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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.

Paul Robert’s ‘Release’ Proves Catharsis Hits Harder With Cross-Genre Firepower

With Release, Paul Robert proves that artistic distinction lies within taking influences from genres instead of merely assimilating certain figures within the niche. With a cascade of synths serving as a polyphonic prelude that reminisces with a John Carpenter score before he allows you to imagine a matured offshoot of Bloodhound Gang, Paul Robert becomes the master of inter-genre alchemy.

With a sense of mindfulness reverberating through the enlightened, locked and loaded with lyrical gold track, it’s impossible not to feel the catharsis and the hype simultaneously being injected by the electronica, hip-hop and pop crossover.

After pivoting from a sales career in early 2024 and launching his debut 110—a nod to the steep learning curve and the commitment it demanded—Paul has shown no signs of easing up. When copyright disputes blocked his mixtapeLying from release, he didn’t retreat; he recalibrated. Relocating to Los Angeles, he restarted with new collaborators and fresh resolve. Release arrives as part of his new project Love Different, rolling out one unapologetic track at a time.

Paul’s optimism doesn’t come from naive cheer—it’s forged through friction, stitched through each verse touching on belief, action, love, and digital dysfunction. The track is a pressure valve and an invitation—both release and ignition.

Release by Paul Robert is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify. 

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Xy Gala Wires Electricity into the Mundanity of Existence in ‘Lifeless Life’

‘Lifeless Life’ opens a pop-hooked Pandora’s box of a paradox, reflecting on how life often inhibits feeling alive, especially as we become numb to atrocities and the monotonies of daily existence. Between the diaphanous candour pouring from Xy Gala’s confessions and the beat that brings a pulse of resistance to the mediocrity of reality, it’s impossible not to lock into the track and feel that he has a gift for unifying those who aren’t content to go through the motions, who struggle to find meaning and pleasure within their autonomy.

It’s a haunting track, sure to vindicate anyone who knows how emotionally paralysing it is to keep your head above water. The electro-rock riff blazes through the mix before the hauntingly pensive, cinematically raw outro, affirming that Xy Gala never pours half measures into his alchemic cocktail of pop, rock, electronica, and trap. The soaring chorus and the Santana-esque guitar solo inject an unforgettable energy into the track, fusing genres into a sound that fans of Post Malone, Falling in Reverse, and The Kid LAROI will appreciate.

The London-based luminary, Xy Gala, has never sounded more authentic or essential. ‘Lifeless Life’ is out on 21st March 2025. Hear it on Soundcloud.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Cupid and the Cowboy’s ‘Beer on My Tramp Stamp’ Is a Shot of Whiskey Spiked with Sarcasm

Evading the clichés of every scene and leaving no room for pretence or posturing, Cupid and the Cowboy delivered a satirically subversive and seductively salacious tour de force of literally and figuratively down-and-dirty Americana with Beer on My Tramp Stamp. With folk and alt-country drippings in the soulfully delivered, foot-stomping hit, they find rugged intersections of euphony while the lyrics prove that they’re so beyond pastiche they’ve reserved a spot for other pioneers in the alt-country pantheon. There’s something delicious in the way they go down old country roads, finding new thematic intersections to explore while taking playful shots at the culture they’re dissecting through sound.

This misfit NYC duo thrive on contradiction. Bronx-born Cupid, a sultry wallflower with songs of unrequited love, collides with Maynard, a Reno Casino Cowboy who delivers his raw energy like an open bar tab on the line. Together, they trade vocals and have a proclivity for pulling in everything from country, Americana, dance-pop, R&B, alt-rock, and folk-punk to craft a sound as unfiltered as their songwriting.

With their first full-length album, Misfit Sessions, set to drop in 2025, they’re proving that country can be taken apart and put back together in a way that pays ode without feeling old.

Beer on My Tramp Stamp is available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Trip Sitter Resurrects the Ghosts of the ’90s with ‘I Love You All’

Trip Sitter teases sonic serenity in I Love You All before dismantling any expectations of a passive listening experience. The hazily psychedelic intro introduces them as a seraphic offshoot of the Happy Mondays, but it’s not long before a wall of scuzz-constructed noise crashes in, revealing their grungy shoegaze stripes. Even as the guitars snarl through waves of oscillation, the vocals maintain a hymnal presence, bleeding over the instrumentals with an ethereal detachment that softens the bite of the distortion.

