You are here |
progressiverockcentral.com | ||
| | | |
www.obscuresound.com
|
|
| | | | A dreamy and soulful rock entrancement shows throughout "Living the Dream," a new single from Phoenix-based composer and painter Allan Jamisen. The track is our first look at Jamisen's upcoming album, Life Lessons, from which "Living the Dream" is one of its ten tracks. Gospel-inspired backing vocal soulfulness melds with a rainy-day rock feeling, bolstered by soaring guitar lines and steady rhythms. The release's memorable production aligns with a consuming thematic outlook, encouraging one to embrace a life that's genuinely exciting to them. "It's always darkest before the dawn, at the intersection of right or wrong," the vocals open with | |
| | | |
www.obscuresound.com
|
|
| | | | London-based band Sunrise in Jupiter craft an impassioned, replay-tempting rock energy on "Take Me Home." The memorable track represents the second single from their upcoming album, Mission to Mars Vol. 1. "Take Me Home" reflects a thematic concept, depicting an astronaut as they near the end of their space-set journey - also conveying a strong yearning for home. The track closes out the first volume of Mission to Mars Vol. 1, a double-album that seems poised to succeed in its overall conceptual narrative and melodic immediacy. "Take me on this journey from the start," vocals beckon initially amidst radiant guitar | |
| | | |
www.obscuresound.com
|
|
| | | | Los Angeles-based artist Eric Schroeder consumes with a balance of hooky immediacy and vulnerable introspection across Cat's Game, an album that enthralls in its depictions of loneliness, lost love, and feelings beyond. Released via Enabler No. 6 Records, Cat's Game unveils a cathartic sense of overall relief - finding embrace in navigating these various emotions. Complementing these heartfelt themes is a cast of excellent musicians. Joining Schroder are Matt Scheussler on bass, Jake Richter on drums, Aidan Finn on keys - while the standout production comes from Rob Schnapf (Kurt Vile, Elliot Smith, Beck, X, etc). Opening the album, "High | |
| | | |
cyranny.com
|
|
| | . I wasn't a big fan of Rihanna when the song came out in 2015. But for some not so mysterious reason, my dear Mads (Mikkelsen) played in her videoclip (his daughter was a big fan, and daddy wanted to make his little girl proud, I guess). I'll spare you the original video, it is... |