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Lost Foxes Rips Through Rhythmic Convention in His Electrifyingly Frenetic Indietronica Earworm, ‘Sirens’

‘Sirens doesn’t settle into the background of Lost Foxes’ sophomore LP—it crashes through it with the weight of unresolved emotion clawing at the bones of To Get Used to You Gone, an emotionally turbulent tour de force that holds no prisoners in the name of candour.

Duncan Therrell, the creative force behind Lost Foxes, has never played by the rulebook, and in his latest release, he doesn’t just ignore convention—he grinds it into the dirt beneath syncopated beats that rip through the mix like a live wire.

Opening with an alternative slant on Slowdive’s cuttingly angular guitars, the track teeters on the edge of familiarity before wreaking havoc on the rhythmic pulses. From there, Sirens swells into a new-wave synth anthem, its oscillating layers stacked with enough textural depth to pull listeners under, all while Therrell’s indie-pop-adjacent vocal lines bleed melancholy over the frenetic percussion.

More of an avant-gardist than an assimilator, Lost Foxes chips away at expectation with every unflinchingly unfeigned note. Then, the hypersonic middle eight obliterates all restraint, leaving only rubble in its wake and the mark of a true innovator.

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

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Jay Riley’s ‘Carl Finegan’ Swings Like a Pendulum Between Jazz-Funk and Euphoria

With ‘Carl Finegan’, the jazz maverick Jay Riley throws open the doors to a smoke-filled 70s lounge and lets the groove do the talking. As the opening salvo from his latest LP, Orange, the track drips with nostalgia, lacing jazz-funk grooves with an almost hypnotic momentum. If anyone is on track to crack jazz hypnosis, it’s Riley.

With sax lines that speak louder than any lyrics ever could, Carl Finegan makes vocals feel surplus to requirement. Each swanky note bends and sways with an effortless conviction, conjuring the kind of unrelenting euphoria that breeds in the dim glow of a dive bar. The progressive exhilaration of the release never settles, always finding new ways to pull you further into the intricate layers of Riley’s masterful production.

Riley, a Midlands-born saxophonist and keyboardist, has spent decades refining his craft since studying at Dartington College of Arts. From touring the US and Europe with the Dr Teeth Big Band to carving out his own path with independently released albums, his ability to wield groove as both a time machine and a serotonin trigger is undeniable.

For those looking to escape into the warmth of funk-infused jazz, Carl Finegan is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

SUHAIB Revived Romance with his Intimate Self-Produced Indie Pop Debut, ‘All It Was’

 After years of crafting soundscapes under the moniker ‘Osiris’, SUHAIB (Suhaib Qasim) stepped into his new era with his debut single, All It Was, a resonantly raw indie pop ballad that proves his place among the genre’s most evocative storytellers.

Out on Valentine’s Day 2025, the track arrives with a lyrical tenderness reminiscent of Elliott Smith, complemented by acoustic guitars that shimmer with diaphanous warmth. It’s the kind of sound that reaches into the depths of the listener’s soul, tugging at threads that often go untouched by today’s fleeting pop trends.

Through orchestral crescendos and delay-soaked arrangements, SUHAIB transcends indie conventions, offering a poignant meditation on how the smallest moments and exchanges can leave the most profound impacts, especially when they touch people as they come of age in a world full of potential, determined to hold what’s close to them in spite of the possibilities. The weight of the single feels all the more impactful in an era where such subtleties are often overlooked. SUHAIB has called All It Was one of his most personal creations to date—and it shows.

As an Indian-American, second-generation Southerner with roots in jazz and a pandemic-forged production ethos, SUHAIB brings a singular perspective to his music. His path from poetry-filled quarantine nights to mastering multi-instrumental arrangements speaks to his dedication to the craft. Following his early successes with the EP Half Life and singles like Euphoria, SUHAIB’s reintroduction under his birth name reflects an artist who has grown into himself, bringing both emotional depth and technical sophistication to his work.

