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Music Blog for Indie Rock Fans

Alley Eyes Mainlined Digital Exhaustion Through Stadium-Sized Indie Euphoria in ‘Punisher’

Alley Eyes are unrivalled when it comes to sticky-sweet supersonic indie hooks, and yes, that includes Sam Fender. In their latest single, Punisher, the band launch their own adrenalized-to-the-nines philosophical inquiry, digging into how nihilism has become the crux of the collective psyche, as our overstimulated minds try to keep pace with relentless stimuli, propaganda, and the digital pointlessness of modernity.

Born in the band’s home studio, Punisher captures the isolation-craving desire to escape it all while still turning that tension into a release built for live rooms. The chorus lands like a cathartic rupture, transforming modern dread into the kind of alternative anthem that feels engineered to open a set and detonate the room before anyone has time to brace themselves.

With sharp enough songwriting chops to slice their way to the top of the indie charts, the sheer force of the vocals sugars the serious swagger of the stadium-ready instrumentals. Alley Eyes are a rare band whose talent translates into pure euphoria-laced adrenaline, turning frustration, exhaustion, and existential static into something dangerously playable.

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

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Johnny spat out the poison of complacency in the Mediterranean alt-rock shadows of ‘This is Your Life’

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Johnny B brought the Mediterranean’s scorched intensity into dark Americana with This is Your Life, a cinematic alt-rock release created in collaboration with Daniele Macchi. After the Greek alternative artist unleashed the track, a parallel world where Nick Cave soaked up the sun-dazed pressure of the coast and baked it into his dark, snarling sessions of alt-rock alchemy suddenly felt dangerously easy to picture.

Penned around the epiphany that we sleepwalk through stale days without awareness of the sands of time slipping around us, This is Your Life is a sobering full-frontal allegory that refuses to pull its lyrical punches. Instead, it amplifies them through the shadowy intensity falling over this revolutionised reckoning of rock, turning self-awareness into something sharp enough to bruise.

With artful textures pushing the single beyond classic rock territory while keeping the core direct enough for long-standing rock devotees, Johnny B delivers a track capable of carrying the results of ennui into a cross-generational audience. The crossover appeal is as fierce as the thematic core of this sermon on the poison of complacency.

This is Your Life is now available to stream on all major platforms, including SoundCloud.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

credits Pushed Alt-Country Away from Indie Landfill with the Rose-Tinted Sting of Evergreen

If any contemporary band is worthy of being the ambassador for Liverpool’s culturally rich indie scene, it’s credits, who turned their latest single, Evergreen, into a session in soul-deep sublimity, carried by quasi-prophetic grace in the lyrics and the way they are projected into the expanse of alt-country, 90s indie, and Americana.

Put an Americana twang against the soaring choruses of Gold Against the Soul-era Manic Street Preachers and the introspective candour of Mansun, and you arrive at the dusky alchemy of credits, a band paving their way away from indie landfill with pure sonic gold.

Nothing in the production is overblown, giving Evergreen the intimate lack of pretence that became synonymous with college radio rock, yet credits place each note in euphonic suspension, creating a cinematically visual, radio-ready feather in their cap. Pedal steel, jangly guitar chimes, and Jay Morris’ reflective storytelling turn the track into a rose-tinted reckoning with a past love that still rattles around the mind like an address you remember too well.

The Liverpudlian power-pop songsmiths wear the lineage of George Harrison, Tom Petty, Neil Young, James Taylor, and Laurel Canyon harmony with open devotion, while production from Ben Harper and mixing from JB Pilon keep the single rooted in the future of indie. Whoever said you can’t have the best of both worlds?

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

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Concealer Dragged Angular Guitars and Stone Roses Swagger into Shoegaze’s Next Burst Through the Alt-Indie Zeitgeist with their Debut, ‘Someone’

Alt-90s ear candy is sweeter than ever now that Concealer have entered the alt-indie circuit with their debut single, Someone. After hooking shoegaze fans hook, reel, and sinker with iconic Slowdive-esque angular guitar notes drifting into a kaleidoscope of choral saturation, the band pivots into vocal swagger possessed by Stone Roses and Fontaines D.C., with cadencing so hypnotic and kinetic it acts as a percussive instrument as much as a conduit for bittersweet longing.

Someone feels built from the residue of smoke-machined venues, scuffed pedals, overdriven youth, and the weary romance of guitars sounding half-awake and fully haunted. The production keeps its shoegaze haze lucid enough for the hooks to cut through, while the vocal line prowls across the track with the clipped bite of post-punk and the loose-limbed cool of 90s indie rock.

With just enough psychedelia to twist the atmosphere in a way we’re sure Bez would get high on, Concealer pushed indie shoegaze beyond its usual revivalist limits and landed on something far more affecting than genre nostalgia. Their debut carries the confidence of a band already aware of the room they can command and the cultural pressure they can apply. Someone is a masterstroke of a first strike, armed with exactly what is needed to keep the cultural zeitgeist in a chokehold until their next release.

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

 Review by Amelia Vandergast

Carl Krausnick became a cosmic conduit of the purity in humanity with his sticky-sweet slacker jam, Handle with Care

Carl Krausnick

Carl Krausnick’s Handle with Care tears a strange, celestial hole through the alt-indie ceiling, arriving as the kind of artful slacker-psych jam that makes Wayne Coyne’s cosmic harmonies feel like part of the same far-off constellation. After a soaring rock-opera-esque guitar riff throws the electricity of amplification into a distorted psychedelic kaleidoscope, the track slips into an arrangement swimming with the cerebral care of Radiohead, the endearing wonk of Grandaddy, and a tinge of The Beatles in their most mind-altering era.

Krausnick handles each transition in sound in the way the metaphysics behind alchemy could explain, turning fractured guitar textures, warped pop structures, and emotionally off-kilter songwriting into something oddly pure. The Memphis-based indie psych artist, fresh from his debut LP, Dining Companion, pushes deeper into art-rock terrain here, letting Handle with Care feel loose, lucid, and spiritually aerodynamic all at once.

The Flaming Lips, early Stephen Malkmus, Radiohead, and Grandaddy hover as useful coordinates, yet Krausnick’s signature reaches somewhere stranger than reference points can contain, with genuine cross-over appeal. If humanity ever needs to negotiate with beings from another planet, I’m voting for Carl Krausnick as our ambassador; there are few people better equipped to exhibit the beauty and purity human minds are capable of.

Handle with Care is now available to stream on all major platforms, including SoundCloud.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

The Unsuited’s Eponymous Post-Hiatus Debut is What Rock Veterans Kicking Down the Doors and Reclaiming the Airwaves Should Sound Like

Stone Roses-esque basslines, the arcane darkness of Sisters of Mercy reverberating through the harbingering vocals, the cutting angular guitars of Arcade Fire, and renegade-level overdriven amplification root Unsuited firmly in the pantheon of prodigal sons of rock. The eponymous comeback single from The Unsuited spellbinds the way post-punk-leaning rock only can, giving guitar music back its former serrated conviction.

Through anthemic choruses that give full permission to unapologetically relinquish yourself into 80s rock nostalgia, Unsuited carries the visceral power of Alice Cooper’s Poison while giving the legacy of eclectic indie styles a chance to thrive on the airwaves once more. The riffs swell and lift with stage-tested authority, the hooks are razor-sharp, and the whole release feels engineered by musicians who understand sweat, setbacks, and studios.

With Iain Stew Brownlie, Howard Moth, Stu Englefield, Jo Line, and Tim Dorney, whose Republica and Flowered Up history brings serious pedigree and a sense of swagger that can be assimilated but rarely authentically alchemised by bands only arriving on the scene today. The five-piece of 50-year-old spits in the face of ageism in music and the way the industry has so eagerly, with its capitalistic hunger, devoured AI music.

In all honesty, I rarely think AI could fail so completely at replication, yet it has no chance at mimicking anything in the authentically ingenious, evocatively hard-wired signature of The Unsuited.

