
Big O, L.O.U – The Call (Feat. Frannie EL)
Soulful Hustle: “The Call” Resonates
Big O’s minimalist, soulful production creates a warm yet spacious backdrop for “The Call,” and it immediately sets the tone for something both reflective and energizing. Warm breakbeats and subtle instrumentals weave together under a polished mix from Argy W., making it a perfect canvas for emotion and contemplation.
L.O.U., whose name, Let’s Obliterate the Universe, signals bold ambition, delivers with calm authority. Hailing from South Side Jamaica Queens and now on his fifth project, he’s honed a lyrical presence that combines grit with grace. His words feel carved from real experience, dreams chased at 2 AM, faith tested, purpose reaffirmed, yet conveyed with a steady hand and determined spirit. It’s this contrast, quiet resolve over energetic beats, that makes the track move both body and soul.
Frannie EL’s vocal cameo lifts the track into a soulful realm, echoing inner dialogues that tap into universal feelings of doubt and perseverance. Her melodic lines offer a momentary release, like a deep exhale amid the hustle.
Thematically, “The Call” isn’t just another motivational anthem, it’s a spiritual nod to creatives grinding behind the scenes, affirming that purpose often whispers, not shouts. It’s a song for 3 AM epiphanies, late-night dedication, and that steady belief that under the quiet, something powerful is taking shape.
In short, this track is a warm hug to worn-out dreamers: honest, uplifting, and full of heart.

Jay Putty – Centerfield (John Fogerty Cover)
A Summer Memory Reborn
Jay Putty steps up to the plate with his soul-stirring rendition of John Fogerty’s Centerfield, and the result is a home run of heart, nostalgia, and Americana warmth. With its release timed perfectly for the Fourth of July, this cover isn’t just a nod to baseball, it’s a deeply personal tribute to family, legacy, and the golden memories stitched into the fabric of childhood summers.
What makes Putty’s version stand apart is the emotional gravity he brings to it. There’s a tender reverence in the production, crafted alongside Kevin Gates, that balances ballpark energy with backyard intimacy. His voice carries the sincerity of a man reliving the first time he held a glove or watched his team from the bleachers, and that connection radiates through every note.
But this isn’t just a feel-good tune. It’s a portal to a simpler time, a reminder of the joy in the crack of a bat, the warmth of a sun-soaked afternoon, and the quiet power of family rituals. It’s clear that Putty isn’t merely covering a classic, he’s weaving his life into it, offering listeners not just a song, but a story.
In a world that often moves too fast, Centerfield gives us a moment to breathe, smile, and remember what truly matters. With this heartfelt cover, Jay Putty reminds us why music and baseball still have the power to bring us home.

Barking Poets – Change Our Ways
Punk, Grit, and Defiance: Barking Poets Bring the Fire with “Change Our Ways”
Barking Poets are back with a blistering, unrelenting punk anthem that wears its heart on its sweat-soaked sleeve. “Change Our Ways” is more than just five minutes of smart, snarling pop punk, it’s a raw testament to survival, creative stubbornness, and the chaotic beauty of not giving up when everything else seems to be collapsing.
Written by drummer Conor Heary in the afterglow of lockdown madness, the track burns with lived-in truth. You can hear it in the thundering drums, the razor-sharp guitar lines, and the vocals that crackle with both fire and fatigue. It’s celebratory, but not naïve, a raised pint to every band that refused to give in, while also staring hard at the mirror and asking, Why are we still doing this?
Paul Tipler’s production is spot-on, giving the song grit without muddying the emotional core. There’s something beautifully British about it, a pint-glass-clinking resilience with its boots still soaked from the rain.
“Change Our Ways” isn’t just a song, it’s a rally cry for every artist who kept the lights on through the dark. Loud, loyal, and alive.

