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Blog Showcasing Singer Songwriter Talent

Luke O’Hanlon’s ‘The Parrots of Lark Lane’: A Feathered Alt-Folk Elegy to Liverpool’s Hidden Magic

Liverpool alt-indie folk singer-songwriter Luke O’Hanlon becomes a conduit for naturalism and catharsis when armed with his acoustic guitar and warmed vocal chords. Released on the 31st of March as a teaser from his upcoming LP, The River Only Flows One Way, the standout single The Parrots of Lark Lane allows listeners to witness his infatuating sensitivity—his rare ability to perceive what we usually overlook.

As the track unfurls, it evolves gracefully into a Neutral Milk Hotel-esque lo-fi arrangement, with O’Hanlon, the poet of melody, gripping his pen firmly as he writes calligraphy with his affecting sonic signature. There’s a touch of James Yorkston in the observational clarity of his lyricism; its gentle grandeur inspires listeners either to adopt a similar macro lens or simply indulge in the reverie of his unique perspective. His innate gift lies in tying personal experience to wider phenomena, creating tenderly affectionate parables of everyday existence.

O’Hanlon, known for weaving poetic storytelling with evocative melodies, continues to delve into nostalgia, survival, and the quiet poetry found in ordinary life. His latest single gracefully blends sharp observational songwriting with surreal beauty, honouring Liverpool’s iconic Lark Lane with affectionate authenticity. Through O’Hanlon’s lens, even the smallest details feel monumental.

The Parrots of Lark Lane is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Matcha & Mayhem: A Conversation with Cami Bear

Cami Bear marks her return with the unapologetically sharp single, matchacoldbrew, ushering listeners into a fearless new era defined by confidence and contradiction. Rejecting expectations to fully embrace intuition, Cami unpacks her fresh artistic philosophy, inviting us into a creatively liberated space that feels both vivid and deeply personal. Partnering with Atlas Lens Co., whose cinematic credentials include groundbreaking films like Everything Everywhere All at Onceand The Batman, she crafts an emotionally tactile universe steeped in glamour and grit. Through this conversation, Cami candidly discusses the tension between digital experimentation and human imperfection, the courage behind creative reinvention, and the importance of celebrating chaos as much as polish. With characteristic wit and honesty, she offers a  look into her newest chapter, challenging her audience—and herself—to boldly claim their own contradictions.

Welcome to A&R Factory, Cami Bear—it’s a pleasure to have you with us as you usher in a bold new chapter with matchacoldbrew. The single signals a new era for you creatively—what sparked the shift, and how did you approach reintroducing yourself on your own terms? 

This shift came from finally giving myself permission to create without overthinking. I used to mold myself to expectations—whether industry, aesthetic, or sound—but matchacoldbrew is me trusting my instincts. It’s playful, sassy, and layered, like me. I wanted to reintroduce myself with something that felt effortless yet intentional, letting the music and visuals speak before I did.

Reinvention can be a powerful tool, but it also comes with risk—how do you navigate shedding past versions of yourself while staying rooted in your artistic instincts?

I don’t see reinvention as abandoning past versions of myself—it’s more like evolving them. Every chapter of Cami Bear thus far has been real to where I was at that time. I let my instincts guide what stays and what gets left behind. The key is staying honest. If a sound, a look, or an idea doesn’t feel real to me anymore, I don’t force it.

The collaboration with Atlas Lens Co. adds cinematic weight to your vision—can you walk us through how that partnership formed and what it meant to have their backing for your latest video? 

The collaboration happened organically, Atlas Lens Co. teamed up with talented director and editor Max Lin to carry out this submission-based initiative called “MONTH2MONTH” where they hand-picked brands and artists to sponsor a video for and spotlight monthly. I submitted a pitch earlier this year and Max replied the next day, the rest was history. Having their lenses shape this video gave it a timeless quality. It means everything to know that a company of such high calibre, behind some of the most powerful films today (Anora, Everything Everywhere all at Once, The Batman) and ever is now part of my story too. I’m so grateful to their whole team and everyone involved. I’m still wrapping my head around it.

You’ve mentioned your commitment to building worlds for your fans—what emotional and visual cues were non-negotiable when constructing the universe of Matcha Cold Brew?

It had to feel tactile like you could step into it. I wanted viewers and listeners to relive that night and that morning with me. Channeling something so oddly specific through art is challenging but we stuck to our gut and opted for the details that bring you to that place, no matter how niche. Cinematic lighting and movement were non-negotiables. In terms of visuals, we wanted it to transport you to the darkest places of the morning after while still keeping it fabulous, this goes for styling as well. Emotionally, I wanted a balance of dreaminess and sass—something surreal yet unapologetically me. I played with contrast a lot: soft moments with sharp edges, fantasy with reality. It’s all about duality for me.