Stream All It Was on all major platforms, including SoundCloud, from February 14th.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Nick Marks Charts New Coordinates in Jazztronica with ‘Current Location’

From the first note of Current Location, Nick Marks and his armada of collaborators pull listeners into an aural cosmos where jazz motifs greet futurism with traditionalism.

Opening Cinematic Chromatics Vol. III, the final instalment of his 3 EP trilogy, Current Location exists in a liminal space where textures shift like constellations, guiding listeners through a field of gravity formed by soul, neo-soul, and jazztronica.

Marks has spent the past two years carving his sonic universe, bridging the underground scenes where jazz, hip-hop, and electronica collide with filmic grandeur. Since its inception in 2020, Cinematic Chromatics has been heralded for its genre-blurring ingenuity, earning Marks acclaim from tastemakers and playlist placements, including Spotify’s Best of Fresh Finds Jazz 2024.

Current Location represents the fluidity of place, time, and sound, drawing from Brazilian influences, lo-fi aesthetics, and orchestral sophistication. The track’s inception came as Marks walked through Manhattan, melodies forming in response to the rhythms of the city, later fleshed out with electric bassist CARRTOONS, vibraphonist Chien Chien Lu, and pianist Benjamin Furman.

The soulful yet spacey non-lexical vocals harbour accessibility in the mix, reassuring that, despite the technical chops underpinning the track, pretension is absent. This is pure rhythmic expression, allowing listeners to traverse the same sonic pathways as its creators. The polyphonic tones heighten the groove’s ecstatic zeal, but the crescendos, reaching the epitome of seraphic euphonia, steal the spotlight.

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

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Agaaze Sends Synths Soaring with ‘Run Free’ – A Neon-Soaked Slice of Sonic Liberation

There’s no mistaking an Agaaze production when it lands—his signature sound carries the warmth of sun-scorched nostalgia while still pulsing with an electrified sense of the future. ‘Run Free’ is no exception. Built on staccato pseudo-reggae rhythms and synths torn straight from the neon-lit corridors of the 80s, the track doesn’t just stick in your head—it hijacks your psyche.

Even as the instrumental euphoria threatens to sweep you away entirely, the rhythmic cadence of his rolling vocal melodies keeps you hooked as they surf over the synthesised soundscape. Blasts of funk, nostalgia, and eccentricity make this track impossible to pin down, but that unpredictability is exactly where the ingenuity of the monolith of an infectious perennial pop earworm lies.

The Rochester-born artist, producer, and DJ has already gained recognition for his boundless creativity, and with a fearless approach to independent artistry, he’s proven that no sonic territory is off-limits.

With ‘Run Free’, Agaaze doesn’t just invite you into his world; he allows you to escape your own. Liberate yourself and hit play on Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Exclusive Interview with Flame: Unravelling the Emotion and Honesty Behind ‘Pride of the Lamb’

In this interview, Flame opens up about the deeply emotive core of Pride of the Lamb, an EP that embraces vulnerability, introspection, and the raw intensity of human emotion. With a soundscape influenced by the atmospheric depths of Thom Yorke, which carries the cinematic touch of Ramin Djawadi, Flame crafts music that resonates with those who seek a profound connection through sound. We explore how production techniques, vocal expression, and thematic storytelling shape the EP’s immersive impact, as well as the role of resilience and self-reflection in Flame’s songwriting. From discussing the influence of Porcupine Tree and Alice In Chains to revealing the creative process behind capturing such expressive depth, this conversation offers insight into the layers of meaning woven throughout Pride of the Lamb.

