you to move while your mind lingers on what’s being said beneath the surface.
HMAS CERBERUS doesn’t try to tidy up trauma or wrap it in neat conclusions. Instead, ReeToxA offers something braver: a clear-eyed look at how the past echoes into the present. It’s raw, poetic, and unflinchingly human—a powerful reminder that some stories are best told loud, distorted, and completely unfiltered.
Asthma Kids – Crumbs and Morsels (The Meek Are Getting Ready Pt IV)
Dancing at the Edge of the Fire
Asthma Kids don’t ease into Crumbs and Morsels (The Meek Are Getting Ready Pt IV)—they kick the door down and dare you to keep up. The track crackles with urgency, sounding less like a polished studio product and more like a live wire humming with intent. There’s a rawness here that feels deliberate, almost confrontational, as if the song is refusing to be cleaned up or made comfortable.
Sonically, the energy is relentless. The rhythm surges forward with a pulse that’s equal parts punk defiance and dance-floor propulsion, creating a strange but addictive tension. It’s the kind of track that makes your body move even while your mind is busy unpacking what’s being thrown at you. Asthma Kids balance chaos and control impressively—everything feels on the verge of unraveling, yet it never actually does.
What makes Crumbs and Morsels hit harder is its emotional weight. The song radiates frustration and clarity at the same time, channeling anger into something communal rather than isolating. There’s a sense of collective awakening woven into the sound, a feeling that this isn’t just personal expression but a call to shared awareness. Yet, it never sinks into heaviness for its own sake. There’s grit, yes—but also a sharp, almost mischievous spark that keeps things alive and kinetic.
Ultimately, this track feels like a manifesto you can move to. Asthma Kids prove that protest doesn’t have to be solemn—it can be loud, sweaty, and strangely joyful. Crumbs and Morsels (The Meek Are Getting Ready Pt IV) doesn’t just demand attention; it earns it.
