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Indie Electronic

MOMARZ Interview: A Piano-Built Planetarium of Human Feeling and Cinematic Electronic Sound

MOMARZ arrived at A&R Factory armed with an album built from hypnotically evocative piano-led percussion, and a fierce commitment to keeping electronic music human. Ahead of the May 28th release, this interview opens up the world behind his latest record, from the Yamaha P 125, KORG microKEY, M VAVE MIDI piano, and GarageBand setup that shaped its tactile character, to his refusal to let AI flatten the soul of the process. MOMARZ speaks with clarity about identity, confidence, and the cinematic universe sparked by Unseen By Human Eyes, while reflecting on early support from EARMILK, Indie Boulevard Magazine, and Apple News.

With the album arriving on May 28th, what did you most want this record to say about where you are creatively right now?

This album is me stepping into my identity with clarity. I’ve spent years shaping the edges of my sound, but this record is the first time it feels fully realized, cinematic, emotional, and unapologetically mine. I wanted it to say: this is the world I’m building, and I’m finally creating from a place of confidence rather than experimentation. It’s a snapshot of a music artist who knows exactly what he wants to say and how he wants it to feel. At my core, I’m a musician first and a producer second. That’s simply the lens I create from the musical foundation is the priority I’ve spent my life developing. Every artist has their own path and their own strengths, but for me, the heart of my work begins with musicianship and the commitment to shaping sound with intention.

Your sound seems rooted in piano‑led melody and hypnotic percussion — what is it about that combination that keeps pulling you back?

Piano is my emotional compass. It’s the first instrument I ever touched, and it still feels like the most honest way for me to communicate. Pairing the natural piano with hypnotic percussion gives the music its pulse of human emotion.

You’ve built this album using a Yamaha P‑125, KORG microKEY, M‑VAVE MIDI piano, and GarageBand. How does that setup shape the character of the music?

That setup forces me to stay hands‑on. Nothing is automated, nothing is outsourced. It’s me physically shaping every chord, every texture, every rhythm. The Yamaha gives me warmth, the KORG gives me agility, the M‑VAVE gives me percussion precision, and GarageBand keeps the process grounded that most people have access to. The limitations actually became part of the identity. You can hear the fingerprints and the decisions. It’s not a sterile digital environment and it’s a workspace with personality.

At a time when many artists lean on AI tools, you’ve been clear that you refuse to use AI in your production. What does keeping the process human mean to you?

For me, music is a dialogue between emotion and craft. The moment I hand that over to AI, I lose the part that makes it personal. Major corporations use AI to automate routine and repetitive tasks. The kinds of things they consider too mundane for human attention. I don’t see music through that lens. I don’t ever want an algorithm treating my creative process like a box to check or a task to optimize. I want listeners to feel the hours, the revisions, the human imperfections, and the breakthroughs embedded in every track. That’s the essence of music. Keeping the process human is my way of protecting the soul of the work. It’s not about rejecting technology, it’s about preserving intention, emotion, and human values. I want people to hear the person behind the electronic instruments, not the machine behind the person.

Was there one track that unlocked the wider sound for the rest of the record?

Absolutely, Unseen By Human Eyes was the turning point for me. When I finished that track, I genuinely sat back and thought, Wow… I can’t believe I created this. It had this cinematic, futuristic energy that felt like it belonged in a space‑themed film. Indie Boulevard Magazine heard it early, and they picked up on the exact same thing. That sense of scale and atmosphere that surprised even me.

It was the first piece where everything aligned: the piano, the atmosphere, the rhythmic tension. It didn’t feel like a song anymore, it felt like a world. Once that track existed, the rest of the album started orbiting around it. It became the blueprint for the emotional tone, the pacing, the cinematic scope. That was the moment I realized, This is the universe I’m building and MOMARZ’s Theory on music.

Early feedback from EARMILK, Indie Boulevard Magazine, and Apple News has already started rolling in. How has it felt seeing people respond so strongly before release?

It’s surreal in the best way. When you spend months alone with a project, you start to wonder if the world will feel what you felt while making it. Seeing early support from outlets I respect, before the album is even out. Feels like confirmation that the vision is translating. It’s motivating. It makes me feel like I’m stepping into the conversation as an emerging music artist with something real to offer to listeners.

Your music values atmosphere as much as structure. When producing, are you led more by instinct, technical detail, or the images the sound puts in your head?

Instinct is the spark, imagery is the guide, and technique is the architecture. I usually start with a feeling, a chord that hits a certain way, a texture that opens an idea. Then I follow the images it creates: a landscape, a scene, a moment. Once I can see the world, the technical side takes over to build it properly. It’s a balance between emotion and musical craftsmanship, but the emotion always leads.

When listeners press play on May 28th, what do you hope lingers with them after the album ends?

