The Greatest Entertainer - Synergy

Synergy - The Greatest Entertainer (Pop)  Anthemic is the word that best describes The Greatest Entertainer’s latest track, “Synergy.” From the moment the drumline kicks off the track—which never seems to stop building throughout by the way—we started getting fired up, which is exactly what the record is about. The verses are lead by a raspy and authoritative bass which leads us to a soaring chorus that has some serious singalongability. Part dance track, part chant, part mantra, Synergy boasts an epic production that we think makes the song full of commercial licensing potential—think energy drink, think sporting event, think Olympic games. You want to rally? Get Synergy on your playlist.

Best Lyric: “We came with fire, we fight to win.“

Marc Rangel - Closure

Closure- Marc Rangel (R&B) We are treated to Marc’s third appearance on our blog with the sultry and mature track “Closure.” The song tackles a universal and relatable subject matter of needing to bookend a relationship with a unique specificity and vulnerability in the lyrics that lets the listener know this story is a personal one. The sound is quite mature, a sun drenched guitar and verby horn evoking a hazy summer night. Marc’s vocals are, as always, on point—a raspy and seductive alto for most of the number until Marc reaches Mariah Carey level whistle tones that truly shocked us. Listening to “Closure”, you’d think Marc was an R&B veteran considering just how polished this track is. If you’re looking for peer musicians, we’d put this one in the Jazmine Sullivan category. Fans of of R&B—this is right up your alley.

Best Lyric: “You know what you did but maybe you’ll find a way to make it right.“

MUNGMUNG - Internet Friends

Internet Friends - MUNGMUNG (Rap)  What would happen if Eminem and Nikki Minaj had a bad ass kid raised by Missy Elliot? Well, that’d be MUNGMUNG, as evidenced by the killer flow, creative lyrics and bananas music video for latest release, “Internet Friends.” The track takes the point of view of self criticism to conduct a clever analysis of social media culture, the chase of follows and likes, the toxicity underpinning that behavior and the motivations and emptiness behind internet clout chasing. MUNGMUNG takes no prisoners in the track, calling each platform out by name and skewering each for their specific flavors of bile. In your face, hyper fresh and uniquely avant garde, MUNGMUNG is a talent to watch.

Best Lyric: “They pop up and ask if we could be friends and should hang out on all the weekends and I say that depends.”

Katie Belle - Symptoms

Symptoms - Katie Belle (Pop) Oh this is catchy. In Katie Belle’s latest track “Symptoms” she is…well, feelin it. An emotive, breathy and sultry vocal performance, Katie croons that the object of her affection is giving her the fever. The track is pure pop, a midtempo bop with some R&B flare—think Ariana Grande. The dry guitar intro is a misdirect as to the lushness of the rest of the track, which is quite groovy, not to mention catchy af. That chorus is a real earworm and will definitely be running around any listener’s mind for hours after hearing it. This one will surely make you move, and we have to warn you that Katie might be contagious, because this track is now giving US some symptoms. Go off.

Best Lyrics: “When you get so close you breathe my air.”

Rob Roth - Awol

Awol - Rob Roth (Pop) Rob Roth is getting ready to trek off the beaten track in his latest track, “Awol.” The song is prime for Top 40 radio—from production, to lyrics, to performance, there’s no reason “Awol” can’t sit among today’s top hits. The melody is catchy af, cutting beautifully through an expertly mixed instrumental production. It’s a midtempo—a good head bopper that trots along patiently—and yet has that dance sensibility that primes it for club remixes and incorporation into DJ sets. The vocal is pure pop, and the entire vibe feels like “first single after I grew out of my boy band”. Down to brass tacks—it’s a hit. We challenge you to not hit repeat on Awol.

Best Lyric: “They just tryna keep me on the payroll. Livin’ in the same old same old.“

July - Salone

Salone - July (R&B) July is bringing some real Weeknd vibes with “Salone,” a modern R&B track that pays respect to the history of the genre. Salone captures the listener immediately with that retro analog fuzz before the crisp trap drums enter to let you know this ain’t no throwback track. The production is lush af—an immediate vibe. July’s voice is heaven, a strong tenor with all the R&B warmth you want. There’s some Jackson family sensibility in there, there’s some Babyface, there’s some Tevin Campbell…July certainly fits right in the canon of great R&B crooners. And just like those artists, boy does July have an ear for a catchy melody. Our only complaint is the 2:22 runtime—we want more! This track is gold.

Best Lyric: “I’m a lonely boy in a lonely world.”

