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Best UK Music Blog & Promoters

Promise by ADZii BOii: A Hip-Hop Plea Forged in Fragility

ADZii BOii, the hip-hop titan who knows exactly how to bring the hammer down in every bar, delivered his most intimate blow with Promise. Blazing leagues away from his contemporaries, he brings a rare sense of vulnerability to the track, laying all of his insecurities and idiosyncrasies bare while tenderly requesting acceptance in the moments that are in the wake of perfection.

His Scottish vocals are a striking juxtaposition to the polyphonic, playfully retro Afrobeat instrumentals in the bitter-sweet hip-hop and pop hybrid. All of the experimentation and daring to stand alone as an innovator without falling in line with trends only amplifies the sentiment of the lyrical underpinnings by sonically asking for understanding, even when you need to discover new vestiges of what you thought you already knew.

There’s no bravado here—just raw prestige, candour, and the opportunity to strengthen your empathy for anyone who falls outside the mental health mould.

As an artist, ADZii BOii wears his temperamental streak and emotional depth like armour, and Promise proves nothing is off limits. With previous acclaim for ‘Let’s Go’ on Netflix’s Sprint, and ‘Colours’ airing during BBC Radio Scotland’s Mental Health Awareness Week, ADZii BOii’s bid to redefine Scottish rap isn’t wishful thinking—it’s already in motion.

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

Review by Amelia Vandergast.

The Sonic Slaughterhouse of Industrial Despair – A Circle of Teeth Rips the Veneer in ‘Bovine’

The Beast Who Eats Everything by a Circle of Teeth

With a title like The Beast Who Eats Everything, the UK powerhouse, A Circle of Teeth, didn’t set the bar for subtlety with their 2025 LP—but no one with an appetite for industrial metal should expect a delicate serving. The standout single, Bovine, is the most ferociously emblematic track from the UK-based architects of mechanical disquietude, who’ve spent the past two years carving a visceral soundtrack from the wreckage of chaos, grief, and internal collapse.

Clearly, A Circle of Teeth have honed the ability to make a titular impact to the nth degree, and nothing in the album lets the intensity slip. After a filmically eerie prelude, the guitar amps start to warm before the instrumentals rampage through the production, tumultuously razing it to the ground as the hell-hath-no-fury-like industrial metal vocalist screams cut through the atmosphere with caustic volition.

The crushing weight of the sound design is matched only by the brutality of the lyrics, which lacerate without restraint. Bovine launches an all-out attack on the sociopathic puppeteers of the modern psyche—the manipulators whose influence pollutes everything they touch. Place your own protagonist in the firing line of A Circle of Teeth and feel the catharsis take over the rage. This track wasn’t made for background noise; it is a conduit for fury, forged for those who need to scream without lifting their own voice.

Bovine is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Bandcamp.

Review by Amelia Vandergast.

Evelyn’s ‘The Woman I Used to Be’ Is A Pop Elegy in the Mirror of Memory

If you thought the title ‘The Woman I Used to Be’ was harrowing, just wait until you feel the sting of the minor piano keys and the evocative pull of Evelyn’s celestially raw vocal lines. in her latest single. With the ability to deliver the artful highs of Kate Bush alongside the reverberant depth of Adele, Evelyn provides an expansive, emotive range from her vocal performance alone.

When you factor in the crescendos and cinematic production behind ‘The Woman I Used to Be’, which poignantly mourns the loss of our authentic selves while urging us to reclaim that lost contentment, the track becomes an evocative reflection on emotional resilience. Life inevitably leaves scars, but Evelyn powerfully conveys that healing can be about moving closer to who you truly are, rather than retreating further away.

Evelyn, the Nottinghamshire-based singer-songwriter, spent years finding the courage to share her own music after initially performing timidly under her original stage name, Evelyn Pretty. From early covers of post-modern jukebox numbers to vintage classics, it was relentless perseverance that transformed her self-doubt into assured artistry. By early 2024, she committed fully to her instrument, learning piano from scratch, and emerging a year later with emotionally charged originals rooted firmly in piano-driven compositions.

‘The Woman I Used to Be’ isn’t merely relatable; it is profoundly affecting, capable of resonating with anyone who has felt the friction between past contentment and present uncertainty.