You often speak about embracing contradictions—how do those themes of chaos and polish, glamour and grit, surface in both the sonic and visual elements of this release?

High contrast is my thing, we really wanted to make it pop here. To put it in the most simple terms this whole song is about embracing the good in the bad. I took my Sunday Scaries spin on that. I asked my creative team: How do we make the ugly look and feel glamorous? How do we make lyrics about bad times feel cute? Listen to the song today and watch the video on April 18th, I think we did a great job at answering those questions.

You push boundaries not just musically but conceptually—how does technology inform the emotional layers of your sound, and where do you draw the line between digital precision and human vulnerability?

I’ve always said that a huge part of my mission as a creative is to bridge the gap between technology and emotions. I play with technology a lot. Technology allows me to explore textures and moods I haven’t quite found the words for. But no matter how much I experiment, I always leave room for imperfection. That’s where the human side comes in. I’m drawn to first takes, breaths between words, things that feel alive, and visuals that don’t feel conventionally perfect.

With reinvention at the heart of this project, how has your relationship with your audience evolved—and what do you hope they take away from this version of Cami Bear?

I think my audience is growing with me. They’re seeing me take creative risks, and hopefully, that’s making space for them to do the same in their own lives. I want them to take away the idea that reinvention isn’t about fixing yourself—it’s about uncovering who you’ve been all along. That means embracing your mistakes, your boldness, your messiness—every unpolished and chaotic part of yourself. I want them to feel unapologetically them and to take up space without second-guessing it. And honestly, I just think it’s hilarious that I’m conveying all of this through the time I walked home from a one-night stand. I love art!

As this chapter begins, what’s keeping you energised behind the scenes—are there any habits, collaborators or creative rituals fuelling this current momentum?

Collaboration keeps me inspired. I’ve been working with people who challenge me in the best ways, pushing me outside my comfort zone. Also, daily rituals—matcha in the morning (of course), working out, and spending time offline. Protecting my energy is key to keeping this momentum going.

Stream Cami Bear on Spotify.

Interview by Amelia Vandergast

Lauren Ash Lights a Match with ‘COOL STORY, BRO’: A Pop-Punk Anthem Fuelled by Scathing Contempt

Lauren Ash

Lauren Ash is driving the nostalgia of pop-punk back onto the airwaves, though you’d be mistaken to expect a familiar revival. Her latest single, ‘COOL STORY, BRO’, confidently flits between glossy pop hooks and sultry-sweet harmonies before crashing headlong into alt-rock territory, exploding into an anthemic chorus driven by jagged guitars and electrifying percussion.

Written from the merciless vantage point of someone whose heartbreak has curdled into sharp-tongued contempt,the track is an acerbic wake-up call delivered with visceral intensity. Lauren Ash channels the relatable brutality of post-breakup clarity, turning personal wounds into lyrical dynamite reminiscent of Alanis Morissette’s unfiltered honesty on ‘Jagged Little Pill’, with a pop-punk energy.

Though best known for her roles as Dina Fox in NBC’s ‘Superstore’ and Lexi in ‘Not Dead Yet’, Ash’s dream was always rooted in songwriting and live performance. With her debut single ‘Now I Know’ soaring to #5 on Billboard’s Alternative Digital Song Sales and #1 on Canada’s iTunes Rock Chart, and performances at venues like the Viper Room and Whisky A Go Go, her musical ambition is swiftly matching her acting acclaim.

‘COOL STORY, BRO’ is now available to stream on all major platforms. Find your preferred way to listen on the artist’s official website. 

Review by Amelia Vandergast

John Drake’s ‘Ocean’ Washes Poetic Desolation in Waves of Soul-Stained Rock

John Drake

With his debut solo single Ocean, the truly prodigal rock n roll conduit John Drake has torn away from The Dust Coda to expose a more vulnerable but no less arresting facet of his talent. The first single from his solo debut Separation Songs is a slow-burning catharsis, steeped in self-doubt and the inertia of ambition, as he captures the conflict between longing and paralysis with a voice that gnaws away at the walls of the soul.

While Drake was never short of emotional artillery during his thirteen-year stint with The Dust Coda, Ocean is where he gives full licence to his inner poet. Resulting in a production steeped in haunting nostalgia, built on Bowie-style acoustic murmurs and thick, lumbering beats that drag you into a Radiohead-reminiscent realm where nothing is safe from introspection. There’s a quiet sense of disquiet that swells under the surface—never theatrically melancholic, always grounded in raw human ache.

Drake’s vocal delivery alone makes the release a force to reckon with—teetering between the cavernous grit of Eddie Vedder and the fragile celestial range of Buckley. It’s not a sound engineered to pander, but one engineered to bruise with truth.

