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The Disenchanted Divinity of Feeling Ill-Fitted: Useless Wonder! by The Mercury Sounds

If the sanctuary within the tonality of Useless Wonder! is anything to go by, The Mercury Sounds have become masters of carving relics of nostalgic experimentation that border on divine intervention.

The Baltimore-based duo, Jason Stauffer and Josh Krechmer, have been long-hauling their sonic telepathy since primary school. Two decades later, they’re still refusing to colour within the lines. Their fusion of indie-pop vitality and folk-rock introspection culminates in Useless Wonder!, a cosmic lament steeped in lo-fi 70s alchemy. Through natural vocal proclivity and delicate lyrical agony, they sculpted an aching confessional that stings with the sentiment of not being built for a world that keeps shifting beneath your feet.

The way the vocals bleed with weary existentialism against the gauzy swell of warm distortion and glimmering, melancholic strings carries the same weight as a memory you can’t outgrow. The verses tether you to vulnerability, while the chorus throws you into an orbit of quiet resignation.

Even though it would be impossible to crown a Leonard Cohen, Joni Mitchell or Bob Dylan in our modern and fractured industry, it’s clear that if Useless Wonder! had surfaced fifty years ago, it would be playing through grainy AM radios as a national folk treasure.

The Mercury Sounds exhaled a truth for the quiet disenfranchised who’ve long since given up pretending they fit the mould, if you can align to that particular branch of melancholy, hit play.

Useless Wonder! is now available to stream on all major platforms, including SoundCloud.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Olav Larsen & The Alabama Rodeo Stars: Holding the Reins of Reverie – An Interview

Olav Larsen & The Alabama Rodeo Stars may not have set out to redefine Americana from the fjords of Norway, but through Stream of Consciousness Vol. 2, he proves how much weight a quiet voice can carry. In this interview, the seasoned singer-songwriter reflects on how the record’s textured soundscape and broader emotional range were born from the same creative well as his earlier, stripped-back work. The conversation moves through questions of artistic longevity, genre fidelity, and the unshakable pull of honest songwriting. Olav offers rare clarity as he addresses the absurdity of social media-fed narcissism, the tension between restraint and revelation in lyrics, and how communal voices helped carry his songs past what he could reach alone. If you’re curious about what it means to stay real in an industry obsessed with reinvention, you’ll want to read this to the final line.

Olav, it’s a pleasure to welcome you to A&R Factory. Thanks for taking the time to speak with us about your latest album and the work that’s brought you here.

Thanks for having me. It’s always nice when people take the time to listen and engage with the music.

Stream of Consciousness Vol. 2 feels like both a continuation and a departure from the stripped-down aesthetic of its predecessor. What prompted the decision to lean into a fuller, more band-oriented sound this time around?

The songs themselves called for it. While Vol. 1 was initially recorded mostly in one room with a couple of vintage mics, just me and my guitar, this time I felt the stories needed a broader palette, even though most of the songs were written at the same time as the ones on Vol. 1. The band and I had a few loose sketches from earlier sessions, and we built on those with intention. I wanted to preserve the rawness but stretch out sonically. The choir, the organ, the layered guitars all serve the emotion rather than cover it up.

You’ve often been described as a “country purist,” and yet your work never feels stuck in the past. How do you strike that balance between staying true to the genre’s roots while still saying something personal and present?

I think it comes down to honesty. I grew up on country, gospel, soul, and folk music, and those genres were always about truth-telling. I’m not trying to recreate the past or chase trends either. I just write what feels real to me, in the moment I’m in. If the bones of a song are strong, you don’t need to dress them up too much. It’s in the heart of the song where tradition and now can meet.

Growing up in Stavanger with your father’s blues records must have shaped your early understanding of storytelling through sound. Can you recall a specific record or moment that first made you feel like songwriting was the path you needed to follow?

I remember hearing “There Was a Light” by Chris Bell for the first time. That wrecked me. It wasn’t blues, but it had the same ache and beauty I heard in the old records my father played. That song opened a door for me. It was fragile but certain, and I knew I wanted to write something that made someone else feel like that.

Norway isn’t the most obvious place to find a voice like yours echoing the spirit of Gram Parsons or Uncle Tupelo. Have you faced any pushback for committing to a genre so rooted in American tradition, or has it opened more doors than expected?

Both, to be honest. Early on, people weren’t quite sure what to make of it. Americana wasn’t a big thing in Norway when I started out. But over time, I’ve seen it connect with people on a deeper level than genre. A good song is a good song. And now there’s a growing scene here that embraces those roots, so it’s been encouraging. We even have a name for it: Norwegicana or Nordicana, I believe they call it. Check out the likes of Malin Pettersen, Darling West, and Sugarfoot, to mention a few.

