We dig the dreamy post punk shoegaze blend heard on till the end, the new single from pleaselevitate. The initial riff is seeped in contrast. Its first half feels uplifting while the second wades dark and brooding.
The vocal duet adds to the cinematic inference. Stylistically it blends the aesthetics of The XX and Nothing. Thats super cool.
Hear it now on our All New Rock Playlist.
Ex Monarch lets loose on their new single Rotten. They add some dramatic progressive contrast as the energy relents in the verse section, before building back into an expressive build.
Stylistically they’re a sure thing for fans of Paramore looking for something that trends more underground. A catchy hard rock stand out, Rotten makes 90s rock feel fresh again. We can dig it.
Rotten is featured on our All New Rock Playlist.
If you’re going to embrace the influence of The White Stripes and The Black Keys and keep it interesting, then you can’t do much better than Dreamwave and their new single Polystyrene Irene. The British export finds their own space within this turn of the century indie rock legacy.
They recall the vintage influence of T Rex and reinject some attitude and sex appeal into this inspiration. They spin it weird too in the songs impressive music video (see above). It’s an anthem.
Dreamwave are featured on our All New Rock Playlist.
Lilly Flower embraces her bizarre nature in the video for her new single im not hungry. The songwriting at its essence is fairly approachable, but her vocal part is notably abstract. The sentiment is amplified in the eccentric DIY music video.
Reflecting the song title, the video features some subtle gorging mixed with Flowers explosive interpretive performance. Stylistically we hear evidence of Hole and more recently Mannequin Pussy. We’re into it.
Lilly Flower is featured on our All New Rock Playlist.
