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Single Reviews

Ed Boxall – The High Far Fields of Home

Single Reviews

Noam Peri – Poison

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唯美人形 Yubiningyou – 秘密 Himitsu

Single Reviews

Animus Aura – Call to the stars – Winter version

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  • Ed Boxall – The High Far Fields of Home
  • Noam Peri – Poison
  • 唯美人形 Yubiningyou – 秘密 Himitsu
  • Animus Aura – Call to the stars – Winter version
  • The Ghostly Pulse – Oh Heavy Rain

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Single Reviews

Ed Boxall – The High Far Fields of Home

Where Restlessness Finds Light

Ed Boxall’s The High Far Fields of Home arrives with the quiet confidence of an artist who knows exactly where his strengths lie: in storytelling, atmosphere, and emotional honesty. As the first single from his forthcoming LP, the track feels like an open doorway into Boxall’s creative world—one where unease and hope coexist without cancelling each other out.

The song begins in a place many listeners will recognise: a restless mind, awake in the small hours, circling worries that refuse to settle. Rather than lingering in that tension, Boxall gradually reshapes it. The arrangement builds with intention, led by a bold, insistent piano that gives the track a forward pulse, as if gently urging the listener out of their own head. There’s a sense of movement here—emotional rather than physical—where heaviness slowly gives way to something steadier and more expansive.

What makes The High Far Fields of Home especially affecting is its emotional arc. It doesn’t rush to reassurance, nor does it dramatise despair. Instead, it finds meaning in connection: to memory, to landscape, to something larger than the self. Boxall’s vocal delivery remains grounded and sincere, carrying the song’s optimism without tipping into sentimentality.

As a standalone single, it’s uplifting and thoughtful; as an introduction to a new chapter in Boxall’s career, it’s quietly compelling. The High Far Fields of Home reminds us that even in moments of sleepless doubt, music can offer a way through—steady, human, and deeply felt.

Single Reviews

Noam Peri – Poison

A Beautiful Kind of Burn

Noam Peri’s “Poison,” built on a cinematic indie rock-pop foundation, captures the slow unraveling of a relationship that once felt essential but now feels impossible to stay in. There’s an immediacy to it, but also patience—Poison takes its time, letting emotions rise, break, and settle again.

Sonically, the track is rich and immersive. Electric guitars and commanding keyboards sit alongside layered synths that create constant movement, as if the music itself is searching for balance. The production mirrors emotional instability beautifully, shifting from restrained, almost fragile moments into sweeping, cathartic surges. These transitions never feel abrupt; instead, they echo the inner push and pull of holding on versus letting go.

What stands out most is the emotional honesty at the center of the song. Poison doesn’t dramatize pain for effect—it simply allows it to exist. There’s space here for sadness, loneliness, and self-reflection, all handled with a quiet confidence that makes the experience feel deeply human. The vulnerability feels intentional rather than exposed, which gives the track its strength.

By the time the song ends, it leaves behind a sense of release rather than resolution. Poison isn’t about neat endings; it’s about acknowledging damage, learning from it, and slowly reclaiming yourself. With this release, Noam Peri transforms heartbreak into something immersive, expressive, and quietly powerful—proof that pain, when treated with care, can become art worth revisiting.

Single Reviews

唯美人形 Yubiningyou – 秘密 Himitsu

Secrets in Porcelain Shadows

With 秘密 (Himitsu), 唯美人形 Yubiningyou invite the listener into a carefully sealed world where elegance and unease coexist. Originating from Tokyo’s underground aesthetic scene, the trio’s “living doll” concept feels fully realized here—not as a gimmick, but as the emotional spine of the song. From the opening moments, there’s a sense of restraint, as if the music itself is holding its breath, allowing tension to build beneath the surface quietly.

The track unfolds like a gothic stage play compressed into a few minutes. Delicate, almost glass-like vocal passages contrast sharply with surging symphonic rock elements, creating a push-and-pull between stillness and release. This dynamic mirrors the song’s core idea: an outwardly controlled façade concealing something fierce and burning within. The production leans cinematic, blending orchestral textures with heavy guitars in a way that feels dramatic without tipping into excess.

What makes Himitsu especially compelling is its emotional pacing. Rather than chasing immediate impact, the song trusts atmosphere and gradual escalation. When the intensity finally breaks through, it feels earned—cathartic rather than loud for the sake of it. The result is immersive, almost hypnotic, drawing listeners deeper into its shadowed romance.

Defying the expectations of conventional J-Pop, 唯美人形 Yubiningyou offer something darker, more mature, and unapologetically theatrical. Himitsu doesn’t ask to be casually consumed; it asks to be entered, explored, and felt. Long after it ends, its quiet intensity lingers—like a beautiful secret you’re not quite ready to let go of.

Single Reviews

Animus Aura – Call to the stars – Winter version

A Quiet Ascent into Winter Skies

Animus Aura’s Call to the Stars – Winter Version feels less like a remix and more like a seasonal transformation. There’s a hush to it, a sense of cold air and open space, as if the track has been gently slowed down to let every emotion breathe. From the opening moments, the soundscape unfolds with patience, drawing the listener into a reflective orbit rather than rushing toward a peak.

What stands out most is the track’s emotional restraint. Instead of relying on heavy drops or obvious climaxes, Animus Aura leans into melody and atmosphere, allowing subtle progressions to carry the weight. The textures feel carefully layered, shimmering softly like frost under moonlight, while the rhythmic pulse remains steady and grounding. It’s progressive psytrance, but viewed through a contemplative lens—less about the dancefloor frenzy, more about inner movement.

There’s a cinematic quality here that makes the track feel expansive and inward at the same time. It invites long listens, preferably through headphones, where the details truly reveal themselves. Each transition feels intentional, crafted with a precision that never comes across as cold or mechanical. Instead, there’s warmth beneath the chill, a quiet soulfulness that lingers well after the track fades.

Call to the Stars – Winter Version succeeds by knowing exactly what it wants to be: immersive, emotive, and unhurried. It’s a piece that doesn’t demand attention but earns it, offering listeners a moment of stillness and wonder in a season that often calls for both.

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