Noy Markel flaunts her seductive sultry delivery on her new single Antidote. Full of instinctual soul and ripe in mystery, Antidote brings a classic feel with modern psych pop flare. She Tames the Impala with the melodic flex of Biig Piig. A dose of disco updates that influence to the rainbow lit dance floor, matching that dreamy intent with the fresh fluid smoothness known to our cherished vintage soul 70s. Like a neon soul train to outer space.
Hear Antidote now on our Best New Indie Playlist.

Mikey Demilio is ready to talk about Lucy Lust. The title of his new single, Lucy Lust is a catchy jam in any light. What gives it buzz appeal is Demilio’s rare vocal delivery, slightly broken with an urban swagger to match its melodic instinct. As if post punk infected Citizen Cope. Mikey is charmingly mumbly, it accentuates the hurt and real world tribulation it took to earn this peculiar draw.
Peculiar, but intoxicating. We simply love it. Makes sense he’s from Jersey, all the best songwriters are. Now calling Nashville home, he’s bringing the grit of the Garden State to fight the pop country machine. It’s kind of a style swap, since every bar in Jersey seems infected by country crap. Yuck.
Hear Lucy Lust now on our Best New Indie Playlist.

Hillary Capps is infectious on her vibe heavy new single Montage. Retro influence meets indie pop heaven on this eclectic combination of elite pop. We agree with the self proclamation that blends the influence of Kate Bush and Feist with Lana Del Rey and Midnight era T Swift. Like all of them Capps has mainstream potential while serving a wider audience, one that demands some intellect to match the catchy appeal.
Montage finds its most unique moment in the orchestrated outro, where an intense string section runs wild beneath the foundation popscape.
Hear Montage now on our Best New Indie Playlist.
Sara floats caught our attention with their new single attached [never miss a thing]. Collectively a catchy innovative work of art, it recalls an art first aesthetic known to breakthrough buzz artist like Joji, with the commercial melodic awareness of Frank Ocean. The dreamy atmospheric introductory synth wash collides with a classic retro drum design. The singers unique vocal delivery is presumably effected with a combination of pitch correction and autotune.
It’s how the vocals dig into the effect art show the artists melodic genius. That clever tweak adds to the collective intrigue. She wanders the songs melodic range effectively. The performance feels candid, as if they’re singing it for the first time. Melodically juicy, it’s insanely catchy while within a mysterious abstract framework. We can dig it.
She not on Spotify, but smash this link to here attached [never miss a thing]
