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Ghost Nation’s ‘Last Words’: A Dark Pop Mirror Reflecting the Tightrope of Truth

Ghost Nation’s latest dark pop single, Last Words, opens with disquieting, carnivalesque scintillation, quickly establishing an atmosphere thick with tension. The distorted effects enveloping the vocals mirror how fractured we can become when communication is reduced to a battle of reticence and manipulation rather than genuine connection. It’s proof of Ghost Nation’s adept grasp of lyrical themes, vividly amplifying the intense narrative beneath the track’s surface.

There’s swathes of desolation oscillating throughout the darkwave and industrial-infused pop production, emphasising the idea that no man is an island—we’re all adrift if we lose the ability to tether ourselves with truthful expression. But truth itself can cut deeply, and Last Words provides ample space to ruminate on the weight every syllable carries.

Formed by vocalist and producer Tomas Vasseur and producer Micke Berg, Ghost Nation has cultivated a globally resonant sound since 2016, accumulating over eight million streams by fusing alt electronica with cinematic arrangements. Their seasoned approach is apparent in every motif of Last Words, particularly in the dynamic interplay between innocence and strength.

By intertwining rhythmic urgency, playful experimentation, and philosophical depth, Ghost Nation reveals the fragile tightrope we all navigate with words—where one slip can irreversibly alter our connections.

Last Words is now available to stream on all major platforms, including SoundCloud. 

Review by Amelia Vandergast

ZKIN Expose the Sociopathic Script in ‘Breaking Me Down’ – A Synth-Pop Autopsy of Emotional Erosion

ZKIN’s latest single, Breaking Me Down, tears through the surface with haunting synth-pop stylings that shimmer with trip-hop unease and indietronica nuances. The Swedish duo, formed in Linköping by Jonas Gustafsson and Malin Jeraeus, have crafted their own genre by refusing to compromise their vision to fit a template. Their self-styled descriptors—Dessert Soul, Bristol Blues, Cinematic Industrial Synth Rock—speak to their obsession with pushing past the expected.

The production operates like strobe lighting through fog—illuminating the disorientation of psychological warfare in toxic dynamics. The synth arrangements soundtrack a spiral, while the lyrical plot is paced like a psychological thriller. Jeraeus delivers each line with measured cadence, capturing the ache of recognition and the slow-burn clarity that comes from realising you’ve been pulled into someone else’s constructed reality. Her voice, shaped by years of singing through soul, funk, blues and rock, holds nothing back in its precision.

Thematically, Breaking Me Down resonates as a cautionary tale written for anyone who’s felt reality rewritten by someone more concerned with control than connection. Gustafsson’s lifelong grounding in jazz, blues, and punk bleeds into the track’s rhythmic structure—firm, unrelenting, and laced with menace. Together, they reconstruct the power balance that emotional manipulation seeks to dismantle.

ZKIN’s strength lies in their refusal to simplify or soften. Every element of Breaking Me Down is sharpened to expose what it means to reclaim your voice after it’s been strategically unravelled.

Breaking Me Down is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Francesca Pichierri’s ‘Amen’ Strikes Alt-Pop Gold with a Groove-Soaked Rebuke

Francesca Pichierri never lets sentimentality get in the way of precision. With ‘Amen’, her fifth single and a pivotal chapter in her concept album Cellule Stronze, she lays a satirical yet razor-sharp lens on cancer ghosting—the social retreat of those who disappear when illness walks into the room. Rather than wallowing in the emotional wreckage, she chooses to let irony march straight to the dancefloor.

Musically, Amen firmly implants alt into pop. Retro-futurist synth lines and swathes of synthesised bass bring the funk, summoning a sound reminiscent of Depeche Mode warped through the lens of South American disco and gospel. But it’s Pichierri’s performance that overrides the energy of the release. Her vocal lines carry a seraphic sanctity, acting as a vocal exorcism of all the shallow well-wishers and their hollow “thoughts and prayers”.