Marine Store Dealer – Dead Men’s Songs
A Storm Beneath the Stillness
Marine Store Dealer’s Dead Men’s Songs is the kind of track that doesn’t just play, it lingers. It’s a quiet reckoning wrapped in haunting textures and raw emotion, the sort of song you stumble upon late at night and end up sinking into like fog over a ruined city. There’s a restrained urgency here, an ache simmering beneath every note, that makes the track feel not just timely, but timeless.
Built on dream pop atmospherics with a post-rock backbone, the trio (Gemma Upton, Martin Pearce, and Eray Çaylı) crafts a soundscape that is both intimate and cinematic. Upton’s vocals are ghostly but grounded, like someone singing from the edge of memory, while Pearce’s bass and keys stretch and pull the mood in shadowy directions. And Çaylı’s drumming? Subtle but commanding, like a heartbeat steadying the storm.
But what truly sets Dead Men’s Songs apart is its emotional honesty. It speaks to that eerie calm when everything seems normal on the surface, yet underneath, society is cracking. There’s melancholy here, yes, but also resilience. This isn’t music for the apocalypse. It’s music for the quiet walks afterward, when the sky is still and you’re not sure what comes next.
In a world full of noise, Marine Store Dealer gives us something braver: reflection. And it’s devastatingly beautiful.

The Parachute Testers – Halfway To Everywhere
Ethereal Horizons: Halfway To Everywhere
The Parachute Testers’ “Halfway To Everywhere” is a radiant sonic journey, a cinematic voyage brimming with emotion and tasteful restraint. From the instant its ambient textures bloom, the song establishes a delicate tension: poised between soothing calm and quiet anticipation.
Fronted by a soaring female voice that recalls luminaries like Mazzy Star and London Grammar, the vocals carry a fragile confidence, gliding through the mix without overpowering the atmosphere. It’s a voice that can whisper vulnerability yet swell into determined resolve, giving each phrase a poignant sense of narrative.
Musically, the track is an elegant tapestry, acoustic guitar, gentle piano, and soft electronic pulses merge seamlessly, while carefully placed drums punctuate rather than dominate. It feels like a slow sunrise, guided by thoughtful arrangements that build momentum while honoring spaciousness.
The Parachute Testers’ background, spanning Ireland, the UK, and Ukraine, imbues the song with a layered cultural warmth. Its blend of folktronica, indie-pop hues, and ambient rock creates a unique voice that stands confidently alongside influences like Elbow or Zero 7 yet sounds distinctly its own.
“Halfway To Everywhere” doesn’t just preview their September 2025 debut, it plants a flag in the listener’s heart. It’s more than a single; it’s an atmospheric embrace that invites you to feel the emotion behind every note.

Penny Rebels – Bad Man
Meet the ‘Bad Man’ – Penny Rebels Make One Hell of an Entrance
Turn your speakers up and brace yourself, Penny Rebels have landed, and their debut single Bad Man is a blues-rock beast with teeth. Right out of the gate, this London-based five-piece doesn’t whisper for attention, they demand it, slamming down a track so gritty and groove-laced, it could’ve been brewed in the same smoky backroom where vintage rock legends once roared to life.
From the first gut-punching riff, Bad Man oozes swagger. There’s no flashy overproduction here, just pure, muscular rock built on crunchy guitar lines, a thunderous rhythm section, and a vocal delivery that growls with attitude. James Burns isn’t just singing, he’s channeling decades of rock spirit, with a voice that feels like it’s lived a few hard nights and isn’t done yet.
But here’s the real trick: while Bad Man tips its hat to the gods of rock, think Led Zep, think Free, it doesn’t feel like a throwback. It’s sharp, tight, and unmistakably now. Like Rival Sons crashing a Stones afterparty. You don’t just hear this track, you feel it in your chest.
For a debut, this isn’t a gentle handshake, it’s a slammed shot of whiskey and a raised eyebrow. Bad Man isn’t just a song. It’s a mission statement. And if this is Penny Rebels’ opening move, rock fans better buckle up, there’s fire coming.