The new album touches on longing, protest, and personal growth without slipping into preachiness. How do you decide which themes to explore in your writing, and what made these topics feel urgent now?

I don’t sit down with a theme in mind. I write to process, to reflect, to figure things out. But of course, the times we live in seep into the writing. The world feels fragile and loud. I wanted to make something that holds space for both anger, frustration, and beauty and grace. I think we’re all craving a bit more meaning and connection. These songs came from that place.

From the title track to “Protest Singers,” the lyrics feel carefully weighted, even when delivered with simplicity. How important is restraint in your writing, and do you ever feel tempted to say more than you should?

Restraint is key. A line can hit harder when you trust the silence around it. I always try to write from a place of clarity. That doesn’t mean every emotion is tidy. It just means I aim to say what needs to be said and let the listener meet me halfway. And yes, I do sometimes want to overexplain or tie it up in a bow, but that’s usually when I know I should pull back. On another note, this particular song is written with a sense of my own humorous taste. Even though I feel the negative, almost narcissistic energy we all bring to the table through the lens of social media, and I write about some of the interhuman results of this on this record, I also see that same energy in many singer-songwriters’ work these days, including my own, and I do find that to be a bit funny.

There’s a strong communal feel to this record with the addition of the choir and guest vocals. How did those collaborations come about, and what did they bring out in the material that may have surprised you?

The choir is something I’ve always been fond of, but this was the first time it really became an important instrument in helping build the songs’ crescendos. The songs were reaching for something bigger than myself, and I wanted other voices to carry that weight with me. Working with friends and fellow musicians is always a blast. It wasn’t about perfection, but rather about feeling. And it surprised me how much that lifted the songs beyond what I had imagined.

After nearly twenty years in music, you’re still creating albums that critics are calling career-best work. How do you keep that spark alive, and what does longevity in this space look like to you?

You stay curious. You stay open. I’ve never had a five-year plan, but I’ve always tried to show up fully for whatever season I’m in. Some years you feel like you’re climbing a mountain. Other times it flows like a river. But if you keep writing a little bit every day, keep listening, and keep learning from the masters, I guess the spark keeps finding you. Longevity, for me, isn’t about staying relevant. I honestly do not care about staying relevant. It’s about staying real.

Stream the latest releases from Olav Larsen & The Alabama Rodeo Stars on Spotify now.

Interview by Amelia Vandergast

Dust-Stained Dreams and Sky-Wide Hymns: ‘Dreamer’ by Olav Larsen & The Alabama Rodeo Stars

‘Dreamer’, lifted from Stream of Consciousness Vol. 2 by Olav Larsen & The Alabama Rodeo Stars, traverses the most affecting intersections between the avenues of Americana, Alt-Country, and Folk Rock while conjuring a blissfully ethereal manifestation of roots-deep reverie. It’s gospel for anyone who calls the open road home and finds sanctuary within the horizons of a free imagination.

Olav Larsen & The Alabama Rodeo Stars work with a rare sense of serenity and synergy to deliver a sound that instantly transports you to the panorama of soul they paint through harmony, cutting folk strings, and bluesy guitar licks that ground the release in virtuosic cultivation. It takes a rare breed of musician to make innovative passion feel like a timeless portal to a time when life was simpler and sanctity was easier to find, but clearly, Olav Larsen knows exactly how to deliver sonic solace to wearied nostalgia-inclined minds.

For nearly two decades, the Norwegian country purist has channelled his love for traditional songwriting into a raw, heartfelt sound shaped by the weight of Hank Williams, Bob Dylan, John Prine, and Neil Young. As always, his voice carries a weathered resonance that doesn’t posture or reach—it simply lays truth bare. Stream of Consciousness Vol. 2 broadens the blueprint laid out in the first volume, offering a more expansive, full-band experience without losing the poetic intimacy that defines Larsen’s approach.

Dreamer is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast.

Erin Inglish’s I Will Not Obey: A Banjo-Laced Battle Cry in a World Built to Break the Willing

I Will Not Obey by Erin Inglish

Erin Inglish pulled no poetic punches in I Will Not Obey—a protest single that rules out compliance and refuses to be complicit through silence. The honkytonk instrumentation and her hauntingly ethereal folk vocals take protest music right back to its roots while injecting swathes of feminine fire into the production. When the single reaches its chorus, an almost hypnotic tribal energy takes over the track, awakening you to how you’ve slept until you’ve woken up in this fever dream of a tyrannical system where there’s no justice or peace, unless you can pay the price of privilege.

