Anna Grace Odom – May To One
‘May To One’, the charged, simmering new single from Nashville based songwriter and musician Anna Grace Odom, might be an inherently personal track, but that doesn’t mean it’s themes are not more widely applicable. “This song is a confession and an offering,” Odom explains. “I wrote it on my little brother’s birthday, in the spot in my childhood bedroom where I wrote every song as a teenager. I’d just finished my first year of college and was feeling like I was letting everyone down at once (family, friends, God, myself).” As she started playing the track live, a curious thing happened. Members of the audience starting approaching with their own reads of the lyrics, and how it evoked their own personal guilt and shame. It’s a reminder of the universality of such concerns, as well as the power of music to transform confessions into acts of communal release.
‘May To One’ is out now and available from the usual places.
David James Allen – The Moonlight Waltz
Back in February we wrote about ‘By Your Side’, a single by David James Allen from forthcoming album Jubilation Potpurri. “An ode to the safe harbour of a significant other,” as we described the track, “where calm might be found no matter how stormy the outside world might prove.” Now the Prince Edward County, Ontario-based songwriter and multi-instrumentalist has returned with brand new single ‘The Moonlight Waltz’ to further whet appetites, and this time the focus is on an attempted escape of an altogether different kind. Full of equal parts heartbreak and romance, the track is a country song in the classic sense, celebrating the potential within a good old fashioned barroom while nodding to the all too familiar loneliness which haunts the edges of such a place.
‘The Moonlight Waltz’ is out now and available from Bandcamp.
Fishwife – All Good Wives
The fact that Fishwife’s Lenny Moynihan and Jos Cubie first met in an oyster shack during a storm might seem like the sort of throwaway factoid that often populates a band’s bio, but in this case the origin story seems to be central to the project’s DNA. Because this is a duo that makes music bathed in shadow and charged with energy, full of an almost Gothic atmosphere that’s at once enigmatic and enveloping. Take debut single ‘All Good Wives’, which transposes Ellen Hutter’s relationship with Nosferatu onto Moynihan’s own experiences living in Los Angeles, merging the corporeal and ghostly into something as alluring as it is ambiguous. With vocals recorded in an abandoned ghost train ride and organ in a Grade II listed church, you’ll do well to find a more evocative track. Watch the video directed by Ellen Moynihan below:
‘All Good Wives’ is out now and available from the usual places.
The Huntress and Holder of Hands – Beasts We Are
“A sound that holds space for anger, confusion, sadness and compassion, as well as an inherent sense of hope that’s built into the very fact of its existence.” So we wrote of MorganEve Swain’s The Huntress and Holder of Hands project earlier in the month, with new album Babylon representing “the perfect example of this nuanced style, confronting the corrupt and violent present without forgetting ideas of redemption and sanctuary too.” Latest single ‘Beasts We Are’ displays Swain’s uncanny ability to convey such conflicting emotions within the same sound, the tender tones carrying both fondness and fury simultaneously. “‘Beasts We Are’ is about ghosts and the stories we tell ourselves,” she explains. “It’s about the planet, and the world, and our responsibility to the place we call home. It’s about ugly pasts and shared histories, and shared grief. It’s about where we find ourselves now as a species and an appeal to each other to care enough to do something about it.”
Babylon will be released on the 5th June and you can pre-order it now.
Lydia Luce – Baby Blues
“A track which originated in the depths of a period of suffering yet nevertheless asserted the potential of recovery, as though in some way instigating not only the rest of the record but also the path back to health Luce’s life would take.” So we wrote of ‘Belly’ from Lydia Luce‘s most recent full-length Mammoth back in 2025, summing up a record which charted a course through pain towards healing. Fast-forward a year and Luce is back with ‘Baby Blues’, a very different song, yet one still chronicling a difficult path through a life-changing period. “It’s about my experience postpartum,” Luce explains. “I also fully produced and recorded this at home which is something I’ve been wanting to do for so long. I wrote this during his naps and I posted a clip on Instagram and so many moms and parents found it and encouraged me to release it. I am so proud to share this one as it feels so raw to me in this stage of my life.”