I hope they walk away with a sense of immersion. Like the listener stepped into a cinematic world. Whether it’s the melodies, the mood, or something they can’t quite name, I want the feeling to stay with them. If the music leaves a visual imprint in their mind or an inspirational thought, then I’ve met my intention for making music.

Stream Unseen by Human Eyes on all major platforms, including Spotify, from May 28th.

Interview by Amelia Vandergast

Conelrad Suspended Vulnerable Purity in the Grandaddy-Esque Polyphonia of ‘party’s over’

party's over by conelrad

It is only a matter of time before the prestige of Conelrad’s sound becomes industry-recognised. The solo independent musician from Co Durham deals in the kind of leftfield indietronica that coils around the heartstrings in such a visceral way it reminds you what the true vulnerability of intimacy feels like.

The release juxtaposes crunchy electronic bedroom-rock textures into introspective sound design, with harmonised vocoders smudging the boundary between voice and synth until everything feels half-human, half-machine, and fully transportive. There’s melody all through it, but none of it comes cheap.

So, if the scuzzy drones of retro analogue synth lines have a tendency to lull you into a state of catharsis, party’s over may just leave you catatonic as you’re suspended within the bliss of the Grandaddy-esque polyphonia. The transcendent feat of leftfield indietronica wears its 80s influences on its sleeve while pulling from electronica-leaning experimental 90s textures and pushing those retro aesthetics somewhere fresher, somewhere dreamier, somewhere touched by cinematic scintillation. Conelrad’s composition and performance skills are resolutely on display in the euphonic production, carrying the release with the authority of Mogwai and Sigur Ros.

The seminal release strips the weight right off your soul and leaves you drifting in a neon haze, a bit dazed, a bit spellbound, and don’t be surprised if you’re left in absolute awe of the affecting nature of Conelrad’s talent.

party’s over is now available on all major streaming platforms, including Bandcamp. 

Review by Amelia Vandergast

90s Nostalgia Spiralled into a Darkly Psychedelic Fever Dream in Goth Milk’s Standout Single, Cough Syrup Purple: 

Goth Milk cracked open their standout single, Cough Syrup Purple, with the swagger of 90s boy bands wired straight into the atmospheric charge of Gary Numan and Depeche Mode. The Merseyside duo do exactly what their moniker hints at, yet they take it further by plunging headlong into an infectious fusion of hedonic EBM shivers, distortion-heavy guitar textures, and a frenetic breakbeat Drum n Bass-esque crescendo that blows the hinges off any expectation of a pedestrian pace. The track is a technicolour detonation of impulsive rhythm and psychedelic saturation, delivered with the kind of ego-less vocal fearlessness that makes their sonic universe feel entirely unfiltered.

As the oscillations build, the hit grows more labyrinthine, shaking loose any sense of predictability while keeping its centre fixed on pure ingenuity. Goth Milk exhibit an instinctive command over their sound, threading their influences through a high-octane synthesis of rave-tinted exuberance and shadow-soaked pop sensibility. The way they reimagine nostalgia into something fevered, hot, and utterly alive adds a delirious, spectral shimmer to the release, turning the track into a warped little portal into their own world of dark disco from space. It is a headrush of a listen, steeped in immediacy and anchored by the impulsive charm that fuels the entire Like the Taste EP.

Formed in Merseyside by Zach Tellett and Guy Anderson, the psychedelic-pop duo spent a year developing their first official EP through constant experimentation, lifting influence from electronic, rock, funk, and hip-hop while stubbornly refusing to settle into a single lane. Their sound pivots between club culture and live-band energy, creating landscapes thick with big beats, stacked synths and guitars, and the kind of catchy vocal hooks that coil around your attention and tighten their grip. Cough Syrup Purple sets the tone for their restless creativity while the rest of the EP sprawls into quieter jazz-infused corners, rock climaxes, sarcastic funk rhythms, and disco-leaning grooves.

Cough Syrup Purple is now available on all major streaming platforms, including Spotify. 

Review by Amelia Vandergast

BURN slow-burn through emotional collapse in their disarming trip-hop triumph, Night

The new single from BURN, Night, arrives incandescent with etherealism and loaded with enough reverb-washed retro synths to send any trip-hop devotee sideways. As the second single lifted from their LP Chopped and Shattered, it marks a defining moment for the project, teasing a record shaped by single-word titles, poetic motifs, and a narrative stitched together across nine tracks. Within seconds, Night shows BURN’s fixation on intent; every element sits exactly where it needs to, sculpted with a razor-sharp blade and stripped of anything ornamental, leaving an intoxicating structure where vocals and instrumentals move as one.