Her razor-sharp songwriting, composed around the words of Utah Phillips, allowed this single to spring to life as far more than the sum of all its parts. It’s almost enough to inspire you to join a Wicker Man-style cult and collectively take down the government.

With arrangement support from Adam Nash and Sean Alexander Collins, and banjo lines that bleed defiance into the architecture of the single, Inglish channels her craft into a folk-rooted statement piece that is far from sentimental nostalgia. Her artistry, sharpened across three solo albums, five collaborative records, and a globe-spanning performance history, culminates in this moment of rebellion wrapped in timeless musicality.

As a banjo-wielding songwriter and activist based on California’s Central Coast, Inglish has always pushed her voice beyond performance—I Will Not Obey ensures that her voice echoes where it’s needed most.

I Will Not Obey is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Bandcamp.

Review by Amelia Vandergast.

Jason Klaire Holds the Door Open to Solidarity in His Nine-Minute Pop-Rock Reckoning

Jason Klaire has always had a knack for translating chaos into art. With Open the Door, he strips away the noise of nationalistic chest-pounding and forces attention onto the slow rot of a society that’s convinced itself of its own superiority. Through theatrical piano-laced pop-rock progressions and gruff lyrical reckonings tempered by falsetto-soaked crescendos, he lays bare the internal malaise that festers in the face of external injustice.

The production carries the weight of disillusionment with a world that grows more fractured as the sands of time erode compassion, youth and the impulse to question. Open the Door isn’t content to simply reflect existential dread—it pushes past guilt and calls for a collective pivot, urging listeners to abandon cynicism and step into a future shaped by shared humanity. There’s no patience here for apathy, no room for denial.

Written as a defiant stand against territorial arrogance, Klaire’s nine-minute single was sculpted through painstaking revision, mastered by Steve Kitch, and eventually paired with a macabre AI-generated visual epic that consumed two months of obsessive perfectionism.

Klaire may have started with guitar chords and frustration, but what he built is a manifesto. One that swells with theatrical poise and lands with an emotional impact few artists dare aim for.

Open the Door is now available to stream on all major platforms. For the full experience, watch the music video on YouTube. 

Review by Amelia Vandergast

XXLTARIK dragged RnB into the shadows of pop funk with his ahead of the curve hit, RUNAWAY

Moroccan-American artist XXLTARIK is storming through Jersey’s music scene with his spectral and darkly sultry approach to RnB, creatively spliced with alt-pop sensibilities and contemporary funk grooves. His latest single, ‘RUNAWAY’, sidesteps the usual pitfalls of superficial hooks, pulling listeners instead into a deeper, emotionally raw narrative that feels hauntingly personal despite the slick, polished production.

XXLTARIK’s ability to alchemise genuine emotive candour with melodies flooded with unflinching momentum turns ‘RUNAWAY’ into an infectiously arresting anthem—guaranteed to hype any listener, whatever their backdrop. His vocals refuse pretence, showcasing flawless command as authenticity surges through each note, effortlessly oscillating between gritty vulnerability and smooth sophistication.

The track confronts the human tendency to expose our vulnerabilities to those least worthy of them. Through this emotional transparency, XXLTARIK makes ‘RUNAWAY’ resonate as both confession and cautionary tale, exploring the shadows we willingly inhabit for fleeting connections.

With funk-driven rhythms underpinning his dark wave alt-RnB textures, XXLTARIK ensures ‘RUNAWAY’ is a tour-de-force, defined by its depth and cross-over appeal.

‘RUNAWAY’ is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Byron Ciotter used lo-fi melodic rock as a confession booth through his latest single, Impossibilities

https://music.youtube.com/watch?v=xIoxuYgJ1Ws&si=Hk5o4XXhIdFne8oz

There’s something arrestingly primal in the way Byron Ciotter strips his soul bare in Impossibilities. While most artists polish pain until it sparkles, Ciotter lets it crack and creak through every chord in this lo-fi melodic rock elegy that aches with the weight of unprocessed loss, love, and the universal pull of unanswered questions.

Drawing from two decades of eclecticism that started in Southern Maryland’s metal scene in 2005, Ciotter’s path to Impossibilities was paved through the wreckage of trauma, the solace of connection, and the quiet contemplation of death, divorce, and fleeting affection. It’s a long way from distorted riffs and high-octane catharsis—now the weight is carried by pared-back progressions that resound like intimate confessions. There’s no filter between the listener and the flood of reflection. Every note feels lived in, every lyric sounds like it was torn from the back page of a notebook too private to publish.