With no trace of modernity cluttering the mix, I Love You All allows listeners to slip straight into the nostalgia of the ’90s indie and grunge revolution. Every transgression in sound is as sanctifying as the last, proving that Trip Sitter isn’t here to simply recycle the past—they’re making nostalgia malleable enough to forge a new sonic signature from the ashes of a golden epoch.

Taken from their debut LP, Then Again, It Never Was, I Love You All reinforces their ability to straddle the line between chaos and clarity. By embracing pop/emo vocal sensibilities, fuzzed-out grunge chords, reverb-drenched shoegaze tones, and post-rock ambience, they have become unparalleled conduits of innovation in Boston’s indie underground scene.

I Love You All is available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify and Bandcamp.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

James Pots Cradles the Right Words for Devotion in the Lo-Fi Folk Reverie of ‘Close My Eyes’

James Pots doesn’t waste a second of Close My Eyes trying to impress with grand gestures. Instead, he lets his whispered reverence do all the talking. The short and sweet burst of idyllic folk reverie is a love letter penned with unflinching adoration, performed with an impassioned quiescence that draws you into the centre of the intimately minimalist performance. With little more than the rugged pulls of his guitar strings and the warm reverberations of his honeyed harmonies, he strips romance back to its rawest form—delivered with the quiet conviction of someone who knows exactly what devotion sounds like.

Featured on his debut LP, Everybody’s Gonna Know Your Name, Close My Eyes is just a glimpse into the album’s broader meditation on love and commitment. Where so many artists overcomplicate what those three little words mean, Pots keeps it unpretentious and unguarded.

At just 18, Pots has already proven himself to be a master of understatement. With a growing catalogue spanning acoustic folk, pop, and even dance EDM, he’s building a reputation as an emerging Australian artist unafraid to explore his creative instincts. If Close My Eyes is any indication, he’ll be one to watch as his sound continues to take shape.

Close My Eyes is available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Keys from Neptune Maps the Stars in His Classical Composition ‘Do the Cosmos Think?’

True to his moniker, Keys from Neptune is out of this world in the star-roving classical composition Do the Cosmos Think? Synthesising elegance with wonder, the self-taught San Diego-based pianist visualises the vastness of space in the twilight of the production; each piano key is a starlight illumination in the pitch black that surrounds us. The spatial effects and the intensity of the subtle yet affecting crescendos leave you under no illusion of the composer’s talent.

Words are surplus to requirement in this eloquent reminder of our place in the world, in the galaxy, allowing any anxiety you felt before nestling into the production to feel completely inconsequential. With each note, the ambient jazz artist extends a moment of solace, yet leaves you yearning for the next sanctifying note.

Slowly building his repertoire, Keys from Neptune has already proven his ability to pull listeners into the gravity of his compositions. Do the Cosmos Think? is a celestial reflection set to sound, and the perfect way to introduce yourself to Keys from Neptune’s talent.

Do the Cosmos Think? is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Eleftherios Interview: Transforming Kanye West’s ‘Runaway’ into an Ambient Dreamscape

Eleftherios has taken Runaway, one of Kanye West’s most emotionally unfiltered tracks, and reshaped it into something weightless and introspective. In this interview, he breaks down the creative decisions behind his atmospheric rework, explaining how he preserved the raw underpinnings of the song while steering it into a more meditative space. He also reflects on the unexpected viral success of Hide CS01, the fine line between artistic instinct and strategic thinking in today’s music landscape, and his ambitions beyond streaming success—including a move to Greece and aspirations to compose for film and games. Whether you’re fascinated by the details of ambient production or the evolving role of TikTok in modern music, Eleftherios offers plenty to unpack.

Eleftherios, welcome to A&R Factory! You’ve carved out a space in ambient music that’s clearly connecting with people in a big way, and your upcoming take on Runaway looks set to do the same. Runaway is already a pretty haunting track. What made you want to break it down even further and reimagine it as an ambient piece?

It’s a pleasure to be here at A&R Factory, thank you for having me on this incredible platform for artists! I really appreciate the kind words. I’m honestly not too sure about modern Kanye, but you can’t deny that, in the past, he created some truly culture-shifting records. Runaway is one of my favourites. The minimalism of the piano, so simple yet incredibly iconic—paired with the raw emotion of the song makes it deeply moving. I felt it could translate beautifully into the ambient space, allowing the melody and emotion to breathe in a new way.

Kanye West’s Runaway is such an unfiltered song, essentially Kanye being brutally honest about his own flaws, toxicity, and inability to navigate relationships. At its core, it’s raw and vulnerable. I wanted to take that same rawness and explore it through a more hopeful, ethereal lens.