The Woman I Used to Be is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Manchester’s Concrete Club turned the noose of neoliberalism with their indie anthem, ‘Paycheck to Paycheck’

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The most promising indie rock outfit Manchester has had swaggering down Oldham Street in quite some time has returned with Paycheck to Paycheck—a synth-soaked, guitar-jangled post-punk-adjacent anthem that picks up where Morrissey left off. Concrete Club turned the noose of neoliberalism into a no-nonsense working-class vignette, unflinching in its portrayal of the modern malaise of trying to keep your head above water while the elite swan-dive into tax avoidance schemes.

Built around a powerful synth lead and a tighter-than-the-welfare-budget rhythm section, Paycheck to Paycheck offers a rallying opportunity to seek refuge in the bleak comfort of shared scarcity complexes. The infectiously adrenalising reprise of “You’re not fun anymore” perfectly encapsulates the satisfaction that’s been stripped and sanitised from society; walk through any town, and you’ll witness psyches cracked by austerity and stitched up with zero-hour contracts.

The irony? Catch Concrete Club live and you’ll find the fun that’s been excised from everyday life forcibly reinstated through their Editors-esque earworms. Their sound may nod to New Order and The Killers, but this isn’t a tribute act banking on nostalgia. With lyricality that hits like a shot to the heart from a candid, politically aware soul and vocals that pull you into the feverish core of their arrangements, Concrete Club aren’t here to be a footnote. They deserve a headline slot in Manchester’s ongoing music legacy.

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

Review by Amelia Vandergast.

Eureka Machines – Everything: Power-Pop’s Turing Test for Your Emotional Core

Eureka Machines are keeping the serotonin cogs turning with their sixth studio album, ‘Everything’, and it’s everything a power pop record should be. Just as the Turing Test ascertains if technology can possess human cognition, Eureka Machines tests the human capacity to feel visceral emotion or whether you’ve left your soul out in the cold for too long.

Kicking off with the scuzzy pop-punk chords in the title single, there’s an instant affirmation that the Leeds-based outfit succeeded in their mission to flood the studio with the energy they project on the stage. Winding a few euphoria-doused James Dean Bradfield-esque riffs into the mix, the opening track reaches the epitome of affecting. When the vocals come in as a clean, cutting juxtaposition to the cultivated spirals of rhythmic distortion, you’ll be torn between being emotionally ruined by the lyrics and subjugating yourself to the pulsating augmentations of pretence-less power pop.

As the album progresses, it evidences singer-songwriter Chris Catalyst’s songwriting chops as he humbly demands emotional investment through the sheer authenticity of his charismatic candour. There are performers, and there are conduits of sonic expressionism and with the help of Wayne Insane (drums), Pete Human (bass, vox), and Davros (guitar, vox), he’s in the pantheon of the latter camp.

With poignant introspective outpours wrapping around poetic parables remaining a constant throughout the 12 singles, Eureka Machines only leans into stylistic departures from the preceding singles. After Black and White’ nods to 90s Britpop, ‘Canaries in the Coalmine’ veers into a symbiosis of alt-rock and the working-class fire of Morrissey’s First of the Gang to Die and If I’m Gonna Fight Myself, I’ll Never Win’ teases its way into punk ‘n’ roll territory with Catalyst’s signature soaring with sticky-sweet sentimentality vocals tempering the frenetic percussion.

I was preparing myself for a stripped-back ballad-esque entry, and it finally arrived with Home, which gives full permission to lean into the lyricism, cradled by the artful motifs as they ascend around the intimate confessions. By this point, you’ll be wondering if Catalyst bought shares in Kleenex before dropping the album and if Trump funded the heavy emotive artillery.

‘They’re Coming To Get You’ is a full-on exhibition of how effortlessly synergised Eureka Machines have become since 2007. Instrumentally, the riff-heavy track proves that they could skate by on their technical precision alone and leave out all semblance of personality. The synthesis, which is just as harmonious as the layered vocals, sets the perfect tone for the concluding single, ‘Beautiful Day’, which ebbs away ennui. It’s a choral masterpiece which takes the record to consoling new heights.

In an era when becoming numb is a coping mechanism and dragging yourself through the darker days gets harder, albums like this transcend sound to build sanctuaries where it’s safe to resonate.

