Music is one of those things people can’t really avoid in daily life. It plays in the car, in cafés, in stores, and even quietly in the background when someone is just hanging out at home. A lot of people don’t think too deeply about it, but music can really change how a moment feels. The right song can make a simple evening feel way more enjoyable.
With Troubadours Drown In Lakes, Ten-Headed Skeleton delivers a record that holds a ton of different meanings. From channeling personal history, political awareness, and sonic experimentation transforming into a gripping hip-hop statement, this record refuses to look away from the realities that shaped it. From start to finish, it’ll pull you in with every facet that it holds.
Some pop ballads aim for grandeur and end up drowning in it. Others approach emotion with such elegance that every note feels purposeful, intimate, and quietly powerful. With “Grace,” emerging pop artist Gulia lands firmly in the latter category, delivering a cinematic single that feels both expansive and deeply personal at the same time.
Some compositions speak loudly through spectacle and others arrive quietly, carrying emotional weight in every carefully placed note. With “What We Lost II,” award-winning composer and pianist Hanan Townshend crafts the latter kind of experience. It’s certainly a piece that unfolds slowly and with an almost reverent sense of stillness. He’s created a seriously deeply moving instrumental that feels like a highly specific moment of reflection.
There’s always been something delightfully unhinged about the way Pond approaches big ideas, as if existential dread and cosmic curiosity were just two colors on the same swirling palette. With “Terrestrials,” the beloved Australian five-piece leans into that instinct once again, delivering a track that feels like a meditation, a warning, and a daydream all at once.