Flame, welcome to A&R Factory, it’s a pleasure to have you with us to discuss your new EP, Pride of the Lamb, and the emotive themes you’ve instilled into your music. Your reflective style resonates with deeply expressive vocals, and it’s fascinating how your compositions echo the atmospheric influence of Thom Yorke and the sweeping cinematic qualities reminiscent of Ramin Djawadi. From the first note, there’s a sense of raw honesty in your approach, hinting at an intent to connect with listeners on a shared emotional wavelength. How do you capture the tenderly reflective tone that defines your sound, and what key elements do you think contribute most to establishing that emotional depth?

Hello Amelia,

Thank you so much for having me. And thank you for such precious compliments!

The making of Pride of the Lamb was a very intense and emotional journey. It is the very first body of work in which I decided to get lost without necessarily trying to find a way out. I think that sense of determined journeying was key to creating a visceral emotional bond with every element of the music.

Production was another stage of the creative journey where I found a path to creating that intense emotional depth and a connection between myself and my audience. During production, I sought to create a space with my music where emotions could flourish and be free – I would envisage this dark, almost void-like space, which would then be lit up by a thousand shades of colour reflective of the emotions passing through my lyrics and vocals. I was chasing this idea of a space that could be infinite yet intimate at the same time; composing and performing in a way that felt right in capturing the expression of my soul.

Your vocals carry intense emotive weight. Is there a method or mindset you adopt to ensure your voice remains genuinely expressive rather than simply polished?

Before recording the vocals for each song, my producer, Etain Sweeney, would talk me through the meaning of my song. And as I sat on the floor, or on her bed, or in the studio where all these conversations took place, I’d find myself spiralling, trying to find a perfect answer to her question because it was never one I had asked myself. My focus had always been the conjuring and exorcism of the emotions I was feeling rather than a clear cause or single meaning.

But her questions prompted greater introspection – taking me back to the point of creation and examining the situations and events that prompted the emotions I felt. I think is what keeps the vocals so intentionally primal, raw and unpolished, that emotionally focused mindset, rather than the one of creating perfect notes. Sometimes, overthinking isn’t necessarily a bad thing!

When did the concepts of resilience, grace and growth become the focal points for your songwriting, and did you face any internal resistance while exploring such honesty?

The realisation of those concepts didn’t occur to me until much later in the production of this EP. Although the songs were written in different moments of my life, I always felt that there was something connecting them – a red thread running throughout that only appeared when I stepped back to view the tapestry of the work as a whole. That thread was the difficulty I faced in connecting these moments, the painful recollections that glue them together.

I guess those focal points were almost a result of the difficulty I found in expressing my emotions in such a raw and unvarnished way. I was excited to bring something new to the world, and yet that something came as a result of heartache, solitude, healing, and a natural journey of resilience, grace, and growth.

Who are your main influences, and how do you balance these influences without overshadowing the unique nuances that make your sonic signature distinct?

I have many different influences, with Porcupine Tree, Alice In Chains, Dave Matthews Band, and The Cranberries being the major ones.

Despite being very different sonic landscapes from each other and from my own, I try to focus on what is real about their music. My mind often reflects on how, when, what and why they – among many other artists – wrote what they wrote. I soak my soul in what their music leaves me, and I try to do the exact same in my own world and words, even though I do occasionally take the liberty of adding a little referral Easter egg.

In what ways do you use instrumentation, arrangement, or production techniques to create an immersive sense of empathy and reflection for your audience?

I like the idea of using many intertwining layers that could complement each other’s presence through reverberation. It’s how these layers communicate with each other that gives space for empathy and emotions. Automations and customised plug-ins are great for these things.

I also experimented with different acoustic spaces, recreating the atmosphere of particular places like McEwan’s Hall in Edinburgh through impulse responses and convulsions to fully immerse the audience in my world. It sounded wonderful, but I chose a different route for this release, as although it perfectly echoed the emotions I was aiming to recreate, the vocals and instrumentation lost some of the colour which I felt more importantly fostered that emotional empathy and connection in my audience.

However, I have been working a lot in Dolby Atmos and convolutions for upcoming music, and this experimentation brings emotions on a whole new, immersive level.