While Ciotter may never claim a crown for innovation, he’s reached the epitome of emotive expression. His unembellished approach to songwriting serves as a raw conduit of connection, one forged in the fires of personal experience and cooled in the lo-fi tones of acoustic melancholy.

Impossibilities is now available to stream on all major platforms, including YouTube. 

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Jem&i’s ‘Gemini’ is An Alchemical Invocation of Hedonic Alt-Hip-Hop

With the release of his latest single, ‘Gemini’, Jem&i effortlessly dissolves genre boundaries, merging grime, house, garage, and hip-hop into an intricate structure built for pure hedonic euphoria. Through a dark, sultry production style that oscillates hypnotically around the synth lines and the steady pulse of the beats, he crafts a track that compels rhythmic pulses into obedience. Each beat becomes more than percussion—it is a command, sinking deeper into the psyche as the mind melts into the tones.

At a time when indie rap artists frequently deliver half-cooked productions, Jem&i refuses to lower his standards, carefully orchestrating instrumentals that open portals to new sonic dimensions. His arrangements set the mood, amplifying your susceptibility to his bars, which purposefully shift away from predictable rap cadences to fuse seamlessly with melody, paying respect to house music traditions.

Yet ‘Gemini’ offers more than mesmerising instrumentals. Its grime-infused lyrical narrative carries sharp conviction and a streak of lyrical gold, balancing urban grit with atmospheric cultivation. Jem&i navigates the shifting sonic landscape with confidence, embodying an artisan’s precision in his unique approach to rhythmic storytelling.

‘Gemini’ is now available to stream on all major platforms, including YouTube.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Jack Kendrick and The Broken Wonders Cut to the Core with the Folk-Punk Candour in ‘Spoke to My Doctor’

Jack Kendrick and The Broken Wonders

With an evocative sting sharp enough to cut through the coldest souls, Spoke to My Doctor pulls all the right emotively bruising punches. Jack Kendrick and The Broken Wonders are void of pretence as they put melodies to the maladies of the modern age, distilling the agony of a system designed to manage, not mend. The alt-90s aura bleeds through every chord, carrying the weight of raw emotion as the instrumentals fuel the energy and the lyrics lay bare the disillusionment.

Emotionally, the track pivots on a knife-edge, striking with unfiltered honesty. If you’ve ever stared down the tunnel, squinting for a light that refuses to show, or placed your faith in a medical system too ill-equipped to salve the wounds it barely acknowledges, Spoke to My Doctor will hit like a gut punch. The emotion isn’t just in the words—it’s in the way every note aches, in the expressive vocals that never veer into performance for performance’s sake.

After years of relentless gigging, sharing stages with folk-punk legends like Gaz Brookfield and Ferocious Dog, Jack Kendrick has built a reputation for no-frills, high-impact storytelling. This single only cements that further, proving their ability to turn personal turmoil into a cathartic anthem.

For anyone who’s ever felt unheard, Spoke to My Doctor makes sure the message is loud and clear.

Spoke to My Doctor is now available on all major streaming platforms.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

The Sonic Prism Cracked: Damian Wolf Splits the Alt-Rock Spectrum on ‘Flying Colors’

Damian Wolf didn’t just carry the alt-rock flame into his debut LP—he set it ablaze with every saturated string. On the title single Flying Colors, the Maryland-born 20-year-old commands his solo project with the kind of DIY nerve that rarely finds this much cultivation. Entirely self-recorded, mixed, and mastered in his bedroom studio, the track stands as a defiant declaration: no one else engineers Wolf’s chaos—he shapes it into art with his own hands.

He carved his teeth on early ’90s grunge and hard rock, filtered that influence through the discord of noise rock and post-hardcore, then added his own commercial alt sensibility to the mix without sanding down the edges, resulting in a track that channels shoegaze and grunge into high-octane alt-rock visceral volition. When the overdriven guitars refrain from the production, the choral layers of reverb-soaked guitars are left to synergise with Wolf’s arcanely sweet vocals, which bleed into the mix that’s mercilessly blasted by punk’s percussive pulse.

It may often feel like there aren’t many more alt-rock intersections to explore, but Wolf didn’t just find one—he scorched a new route through a multitude of them with Flying Colors. The title track is the flashpoint, where texture becomes tension, and melody finds its way through the maelstrom. If you want to head back to the alt-90s, take this route. Just don’t expect nostalgia. Expect impact.

Flying Colors is now available to stream on all major platforms including Spotify and Apple Music.

Review by Amelia Vandergast.