When you take a song like Runaway and strip it back, how do you decide what stays and what goes? Were there any parts of the original that surprised you once you isolated them?

That’s a great question. The biggest change was in the structure. The original is almost nine minutes long, while my version is just over two minutes. It’s like adapting a novel into a film, you can’t include everything, so you have to choose the most essential moments.

I knew I had to keep the most iconic melodic lines, especially the vocal melody, and finding a way to make that work naturally in an ambient setting was a challenge. Reverb became my best friend (as always) in shaping the atmosphere and blending everything seamlessly.

What surprised me most was just how powerful the melody is on its own. Even without vocals, without drums, without all the production, it could easily be the soundtrack to an emotional indie film where someone stares out of a rain-soaked window, contemplating life…

Hide CS01 blew up on TikTok in a huge way. Did that change the way you think about making music, or do you just focus on what feels right in the moment?

Oh, 100%, it changed how I think about music. Before Hide, I was making songs purely based on feeling. Now, I still focus on emotion, but I also think, “Could this fit into a moment people might want to soundtrack!?” With Hide, it all felt very natural. I saw the dark fantasy trend taking off on TikTok and thought, this track would sound incredible in an ethereal ambient style! I made it in a day, got my girlfriend GLO to add these beautiful, ethereal vocals, and we had it ready to go within a couple of days. It was a case of seeing a moment, acting fast, and trusting that it would resonate.

The biggest lesson? Sometimes, being intentional with marketing isn’t a bad thing. It doesn’t mean making ‘soulless’ music, it means finding the right home for the music you love making. It also showed me just how powerful TikTok is, how quickly a song can spread when it connects with the right audience. That said, I
still believe in balance. You don’t want to overthink trends to the point where you lose the magic.

Ambient music can be so personal for listeners, like a soundtrack to their thoughts. What kind of headspace do you want people to be in when they hear your version of Runaway?

That’s what I love about ambient music, it’s so personal. Every genre is personal in its own way, but ambient music feels more solitary. You’re not exactly going to a club to hear this kind of music (though, if there’s a club for ambient music, someone please sign me up).

Some people might find this version of Runaway melancholic, others might feel a sense of peace or nostalgia. Music is subjective, and that’s what makes it beautiful. But if I had to paint a scene, picture yourself lying under the night sky, feeling like the whole world is open to you. The original Runaway is raw and unfiltered, like Kanye is emotionally unravelling in real time. My version takes that same emotion but filters it through a dreamier, weightless perspective, almost as if Runaway existed in an alternate, more ethereal reality.

You’ve got 275K monthly listeners on Spotify—pretty massive for a genre that’s still pretty niche. What do you think it is about your sound that keeps people coming back?

Honestly, I’m still wrapping my head around it. A year ago, I had fewer than 1,000 listeners, now I have more monthly listeners than some small towns have residents. It’s surreal.

Even though ambient music is niche, it lives in the wellness space, which is actually massive. People use this kind of music to help with anxiety, sleep, focus, or to just to feel something deeper. That’s what keeps it growing.

As for why people come back to my music? I’d like to think it’s because of the extra detail I put into the sound design. I’ve been making music for over a decade, and I love creating immersive sonic worlds. So, hopefully, that attention to detail makes my music something people want to return to.

Ambient music is all about subtlety, but it’s easy to get lost in the details. How do you know when a track is finished and not just stuck in a loop of endless tweaking?

Oh, I don’t always know. Sometimes, I tweak a track endlessly until I start to wonder if I’m actually improving it or just making it slightly worse in different ways. But over time, I’ve learned to trust my instincts. Some tracks come together fast, like ‘echoes of the unsaid’, others take ages, especially the last 10% of polishing. If I find myself endlessly tweaking, I try to step away, reset my ears, and come back later. If I’m still not satisfied, then maybe the track isn’t meant to be finished yet.

A lot of people don’t realise how much actually goes into making ambient music. Can you break down a specific moment in Runaway where something small makes a big difference?

That’s so true, ambient music can feel minimalistic, but the beauty is in the details. This was one of those tracks where everything flowed naturally, though I initially thought structuring it would be the hardest part.

One specific moment that made a huge difference was deciding where to place the key melodic moments and figuring out what to keep and what to trim. My eureka moment came at 1:36, when everything comes back in. It just felt so satisfying, like solving a puzzle. The moment I locked that in, I knew the hardest part of the track
was over. I could finally breathe again

Ambient music has exploded on streaming platforms and TikTok—why do you think people are gravitating towards these kinds of sounds more than ever?

