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Single Reviews

Black and White Rewreite – Tokyo Ghost

Single Reviews

Deptford Sound Collective – We All need to get a Cat

Single Reviews

TillaTone – Alien Love

Single Reviews

Fendahlene – Looking for a Break (Electric Version)

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  • Black and White Rewreite – Tokyo Ghost
  • Deptford Sound Collective – We All need to get a Cat
  • TillaTone – Alien Love
  • Fendahlene – Looking for a Break (Electric Version)
  • Sunstreets – Northern Lights

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Single Reviews

Black and White Rewreite – Tokyo Ghost

Echoes in an Empty City

There’s something quietly unsettling about “Tokyo Ghost” by Black and White Rewrite—a kind of restless energy that never quite lets you settle, even in its softer moments. The track leans into that eerie space between motion and stillness, capturing the strange tension of being wide awake in a world that feels temporarily abandoned.

From the outset, the song pulses with urgency. Gritty guitars slice through the mix while the rhythm section drives forward with a sense of controlled chaos. It feels intentional—like the band is recreating not just a sound, but a moment. There’s a cinematic quality to it, as if you’re walking through long, empty corridors under harsh fluorescent lights, unsure whether to feel calm or on edge.

What stands out most is how the emotion builds without becoming overwhelming. The vocals carry a raw, almost anxious edge, but they never lose clarity. Instead, they guide you through the track’s shifting atmosphere, balancing vulnerability with intensity. It’s that push and pull that keeps the song engaging.

“Tokyo Ghost” doesn’t try to over-explain itself. It trusts the listener to sit with the unease, to feel that quiet isolation and the longing for connection underneath it. And maybe that’s where its strength lies—it doesn’t just tell a story, it lets you inhabit it for a few minutes.

For a comeback track, it feels less like a return and more like a reawakening.

Single Reviews

Deptford Sound Collective – We All need to get a Cat

A Little Chaos, A Lot of Comfort

Deptford Sound Collective return with We All Need to Get a Cat, and somewhere between the jangling guitars and sunlit synths, they’ve managed to bottle a feeling that’s both deeply personal and quietly universal. What starts as a playful, almost whimsical concept unfolds into something far more grounded—a story of grief, recovery, and the strange, soft ways life stitches itself back together.

There’s an easy warmth to the track. The rhythm section keeps things buoyant, while handclaps and shimmering melodies give it that breezy indie-pop charm. But underneath all that brightness, there’s a pulse of sincerity that keeps it from drifting into novelty. Deptford Sound Collective aren’t just writing about a pet; they’re tracing the emotional aftershock of loss and the unexpected ways healing sneaks in.

What stands out most is the balance. The song never leans too heavily into sentimentality, nor does it hide behind irony. Instead, it sits comfortably in that middle space—where humour, affection, and a touch of chaos coexist. You can almost feel the lived-in nature of the story, the kind that doesn’t need exaggeration because it’s already a little absurd and a little beautiful.

By the end, We All Need to Get a Cat feels less like a statement and more like a gentle nudge. Not an answer, just a reminder: sometimes comfort arrives unannounced, leaves fur everywhere, and refuses to follow any rules.

Single Reviews

TillaTone – Alien Love

Cosmic Pulse in Motion

TillaTone’s Alien Love doesn’t ease you in—it grabs hold and lifts you straight into orbit. From the first beat, there’s a sense of momentum that feels both urgent and strangely weightless, like being caught between a dancefloor rush and a drifting daydream. It’s that tension—between force and float—that gives the track its identity.

What stands out immediately is the production. TillaTone leans deep into layered textures, stacking warped melodies over a bassline that pulses with a kind of hypnotic insistence. The soundscape feels alive, constantly shifting, as if the track is unfolding in real time rather than following a fixed path. There’s a cinematic quality here too, something expansive that makes the song feel bigger than its runtime.

Yet, despite its complexity, Alien Love never loses its punch. The rhythm keeps things grounded, driving forward with a steady intensity that makes it easy to get lost in. It’s music that invites movement but also rewards close listening—the kind where each replay reveals a new detail tucked beneath the surface.

There’s a quiet confidence in how TillaTone balances energy with atmosphere. Nothing feels overdone, and nothing feels held back. Instead, the track lands in that rare space where immersion and impact coexist.

With Alien Love, TillaTone isn’t just exploring sound—he’s stretching it, bending it, and letting it breathe in ways that feel both deliberate and free.

Single Reviews

Fendahlene – Looking for a Break (Electric Version)

No More Holding Back

There’s something almost cathartic about the way Fendahlene tears into Looking for a Break (Electric Version)—like a thought that’s been simmering too long, finally boiling over. Where the original leaned into restraint, this version kicks the door open and lets everything spill out, loud and unapologetic.

Right from the start, the track feels restless. The bassline doesn’t just sit in the background—it prowls. The drums hit with a kind of urgency that refuses to let you settle, and the guitars arrive with a gritty, full-bodied crunch that gives the song its sharp edge. It’s not polished in a glossy sense, and that’s exactly the point. There’s a rawness here that feels deliberate, almost necessary.

What stands out most is the emotional weight carried through the performance. Fendahlene doesn’t just present frustration—they embody it. The vocals push forward with a sense of tension that keeps tightening, as if searching for release but never quite finding it. That unresolved feeling lingers, making the track stick long after it ends.

There’s also an interesting ambiguity at play. The idea of “looking for a break” feels open-ended, allowing the listener to project their own version of escape—whether personal, creative, or something more existential.

In the end, this isn’t just a louder reinterpretation. It’s a transformation. Fendahlene takes the same core idea and reframes it with urgency and grit, turning quiet desperation into something far more confrontational—and, strangely, liberating.

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