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

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Larsen West Carried Stevie Nicks Aura and Riot Grrrl Voltage Through the Brashy Rock Contours of Fool’s Gold

Larsen West’s indie rock stripes show as more than just accolades in an EPK in Fool’s Gold, an expansively lush, viscerally unfeigned single where big, brashy vintage rock swagger collides with noir-Americana shadow and art-punk voltage. Fronted by Lauren Warner, former vocalist of Austin Chronicle’s 2022 Best Rock Band winners The Dead Coats, the project arrives with history, force, and a voice built for myth.

West’s vocals encompass the vindication of 90s Riot Grrrl and grunge while keeping the performance far from hollow pastiche posturing, turning Fool’s Gold into the kind of kinetic, stadium-ready anthem that leaves the power of the lyrics soaring through your own ribcage as something inside catches fire to the cascades of rock n roll euphoria; they come in waves. The classic rock guitar solo in the middle eight sends the track into a spiral of molten release, lifting the analog warmth into full-bodied catharsis.

Recorded at Point West Studios with Charles Godfrey, whose credits include Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Brand New, Fool’s Gold carries the bite of underground rock with the scale of Stevie Nick’s legacy, the raw magnetism of Courtney Love, and the haunting grace of Siouxsie Sioux.

Fool’s Gold is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

 Review by Amelia Vandergast

Alexander Yearns Interview: How ‘Keep the Faith’ Becomes a Lantern for Isolation, Longing and Becoming

In an exclusive interview with A&R Factory, Alexander Yearns spoke from the fragile threshold between isolation and expansion, where songs become small acts of survival, longing, and self-recognition. In this interview, he reflects on writing from solitude, the emotional temperature of long-distance love, and the pull towards a life that feels more electric, open, and creatively alive. He also explores the intimacy of solo performance, the way older songs change shape as the artist changes, and why stripped-back storytelling can reveal the deepest nerve of a lyric.

Your Brooklyn Music Kitchen headline show feels like a major marker in your evolution as a live artist. What makes this performance feel especially pivotal for you?

This performance feels pivotal because it’s probably the clearest reflection yet of who I am as an artist right now. For a long time, I was still figuring out how to merge all the different parts of myself — the songwriter, the live performer, the storyteller, and the person behind all of it. This show feels like a moment where those worlds are finally meeting in a very honest way.

Headlining a room like Brooklyn Music Kitchen also carries emotional weight for me because Brooklyn has been such an important place in my creative life, as all of my studio albums were recorded there. There’s a certain intimacy to this performance that makes it feel different from past shows. I’m leaning more into vulnerability, simplicity, and connection rather than trying to make everything bigger or louder.

I’m also introducing unreleased material that represents where I’m heading creatively, while revisiting older songs through a completely different lens. In that sense, the night really feels like a bridge between past and future — a snapshot of transition, growth, and becoming more comfortable in my own voice as both a songwriter and performer.

You’ll be sharing unreleased material during the set, which always carries a certain electricity in the room. What elements of your personal world have bled into these new songs?

A lot of these new songs were born out of isolation. I’ve been living alone and pretty isolated for almost two years now, and I think you can hear that in the intimacy and softness of the writing. These aren’t songs that came from chaos or crowded rooms — they feel very quiet and close to the chest. You can almost tell they were written sitting alone on my couch late at night. There’s a stillness to them that reflects the environment I’ve been living in emotionally and physically.

At the same time, there’s also this strong desire running through the music to break free from that isolation — to create a life that feels bigger, more electric, more alive. A lot of the songs sit in that tension between comfort and restlessness. I think I’ve spent a lot of time reflecting over the last couple years, and now there’s this growing pull toward movement, connection, and transformation.

Another major part of the subject matter is love, especially through the lens of a long-distance relationship. It introduced a kind of yearning and longing that I honestly hadn’t experienced before. When someone you care about deeply exists out of reach, it changes the emotional temperature of everything. That feeling has absolutely bled into the music. A lot of these songs are reaching for closeness — emotionally, physically, spiritually — and trying to make sense of distance at the same time.

This performance leans into a more intimate, stripped-back format. What does that solo setting allow you to reveal in the music that a fuller arrangement might leave buried?

