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Single Reviews

Jay Luke – Tornado of Mistakes

Single Reviews

The Burbs – There’s No Time For Presents

Single Reviews

Josh Jensen – Be Human

Single Reviews

Barking Poets – Losing Contact

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  • Jay Luke – Tornado of Mistakes
  • The Burbs – There’s No Time For Presents
  • Josh Jensen – Be Human
  • Barking Poets – Losing Contact
  • Ultan JP – All in good time

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Single Reviews

Jay Luke – Tornado of Mistakes

Riding the Storm Within: Jay Luke’s “Tornado of Mistakes” Hits Hard and Haunts Longer

Jay Luke’s “Tornado of Mistakes” is a reckoning. A thundering, emotionally raw journey through the eye of self-reflection, this latest single from the Scranton-based rocker forces you to look inward, whether you’re ready or not.

From the first strike of the guitar, you feel that Iron Maiden edge ferocious, unapologetic—but Jay isn’t just borrowing from the legends. He’s channeling them, spinning their influence into something uniquely personal. The track’s heart lies in its brutally honest lyrics, penned by Luke himself, that dig deep into what happens when ambition turns into tunnel vision. It’s about chasing goals so hard that everything else—your people, your peace—falls by the wayside.

But make no mistake: this isn’t just a sad song with a sadder story. “Tornado of Mistakes” is an absolute force. Recorded at JL Studios in Olyphant, PA, the production balances grit with clarity, and Michael “Duds” McDonald’s guitar solos absolutely scream—a perfect storm swirling with intensity and soul.

Jay Luke delivers his vocals with the kind of conviction you don’t hear everyday—raw but focused, like a man who’s walked through his own wreckage and lived to sing about it. This track doesn’t ask for your attention—it demands it. And you’ll be glad it did.

Single Reviews

The Burbs – There’s No Time For Presents

Paper Cuts and Ghost Notes – The Burbs Deliver a Raw Holiday Gut-Punch

There’s no sleigh bells, no cheer — just the cold, cutting honesty of “There’s No Time For Presents”, the latest haunting gem from Bells Beach trio The Burbs. Forget festive clichés; this track is a slow-burning emotional avalanche, quietly crashing through the glitter and tinsel with a confessional weight that stays with you.

Opening with muted guitars and a heartbeat rhythm section, the song sets a tone of restrained tension. Brook Mckeon’s vocals hover between numb and aching — like someone standing outside in the snow, waiting for a door that never opens. By the time the eerie pocket knife slice cuts through the mix, it’s clear this isn’t a song about Christmas. It’s about what’s left unsaid, undone, unfixed.

Lyrically, it’s devastating. “What a nice weight to get off your chest / All it took was a pocketknife and a press” — that line? It doesn’t just sting, it bruises. The Burbs don’t write for the radio; they write for the parts of you that don’t heal cleanly.

Following the shimmering heartbreak of Ladder to the Moon and Skin and Bones, this track solidifies their signature: pop hooks wrapped in barbed wire. Recorded with Aaron Dobos at Sing Sing Studios, the production is intentionally raw, like an old wound you can’t stop picking at.

In just under four minutes, The Burbs remind us that not every December comes with ribbons — sometimes it comes with reckoning.

Single Reviews

Josh Jensen – Be Human

 A Gentle Plea Wrapped in Strings – Josh Jensen’s “Be Human” Hits Home

Some songs aim to entertain. Others reach a little deeper. Josh Jensen’s “Be Human” does both, and then lingers in your mind like a quiet, necessary reminder.

From the first note, there’s a tender honesty that sets the track apart. Jensen—Seattle-based singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist—brings a kind of raw warmth to this single that feels both deeply personal and strikingly universal. Written, sung, and partially recorded on his phone (yes, his phone), “Be Human” is a testament to how sincerity trumps polish. And when Hannah Wyatt joins in with her ethereal fiddle and backing vocals, the song blossoms into something truly stirring.

The lyrics—part Dylan homage, part reflection on our fractured modern world—aren’t preachy. They’re a gentle nudge, urging us to drop the labels, put down the metaphorical axes, and just… be human. It’s storytelling at its most vulnerable, framed by understated piano, twanging strings, and a melody that rolls forward like a soft wave on a gray Washington shore.

Jensen’s collaboration with Hannah and engineer Luke Rain results in a sound that’s both intimate and resonant. It feels like a campfire conversation with a friend who tells it like it is, but with love.

In a noisy world, “Be Human” is a quiet triumph—one that leaves you feeling a little more grounded, a little more seen.

Single Reviews

Barking Poets – Losing Contact

Out of Orbit and Into Your Heart: Barking Poets Hit New Heights with “Losing Contact”

Strap in, because Barking Poets just launched a rocket of a single that’ll leave your feet on the ground but your soul drifting somewhere past the stratosphere. “Losing Contact” is an emotional odyssey wrapped in gritty guitars and interstellar yearning.

From the jump, there’s a tight, punchy riff that feels like Green Day went on a spacewalk, anchored by Neil’s unexpectedly brooding vocals—low, rich, and eerily reminiscent of Jim Morrison’s smoky mystique. It’s a tone shift that grabs your attention and doesn’t let go. But this isn’t just another punk-tinged rock tune; it morphs. Just when you think you’ve got it figured out, the Poets detour into something more cinematic—a sudden hush, angelic backing vocals, and then a soaring, blues-drenched guitar solo that could make Slash nod in approval.

What really sells “Losing Contact” is the ache beneath it all. It’s a song about losing touch, not just with people but with places, versions of yourself, or entire worlds. There’s beauty in that loneliness, and the band taps into it with finesse and fire.

Produced by Paul Tipler (Placebo, Reuben), this is Barking Poets at their boldest—ambitious, raw, and ready to burn through your speakers. “Losing Contact” isn’t just heard; it’s felt. And once it grabs you, it won’t let go.

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