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Single Reviews

Allan Jamisen – This Is Not an Act

Single Reviews

Westingway – I Get That All The Time

Single Reviews

Foxy Leopard – I Haven’t Seen Enough

Single Reviews

The Sway – Twice In A Lifetime

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  • Allan Jamisen – This Is Not an Act
  • Westingway – I Get That All The Time
  • Foxy Leopard – I Haven’t Seen Enough
  • The Sway – Twice In A Lifetime
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Single Reviews

Allan Jamisen – This Is Not an Act

Where Jazz Meets the Soul’s Mirror

Allan Jamisen’s “This Is Not an Act” feels less like a song and more like a slow-burning revelation. From the very first moments, there’s a magnetic pull — a bass-heavy undercurrent and spoken-word delivery that draws you into a shadowy, late-night world where reflection feels unavoidable. It’s intimate without being fragile, bold without being theatrical. True to its title, nothing here feels staged.

Jamisen leans into atmosphere with remarkable control. Smooth saxophone lines and delicate flute accents drift through the arrangement like wisps of memory, while moody electronic textures pulse beneath the surface. The production is immersive, wrapping around the listener in waves of smoky jazz tones and trip-hop-inspired grooves. It’s cinematic but never overwhelming — every element has space to breathe.

Vocally, Jamisen strikes a compelling balance between sensual confidence and quiet vulnerability. There’s a sense of inner dialogue unfolding, as though we’re overhearing a private reckoning with authenticity, mortality, and the desire to evolve beyond old limitations. The emotional weight doesn’t feel heavy-handed; instead, it shimmers with spiritual curiosity and acceptance.

By the time the brass swells and layered harmonies rise into the mix, the track has transformed into something intoxicating — reflective yet rhythmically hypnotic. With “This Is Not an Act,” Allan Jamisen doesn’t just blur genre lines; he dissolves them entirely, offering a deeply personal, soul-searching soundscape that lingers long after the final note fades.

Single Reviews

Westingway – I Get That All The Time

Getaway in Overdrive

With “I Get That All The Time,” Westingway leans hard into the thrill of the chase—and has an absolute blast doing it. The seventh single from the project feels like a dusty highway crime caper set to a fuzz-drenched soundtrack, the kind of song that kicks the door open and never looks back.

Built around a raw, open-tuned riff, the track pulses with restless energy. The beat doesn’t just keep time; it propels the story forward, giving the whole thing a sense of motion, like tires screeching onto an empty desert road. There’s grit in the guitars, a swagger in the rhythm, and just enough rough edge to make it feel dangerous without losing its charm. You can hear the joy of making noise for the sake of it—of throwing out the rulebook and chasing instinct instead.

What’s especially refreshing is the storytelling. Instead of introspection, Westingway opts for cinematic flair, sketching out a playful outlaw fantasy that feels vivid and tongue-in-cheek. This was written with a grin and recorded with the same spirit. The production stays organic and unpolished in the best way, capturing that live-wire chemistry that can’t be faked.

“I Get That All The Time” doesn’t just nod to Americana and alternative country traditions—it barrels through them at full speed, windows down, stereo cranked. It’s bold, a little reckless, and entirely irresistible.

Single Reviews

Foxy Leopard – I Haven’t Seen Enough

Before the World Breaks

There’s something quietly arresting about Foxy Leopard’s I Haven’t Seen Enough. It doesn’t rush to impress. It doesn’t explode into drama. Instead, it lingers — like the last golden hour before dusk, when everything feels possible and untouched.

With this single, Foxy Leopard introduces Clarabelle, a character who stands outside the weight of conflict that has shaped much of the project’s earlier work. And that shift in perspective is powerful. Clarabelle isn’t hardened or haunted. She exists in that delicate space where the future still feels wide open, where longing is soft and hope hasn’t yet been complicated by consequence. The song captures that fragile belief in endless time — the sense that life hasn’t quite begun, but it’s about to.

Musically, the atmosphere feels intimate and reflective, as though recorded in a room filled with memory rather than microphones. There’s a human pulse beneath it all — thoughtful lyrics, intentional storytelling, and a performance that balances vulnerability with restraint. The subtle fusion of human artistry and AI performance adds an intriguing modern texture without overshadowing the emotional core.

What makes I Haven’t Seen Enough stand out is its refusal to dramatize. It’s not about catastrophe; it’s about the calm before it. Foxy Leopard reminds us that some of the most powerful stories aren’t about what breaks — they’re about what once felt safe enough to last forever.

Single Reviews

The Sway – Twice In A Lifetime

Love, Revisited and Reborn

There’s something beautifully poetic about a band returning to a song decades after it was first played live and discovering it still has a pulse. With “Twice In A Lifetime,” The Sway don’t just dust off an old idea—they breathe new life into it, shaping it into a shimmering, emotionally charged statement that feels as urgent now as it must have in the mid-’90s.

From the first swell of sound, the track carries a quiet gravity. It leans into themes of heartbreak and second chances without sounding sentimental or forced. Instead, it unfolds naturally, like a conversation you’ve been meaning to have for years. The production strikes a compelling balance: there’s an earthy, organic backbone to the instrumentation, but it’s elevated by a polished, contemporary sheen that gives the song real depth. Guitars glisten and ache in equal measure, while the rhythm section anchors the emotion with steady conviction.

What makes “Twice In A Lifetime” truly resonate is its central question—can love ever feel as powerful the second time around? The Sway explores that uncertainty with honesty, allowing vulnerability to sit alongside hope. The result is a track that feels both melancholic and quietly triumphant.

It’s not just a comeback single; it’s proof that some songs refuse to fade. In revisiting their past, The Sway have created something timeless—an anthem for anyone who’s dared to believe that new beginnings can rise from old endings.

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