Written in the aftermath of an identity-shedding leap of faith, recorded between Brisbane and London with ARIA-winner Cody McWaters and long-time collaborator Chass Guthrie, Ocean transcends the trappings of its influences. Nick Cave’s brooding presence lingers, Springsteen’s resilience flickers at the edges, but what Drake builds is unmistakably his: a cinematic alt-rock elegy for anyone who’s ever feared they might be swallowed whole by the scale of their own dreams.

Ocean is now available to stream on all major platforms via this link.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Amanda Gabriel Crystallises Nostalgia into Sentimentality’s Sharpest Edge in Her Indie-Pop Single, Always Better

With her theatre roots, New Jersey-bred vulnerability, and a self-diagnosed tendency to feel too much, Amanda Gabriel builds entire sonic topographies from emotion. In Always Better, her girl-next-door demureness sharpens the blow of her emotional candour. The single pulls you under with infectiously seraphic progressions, tinged with a gentle nod to 90s and 00s pop, while keeping one eye fixed on the horizon.

The production elevates the songwriting to stratospheric heights. What begins with a dreamy, cloudlike atmosphere slowly tightens its grip as jangly guitar chops carve through the softness. It’s delicate without being breakable, with Gabriel’s dynamic vocal range gliding over the instrumental with glassy, diaphanous harmonies that feel fragile and unshakable.

Lyrically, Always Better distils emotional chaos into clarity, moving through beauty, confusion, pain, and longing without over-explaining or overstating. From the first verse, the sentimental pull is inescapable, and by the final note, you’ll know precisely what she meant—even if she never told you outright.

Her debut EP, also titled Always Better, made a strong first mark in early summer 2024, with the title track climbing to #16 on the aBreak58 chart and earning a slot on their radio station and playlist.

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

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Afton Wolfe – So Purple (feat. Brian Brown, Jack Vinoy Remix): A Blues-Rinsed Trip Through Psychedelic Hip-Hop Alchemy

Afton Wolfe’s latest single, So Purple, was never made for the skimmers, the distracted, or the easily satisfied. It’s a track built to grip your brainstem and hold it under a hazy, hallucinogenic spell. In the Jack Vinoy remix, Wolfe, alongside Brian Brown, brings a soul-soaked, genre-scrambling opiate for the audiophiles who don’t want their boundaries respected.

Wolfe’s vocal delivery alone is enough to trigger an inner chemical reaction. Gruff and thick with Southern blues nuance, his timbre never fights for dominance. It lounges. It drips. It carves through the synth-drenched backdrop like molasses sliding off a neon-lit glass. The production doesn’t bow to any one style—hip-hop is the main artery, but the heartbeat throbs with experimental jazz-blues fusion, swirls of soul, and psychotropic layers that wouldn’t feel out of place in a track built for a Lynchian lounge.

When Brian Brown’s rap bars slide in, they don’t disrupt the equilibrium—they challenge it. The cadence is sharp, the diction is clean, but it’s never ornamental. Brown brings the punch while Wolfe bathes you in smoke.

Vinoy doesn’t phone in his role either. His touch is the hallucinogen. Every snare, warped synth swell, and backmasked flourish is precision-placed to hypnotise. This isn’t your standard producer flex—this is a psych-laced sermon served on a vinyl platter made for the hedonistic and the heartbroken alike.

So Purple is a lucid dream on loop. It welcomes you, intoxicates you, then leaves you wondering if the high came from the sound or the space it created inside you. Wolfe is pushing past what’s comfortable, and it’s about time the rest of us caught up.

The remix is now available to stream on all major platforms, including SoundCloud. 

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Angie Keys Unlocks Emotional Armour in Her Alt-Pop Anthem ‘Brave’

With an intro landing deftly between a bitter-sweet Taylor Swift ballad and the soaring guitar strings of a Springsteen-inspired country-pop anthem, Angie Keys’ single, ‘Brave’, instantly immerses you in melodically impassioned territory. Taken from her debut album, Finally Here, the track never allows its emotive momentum to falter, striking an affecting balance between intensity and tranquillity.

Keys’ instrumental swells resonate with palpable feeling, affirming her talent for embedding visceral emotion into each note. Yet, amidst this sonic strength, a gentle serenity emerges through Keys’ vocals, gracefully drifting through the production like whispers of comfort. This effortless vocal touch adds a serene reverie, making the single a musical salve for those wearied by fortitude.