‘Baby Blues’ is out now and available from the usual places.
Swapmeet – 2 C U
We’ve covered a couple of singles from Swapmeet‘s debut album Mount Zero in recent months, with ‘I Know‘ (“A sound able to encompass both sardonic slacker bite and cathartic alt rock release, rising from sly, taut beginnings into something with serious size and heft”) and ‘Sand‘ (“A more reflective and earnest track which mourns that which is lost within contemporary youth, where a thousand distractions rob some of the magic away from the experience”) highlighting different dimension of the Aussie band’s sound. With the record coming later this summer via Winspear, Swapmeet are now back with latest single ‘2 C U’, and this time they are at their most jubilant. The track opens almost hesitantly yet soon explodes into a bright and hazy rhythm in no time at all, playing like excitement bottled up and committed to sound.
Watch the video by Rhys Scarabosio below:
Mount Zero will be released via Winspear on the 17th July. Preorder it now from the Swapmeet Bandcamp.
Shaina Hayes – Timid
“Québec-based artist Shaina Hayes runs a vegetable farm in her hometown, a fact which is more than an interesting tidbit to add to a bio,” we wrote back in March when covering single ‘Flourish‘. “Because spend any time with Hayes’s music and you’ll come to appreciate a kinship between both of these pursuits: an attention to detail, a deep-rooted connection to the land and its life, not to mention an overarching patience that allows her to reflect upon the present with admirable clarity.” Hayes’s latest single ‘Timid’, out now via Bonsound, follows in this style, leaning into introversion and the ways in which we might nurture our own interior worlds. “I wanted to explore the idea that even at our most articulate, the way we express ourselves is just a tiny glimpse into what’s actually going on inside us,” she explains. “That we contain whole, unseen universes. Ultimately, Timid is a song about everything we feel but rarely manage to express.”
Trails and Ways – Next of Kin
“A reminder that life is richer in company, and that social isolation can be overcome, written and performed by a trio who worked through that very process themselves to bring the track to life.” So we wrote of ‘Patiently’, the triumphant return of Trails and Ways after going on a decade away. Eager to capitalise on the fresh momentum, the Oakland group have returned with brand new single ‘Next of Kin’. Somehow simultaneously expansive and intimate, the track is Trails and Ways doing what they are best at, evoking a tangible sense of emotion without losing any of the brightness and movement. Lyrically, it meditates on the strange moment of the present, where small personal hopes are impinged upon by an increasingly precarious global situation wracked by war, climate breakdown and extractive industry.
Vesuvian – Hecate in the Highlands
Back in February we introduced Vesuvian, the Philadelphia-based band consisting of Garret Bollin (guitar, vocals), Joey DeGrado (vocals, guitar), Bill Magerr (bass) and Gavin Caffrey Perez-Canto (drums and percussion), with single ‘Fortunate Death’. The first taste of their new self-titled album, the track was “certainly not your usual scrappy punk number,” we described, “drawing upon the work of Julio Cortázar and accounts of Mesoamerican history to create something cathartic and boisterous.” With the full-length coming soon via Worry Bead Records, Vesuvian have returned with new track ‘Hecate in the Highlands’. Opening with an impromptu choral opening that was initially meant as a joke, there’s a distinctively playful vibe to the song, embracing retro rock sensibilities alongside droll near-spoken vocals in a way which might at first seem almost ironic. But it soon becomes clear Vesuvian are committed to the sound with full sincerity, and as such the track becomes the perfect calling card for the entire release. “At times we thought we’d have to shelve the whole thing,” DeGrado says, “but it turned out as the song I’m most proud of.”
I hadn’t seen a soul in a hundred years
So I let him sit beside me and I let him bend my ear
But when his night came mine stayed bright
The way it always does every single lonely night