You’re absolutely right, it’s exciting to see. Who would have thought minimal ambient music would be recognised by hundreds of millions? It’s both peculiar and incredibly motivating.

I think now more than ever, people feel disconnected. With social media and constant ‘doomscrolling,’ everything moves so fast. The younger generation is growing up in a world where they practically live online, and while that has its benefits, it also comes with a lot of negatives.

Ambient music feels like an antidote to all of that. It’s music that gives you space, lets you slow down, and helps you reconnect, not just with the world, but with yourself. That’s why I think it’s surging in popularity. It’s almost like a reset button for your brain. And platforms like TikTok have made it easier than ever for these tracks to find the people who need them most!!

Do you ever think about working on a soundtrack, or do you already write with visuals in mind?

Scoring a film or game is my ultimate goal!! (Hook me up if you know anyone) When I was a kid, while everyone else on the bus was blasting pop or hip-hop, I was sitting there listening to film scores, imagining scenes that didn’t exist… So, yeah, I’ve been thinking about this for a while.

I haven’t had the chance to do official soundtrack work yet, but I’m hoping that as I grow in the ambient world, I can transition into it. Scoring a game is one of my top goals for the next couple of years.

After Runaway drops, what’s next? Are you already working on something new, or are you taking a second to soak it all in?

I’ve got a weekly release schedule lined up until May, but my focus now is on bigger projects. I’ve been releasing a lot of singles, which has been great, but I want to create something more immersive, like a full album.

I’ve been working with Dreamscape, the biggest ambient label and the home of many of the ambient trends you see on TikTok. They are the best in the game and true visionaries in this creative space. I’m really excited to put out an album with them in the future.

Beyond that, I’m moving to Greece, back to my ancestral roots, with my girlfriend, GLO, in April, just a couple of weeks after Runaway drops. I feel like this change in environment is going to inspire my best work yet. It feels like a new chapter in the Eleftherios story.

Stream Eleftherios on Spotify and discover more about the artist via their official website. 

Interview by Amelia Vandergast

Eve Berry Sinks into the Shadows of Situationships with her debut single, ‘back to you’

Eve Berry has hit the pop sphere running with her ethereally dreamy 2010s textures and equally seraphic vocal lines, commanding their way through layers of reverb to entrench the illuminated melodies with emotion that aches with the kind of pain only a cyclical romance can conjure.

back to you is as confessional as a diary entry, an exposition of the darker, often repetitive nature of situationships, where worth is measured in how much time you can kill by their side—until someone shinier walks by. Eve spoke the unspoken, unearthing how the push and pull of an imbalanced romance is the ultimate ego death when the other person is always holding all the cards.

The 21-year-old singer-songwriter and producer from the Southside of Glasgow first found her footing in the city’s live music scene, hitting open-mic nights from the age of 11 before drawing influence from songwriters like Stevie Nicks, Lana Del Rey, and Taylor Swift. Her love for era-defining synth-pop from the 2010s seeps through every note of back to you, a track that carries the weight of nostalgia while feeling like a fresh stab to the heart. Teaching herself guitar before expanding to piano and home production, she built this song from the ground up, knowing it had to be her first release.

For fellow situationship survivors who can’t help but find themselves back where they swore they’d never return, back to you is now available on all major streaming platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Young Jay Channels the Tides of Romance in His Tropic RnB Trap Pop Fusion, ‘Her Ocean’

Young Jay’s latest single, Her Ocean, is as sonically oceanic as the title—it moves with the same tranquil yet powerful force. Fusing pop, RnB, and trap, the independent artist found his space in the contemporary landscape with a track that radiates warmth and intimacy. There’s a sultry undercurrent, but the real strength lies in the sincerity of his lyricism. While others lean on excess, Young Jay proves that restraint and poetic depth leave a far stronger impression.

After stepping away from music for a year following the passing of his great-grandmother, Lillie Mae Jones Manning, Young Jay resurfaces with a song that feels like both a reflection and a return. Her Ocean is far from surface-level sentimentality—it’s a testament to the kind of romance that refuses to drown in modern trends. With a vocal delivery that rolls in like a tide, carrying both tenderness and intensity, he captures the equilibrium between admiration and longing, bringing a tactile emotional depth to the track.

The production lingers in the same atmospheric space, conjuring images of golden-hour heat and slow-motion devotion. The melody doesn’t overpower; it guides, letting the lyrical honesty take centre stage.

Her Ocean is available now on all major streaming platforms, including YouTube.

Review by Amelia Vandergast