‘Everything’ was released on April 11th and is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify and Bandcamp, and can be purchased on vinyl and CD via the official merch store.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Starfire in the Scar Tissue: Stephan Leroy Folkes Transcends Temporal Turmoil in ‘It’s All Within Time (Travelling Through the Stars)’

Stephan Leroy Folkes

After launching Say It Like You Mean It with an insistent demand for honesty, Stephan Leroy Folkes has returned to eclipse every surface-level sentiment in It’s All Within Time (Travelling Through the Stars). Where the debut came with sharp confrontation, the sophomore single is steeped in cosmic introspection and scorched-soul sonics that unravel through alt-soul-pop with funk-slicked edges and ethereal atmospherics.

Folkes has dialled up the soul, beguile, and eccentric electricity up to 11, welcoming his ever-growing fan following into the epitome of impassioned visceralism. With the cosmic underpinnings to the alt-soul-pop serenade and Folkes’ falsetto vocal timbre surpassing the scintillation of Michael Jackson with the aching vibrato that hits in the chorus, the single is a lesson on what it means to truly go beyond surface level with emotions.

From the first synth-streaked beat to the last breathy note, the track tests the tensile strength of resilience, using star-bound metaphors to map the personal collisions that shake us into shape. The Leytonstone-born artist never plays it safe—nor should he. Born from brushes with death, his sound is living proof that survival can sound transcendent. With nods to Prince, Stevie Wonder, and Billie Eilish woven into his genre-defiant fingerprint, Stephan sidesteps imitation and plants himself firmly in the present moment of music with a sound entirely his own.

It’s All Within Time (Travelling Through the Stars) is now available to stream on all major platforms via this link.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Nick Cody & The Heartache’s ‘Next Up’ Is A Swaggering Alt-Rock Serenade to Survival

With their latest single, Next Up, from the freshly pressed LP This is Love and the Heartache, Leeds-based Nick Cody & The Heartache have decidedly dialled up the swank and swagger. Frenetically paced grooves pull listeners into a sandstorm of Jim Morrison-esque desert-infused vocals, while backing harmonies create a dynamic, kinetic whirlwind of alt-rock reverence. The ensemble seems charged with an infectious energy that leaps effortlessly from musician to musician, ensuring the track becomes a certified serotonin shot—even against the stark refrain, ‘you don’t know what it’s like to die ‘round here’.

Clearly the band’s boldest sonic exploration to date, the creative gamble has spectacularly paid off. Genre boundaries crumble away as Next Up seamlessly sways from funk to college radio rock, slipping into vintage soul without missing a beat or dropping intensity. Released via Green Eyed Records—an imprint championing creative collaboration, previously hosting acclaimed artists like Jon Gomm and Martin Simpson—the single underscores Cody’s razor-sharp lyrical instincts and penchant for crafting melodies that refuse to fade.

Next Up is now available to stream on all major platforms, including SoundCloud.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Niamh Casey lyrically grounds the grandeur in her chamber pop diary entry, Fake Friend

Niamh Casey

Niamh Casey delivers tonal grandeur through grounded intimacy in her standout single, ‘Fake Friend’. Her flawlessly pitched, unfeigned vocal lines soar alongside an orchestral pop intensity, swiftly shifting into raw rock reverence with a broadsiding crescendo that spills beyond stadium proportions. Beneath the ornate instrumentation lies a deeper emotional reckoning: Casey captures the sheer exhaustion of existing at your emotional limits in a friendship devoid of reciprocity, where all is expected but nothing mutual ever materialises.

Pivoting away from her familiar themes of romantic heartbreak, Casey turns her gaze towards the murkier waters of friendship, highlighting the stark reality that bonds built on trust, honesty, and mutual support often fracture painfully. The single’s ironic title cleverly frames the cycle of adolescent reflection as Casey carousels through repeated disappointments, mirroring the shallow interactions with her own weary realisations. Each verse speaks rhetorically to the friend, challenging their conscience before swiftly turning inward, questioning her own judgement and emotional resilience.

