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Single Reviews

Max Sarre – The Mercedes

Single Reviews

Lana Crow – Orwellian Times

Single Reviews

Jean-Philippe Ruelle – Compulsein

Uncategorized

ReeToxA – Amber

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  • Max Sarre – The Mercedes
  • Lana Crow – Orwellian Times
  • Jean-Philippe Ruelle – Compulsein
  • ReeToxA – Amber
  • Saint Friday – REASON

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Single Reviews

Max Sarre – The Mercedes

RACING INTO THE NIGHT

Max Sarre’s “The Mercedes” feels like slipping behind the wheel of your own freedom and flooring it straight into the midnight air. The track doesn’t try to overwhelm you — instead, it coasts in with a smooth, cinematic glow, the kind that makes city lights blur a little and your pulse settle into something strangely calm. And that’s exactly the magic Max has been sharpening over the years: a pop sound that carries emotion without ever feeling heavy.

There’s a polished intimacy in the production, thanks to his collaboration with Roberto Panovski. You can hear the late-night home-studio vibe baked right into its bones — warm, close, unhurried. The song moves with the quiet confidence of someone finally releasing what once weighed them down, trading emotional turbulence for the open road and a clean horizon. Max isn’t just singing about escape; he’s capturing the sensation of it, that breathless moment when you realize nothing is holding you anymore.

What really shines is how grounded yet expansive the track feels. You can sense Max’s journey — the charting EPs, the sold-out shows, the rising wave of listeners — all distilled into something beautifully personal. “The Mercedes” doesn’t roar; it glows. It’s the sound of a young artist stepping into his stride, both hands on the wheel, eyes steady on whatever comes next.

A late-night drive never sounded so liberating.

Single Reviews

Lana Crow – Orwellian Times

A Mirror Wrapped in Fire

Lana Crow’s “Orwellian Times” doesn’t ease you in—it grabs you by the collar, tilts your chin up, and dares you to look straight at the frenzy we’ve dressed up as modern life. It’s sharp, it’s punchy, and it’s the kind of track that hits you with its message before you’ve even realised you’re humming along.

Crow’s blend of pop immediacy and rock-edged tension gives the song a heartbeat that feels both urgent and cinematic. The guitars bite without overwhelming, the synths glow with a moody undercurrent, and the vocals glide right between vulnerability and steel—like someone who’s tired of the noise but still rooting for us to wake up.

What really makes this track snap is the attitude behind it. Crow isn’t preaching from a pedestal. She’s standing right beside the listener, nudging us gently—okay, sometimes not so gently—to notice how easily we slip into outrage, how eagerly we join the digital stampede. There’s a certain mischievous clarity in the way she frames it: not condemnation, but a sly, knowing reminder that we helped build the chaos we now complain about.

Despite its heavy themes, “Orwellian Times” is ridiculously catchy, the kind of tune that loops in your head long after the speakers go quiet. Lana Crow manages a rare trick here: she makes introspection sound electrifying. With this release, she doesn’t just announce herself—she sparks a conversation you’ll actually want to have.

Single Reviews

Jean-Philippe Ruelle – Compulsein

A Pulse You Can’t Outrun 

Jean-Philippe Ruelle’s “Compulsein” hits like a neon-soaked adrenaline surge—the kind of track that grabs you by the collar, pulls you into the night, and dares you to keep up. It’s instrumental, sure, but don’t mistake that for minimal. This thing is alive. It breathes, prowls, and flickers like a synth-fuelled city at 2 a.m.

Right from the first throb of bass, you feel Ruelle’s love for retro textures—but what’s gorgeous is how he refuses to stay in nostalgia. Instead, he fires that ’80s voltage straight through a modern engine. You get that Kavinsky grit, the shimmering atmosphere of Röyksopp, and then—out of nowhere—a spark of Jean-Michel Jarre-style cosmic wonder, all twisted into something unmistakably Ruelle.

The tension builds cinematically, layer by layer, as if the track is mapping out its own chase scene. Synths spiral and collide, basslines tighten like a heartbeat edging toward overload, and suddenly you’re not listening anymore—you’re moving. Compulsein feels engineered for motion: headlights slicing through fog, empty highways humming, the world shrinking to a tunnel of sound.

What makes it shine is the joy behind it. You can sense it—the spark, the playfulness, the thrill of pushing a beat until it becomes its own creature. Ruelle isn’t just producing here; he’s letting loose.

Compulsein doesn’t just keep the pulse alive. It becomes the pulse—restless, hypnotic, and impossible to shake off.

Uncategorized

ReeToxA – Amber

A Flame That Never Fades 

ReeToxA’s “Amber” hits you like a memory you thought you’d buried—warm, raw, and just a little bit dangerous. There’s something instantly gripping about this grunge-meets-Aussie-pub-rock hybrid, as if the track carries the weight of decades without ever sounding dated. It’s got that nostalgic bite, but with the kind of modern polish that makes you lean in closer.

The magic, though, runs deeper than the riffs. Amber was born in 1995, when Jason Mckee took a love poem—full of hope, confusion, and that wild teenage certainty—and hammered it into a three-chord confession. You can feel that origin story in the song’s bones. The guitars roar with the restless spirit of a kid who genuinely believed he’d found “the one,” while the grit in the arrangement hints at the voices that tore that moment apart. It’s heartbreak, but stubbornly hopeful—the kind that urges you to follow your heart even when the world mutters otherwise.

What makes Amber really stand out is how alive it feels on its new release. Dropping in as track three on a stacked album, it doesn’t just keep pace—it ignites the whole thing. The passion is front-and-center, the energy is blistering, and Mckee’s emotional honesty gives the track a pulse you can practically feel in your chest.

It’s grunge with a beating heart, rock with a purpose—proof that some songs don’t age; they just wait for the right moment to shine.

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