Night foregoes the usual softness associated with downtempo electronica, reaching instead for retro-futurism that feels almost psychoactive. Fresh blood flows through the torrid oscillations which juxtapose the iridescent harmonies, creating a push-pull tension designed to keep you on edge. BURN designed it to disarm, and you feel that in the swell of unsettling emotion that creeps under your skin while the synthesised club house euphoria takes hold. The chopped vocal samples, a recurring motif across the album, shimmer through the mix like fragments of memory, acting as both texture and narrative device.

The lyricism across the album forms its own poetic archive, and Night’s closing line, “it smells like ash”, makes the whole project feel cyclical. Love, in all its heavy and contradictory emotions, sits at the heart of BURN’s vision. Night seals that world with an eerily serene finality, offering a slow-burning climax that lingers long after the track fades. For fans of trip-hop that leans into mood, metaphor and meticulousness, Night is the exact kind of fever-dream worth sinking into.

Night is now available on all major streaming platforms, including Spotify and YouTube.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Beth Zero lit the altar of alt-electronica innovation with the debut single All Fall Down

Beth Zero

To release a debut in 2025 requires audacity, but Beth Zero enters the fray with ethereally sharp conviction in All Fall Down, an electronic post-rock apparition that feels like an essential extension of self. From the first suspended notes, the track conjures a liminal space where Mansun’s fragile lyrical proclamations float in choral reverb, while a downtempo trip-hop beat grows into a syncopated pulse that quickens the blood. Midway, the single intensifies, erupting into cultivated post-rock furore. Buzzsaw guitars slice through the falsetto refrain of “love is possession”, while percussion deathrolls beneath the soundscape and synths illuminate the waning passage like dying embers.

It’s a composition that delivers grandiosity without tipping into excess; instead, holding tension in balance, it is cinematic in its architecture and emotive in its execution. For those attuned to alt-electronica’s innovation, All Fall Down could easily be considered a ritual offering to the altar of sound design.

Beth Zero is the solo venture of Oxford-based musician Mark Madsen, who filters raw emotion through tech-noir imagery and a palette of atmospheric electronics intertwined with guitar-led catharsis. With All Fall Down landing as the debut on 29 August, followed closely by the Inheritor EP, Beth Zero has already marked themselves as a name to be revered.

Discover your preferred way to connect with and plug into Beth Zero via their official website. 


Review by Amelia Vandergast

Rayrick’s Remix of Sapne Sets the Pulse of New York’s Electronic Future

Your own pulse may keep you ticking, but the beat in Adhitavo’s latest single, Sapne (Rayrick Remix) makes you feel alive in a way that pure biology never could. The Rayrick remix turns the already electric original into a euphoric house anthem that could only have been conjured in NYC; the style that slicks every progression says more about Adhitavo’s substance than any press release ever could. The innovator may still be navigating the depths of the underground as I type, but it feels inevitable that his name will soon be gracing every bougie Brooklyn rooftop party as twilight simmers over an intimate crowd.

Adhitavo, a New York-based Indian electronic artist, found the perfect partner in Taiwanese-New York producer Rayrick, and together they reimagined “Sapne” into a hypnotic Hindi dancefloor dreamscape. The remix layers lush synths, disco-washed grooves, and introspective vocals, creating a cross-cultural anthem that slides between motion and melancholy with magnetic ease. Both artists are fixtures of the Manhattan scene, having met at Power Station Studios and now fusing their visions to transform Sapne into a late-night electronic odyssey for anyone who needs music that goes deeper than the dancefloor.

Their performance at Masala Mixtape, New York’s largest South Asian music festival, marked Sapne’s official arrival as a genre-defying, language-defying hit. With each live set, Adhitavo cements his reputation for immersive, projection-driven shows, and Rayrick’s ambient touch gives the remix its shimmering architecture. For those hungry for the next wave of electronic innovators, Adhitavo and Rayrick have set the bar for New York’s alternative electronic scene.

Sapne (Rayrick Remix) is now available on all major streaming platforms via this link.
Review by Amelia Vandergast

Walter Keyne Sparks a Fever Dream of Synths and Existential Dread in Alt Masterstroke ‘607 Boards’

With 607 Boards, the Sheffield-born lone wolf, Walter Keyne, drags you by the scruff of your neck into a reality where the Depeche Mode synth lines collide with Django Django’s off-kilter eccentricity and John Grant’s sardonic, no-holds-barred lyricism. In this analogue-laced alt oddity, the abstract partners with the Avant-Garde, pulling you deep into the shadows Keyne knows all too well – and reflecting the jagged edges of your psyche straight back at you, just refracted in ways you probably haven’t dared to confront before.