XY Gala - True Story (Full of Lies)

True Story (Full of Lies) - XY Gala (Rap) XY Gala’s latest single, the sonically engaging “True Story (Full of Lies)” rolls in like a foreboding storm cloud, reminiscent of the old school Eminem sound, specifically his darker material. XY’s voice is front and center, sharp with a mature rasp that gives him a unique and easily identifiable sound, cutting through a clean and crisp instrumental production lead by a droning bass lead and a snappy trap percussion. But that style is soon juxtaposed with, and complemented by, a sung punk/emo rock chorus and a choral outro that put XY’s versatility as a musician on full display. Overall, with its menace and danger, this is one to vibe to when you are in your feelings.

Best Lyric: “Independent artist, independent music, don’t label me.“

Ossico & Carl Kammeyer - One

One - Ossico & Carl Kammeyer (Pop) Ossico and Carl Kammeyer are here to add to your summer playlist with sunny mid tempo “One.” It’s a kick and snap forward track with a two step dance feel, complemented by a bevy of modern production tricks and wide ranging instrumentation that help keep the track fresh. The production itself is impeccable and quite varied. However, the star of the track is certainly the soaring vocals. When that chorus hits…wow. Not just the belting up in the rafters, but also the warm harmonies, all ushering in a collection of different instrumental breaks that help give the track a unique identity among its peers. We can clearly hear “One” popping up in summer DJ sets.

InDuna - Are You in Love

Are You in Love - InDuna (Pop) Boasting an impeccable production and a bevy of afrobeat, InDuna delivers a perfect pop summer bop that would feel right at home on Top 40 radio. It’s a mid tempo, but still dancy, with crisp afrobeat percussion and a wailing guitar overlaid with an incredibly catchy hook we still have in our heads after listening to the track. There’s a summertime vibe permeating the record, delivered through some island sensibilities in the beat and general dancehall vibes. It’s just that type of song that you would hear everywhere—every bar, every club, every passing car, every public space, when you turn on the radio... In sum, InDuna’s “Are You in Love” is destined for major playlists.

Gutsy J - Quiet Calamity

Quiet Calamity - Gutsy J (Hip Hop) There’s a epic feeling to the production of Gutsy J’s latest track, “Quiet Calamity”—an R&B/Hip Hop number harkening back to the 2010s. The track feels like it would sit among peers like T-Pain and The Dream, with its quiet storm R&B backings and use of hard tuning as an effect on the vocal. Gutsy J brings a melodic rap, with an easy breezy flow that feels West Coast 90s inspiration, to a track that hits you in your chest, and swells. But don’t be fooled by the mellow groove, the beat knocks, elevated by the tension delivered from the high strings throughout. This is one you play in your car while cruising around town with your crew. This is a vibe record.

Best Lyric: “Can’t see beauty cuz your colors can’t be sorted.“

Kid Lazuras - Utopia

Utopia (LP) - Kid Lazuras (Alt Rock) Bristol based duo Kid Lazuras stepped onto the scene in 2021 with debut LP, Utopia. As displayed by the album, the band has crafted a unique sound, infusing influences of electronica, new-wave, and post-punk scenes. A vocal duet of reedy baritone and lilting soprano, backed by electric live instrumentation, this team is greater than the sum of their parts, with the songs truly soaring when the two come together to just rock out.

The album starts on a somber note with “Fall For The Break”, preparing us for an introspective affair with a melancholy piano and organ. There’s a folk sensibility to the track, as it lets each singer have a moment to themselves before coming beautifully together, as if taking each other’s hands and readying themselves to dive into the depths of the album. Most ear catching about Fall For The Break are the lyrics. “My thoughts say I’m dead but I don’t trust my thoughts cuz I don’t trust my head.” Oof.

With “Men of God” we start to get our punk influence, with a thrum of energy that evokes that classic beginning of “9 to 5” before the two just…well, rock out. The vocals here are explarary and we would put our money on this track being the single. If “Fall For The Break” was the intro, this is our first big number.

The album continues to swerve, with “In The Ether” feeling like it’s coming right off of the soundtrack to “The Matrix” . Late 90s emo, in “Ether” our female vocalist transforms into a chorus of sirens. Tension abound and thrumming with danger, this track takes us to a dark cathedral. Title track “Utopia” continues the swirling miasma as our male vocalist takes the spotlight with his Johnny Cash level graveliness that cuts through the thick atmosphere of the instrumentation. We like these two as a “turn off the lights, lay in the dark and close your eyes” kinda listen.

“All Over Again” breaks the moodiness in favor of an upbeat little bop which is our personally favorite. We’ve got some retro R&B and funk on this one, where we hear guitar elements reminiscent of Prince’s “I Wanna Be Your Lover.” Much like “Men of God”, it has a real pop sensibility and escalates into a big jam session. We’d like to hear this one in concert.

The instrumental takes over in “You Find”, where the jam session infuses some reggae and funk, taking center stage over the vocals, which entirely disappear in “Run On Out”, which transports us into the back half of the album. It’s almost a post-intermission overture. What we realized later is that it was preparing us for a far more instrumental focused and abstract conclusion to the record.