I think the strength and emotional impact of my music has always lived most deeply in the lyrics and the voice, and a solo setting naturally brings those elements to the surface. When it’s just me and a guitar, there’s nothing competing with the emotional core of the song. Every lyric lands differently. Every small change in vocal delivery matters more. The intimacy becomes unavoidable in the best way.

I’ve been exploring the possibility of playing full band shows again, and I still love the energy and scale that comes with that, but honestly, I’ve never felt closer to my solo set than I do right now. Lately, at home, I’ve been trying to play two or three full sets a day just to deepen my relationship with the format and really live inside the songs. It’s become a kind of ritual for me.

It also brings me back to how I started as an artist. Before anything else, it was always just me alone with a guitar, trying to communicate something real to a room. That still feels like the truest version of myself on stage. There’s a feeling of complete control over the moment in a solo performance that I don’t experience the same way with a full band. The pacing, the dynamics, the silence, the emotion. It all becomes incredibly personal and instinctive. I think audiences can feel that immediacy when it’s happening in real time.

You’re also reimagining selections from your existing catalogue for the night. How has your relationship with those older songs changed as you’ve grown as a songwriter and performer?

My relationship with those older songs is always changing. I feel lucky to have a large enough catalog now where I can follow my instincts with what feels emotionally true to me in the moment. Sometimes there are songs I leave out of a set completely because I just don’t feel like that version of myself anymore, or I’m not connecting with the song for whatever reason. Then months later, I’ll return to it and suddenly hear something new in it again.

A lot of the songs kind of come and go from my sets naturally. Some disappear for a while and then find their way back when my life catches up to them emotionally. It really depends on where I am mentally and creatively at that time. I think that’s one of the beautiful things about songwriting — songs evolve alongside you. The meaning changes as you change.

As a performer, I’ve also become less interested in recreating songs exactly as they were originally recorded. I want them to feel alive. Reimagining them for this show has allowed me to strip them down and reconnect with why I wrote them in the first place. Sometimes removing all the layers reveals an emotion or lyric that had been hiding underneath the arrangement the whole time.

Storytelling seems central to this show, both musically and emotionally. What kind of emotional thread do you want the audience to feel running through the set?

I think the emotional thread is ultimately open for each individual experiencing the show to decide for themselves. Of course, as the person creating the setlist and performing the songs, I have my own hopes for what people might feel or discover throughout the night. There are certain emotional currents intentionally woven into the performance — longing, reflection, intimacy, hope, restlessness — but I never want to force a singular interpretation onto the audience.

What I care about most is what the listener brings to the music and what they walk away with afterward. Sometimes a song reveals something completely different to someone than what it meant to me when I wrote it, and I actually love that. I think that’s where music becomes truly alive — when it stops belonging entirely to the artist and starts becoming personal to the person hearing it.

So more than trying to dictate an emotional conclusion, I want to create space for people to discover something within the setlist, or maybe even within themselves. Whatever follows them home after the performance — whether it’s a memory, a feeling, a realization, or simply a moment of connection — matters more to me than my own expectations for how the music should be understood.

How has playing live changed the sound, identity, and emotional weight of your music over time?

Playing live has changed the emotional weight and delivery of my music more than the actual structure of the songs themselves. For the most part, the songs remain intact at their core, but the way they’re presented is always evolving. I think performing regularly teaches you that songs are living things — they shift depending on who you are at that moment and what kind of energy exists in the room.

What I really love is exploring new ways of playing, producing, and presenting the material. Sometimes a song becomes quieter and more intimate over time, while other songs grow heavier or more dynamic emotionally. A lyric can suddenly land differently years later simply because I’m delivering it from a completely different place in my life.

You’ve described this performance as a bridge between where you’ve been and where you’re heading next. What parts of your past are you carrying forward, and what feels ready to transform?

Honestly, at this point in my life, almost everything feels ready to transform — both personally and creatively. I think I’m in a season where I can feel old versions of myself slowly falling away, and there’s both excitement and uncertainty that comes with that. A lot of the themes in this performance exist inside that tension between holding on and letting go.