Lyrically, ‘Brave’ explores the resilience required to thrive despite relentless trials—an honest narrative borne from genuine life experience. Keys, a Birmingham-based singer-songwriter with roots tracing back to childhood family performances, has grown into a nuanced storyteller. Her teenage fascination with 90s multitrack recording blossomed into mastery, fuelled further by life’s heartbreaks, repairs, loves, and losses. These lived experiences culminate impressively on her long-awaited debut, underpinned by contributions from global talents including Emiliano Boulot on drums, Daniel Beachy’s pedal steel, Marco Gatti’s piano keys, Hugo Lanauestudi’s lap steel, and Joseph Keys’ accomplished guitar and production work.

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

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Vanna Pacella Haunts with Her Soul-Steeped Indie Pop Single, ‘Wolf’

With Wolf, Vanna Pacella doesn’t just revisit the time-old tale of naivety and misplaced trust—she reconstructs it through the raw magnetism of her voice and the expressive precision of her songwriting. At 18, the Cape Cod-based singer-songwriter, pianist, and self-taught producer proves that age has no bearing on the depth of emotional insight. Wolf is a soul-stirring excavation of entrapment, emotional dependency, and the slow corrosion of identity in toxic connections that confuse devotion for destruction.

Written and produced by Pacella and her Power Trio bandmates, Tom Davis and Nick Simpson, Wolf holds its weight in every detail. The swanky piano keys drop a moody noir atmosphere over the track, while Tom’s guitar injects bold, bluesy punctuation into the heartbreak. Meanwhile, Nick’s percussive pulse carries the emotional tide with stoic force. Pacella’s voice, equal parts timeless chanteuse and conduit of contemporary soul, weaves between jazz-tinted verses and gut-wrenching admissions, wielded like the most expressive instrument known to man.

The hook, penned on Halloween and later brought to life through obsessive refinement, carves out space for layered interpretations. Lines like “I built you into home” and “I can feel the bleed of time” reflect how easily love becomes confinement, while “Oh, but I am growing cold” closes the curtain with numb finality. The song’s melodic depth is only rivalled by its lyrical scope—Wolf exists as a sobering reminder of how easily we lose ourselves while chasing comfort in chaos.

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

Review by Amelia Vandergast.

Hayden Royal explores the pain of knowing no decision is a remedy in his Indietronic RnB release, ‘Side by Side’

Hit play on Hayden Royal’s latest single, ‘Side by Side’, and brace yourself as emotion makes a full-on collision. Like every accomplished songwriter, Royal understands that affecting expression requires moving beyond thinking in black and white; here, he skilfully navigates the grey areas of duality. The lyrical protagonist faces a familiar yet brutal paradox—the pain of leaving someone can often match the agony of staying. Decisions become unbearable when love persists despite toxic dynamics, creating a tension that Royal vividly portrays.

Instrumentally, ‘Side by Side’ is an authentic amalgamation of indietronica, pop, and RnB—delivering something you genuinely haven’t encountered elsewhere. It’s a raw yet harmoniously layered exploration of indecision and grief, anchored by moody melodies, introspective lyricism, and soul-infused harmonies. Royal boldly traverses the chaotic push and pull between vulnerability and bravado, embodying a voice which will resonate with anyone caught between resilience and emotional collapse.

With darkly atmospheric production underscoring introspective verses and haunting hooks, Royal channels both tenderness and emotional exhaustion. There’s no bitterness here—just an honest reflection from a narrator clinging desperately to fleeting moments of warmth, knowing they’re scarcely enough to hold onto. With fearless candour, ‘Side by Side’ captures the universal struggle of letting go when holding on feels equally destructive.

‘Side by Side’ is now available to stream on all major platforms, including SoundCloud.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Cali Soul Singer Mark Alan Wilson Helped His Fans ‘Cut Loose’ With His Latest Release

Mark Alan Wilson is the kind of modern artist who makes you suspect he struck a deal with the devil, transforming his own soul into the purest conduit for RnB. His latest single, ‘Cut Loose’, lands effortlessly as a feel-good track fuelled with authentic substance and style.

Wilson is a rare musician who never needs to break convention to sign, seal, and deliver a sound that naturally stands apart. Distinction resonates powerfully through the rapture of his honeyed-smoke harmonies, drifting timelessly into that sanctuary only the sound of soul can provide. The track offers a gentle but necessary reminder that, although patience is essential for life’s bigger pleasures, small delights are scattered everywhere. It grants the listener full permission to cast aside life’s darker moments and simply cut loose, if only for one night.

The swanky jazz-infused interludes and blues guitar riffs sweep away the heaviness from any weary mind, allowing Wilson to effortlessly mainline serotonin into your day. Wilson’s commitment to authentic soul music is evident, resonating as he continues to build momentum through live performances, setting the stage for an array of promising releases throughout 2025.

‘Cut Loose’ is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast