LA label Huh What & Where Recordings presents The Dutch, a collective album exhibiting the supreme beat making talents in The Netherlands.
The Dutch is u... Read More
Summertime is a super swell time, except for the scorching heat that intensifies each year.
To complement (or to aptly put it, “counter”) this temporal climate imbalance, a required listening of Derek Clegg‘s latest effort, Head Down Sunrise, is a must.
If, and only if, you ever get to encounter a ‘gorgeous bully’, you should know that fighting back isn’t an option.
This clever title is the moniker of Thomas Crang, a Manchester-based musician who has helped transition the act from a solo project to a band effort.
Summer Salt is the brainchild of Emi Knight, Ali Homan, Jenna Beasley, and Dave Segedy. The Places You Call Home, which was released on June 2011 is a tremendously stirring album.
Gear up your headphones and let the singer’s graceful voice and ingenious lyrics, along with compassionate talent, bloom in your ears with elegance.
Using nothing but an acoustic guitar and his astonishing vocals, Nathaniel Noton-Freeman makes incomparable music. Seabirds was released last March 2013. This album yields music that focuses on pedal effects.
Playing entertaining post-rock genre, his sound produces an unforgettable tune. Nathaniel proves to be an authentic and bold artist by restricting his music with the use of acoustic guitar only.
Aptly titled Garage Days, Avenue’s EP is a your average pop punk fare, but with a twist: the usual bass and electric guitar are replaced with a rawer-sounding acoustic guitar (strummed to its core) and basic drums. Though this sounds amateur-ish, it’s part of the EP’s charm.
Hassen Daoues has been around the industry for awhile. He's released several singles/compilations under different pseudonyms like Anagramist and A Textura From Heaven.
Today, he's back with a different moniker; Killed By A Word. This time he brings in tow his latest compilation, Kids With No Life Manuals.
More experimental, the Tunisian artist describes it as a collection of tracks that focuses on the study of textures and samples.
Here’s something for everyone: an R&B record without the vocals.
That sounds just about right. Nashville native Antjuan Johnson, more popularly known as ‘Kyd Dynomyte’, looks like he’s setting his sights on producing (you know, Timbaland-ish or will.i.am-esque) with the way things are going.