What I’m carrying forward is the emotional honesty and storytelling that have always been at the center of my music. No matter how much the sound evolves or how my life changes, I never want to lose that human element — the desire to communicate something real and vulnerable through a song. That instinct has been with me from the very beginning.

But beyond that, I feel very open to transformation right now. The way I live, the environments I’m drawn to, the kind of art I want to make, the risks I’m willing to take creatively — all of it feels like it’s shifting. There’s a growing desire in me to step outside of isolation and familiarity and move toward a life that feels more expansive, unpredictable, and creatively alive.

I think this performance captures someone standing right in the middle of that transition. It’s not a final statement or a conclusion — it’s more like a snapshot of becoming.

For anyone grabbing tickets, what do you hope stays with them after the set? 

More than anything, I hope people leave with a sense of faith — in themselves, in life, in love, in whatever it is that keeps them moving forward. Spoiler alert, but the final line of every set I play is, “keep the faith,” and I think that phrase has become the emotional thesis of these performances for me.

Not necessarily faith in a religious sense, but faith in the idea that beauty, connection, transformation, and meaning are still possible even during uncertain or lonely periods of life. A lot of these songs wrestle with longing, isolation, change, and hope, so ending the night with those words feels important. It’s like a quiet reminder to both myself and the audience.

If people walk away carrying anything from the set, I hope it’s that feeling — the willingness to continue believing in something larger than the difficult moment you might currently be inside of.

Discover Alexander Yearns’ discography on Spotify.

Connect with the artist on Instagram.

Interview by Amelia Vandergast

Jack Rush Turned Surfy 60s Pop and 90s Indie Swagger into Solstice Gold with ‘Dreaming Again (Here Comes Summer)

If any single can make the summer solstice sweeter, it is the saturated, surfy, and sun-bleached earworm, Dreaming Again (Here Comes Summer) by Jack Rush, an accomplished singer-songwriter whose sound refines the jangly, psychedelically nuanced essence of 60s and 70s pop and rock by rooting it in 90s indie rock swagger.

Far from Oasis-esque posturing associated with 90s indie, this temperate dream of a release practically demands radio A-list placement with its sticky-sweet soul and tender swells of organic euphoria.

As much of a visual experience as an aural one, Dreaming Again leaves you with woozy, sepia-tinged Polaroids of oceanscapes, top-down car rides, and Woodstock-esque festival joy breezing by on the melodies, implanting idyllic faux memories in your mind that you will be determined to replicate as soon as the mercury starts to rise.

Underpinning the reel of picturesque summer escapades, there is the bitterness of mourning connections that dissipated in spite of lingering affection; the ultimate reminder to keep hold of what matters when it grows cold.

Dreaming Again (Here Comes Summer) is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

MissHearMeClick Unlocked a Haven of Whimsical 80s Pop and 90s Lo-Fi Rock in ‘A Place with No Walls’

MissHearMeClick, the artistic moniker of independent singer-songwriter and self-produced artist Feona Samson, lets 80s pop and 90s lo-fi rock swell with blockbuster-esque emotion in A Place with No Walls, her latest single created in collaboration with Goff Johnson.

The sticky-sweet burst of euphoria, mined from the deepest contours of the soul, leaves you powerless in the face of its all-consuming, whimsically rendered ecstasy. The soaring guitar chords lift the production to heights that chart-toppers struggle to reach, while the vocals entrench themselves in pretence-less joy, thematically visualising the lyrical underpinnings that tempt you to find the space where you can set your soul free.

Since beginning her recording path in 2022, Samson has shaped MissHearMeClick into a project guided by belonging, connection, emotional discovery, and the open-hearted thrill of building songs from the ground up. A Place with No Walls carries that ethos with arms wide open, inviting lovers, dreamers, and the spiritually weary into a home without borders, where laughter, music, courage, and shared humanity feed the soul.

There is a rare emotional generosity in the way this single refuses cynicism and chooses radiance with full conviction. Your soul would resent you for skipping this track!

A Place with No Walls is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify. 

Review by Amelia Vandergast