Tune into this weekend with tunes brought to you by Transgalactica, Ben Konarov, BLOCK, Love Ghost and BLUES CORNER!
1. Transgalactica – Liberal Anthem
Transgalactica's Liberal Anthem is your philosophy professor after crashing a rave and not remembering to turn off the sermon. This is not a song; it's a manifesto in hard-rock swagger and classical sea‐shanty momentum clothing. Hiding somewhere between inebriated Polish sailor cry and Velvet Underground landscape, Lukky Sparxx cries out against injustice, hymns reason, and challenges us to envision a Church of John Stewart Mill, whatever that would look like in LED form and power chords. Transitioning from rollicking anti‐populism to anthemic swell seems deliberate: call to arms, then call to reflection. Sonically, organ‐sounding pipes, dripping horns, cinematic electronics, you name them, they apply them to create a stage upon which ideas sound like rebellion. If you have a hankerin' for music served up with some intellectual elbow grease and a chorus that makes you jump up, Liberal Anthem has got it. Thoughtful, dramatic, a little theatrical, and damn fulfilling.
2. Ben Konarov – Road To Nowhere
Ben Konarov's Road To Nowhere creeps up on you like a sunrise you didn't anticipate. Open window, highway buzz, lyrics jotted in the margins of your brain, this is driving soundtrack material. The mood is relaxed, the atmosphere is "roll down the windows and yell your favorite line." There is warmth in the voice, gentle edges in the production, but an underlying tension that this highway may not go anywhere, but the trip is worth it anyway. It's ideal for the moments when coffee intersects with introspection. You don't have bombastic guitar solos or stadium drama; you have something less, something real. This is the sort of song you play when you want room to breathe, when your mind rambles and you just wish it could rambble with you rather than holding you back. Not all roads lead anywhere. Occasionally, the most rewarding ones just take you somewhere.
3. BLOCK – Rhinoceros
BLOCK's Rhinoceros is an audio trench coat of varied colours, muddy brown hues, touches of protest, and a splash of retro rock shake. Reliable sources classify it as indie/alt-rock; the atmosphere is raw but classy. Supported by a powerful instrumental arrangement, the song cruises on driving riffs and stable beats that refuse to allow tension to dip. The production is always crisp, nothing too polished, yet nothing rough enough to turn into anarchy. The standout is how it gets the balance of energy: just enough push to feel like you're alive, just enough holdback to allow people to soak in. It's the type of track you'd be nodding along to in a dark room, enjoying the musicianship without requiring all the bling. If you prefer your rock to be earthy, with a beat, Rhinoceros fills the spot.
4. Love Ghost – Worth It
Love Ghost & The Skinner Brothers' Worth It is like standing in front of your bathroom mirror and looking at yourself and asking: "Am I enough? " The guitars cut with desperation, melody bears the burden, and that screaming solo? It doesn't just howl, it thunders what you've been keeping inside. You get the emo soul, rough edges, a bit of grime, but also release. It bangs where it needs to, rests where your heart aches. There’s chemistry here, you can hear two creative forces locking in. And while themes of self‐worth and struggle aren’t new, Worth It makes them feel urgent, personal, and immediate. If you’ve ever doubted yourself, this song is a fist bump from your better self.
If you’re ready to shout along, this one delivers.
5. BLUES CORNER – Piggy Bank Blues
Piggy Bank Blues from BLUES CORNER is retro laid-back, blended with "hey, listen up." Phil Roman's guitar and vocals and Seb Oroval's keyboards create a groovy, dusty-road-at-sunset atmosphere, such as blues campfire songs filtered through open windows. Rustic texture, old-school warmth, and a hook that starts sneaking up slowly on you, this song gets under your skin. What begins as gentle enjoyment becomes a kind of comfort habit: you listen to it again, catch fresh guitar fills, and appreciate the way the vocals hang. It's got blues authenticity but is nice enough for a throwaway listen. For fans of subtlety, character, and emotional subtext without being bludgeoned, Piggy Bank Blues is just about perfect. Mood‐lifter with depth.
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