An anthemic love letter that embraces insecurity, anxiety, loneliness and the complexity of managing your mental health; elevating it to a space of joyous and cathartic release.
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An anthemic love letter that embraces insecurity, anxiety, loneliness and the complexity of managing your mental health; elevating it to a space of joyous and cathartic release.
19-year old Perth songwriter Julia Wallace has done something incredible on her debut single Warm Light. In an entirely entrancing track of self orchestration the multi-instrumentalist will devour you.
As we hit the backend of a bell-end year, it feels like new singles are flooding in. Jump in the life raft and let me take you through my favourite tracks of October 2020.
If the various graduating classes of 2020 need an anthem to capture the mood of the room yet still feel anthemic and uplifted, I’d put forward Life is Crazy (Like That) as the front runner.
Sitting somewhere between Middle Kids and The Beths, Not Bad, Not Good offer so much more than their name suggests. A brilliant band that promise bright and blisteringly smart songs.
As a straight white male of colonial descent, it isn’t my job to tell the story of this song, but it is my job to amplify diverse voices the best I can. I implore you to listen to Welcome to the Neighbourhood and then listen to it again and again.
All The Same is the sum of all it’s parts being continually pushed and twisted around themselves. Just as you settle into the song, a stop is pulled out and further gear is found within the vivid chemistry of Sweater Curse.
Across four earnest tracks of vulnerability and mental health, Meanjin based trio loulou create a memorable debut.
Stripped bare to just a piano and vocal, the song is a stunning act of simplicity that allows Sykes voice to strap you into the passenger seat and drive you deep into its imagery.
Flush with trumpets, a Tamara & the Dreams feature and an endlessly upbeat salvo of drums, guitar licks and lyrics. Word of the Day is a feat of songwriting and production that feels likely to stay stuck in your head for the rest of the year.
There is something intangible and magical in Alexander Biggs’ ability to entirely floor a listener in an opening lyric. For three releases in a row now, I have found myself entirely arrested and unable to turn away from an opening verse.
Two days ago I hadn’t heard a Camp 8 song. Today I can easily say I have listened to both songs on the split release a dozen times a piece without tiring or wanting to turn off.
Since first seeing EGOISM live last week, I’ve found myself coming back to the chorus of the band’s latest single What Are We Doing? on an eternal loop in the back of my head. A song so beautiful I hope it stays stuck for weeks to come.
Moreton’s ‘See Yourself’ is lofty, spacious and perfectly executed in a way that leaves its slow drawn lyrics lingering with you long after first listen. It also features none other than James Vincent McMorrow.
A song of vulnerability, personal fragility and anxieties strung out over the course of four and a half minutes, Bones and String, by The Sunken Sea is the kind of song that stops you.
An undeniable eruption of mammoth vocals and soaring sugar soaked pop that is going to stay with you weeks after first listening.
Graceful, considered and simply stunning, Wollongong’s Emily Duncan, today releases her debut single Silence is Safe.
Every now and then a song shows up that that is so remarkably beautiful it shuts the world around you out. Ruby Gill’s latest single Your Mum is awe-inspiring and isolating in the way it does just that.
Consistently brilliant, ever growing and very bloody big, Elk Locker are back with a surprise split release right on time for list season.
Thematically flushed with potency to match it’s musicality, Positive Reinforcement, is essential listening.