Did the popularity of Guitar Hero kill the rock music industry by making rock n roll seem like nothing more special than the background to a video game?
Atlas Engine - Where Have You Gone
@atlasengineband
https://t.co/HxCEMfVH8W
Atlas Engine’s Where Have You Gone floats like a contemplative moment caught in a drift of sand leaving the Sahara; it searches for a distant purpose, the...
3/ breath.
There’s a certain hopefulness behind the gentle vocals in Where Have You Gone. It’s optimistic without being obnoxious. It’s a patient kind of confidence that evolves as the music enters a flow state, like sitting on top of a mountain watching the sun break across...
4/ drives towards an exit, but only finds the same reality, a lesson in dissatisfaction, but still relaying the beauty in the moments.
https://t.co/bnel0wzZxk
Ali Awan - Cherry Pits
@aliawanmusic
https://t.co/iJpjkopGrH
There’s something appropriate to the fall weather in Ali Awan’s Cherry Pits. The slow, purposeful groove, and layered harmonies coupled with the details of a shaker, güiro, and other...
3/ synonym, or more like the decomposition of deep roots turning over as the Earth floats peacefully away from the Sun, waiting to tip close again.
Cherry Pits is both contemplative and disinterested, like the last moments before leaving work at the end of a long day. It...
HNRY FLWR - Waiting Room
@HNRYFLWR
https://t.co/IawRUyGB8l
What a joy to find HNRY FLWR. There’s something mystical about bands that feature a singer that can draw drama out of each verse, and in Waiting Room, HNRY FLWR calls out to spirits of...
3/ spreads to cover the area, unconsciously nestling into embrace.
Waiting Room is meant to be listened to with arms grasped tightly around yourself. It feels like it’s attempting to grasp for unknown gratification in solitude, wishing to discover internal insight, casting a...