Why néomí’s “Didn’t I” Signals a New Chapter in Indie Folk-Pop
A calm yet cutting pop-rock confession with 80s hints and a chorus that won’t leave you alone.

A calm yet cutting pop-rock confession with 80s hints and a chorus that won’t leave you alone.
Grief, dreams, and gentleness turned into sound. Sean Dekel’s "Then You Came Back" is intimate, human, and quietly powerful.
The Swedish artist opens his upcoming album with “Tubular Belle,” a tender folk-leaning track with a warm 70s glow and a touch of dreamy synth work.
Jon Hood return with "Mirrors Of Illusion", a dreamy, sky-carousel folk-rock drift from their upcoming album “Pieces of Reality”.
Bobby Halvorson’s “California” is warm, nostalgic, and tinged with that bittersweet West Coast glow.
A pop-folk trip through the madness of modern society. Science, satire, and sound collide.
Ailbhe Reddy’s "So Quickly, Baby" is the heartbreak we didn’t know we needed—graceful, chaotic, and quietly cathartic.
Folk warmth and quiet pop shimmer meet in this delicate reverie.
Gentle, hypnotic, and deeply human, it’s a song that feels like breathing fresh air in slow motion.
There’s a stillness to Yoah Johanne’s “Floors” that feels alive — like a winter sky just before sunrise.
Settling Houses get tender in "Know My Body"—a folk track about the uncertainty of knowing yourself, with a touch of 90s warmth.