Watch this space!

You touch on raw emotion and self-discovery through pain. How do you stay open to these themes in your day-to-day life, and what compels you to channel them into music?

I don’t always find it easy to confront certain emotions or themes in my day-to-day life, but I’ve realised over the course of this EP, that it is necessary and fundamental to what I do. I resonate a lot with Shakespeare in perceiving art as holding up a mirror to ourselves, and this unflinching musical honesty gives me a sort of strength to truly feel, examine, and face these difficulties in my daily existence. I am who I am, might as well face it to embrace it. It is actually kind of funny the way that during and after the production, I felt myself charged with so much love and appreciation for all the people that stayed and that are in my life. I am eternally grateful to be able to love and feel loved.

And that it is exactly what pushes me to not just song write for myself, but share my music, is the idea of somebody out there feeling what I feel, and can relate, so that when they hear my words, they don’t feel like they have to face whatever challenge or dream might be in front of them alone.

Do you approach songwriting as a form of storytelling, and how do you keep the stories cohesive across an entire EP?

Songwriting has always been my emotional outlet, but I didn’t fully embrace it until about 6 years ago. My approach to songwriting functions as a method of carving these emotional encounters into my memories, encounters which can be brought back to life any time I play those songs again.

With this intention, I have found that while the creation or production of a song may fade into distant memory, the lingering taste of the emotional experience that triggered it remains. It is also fascinating how, in some cases, the initial meaning evolves into something more relatable to events closer to the present time, bringing a whole new emotional experience to the table.

As I mentioned earlier, although the songs were written at different times, they had that joining red thread which kept a sort of narrative flowing through, a cohesive theme which has been an elusive will o’ the wisp for me to put a name to.

The EP as a whole is not so much a storytelling piece but an exploration of the process of opening up to people who then,  through whatever means, betray that vulnerability and fade from your life without ever taking accountability for the pain they caused. When I take a step back to look at the work now, I see more than just pain, but progress from my original headspace and growth in my willingness to love unconditionally.

‘On Tape’ is the conceptual closure of the EP, coming after all that pain that’s been let out. I’m just glad I was able to create something out of it. It is what I take away with me when paths divide.

Pride of the Lamb feels particularly personal. Would you say it marks a turning point in how willing you are to share the vulnerable aspects of your own life, or has that honesty always been at the core of your artistry?

Pride of the Lamb was actually the last song I wrote on the EP, and you’re right; it is very personal and makes me feel very vulnerable.

It talks about the sensation of home, which, to me, often feels like being a spectator in both somebody else’s life and my own. It reflects on that constant ache—the desire to move backward or forward in time, to change things, to skip the present—caught in the delusion that we alone could somehow alter the course of things.

In the end, I know the choices of others aren’t mine to make. All I can do is face my own reflection with courage and honesty while watching them build their lives in their own way.

Stream the Pride of the Lamb EP on Spotify now. Find other ways to connect with Flame via this link.

Interview by Amelia Vandergast

‘Good Lord!’ – Malya Tempts the RnB Gods with Her Sultry Debut

Some artists tiptoe into the industry, but Malya kicked the door wide open with her debut single, Good Lord! The Sydney-born singer-songwriter has spent nearly a decade honing her craft on stage across the Western Suburbs, and at 23, she’s finally ready to take her own sound to the airwaves. Taking cues from the vocal fluidity of Ariana Grande and the soulful weight of SZA, she’s riding the contemporary RnB wave in a direction that pays homage to the golden era of 90s icons while staying radio-ready for the new generation.

Good Lord! is a full-bodied meditation on desire—sensuous in its production, intoxicating in its delivery. Every note carries intent, ensuring not an ounce of the soul in her performance slips by unnoticed. Self-produced and sonically rich, the track boasts the same earworm appeal as her influences without leaning into imitation. The hypnotic melodies wrap around lyrics that revel in the body’s ability to spark obsession, making for a track that doesn’t just flirt with seduction—it commands it.

