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ReeToxA – BPD VS BIPOLAR

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<3peace. – COLORS (LETTING GO)

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The domi – See how much you have done

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Tears Are Just Glitter – 80’s Kind Of Sad

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Single Reviews

ReeToxA – BPD VS BIPOLAR

A Beautiful Bruise in Grunge Form

ReeToxA’s BPD VS BIPOLAR is not an easy listen—and that’s precisely its strength. Rooted firmly in grunge, the song drags the listener into an emotional storm where distortion, tension, and vulnerability collide. There’s a rawness here that feels lived-in rather than performed, as if the track wasn’t polished to impress but sharpened to tell the truth.

The sound leans heavily into grunge nostalgia, with thick guitars and a brooding atmosphere, yet it never feels like a throwback exercise. Instead, ReeToxA uses the genre as a vehicle to explore mental illness with a rare kind of care. The song doesn’t romanticize pain or turn it into spectacle. It sits with it, lets it breathe, and allows the chaos and confusion to feel human. That balance—between heaviness and beauty—is where the track truly shines.

What makes BPD VS BIPOLAR stand out is how immersive it feels. The music pulls you into the mindset it’s portraying, not through explanation, but through sensation. You feel the push and pull, the emotional volatility, and the sense of something once perfect slowly cracking under pressure. It’s intense, but never careless.

For longtime grunge fans, this song feels like a familiar ache revisited. For newer listeners, it’s a powerful entry point into a sound that still has plenty to say. With BPD VS BIPOLAR, ReeToxA proves that grunge isn’t just alive—it’s still capable of deep empathy and emotional truth.

Single Reviews

<3peace. – COLORS (LETTING GO)

A FLASH OF LIGHT IN MOTION

<3peace’s COLORS (LETTING GO) feels like someone opening a window in a room you didn’t realise had gone stale. The track carries an energy that moves—bright, rhythmic, a little weightless—and underneath all that shine sits a surprisingly grounded core. You can hear the push and pull between letting go and leaning in, between the world’s noise and the quieter truth underneath it.

What stands out first is the pulse. It’s upbeat without being frantic, the kind of tempo that gets your shoulders moving before you even know what’s happening. The production has that clean, danceable lift, but there’s a warmth to it too—nothing cold or over-machined. Knowing it grew from a freestyle moment actually explains a lot; it keeps that spontaneous spark even as the full arrangement settles around it.

Then there’s the heart of the thing. This is a song that wrestles with release—not in a heavy-handed way, but with a sort of neon clarity. You can sense the reflection behind it, the tug toward renewal, the way faith and self-discovery weave through the beat rather than sit on top of it. It’s uplifting without preaching, hopeful without glossing over the struggle.

By the time the final notes fade, COLORS (LETTING GO) leaves you with that quiet afterglow—the feeling of having set something down, even momentarily. It’s vibrant, sincere, and unmistakably shaped by an artist committed to turning inner shifts into sound.

https://music.apple.com/us/song/colors-letting-go/1855572304

Single Reviews

The domi – See how much you have done

Quiet Victories in Motion

“See How Much You Have Done” feels like stepping into a room where someone has already set the light just right—not bright, not dramatic, just warm enough to breathe again. The Domi leans into that gentle glow, crafting an indie pop-rock moment that lifts without ever pushing too hard. The song moves with an easy pulse: soft guitars, intimate vocals, and drums that feel more like encouragement than percussion. It’s the kind of arrangement that doesn’t demand attention but earns it anyway.

What makes this track land is its emotional clarity. The Domi isn’t trying to reinvent the wheel; he’s trying to remind you the wheels are still turning. There’s a subtle confidence in the way the music opens up, an organic build that mirrors the quiet shift from self-doubt to steadiness. You can hear the intention—the human touch in the pacing, the sincerity stitched into every airy guitar line.

This is healing music, but not the kind that floats away into abstraction. It’s grounded. It holds space for the listener rather than telling them how to feel. As the chorus blooms, the song nudges you toward that small but powerful realization: progress isn’t always loud.

For warm-hearted indie fans or anyone standing at the edge of a personal reset, “See How Much You Have Done” is a comforting reminder that resilience often sounds like a soft voice, a steady rhythm, and a moment of honest reflection.

Single Reviews

Tears Are Just Glitter – 80’s Kind Of Sad

Neon Tears in Retro Motion

“80’s Kind of Sad” arrives like a memory dipped in neon—bittersweet, glamorous, and just a little self-aware. Tears Are Just Glitter lean fully into the delicious contradiction of the era they’re channeling: heartbreak that somehow still sparkles, melancholy with a soft-focus filter.

The track feels like stepping into a bedroom where the lights are low, a pastel poster curls on the wall, and a synth quietly pulses in the background. There’s an unmistakable shimmer to the production—thoughtful without being heavy, playful without losing its emotional core. It’s pop that doesn’t hide its sadness but dresses it up in shoulder pads and lip gloss, letting you feel everything while still keeping the mood strangely buoyant.

What makes it work is the duo’s instinct for vibe-building. Instead of leaning into modern pop’s polish, they revive the textured world of dreamy synths and vintage drum machines, pulling you into a time when heartbreak was almost performative—something you nursed dramatically, maybe even proudly. The track nails that tension: the hurt is real, but the styling is intentional, almost defiant.

And then there’s Gary—less a vocalist and more an aesthetic choice, a character who embodies the glossy mask that sadness once wore. His presence gives the song its pulse, its wink, its charm.

“80’s Kind of Sad” is nostalgic without imitation, emotional without sinking, and effortlessly catchy. It doesn’t just reference the past—it revives the emotional theatre of it, reminding us that sometimes even sorrow can look stunning.

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