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.
All tagged music review
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.
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.
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.
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.
The term supergroup is an easy one to throw around, but it sticks hard in this instance. Typical, are without a doubt one of the most exciting bands to emerge this year.
Thriving with their back against the wall, Neighbours, raises a fist for Sydney on Bubble.
A beautiful love song for nature coexisting with a lament of a relationship with it, Here, Something, has a duality to it that spirals, builds, drops away and stays ever interesting.
Like getting caught in a rip, Dandies, is 3 minutes 39 seconds of noisey indie that you can’t fight.
This is a true fist in the air inducing, fifth gear finding and ball breakingly big anthem that is about to get thoroughly stuck in your head.
Hell In Every Religion is as much of a statement of arrival as it is a pure and brilliant song.
It took a little while for me to come around to Country music. I’m definitely guilty of throwing the phrase “I listen to everything except rap and country” around in high school. Of course, once I finally delved into it; I kicked myself for not discovering it soon.
Being cold, writing songs rings out with the beautiful warmth of a hand written letter to friend running their life on a parallel line.
No matter how challenging... Cry Club and Walk Away works and works gloriously.
Hamilton’s debut single Fade feels like getting caught in a whirlwind from inception to collapse.
The Fifth is an album that deserves to be heard as an album in its entirety. At times euphoric and triumphant, in others daunting and delicate.
No Oath’s Waster punches forward in a style that would have landed the band on the Tony Hawk Pro Skater 2 soundtrack had the game been developed in Australia.