As the bridge ignites, resentment physically releases through echoes of past betrayals and broken trust, vividly portraying how exhausting one-sided friendships truly become. Casey’s lyrical narrative relentlessly explores how grief and contempt intersect when the loss of a so-called friend offers more peace than pain.

With the potential of becoming the Tori Amos of her generation, all eyes and ears should be on Niamh Casey as the release of her upcoming EP inches closer.

‘Fake Friend’ is now available to stream on all major platforms.

Follow Niamh Casey on Facebook, Instagram and TikTok.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

CreezOn Unlocked: Inside the Raw Sound of GRIP HOP

At just 21, the Birmingham-based artist CreeZon has pioneered GRIP HOP, a bold fusion of Grime’s razor-sharp lyricism and Hip Hop’s soulful storytelling, layered with melodic choruses and orchestral intensity. In this candid interview, CreezOn reveals how his formative influences—from breakdancing to Ghetts, from gospel to J Dilla—have led him to redefine UK rap’s sonic identity. Fresh from performing alongside Lady Leshurr and JayKae with the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, he opens up about crafting music rooted in authenticity over virality. CreezOn also shares insights on the cinematic concept behind his forthcoming EP and how his music, including standout track ‘Chosen One,’ is finding its natural place within film, TV, and gaming.

Your signature GRIP HOP sound is a bold sonic statement. What led you to develop this style, and how do you see it shaping the future of UK hip-hop?

Across my journey, I’ve been influenced by and dabbled in many music genres, both as an artist and as a producer. When I first started recording music, I made quite a few Afro-swing, Trap and Drill tracks, cos that’s what was trending at the time. But as I grew older, and more confident in my sound, I started asking myself deeper questions. I asked myself, Even though I’ve proved to myself that I can make music in any genre, what culture do I truly resonate with? How do I want to be seen?

My life has always been rooted in Hip Hop, Grime, RnB, Gospel, Neo-Soul, and Reggae. I even grew up B-boying (breakdancing). Hip hop and Grime have always been my biggest loves, closely followed by Neo-Soul. Once I realised that, I naturally leaned into those sounds. It became a transition, a step into maturity and self-discovery. These genres give me the space to express myself fully, both emotionally and lyrically.   Unlike most people my age, my lyricism has always been inspired by Grime, from writing bars at 13 to tracks like Treble Clef’s Ghetto Kyote. A lot of my peers caught onto the Drill wave heavier than Grime, but this wasn’t the case for me.

For me, these genres all carry a rawness, a distinct soulfulness. And that rawness, that authenticity, is what I believe real creativity is about. I think UK hip-hop has lost a lot of that authenticity ….and this is evident by the repeated lyrical content, visuals and similar sounding beats. That’s not to say people aren’t still out here making substantial, out of the box and raw UK Hip-hop music.  Don’t get me wrong, there are still artists making music that’s substantial, original and powerful… … it’s just clear to see that the music pushed in front of the industry today  is more based on its virality than its substance. Overtime, music has become more in the background of life, like a multitasking activity, as opposed to an activity in itself, where you actually sit down, LISTEN to your favourite album, and take it in, layer by layer.  As attention spans have shortened and talent is often judged by stats over substance, I think we can all agree that UK hip-hop could use a breath of fresh air. GRIP HOP represents that. It demands your full attention, or none at all.

My signature style, which I showcase through GRIP HOP, has been shaped by many influences, both internal and external. Internally, I’m surrounded by creatives every day: producers, MCs, dancers. Within my close circle of friends, the way we make music naturally leans toward that GRIP HOP sound. Because we all listen to Grime, Hip Hop, and Neo-Soul/Jazz, a lot of our beats end up sounding like J Dilla-influenced Grime- raw, soulful, and layered.  Externally, my biggest influences in Grime and Hip Hop have been J-Dilla, Busta Rhymes, Ghetts, and Dot Rotten (Zeph Ellis). Their sounds, energy, and approach to creativity have played a big role in how I express myself musically

GRIP HOP is the result of me sitting alone in a studio I owned in 2023, creating music from the most raw and honest part of myself at the time. From the production to the lyrics, even down to the mixing and mastering, this project is authentically me.  The fusion of Hip Hop and Grime, with a fresh spin of melodic choruses, has been a powerful journey, and one I’m genuinely excited to share. When we talk about Hip Hop, we’re talking about a movement not just about rap music – we’re talking about a culture.