You plug into Amen—not the other way around. It strips you of autonomy with its animatronic pull, transposing darkness into an earworm of euphoria. The lyrical sting doesn’t get lost in the groove. Instead, it’s accentuated by it. Her vocal delivery pivots from soulful sincerity to smirking irony with a deftness that makes every line land harder. It’s funk with bite. Gospel with gall. Dance music with a grudge.

With Amen, Pichierri soundtracks the uncomfortable silence left by those who recoil from pain—and she sets it to a beat they can’t ignore.

Amen is now available to stream on all major platforms, including SoundCloud and Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast.

Alpine Jubilee Inch Closer to the Indie Folk Pop Throne with ‘Fiver on the Favourite’

Alpine Jubilee won us over with their debut, but with Fiver on the Favourite, they well and truly conquered. Folk-tinged indie pop has rarely sounded this expansive, with flourishes tinged with psychedelia and melodies that seem to ascend endlessly. The single instrumentally invites you to a state of transcendence, while the abstract lyricism filters in, almost serving as another instrument, adding texture to the euphonic tonal masterpiece that progressively enthrals with each new nuanced transition.

Born from the creative partnership of brothers Trevor O’Neil and Glenn O’Neil, Alpine Jubilee stretches across continents, with Trevor based in Toowoomba, Queensland, and Glenn in Geneva, Switzerland. Their sound pulls together an eclectic mix of instrumentation, featuring acoustic guitar, violin, trumpet, harmonies, ukulele, mandolin, mando-cello, tin whistle, harmonica, bass, percussion, synthesisers, and even a zither. Their influences range from 80s new wave and darkwave to twee-jangle pop, contemporary nu-folk, and alt-country, and it shows in the depth of their arrangements. Joining them on the track are Flavia O’Neil on trumpet and backing vocals, Nelson O’Neil on drum programming, and Oliver Liang on violin.

If you’re sick of folk artists who bring the same old pale imitations to the table, Fiver on the Favourite is a surefire antidote to monotony.

Fiver on the Favourite is available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify. For the full experience, watch the official video on YouTube. 

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Maria Heivang’s ‘When I Had You’ Hits Like a Wave of Regret

Like a breath of introspectively fresh air, Maria Heivang’s debut single, When I Had You, locks you into its intimacy from the outset, sharing the singer-songwriter’s smoking pains as she paints a vignette of loneliness and regret. This is far more than a standard exhibition of heartbreak—waves of reverberation ripple from the post-production to mimic the blindsiding nature of loss, amplifying the ache in every line. Even with the vocal treatment pulling her voice in line with the electro-pop instrumentals, the emotive sting in her delivery refuses to be dulled.

Born and raised in the Winter Olympic town of Lillehammer, Heivang has recently relocated to Manchester to take her career to the zenith it deserves. With her debut single, which hit the airwaves on the 27th of February, she created plenty of anticipation for her forthcoming EP, ARGH in love, which will unfold throughout the year. She describes the track as a reflection on not appreciating something good until it’s gone, a sentiment delivered with Nordic charm and alt-pop bite.

Her music carries the juxtaposition of emotional restraint and vulnerability, channelled through icy electronic textures and raw lyricism; if you’re unwilling to compromise between style and substance on your alt-pop playlists, When I Had You is a necessary addition.

Stream the single on YouTube now. 

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Doneil’s Sonic Rebellion: An Interview with the Rock Duo Refusing to Conform

Few bands can say their creative spark ignited inside a double-decker bus, but Doneil’s story is as unconventional as their music. From crafting raw, unapologetic rock tracks in a self-built studio on wheels to immersing themselves in Sri Lankan culture, their approach is fuelled by a relentless need for artistic freedom. In this interview, they open up about the industry pressures that tested their direction, their refusal to dilute their sound to meet trends, and the personal experiences that shape their lyrics. As they prepare for their next album, Doneil remain committed to making music for those who crave something real—no autotune, no compromise, just the spirit of rock in its purest form.