If this is Malya’s first step, it won’t be long before she’s towering above us from the RnB pantheon.

Good Lord! was officially released on January 26th and is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Brino blasted ahead of the curve with his vibe-steady alt-hip-hop earworm, ‘Out the Way’

Brino isn’t here to play by anyone else’s rulebook, and Out the Way, the standout single from his latest LP, achievemephobia*, proves exactly that. The Chicago Land-based artist has been honing his craft since 2016, and this latest release is a testament to his refusal to lock into any formula. Going beyond the archetypal rattle of 808s, he delivers a slick fusion of electronica and hip-hop, all while letting his dynamic vocals dictate the flow with a cadence that cuts through with precision.

The earworm is a vibe-steady statement of unflinching resilience, which sees Brino drench the instrumentals with soul through the bars he spits, embodying the luxe style of contemporary RnB while swerving predictable territory.

There’s no forced inspiration here, no preaching, just raw introspection spun into lyrical gold. He waxes lyrical with feverish autonomy like he’s got nothing to lose, as his lyrics narrate just that in an exhibition of what it truly means to blur genre boundaries.

Out the Way is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

CMC J$ap’s ‘No Limits’ is the Sound of RnB Breaking Orbit

CMC J$ap isn’t interested in following the gravity-bound formulas of RnB—he’s hurtling past them at full velocity. ‘No Limits’, lifted from his interstellar LP Woke Up on the Wrong Side of Orbit, doesn’t just flirt with genre fluidity—it obliterates the concept of genre constraints entirely. Synthwave, hip-hop, trap, pop, and RnB all collide in a kinetic explosion of sound, with beats that ignite the track like rocket fuel and an energy level that refuses to wane.

The Kansas City-based artist, producer, and songwriter has never been confined to a single lane, and his global reach is proof that his boundary-smashing approach resonates. As co-founder of Canis Major Collective and NerdLyfe Global LLC, CMC J$ap has built more than just a discography—he’s constructed an empire where music, fashion, and business intersect. But it’s his ability to push a new evolution into the trajectory of RnB that has allowed him to reach his creative zenith, and ‘No Limits’ is an emphatic testament to that.

This isn’t just a track for today—it’s a future blueprint for RnB evolution. If your playlists are stuck in the past, let CMC J$ap propel them forward. ‘No Limits’ is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Saint Senara’s ‘Lost Lisa Marie’: Where Sothern Gothic Folk Blues and Ghosts Collide

Saint Senara

Saint Senara’s latest single, Lost Lisa Marie, demonstrates the award-winning singer-songwriter duo’s unrelenting commitment to crafting southern gothic folk with depth and distinction. Since their 2020 inception, their evolution has led to a sound that combines blues rock’s raw intensity, folk’s piercingly poetic imagery, and the atmospheric richness of Americana.

The haunting arrangement in Lost Lisa Marie invites listeners into a vivid sonic panorama. Blues rock guitars, distorted crescendos, and angular riffs collide to create an audibly tactile experience. As the powerhouse chanteuse’s vocals re-emerge over the brash blues-rock climax, her delivery cuts through the chaos with grace, grounding the intensity in rich, emotive clarity.

Far removed from the pitfalls of pastiche, Saint Senara imbue their sound with authenticity and power, allowing Lost Lisa Marie to unfold like a narrative in motion, leaving space for reflection as much as visceral connection.

For fans of blues-soaked Americana and raw poetic intensity, this is a track that will leave your pulse racing out of rhythm and your finger hovering over the replay button. Off the back of their successful headline shows in 2024, Lost Lisa Marie is both a standalone triumph and a stepping stone towards what promises to be an uncompromising future.

Lost Lisa Marie will be available to stream on all platforms from January 31st. Find your preferred way to listen via the band’s official website.

Review by Amelia Vandergast