“Refuge” follows, taking us to India with its far east instruments, cutting into a track that otherwise feels very 90s British rock, making for a unique combination. “Weaponised” picks up the pace with another instrumental, but stays in that rock lane, feeling like Alice falling down the rabbit hole, boasting an earworm of a melodic guitar riff.

“Capital” brings back our male vocal in an almost Pink Floyd style fever dream. Dark and broody, like other tracks on the album, this one feels the most dangerous, until “Immaterial” begins. Of all of the more abstract works on the album, this one is our favorite, and plays the most with song structure. It’s an incantation of a song. We’re not in Kansas anymore with this back half of the album.

Finally, we end as we begin, with piano ballad “Words Are Just Another Way To Hide” which is just so beautifully sad. It’s a narrative song, a character study of an man, which is a point of view we don’t hear much in pop anymore. It’s a perfect bookend to the experience that is “Utopia.”

Overall, with “Utopia”, Kid Lazuras serves up a perfect mix of abstract and pop rock to make for an eclectic album with a consistent, yet unique, sound. We fervently believe this is an act you want to see live.

Corban Chapple - Ordinary World

Ordinary World - Corban Chapple (R&B) Corban Chapple gives us a breath of fresh air with latest track “Ordinary World.” Retro R&B at its finest, Corban’s style here reminds us a lot of early Maxwell, Jill Scott or John Legend with vocals that tonally evoke Sam Smith. Overall the track is very mature and clearly displays an elevated musicality with the jazz inspired chord progressions, live instrumentation and playfulness with song structure. The backing vocals are pure heaven as well, with some expert layering and harmonizing, and the song boasts so many changes and switchups and movements that all come together to make an incredibly engaging track that doesn’t lose your attention once, and demands a repeat to catch all the little gems you missed the first time.

Close Drive - Bed Head

Bed Head - Close Drive (Indie Rock) With “Bed Head”, Close Drive lets us in on an internal chiding to move forward following the end of a relationship. Over a crisp production lead by a driving guitar and splashy percussion, Close Drive is hoping to push through the malaise of post-relationship depression, dump the memories of the past, and get back to living. The track soars generally with its standout lyrics, but most notably in the chorus, with an impassioned plea of “get out of my head” called repeatedly as the track moves like a freight train from start to finish. There’s also a fair amount of ear candy here, some fun backing vocal effects and ambient sounds, that help both elevate and distinguish the track in relationship to its peers.

Best Lyric: “It’s over, and you’re colder than before.”

J Cru - Post Nut Clarity

Post Nut Clarity - J Cru (Pop) Alright, so, we are of course well acquainted with J Cru’s audacious musical antics, and so we were well prepared for yet another equal parts bop and “da fuck they just say” track with their latest record “Post Nut Clarity.” And while we certainly had those jaw drop moments listening to this pop ballad, what ended up surprising us was how sweet the song is. In fact, the song’s title is probably the most raunchy thing about it, as J Cru, a team we like to refer to as our idiot kid brothers, has a moment of maturity and mindfulness in recognizing a past of disconnected and unfulfilling sexual encounters having found something deeper with a new lover. With “Post Nut Clarity”, J Cru continues to occupy their own lane of chart topping sound, memorable lyrics and a healthy dose of crude.

Best Lyric: “Back in the day, relationship ended as soon as I came.”

Grace & Moji - Monster

Monster - Grace & Moji (Alt Rock) We’re getting 90s alt rock with Grace & Moji’s latest record, “Monster.” Smashing Pumpkins comes to mind when listening to this percussion driven record, which is complimented by both a catchy guitar hook and some washed out guitar atmospherics. The song, about the struggle to find inner peace, is chock full of clever and memorable lyrics, that together with the instrumental paint a melancholy mood. We also get not one, but two engaging vocalists, each with beautifully layered vocals that sit front and center in the track, giving emotive performances that bring the story of the track to life. Overall, “Monster” is a chill vibe and an impeccable production.

Best Lyric: “All those meditations, self inspirations, haven’t healed away the wounds.”

Dici - 200 Miles

200 Miles - Dici (Pop)  What a catchy little bop. In “200 Miles”, Dici’s on a metaphorical roadtrip, backed by an impressive production. The track is beautifully layered with an impressively tight percussion overlaid on a driving guitar riff, which all backs an earworm melody, rousing chorus and call-out chant. More than the sum of its parts, “200 Miles” has that indescribable extra “oomf” to it, there’s magic to the track that elevates it above its peers. Ultimately, we see no reason why this shouldn’t be on Top 40 radio. The vocals give us that indie pop vibe, with certain cadences that evoke almost a hiphop feeling flow, which makes for a unique and multi-faceted record. We defy you to not sing along to this one.

Best Lyric: “Autumn leaves are blocking out the vision.“