Hip Hop consists of five core elements:

  • MCing
  • Breakin’ (Dance)
  • DJing
  • Graffiti (Art)
  • Knowledge

That’s why, with GRIP HOP, my goal was to include enough substance to feed into all of these elements – from the loose, off-grid drums for the dancers, to the storytelling and concept-deep diving for the knowledge seekers.  I’ve crafted this EP with real depth and precision, with the intention of bringing ART back in style – not just “making a tune and releasing it, tryna go viral.”   Instead, I’m focused on how deeply I can move people. That, to me, is worth way more than any numbers on a screen.  I’m coming from a unique angle.  I’m only 21, but I’m heavily influenced by the past. I’m resurfacing what came before me and giving it a fresh, modern twist. Ultimately, I’m trying to explain something that’s just a feeling- it’s intuitive, and if you know, you know. GRIP HOP is a major restoration of that feeling.

Sharing the stage with the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra alongside Lady Leshurr and JayKae is a massive step for UK rap. What does this performance mean to you, and do you think orchestral collaborations will become more common in the genre?

This performance is easily my biggest milestone so far, and honestly, I’m both grateful and a bit shocked that I was chosen. Because my style and approach are so unorthodox, it can sometimes feel like people don’t fully get it yet. But to see that I’ve made enough of an impact to be placed on a major stage, next to major names, is a big confirmation for me.  This is what I’ve been waiting for. Performing is one of my strengths as an artist, I enjoy it . I’ve just been waiting on a stage that’s ready for me.

Your upcoming EP has been described as cinematic and concept-driven. What’s the central theme behind it, and what do you want people to feel when they hear it?

So, the central theme is, of course, the sound of GRIP HOP itself. The EP serves as both a demonstration and an introduction to my self-crafted, raw sound. But beneath that, each track tells its own story.

1.“Not Everything” – The smooth introduction to GRIPHOP. “Not Everything” has a confident vibe, balancing self-growth and personal ambitions with relationship pressures.

2.“Three Shots” – A Triumphant, bold, cinematic anthem celebrating wins and victory through hardship.

3. “When It Rains” – A deeply personal story-telling track about resilience through broken family structure

4.“Chosen One” – A grime-hip-hop fusion with mysterious, orchestral intensity. perfect for film, gaming, and brand placements.

5.“Hit Record ft. Varntae”– An ethereal anthem about confidence, self-belief, and overcoming adversity with spiritual strength and purpose.

Ghetts put you on his “One to Watch” list on Kiss FM, which is a strong endorsement. How did that moment affect you, and has it led to any unexpected opportunities?

That moment was a huge boost for me. It happened back in 2022, I was 18 at the time, and it honestly felt surreal. It was like… one night I went to sleep with not much going on, and the next morning I woke up to a shout-out from Ghetts. We’ve crossed paths and spoken multiple times since, and every time, it’s a vibe of mutual respect. I’m genuinely and wholesomely grateful for his support. Ghetts has been my favourite MC for years, and I’ve learned a lot just by studying his craft.  As for unexpected opportunities? Let’s just say… there’s more to come.

Your work with Toddla T on “It’s Our Team” caught attention from The Guardian and Sky Sports. How did that collaboration come about, and what have you learned from working with him

That collaboration came about in a super unorthodox way. So, long story short… my mum went to uni with Delroy Corinaldi, the Founder and CEO of an organisation called The Black Footballers Partnership (BFP). Delroy needed a catchy theme tune for BFP; they had a major campaign coming up focused on the 2024 European Cup. My mum was working with BFP at the time and recommended me and my cousin Ke4t (bad boy producer) for the job. We made the track — and Delroy loved it.  One of BFP’s Co-Founders, Eartha Pond, is friends with Toddla T, so Delroy linked us up and arranged for me and Ke4t to head down to Toddla’s studio in London for post-production and mastering. That’s also where Sky Sports came through and interviewed us.  The Guardian got involved too — about a week later, they came up to Brum and interviewed us at No.5 Barristers’ Chambers, who support BFP and let us use their space for the piece. Big up BFP for the opportunity.  Since then, me and Toddla T have been proper bredrins. We even dropped a freestyle challenge recently on a beat I made at his studio, The Steeze Factory.  So yeah… big shout out to my mum, for real. None of this would’ve happened without her. She’s a real action taker.