Doneil, welcome to A&R Factory! Your story is as unconventional as your music, and we’re excited to explore the experiences that have shaped your sound and ethos. Your music carries echoes of legendary bands like Queen, U2, and AC/DC, yet it never feels like an imitation. How do you strike a balance between honouring your influences and forging your own identity?

It’s a great honour for us that our music could have echoes of these legendary bands because for us they are a model of good music, in fact, in live performances, we sing some songs of them as well. About our identity, we don’t make any effort in this direction, we only play and sing what we like, and we have been playing for years, in different bands, styles, projects…, each one of these experiences shapes us personally and musically, creating this identity.

Few bands can say that their story began inside a double-decker bus. How did that unconventional living and recording space impact your creative process and approach to making music?

Our life on the bus was wonderful! We think it was the best time of our lives. We bought a conventional double-decker bus, and we took out all the seats, tables, WC,… everything inside! and we built the home studio of our dreams: cover all inside with wood, big kitchen (we like good meals as well), our bed was manufacture by us too, with woods, making the wardrobes under the bed, … and a lot of particular things we were making and publishing in our social networks. This time we felt free, out of the conventional strict rules of the society, living in a camp, and sharing time with the other people who lived there too, as a family. So, as we felt free, we could compose whatever we wanted, and our home was not only comfortable, it was isolated too (climate and sound), we could make noise, nobody heard us.

You spent two years in Sri Lanka, which must have been an intense contrast to your life in Spain. Did the cultural and musical influences from that time find their way into your songwriting?

In Sri Lanka we didn’t live as tourists, not in tourist areas either, we lived and worked as the rest of Sri Lankan people, in a very common neighborhood. So yes! We experienced a lot of cultural contrasts, some of them we considered better than here, even people were more friendly and helpful, but sometimes we missed lots of things and attitudes of our country.

About music they live in other planet, there aren’t concerts of the most famous bands or singers of the world, most of them didn’t know Shakira or Lady Gaga, they are very keen on their traditional music, and yes, their traditional music is very happy, and we danced some of them in parties, but we didn’t like completely. There we not only play rock, we play different styles, the most they wanted from us was we sang in Spanish (boleros, latin music…), and we composed “La noche nos llama” and “Vamonos” for their “tropical” influence, we even collaborated with a local group on a song “Sigiriya”. So we came back to start our new project “Pure Rock”, because we understood this is our real style.

As a couple who have shared both life and music for nearly two decades, do you ever find that personal experiences shape the way you collaborate creatively?

Oh yes!! If we are annoyed with each other, it’s impossible to create anything, if we are happy or inspired by creating, then everything flows easily. In fact, as a couple it’s easier to work together, because we know each other deeply. When we work with other musicians, we need more patience to transmit the idea properly. Sometimes this is like one was in the mind of the other, we think the same, and when one tells the idea, the other answers: Oh yes!, I was thinking the same! And even one complements the other, because Sonia makes lyrics and the melody for the voice, while Xavier composes all instrumental parts.  But on the other hand, confidence is a thread too, you know!

Many independent artists struggle with balancing artistic freedom and industry expectations. How do you approach self-promotion and engagement with listeners while staying true to your music?

This is one of the most difficult challenges, and the differences between how we understand our music and what the industry wants, made our ideas and direction crumble too often. We round and round about our style, if we update our rock style as current, or continue making our 80’s rock, if we processed the voice or not, and else… Many people are music judges and everybody thinks they know more than us about what we have to do, even the first label company we worked with asked us to do Reggaeton, and we left the company.

Finally, we are convinced that there are lots of people who make current music, and we prefer to find the people who like the same as us, honest pure rock!

Your lyrics carry a lot of emotion and depth. Are there particular themes you find yourselves returning to when writing songs, or does each project take you somewhere new?

