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Single Reviews

Lauren Ash – F.A.F.O

Single Reviews

The Danphes – Jacqueline

Single Reviews

Liri Dais – Counting Hours

Single Reviews

The Living Orchestra – Animal Party

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  • Lauren Ash – F.A.F.O
  • The Danphes – Jacqueline
  • Liri Dais – Counting Hours
  • The Living Orchestra – Animal Party
  • Jari Salmikivi – Firelight

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Single Reviews

Lauren Ash – F.A.F.O

Loud, Unfiltered, and Unapologetic

There’s a certain kind of song that doesn’t ask for your attention—it demands. Lauren Ash’s F.A.F.O lands exactly in that space, carrying a raw, electric charge that feels both personal and universal.

What stands out first is the attitude. The track leans into a punk-infused edge, but it never loses its pop sensibility. It’s sharp, hook-driven, and built to stick. The opening moments feel almost deceptively simple, like a shrug or an eye-roll set to music, but there’s intention in that restraint. As the song unfolds, it grows—layer by layer—into something far more assertive, almost triumphant in its defiance.

Lauren Ash uses that progression cleverly. The shift from playful irritation to full-blown confidence mirrors the emotional arc of proving someone wrong—not through argument, but through sheer presence and persistence. By the time the chorus hits its peak, it feels less like a statement and more like a release.

There’s also a looseness to the production that works in its favor. It doesn’t feel overly polished; instead, it carries a kind of live-wire energy, like it could spill off the speakers at any moment. That roughness gives the song its bite.

F.A.F.O doesn’t try to be subtle, and that’s exactly why it works. It’s bold, a little cheeky, and fully aware of its own power. The result is a track that doesn’t just play—it lingers, like a smirk you can’t quite shake.

Single Reviews

The Danphes – Jacqueline

Golden Hour Goodbyes

There’s something beautifully unpolished about The Danphes, and “Jacqueline” captures that magic with effortless charm. Rooted in jangly indie-pop textures, the track feels like flipping through an old photo album where every image glows just a little softer than reality. It’s breezy on the surface, but there’s a quiet ache running underneath that gives it real emotional weight.

“Jacqueline” thrives in that fleeting space between presence and absence—the end of summer, the end of something undefined yet deeply felt. The guitars shimmer with a C86-style innocence, creating a warm, melodic haze that wraps around you instantly. There’s a looseness to the arrangement that works in its favor; nothing feels overworked or too polished, allowing the song’s sincerity to shine through.

What makes the track particularly affecting is how it balances nostalgia without slipping into cliché. It doesn’t just look back—it lingers. The mood feels suspended, like time stretching out just enough for you to notice what’s slipping away. The Danphes manage to turn that emotional in-between into something almost comforting.

By the time the song fades, it leaves behind a soft, wistful imprint—like the last light of evening you wish would stay a little longer. “Jacqueline” isn’t just a song you hear; it’s one you feel quietly settling in, long after it’s over.

Single Reviews

Liri Dais – Counting Hours

Echoes Across Time

There’s something quietly powerful about a song that refuses to fade, and Liri Dais’s Counting Hours feels exactly like that kind of resurrection. Originally born in the early 2000s and now reimagined with modern clarity, the track carries a sense of emotional continuity that’s hard to fake. You can feel the years inside it—not as distance, but as depth.

Liri Dais leans into a stripped-back arrangement, letting vocals and guitar do most of the heavy lifting. The production is clean but never sterile; it preserves the rawness of its origins while giving the song a fuller, more immersive presence. It’s this balance that makes Counting Hours so compelling—it doesn’t try to overwrite the past, it converses with it.

Thematically, the song navigates heavy terrain: time slipping away, emotional fracture, and the quiet unraveling of a life under pressure. Yet it never feels overwhelming. Instead, there’s a reflective stillness that draws you in, like watching a slow-burning film where every moment matters. The storytelling feels cinematic without being overworked, grounded in human vulnerability.

What stands out most is the authenticity. There’s no sense of chasing trends here—just an artist reconnecting with something once unfinished and giving it the space to breathe. Counting Hours isn’t just a song revived; it’s a reminder that some emotions don’t expire—they simply wait for the right moment to be heard again.

Single Reviews

The Living Orchestra – Animal Party

Wild Rhythms, Urgent Dreams

There’s something magnetic about The Living Orchestra’s “Animal Party”—it doesn’t just ask for your attention, it sweeps you into its world with theatrical flair and a pulse you can feel in your bones. From the first swell of orchestration to the groove-laced backbone of funk and rock, the track thrives on contrast, balancing playful imagination with an undercurrent of real-world urgency.

What makes “Animal Party” stand out is its perspective. Framed through the eyes of the natural world, the song feels both whimsical and quietly profound. The Living Orchestra lean into this duality beautifully, crafting a soundscape that feels celebratory on the surface but carries a deeper emotional weight underneath. The brass bursts, layered strings, and rhythmic drive all work together to create something cinematic—almost like stepping into a vivid scene rather than simply listening to a song.

There’s a sense of scale here that’s hard to ignore. Every element feels intentional, from the lush instrumentation to the dynamic shifts that keep the track alive and unpredictable. Yet, it never loses its sense of fun. That’s the real triumph—The Living Orchestra manage to make something thought-provoking feel joyous, even hopeful.

“Animal Party” isn’t just a song; it’s an invitation. To listen, to imagine, and maybe even to rethink our place in the world—while still moving to the beat.

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