UK rap is always changing, but few artists take orchestration and cinematic elements as far as you do. What do you think stops more artists from exploring those kinds of sounds?

Reason 1 – Musical IQ.  To put it bluntly, and I don’t say this lightly,  being good at music is a form of creative intelligence, just like being good at English, Science or Maths. You can learn to be good at music, but the realness, the instinct,  that’s something you’re either born with or not. Rhythm is felt. It’s resonance. That level of musical IQ, the ability to arrange layers of sound with true depth and intention, is rare. And without classical or theoretical training, not many artists are able to take orchestration or cinematic elements to that next level.

Reason 2 – Fear of standing out. Let’s be real,  people are scared to step outside the box of what’s considered ‘normal’. If one person starts dancing in the street alone and no one joins in, what do people say? “It’s embarrassing.” “They’re crazy.” Exactly.  That’s why not many take creative risks. They’re waiting for someone else to move first.

As an independent artist, you’re handling both creative and business decisions. How do you stay in control of your vision while making sure your music reaches a wider audience?

It’s not a task for the weak. Seriously.  But the one thing that has kept me grounded and motivated along this path is… my own music.   My creations are like my babies. When I listen back to them, I think to myself, “I can’t leave this world without putting these out.” I just know the feeling my music gives is valuable and not just the feeling, but the thoughts it provokes too.  I genuinely believe it would be a disservice not just to myself, but to the universe if I didn’t share my music with as many souls as possible.

“Chosen One” has the kind of production that fits into gaming, film, and TV. Have you had any discussions about getting your music into those spaces, and what kind of projects do you think would suit your sound best?

“Chosen One” has given me shivers up my spine more than once. The dark yet luminous harmony of the instruments and vocals, especially on the chorus,  makes me instantly picture an intense, emotional, action-packed movie trailer.  The outro breakdown, where the track strips back to just drums and e-piano, adds this powerful, cinematic tension that I think would land perfectly in a trailer or dramatic scene.  If you listen closely to the project, you’ll notice there’s a recurring theme of rain, both sonically and symbolically. So any intense, meaningful media with a visual rain theme – whether that’s a film, series, or high-concept game – would pair really well with “Chosen One.”

The EP drops on April 25th, right in the middle of both the Birmingham and London CBSO shows.  Big waves are moving right now – don’t miss the ride

Discover CreezOn on all major platforms via this link.

Interview by Amelia Vandergast

Precious McKenzie – ‘Soft Skin, Screaming’: Alt-Indie Proof Romance Isn’t Dead, It’s Just Nihilistic

Manchester’s Precious McKenzie scratched their 7-year hiatus itch with the release of their single, ‘Soft Skin, Screaming’ on April 7; a precursor to their upcoming EP, which brings with it a promise of more cerebrally Machiavellian lyricality and stylistic ricochets across the alt-indie spectrum.

As an exposition of emotional addiction, hedonic excess and how the intersections between them can lead to the avenue of alienation and desperation to evade apathy, the single opts for realism over resolve, affirming how in the end, we return to dust, and yet, there’s catharsis in the emotive cataclysm which proves that romance isn’t dead, it’s just nihilistic and as dysfunctional as its perpetrators as they chase the impermanence of satisfaction in an era of dystopia.

With a chorus that delivers the visceralism we crave to abstract us from the monotony of unaltered mental states following palpitatingly taut verses of angular guitars fuelling the tension and visualising the anxiety that instils itself in the preludes of indulgence, ‘Soft Skin, Screaming’ is the sharpest blade on the alt-indie execution block in 2025.

Through chameleonic vocals that deliver poetic tender sentimentality, augment into anthemic 00s indie adrenaline, find room to inject sardonic spite and let restraint slip into ether while keeping flawless pitch like an indie crooner on the brink, Soft Skin, Screaming, is a buzzsaw through the mind, body, soul and rhythmic pulses.

Soft Skin, Screaming is now available to stream on all major platforms, including  Spotify and YouTube.

Review by Amelia Vandergast