Our lyrics talk about our lives, people who we know, and our ideas. For example:

– Shining everywhere describes what Sonia thinks about Xavier and her admiration

– Planet calls you, is a hymn to yell at people for Environmental protection

– The strength of weakness is an ode for the admiration we feel for some friends of ours, women who suffered abuse by their husbands and now they begin again for the love to their children

– Georgia was something special, a family from Georgia who came to Spain for the International Protection Program, and we were astonished to know all their desire to live, after all the wounds and threats lived in the past.

Now we are working on a song called “Despertar” where we explain the need to wake up as a society and fight for our rights, because the Power is controlling our lives.

The music industry has evolved rapidly over the past two decades, especially for independent artists. What are some of the biggest challenges you’ve faced, and how have you adapted?

First, we have had to learn a lot about the Music Industry nowadays, and we need to continue studying because we have a lot of gaps to fill in. For example, Xavier has studied about producing music (mix, master…), he has 4 fully mastered tracks: Sonia was studying playlists, platforms, social networking… We didn’t know anything about it, and now we know a very little part of this yet.

The second challenge is to be faithful to our style and find the correct places and people to send our work, because most of the curators we found are keen on new styles so they don’t understand our music, especially Sonia’s voice, which is very criticised for them (not processed with Autotune). And even some playlists that place our songs are very different to our style, our music is not made for the current crowded audience, our music is made for the awake, free souls with rebel rock hearts; where are they? We want to find them. But, if you don’t have anyone with good knowledge about the music industry behind you, you spend, and often waste, time trying to do this promotion.

With new material in the works, what can listeners expect from your upcoming songs? Are there any new directions or surprises that you’re excited to explore?

Pure Rock!  We want to close our songs released so far on an album called “Bus” and start the new one: “Pure Rock” with new songs like “Despertar” (we already mentioned), “El tren de la vida” (song that makes a parallelism between life and a train trip), “You and I” (love song) and many more, all of them pure rock, some in English and others in Spanish.

If you could go back to the moment you met at that musicians’ association in 2005, what advice would you give yourselves about the road ahead in music and in life?

Carpe Diem! Live your life deeply, make your dreams come true and don’t let other people decide for you. if you make a mistake, don’t worry, you will learn a lot from this, wake up and shake your dust off! This is the cost of the university of life.

Discover Doneil’s discography on Spotify and connect with the band on Facebook and Instagram.

Interview by Amelia Vandergast

Timothy and the Apocalypse Bottles Utopia in Nothing Sweeter Than

Timothy and the Apocalypse poured the nectar of utopia into Nothing Sweeter Than, his latest indietronic evolution that visualises the bliss of irreplicable connection. A collaboration with Netherlands producer Erik Buschmann, the track forces reflection on the beauty of finding solace in another soul—finding fulfilment in a world intent on leaving you empty.

Known for cinematic electronica and hypnotic downtempo beats, the Australian producer fused his signature sound into something even more immersive. Indie-esque basslines pulse against frenetic breakbeats, while angular shoegaze guitars pirouette around seraphic vocal lines that reprise the title like a hypnotic mantra, resulting in an atmosphere thick with transcendence, striking the balance between ambient trip-hop’s dreamy introspection and indie electronica’s euphoria.

A striking visual identity runs through the release, not just in the official artwork—designed in response to a passionate fan’s vision—but in the way Nothing Sweeter Than captures the feeling of interpersonal nirvana. Whether soundtracking late-night solitude or peak festival moments, the track pushes boundaries while staying true to the expansive emotional charge Timothy and the Apocalypse has mastered.

Nothing Sweeter Than officially dropped on Valentine’s Day and is now available on all major streaming platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

The NeS Transforms Turmoil into Transcendence with The Chase

 Berlin-based producer, writer, and performer The NeS proves there are no fixed boundaries in electronica with The Chase—a track that doesn’t just play with genre conventions but smashes through monocultural moulds with rhythmically awakening intensity.