Beneath the lo-fi production, a thread of delicious discomfort runs riot; 607 Boards takes the pain of terminal obscurity and spins it into a confession for anyone haunted by the shadows you cannot flick away. In a world that would rather see you wear a counterfeit smile than admit your disquiet, Keyne’s musings become both a mirror and a comfort. He’s not afraid to let the absurdity in, using hypotheses that border on the surreal, only to leave you questioning where his mind ends and yours begins.

As a self-professed drifter, the mystery in Walter Keyne’s music is only matched by the mastery at play on his synths, piano, and guitar. It’s the soundtrack for outliers and the misunderstood, and for those who secretly find sanctuary in their own shadows.

607 Boards is now available on all major streaming platforms, including YouTube. 

– Review by Amelia Vandergast

Ltronnika Channelled Electronic Emancipation and Melodic Assurance in the Instrumental Release ‘Break Free from the Chains’

There’s a peculiar sense of comfort that settles over the soundscape Ltronnika has woven in Break Free from the Chains. From the opening sequence, the instrumental pulses with the quiet insistence of freedom within reach, and you can almost feel the circuit boards humming with promise. Ltronnika, known for their viral touch in the electronica scene, sidesteps the temptation to serve up easy resolutions; instead, they hand you a rhythmic lifeline and invite you to do something with it.

The beauty of Break Free from the Chains lies in the way each motif floats with reflective purpose. The melodic reprises flicker in and out, pulling you through the ebb and flow of transition; there’s an ease in the way the architecture of the track builds assurance without preaching. Videogame tones and soft, buoyant pads conjure a nostalgia for late-night screens and the quiet certainty of moving from one level to the next. The rhythm doesn’t push; it carries. That, in itself, is a rare thing, especially in an electronic landscape that so often chases intensity instead of introspection.

Ltronnika’s ability to evoke genuine emotion with little more than electronic pulses and poised production proves there are still artists who can breathe humanity into machinery. In a world that rarely slows down, this is a reminder that you’re always allowed to outstretch your hand towards something better.

Break Free from the Chains is now available on all major streaming platforms, including YouTube and Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Breaking the walls: LA’s Shidasp beats his now-broken demons and courageously releases ‘Painting Warmth’

painting warmth by shidasp

After experiencing heightened anxiety due to this horrific pandemic, Shidasp decided he needed to create and turned his life around via the healing nature of music, through his debut single called ‘Painting Warmth‘.

Shidasp is a brave indie-electronic/pop artist from lively Los Angeles, California who has stepped out of his comfort zone to send the world a message of hope.

With drums from his friend and housemate Omar Khan, this is a marvelous DIY effort that has helped his mind settle after feeling overwhelmed from all the bad news on TV and dealing with this wild time of confusion.

Through his love of music and the inner belief that he could achieve something-while distracting himself from reality, he has opened up a treasure map within himself, to find fond memories and will surely never look back.

The words are hard to hear at first but that is the point. When your mind is unsure and cloudy, you need to close your eyes and let your senses take over control, so you can retrain your brain, to walk through the mist and find sunshine again.

Painting Warmth‘ from new LA indie musician Shidasp, is a message of hope that you can indeed break the walls of your mind and walk free again, so you can follow your dreams down an exciting path of new adventures that are eagerly waiting for you to explore.

We can’t control a lot of things in life but our attitude and bravery are two elements that we can. Meshed with that much-needed love, perhaps that is all we really need to have a fulfilling life after all.

Warm up your heart with this touching effort on Bandcamp and see more on IG.

Reviewed by Llewelyn Screen

Coronavirus inspired sounds: The Brown Fox heal through music as they ‘Take No More’

With the throbbing pain from this horrible pandemic getting too much, The Brown Fox’sTake No More‘, is a gripping story that needs to be heard, to help others out there who are feeling the mountain on their shoulders, weighing down on them mightily.

Mark Brown was in a scary spiral downwards recently but luckily due to the inspiration of his loving wife who has been battling terribly with her health and their two kids, he found a way to put the bottle down for a while and make a song that might only happen one time, but already means the world to them as a family.

The former music novice decided enough was enough and aided by his wife’s lovely vocals, a chord sheet book, a free piano, a laptop and a copy of Ableton Live I, Mark got the job done by making a song that he thought was probably impossible a few week prior. When you love someone so much and know you need help, its incredible what the human heart can create.

The enlightening electronic beat perfectly encapsulates the mood of his country as this video shows the heartbreak, misery, riots, protests and unrest, due to the current leaders not doing enough at the start. The tremendous beat has you uplifted however, as you do think that better days are ahead, hopefully sooner rather than later.

The Brown Fox’sTake No More‘ will leave your eyes watering softly, as you enter into their world and find out what months of hard times can do to a human being, who was calling out for help. Music has shown that it does indeed heal and through this wonderful song, this experience shall lead to healthier times.

Find this inspiring story about how music heals all on YouTube.

Reviewed by Llewelyn Screen