Released on 21st November 2024 as part of an EP of the same name, The Chase pulls techno, trip-hop, soul, pop, and house into its gravitational force, creating an atmosphere that demands rhythmic surrender. The seductively mesmeric official music video is a fitting visual counterpart to the tribal energy surging through the track’s textured progressions. While the beats inject dramatic motifs, the instrumentals thread exotic mystery into the composition, offering a cathartic reprieve from life’s weight.

Lyrically, The Chase compassionately eviscerates the hauntings of a psyche desperate to move beyond the shadow and into the light. Resulting in an experience that speaks volumes of The NeS’ cerebral approach to soul-driven electronica—one that refuses to be confined by conventional genre constraints.

Channelling the chaos of modern existence into soundscapes that uplift rather than oppress, The NeS has crafted a track that reaches the epitome of resonance. If The Chase is a sign of what’s to come, his commitment to sonic wakefulness is going to leave eyes, souls and rhythmic pulses wide open.

The Chase is available to stream on all major platforms. For the full experience, stream the cinematic official music video on YouTube.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

‘My Morbid Tone’ by Alpine Jubilee – When Affection and Discord Collide in Twee Indie Folk Pop Harmony

Few debut releases arrive with such a firm grip on authenticity, but Alpine Jubilee ensured theirs did. My Morbid Tone makes no effort to dilute its raw humanistic essence—it presses it to the forefront with piercingly poignant intimacy.

The alternative duo entwine the hallmarks of traditional folk singer-songwriters with jangly indie pop guitars to resonate with fans of Julian Cope. As meta as music gets, My Morbid Tone employs multifaceted devices to lay bare the dissonance of emotional and ideological distance. The morose vocals steep the track in melancholy, yet the luminous longing in the guitar tones offers a contrast potent enough to mirror the ache of being tethered to someone whose nature exists in opposition to your own.

Clashing perspectives, musical tastes, and the unspoken chasms between people manifest through every note, turning this into a deeply personal exploration of isolation that is rarely approached with such lyrical and melodic precision.

Formed by brothers Trevor and Glenn O’Neil, Alpine Jubilee’s folk-tinged indie pop is the result of a transcontinental collaboration between Toowoomba and Geneva who extrapolate influence from 80s new wave, twee-jangle pop, electro, and contemporary nu-folk to orchestrate accessible Avant-Garde installations of often unspoken introspection. 

My Morbid Tone is now available to stream on all major platforms, including YouTube.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Contemporary Chaos Meets Nostalgic Catharsis in Messy Mike’s Indie Pop Single, ‘Things Are Crazy’

Messy Mike’s seminal release, Things Are Crazy, stands as both a nostalgic ode and a present-day lament, perfectly capturing the surreal chaos of modern existence and juxtaposing it against the perceived simplicity of the past.

Now available on all major streaming platforms, this indie pop gem offers a bittersweet sanctuary, with its shimmering 60s-inspired organ tones and warm timbered production conjuring a world of comforting familiarity amidst the absurdity of today. The single’s retro charm is matched by its lyrical poignancy, as Messy Mike croons his way through an earnest exploration of the collective disarray we’ve all come to recognise. The track anchors itself in the past, not to escape but to reflect, offering a cathartic salve for those struggling to reconcile inner turmoil with the madness of the world outside.

Miguel Nicolau, better known as Messy Mike, channels a raw vulnerability into his work. A drummer for the folk band The Town Bar, Nicolau created his moniker while in Poland, choosing “Messy” to encapsulate his creative aura and ethos. Songwriting, for him, isn’t a casual pastime but an existential necessity—a way to confront his demons and find peace. His honesty permeates every note, ensuring his listeners feel less alone in their chaos.

Despite the messy branding, there’s nothing untidy about Things Are Crazy. It’s a seamless fusion of heartfelt reflection and swooning indie pop that melodiously enmeshes with the authentic panache of a true sonic craftsman. As a criminally underrated sonic architect, Messy Mike’s creative chops invite listeners into his beautifully dishevelled world, where chaos feels just a little less overwhelming. Hit play on Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast