Chris Adams
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Echoes of Light: Mark Fenster’s Journey Through Sound and Spirit
Following his ongoing exploration of music as a conduit for healing and connection, Gabriola Island-based composer, vocalist, and meditation leader Mark Fenster unveils his latest single “Sacred Yearning” – a meditative, neo-classical journey blending the spiritual traditions of Indian Classical music with Western strings and vocalese. The track conveys a heartfelt longing to connect with the Divine, capturing both the devotion and joy inherent in musical collaboration.
By Chris Adams6 days ago in Beat
Perfect Girl: Lauren Minear’s Bold Exploration of Womanhood and Perfection
New York–based alt-pop singer-songwriter Lauren Minear returns with “Perfect Girl,” a razor-sharp, darkly playful exploration of what it means to be a woman expected to shapeshift endlessly to please others. Written from the perspective of a fictional, satirical character, the track leans into the absurdity of “perfection” and the way chasing it strips away humanity in the process.
By Chris Adams6 days ago in Beat
Note To Myself: Satya’s Honest Journey of Healing and Strength
With Note To Myself, Satya delivers a deeply personal debut album that serves as both an introduction and a declaration. Rooted in pop and R&B, the record unfolds as a storytelling journey; one shaped by vulnerability, resilience, and hard-won self-acceptance. It marks the starting point of Satya’s artistic career, and the culmination of years of emotional growth, self-reflection, and perseverance.
By Chris Adams6 days ago in Beat
Jonny Fritz Announces New Album DEBBIE DOWNERS - WOODWINDS
In the summer of 2025, Los Angeles-based country artist Jonny Fritz released his first recorded music after a near decade-long hiatus from the music business. “Debbie Downers”, however, would not be the start of your typical record release cycle, but a multi-album, genre-spanning spectacle meant to bring Jonny’s songwriting to new sonic worlds and challenge the consumption-obsessed nature of the modern digital music landscape. Debbie Downers part one, a classic sounding Americana album recorded in Nashville, was released in October, 2025. The next installment, Debbie Downers - Woodwinds, sees the original album’s nine tracks reimagined with an all-woodwinds ensemble, composed by Andrew Conrad.
By Chris Adams13 days ago in Beat
Kelsey Dower Commands Emotion and Orchestration in "Rage"
With “Rage,” symphonic metal composer Kelsey Dower delivers a sweeping, fully self-created piece of orchestral power that has all the scale and power of a myth being unearthed. As the lead single from her upcoming album Rebirth, “Rage,” which got its first look on Indie Music Discovery, introduces an artist with rare precision, ambition, and emotional force, one who composes, arranges, and constructs the entire symphonic architecture herself.
By Chris Adams27 days ago in Beat
Muriel Grossmann Plays the Music of McCoy Tyner and the Grateful Dead
Muriel Grossmann’s new album Plays the Music of McCoy Tyner and the Grateful Dead, released today on Dreamland Records, presents a rare exploration of two musical worlds that rarely meet. On the surface, McCoy Tyner and the Grateful Dead seem to inhabit entirely different spheres. Tyner’s towering presence in post-Coltrane jazz is built on harmonic complexity, powerful left-hand voicings, and modal exploration. The Grateful Dead’s legacy, meanwhile, lies in open-ended improvisation, rhythmic elasticity, and a communal approach to performance. Yet Grossmann’s interpretation shows that both traditions share a common drive.
By Chris Adamsabout a month ago in Beat
Mourning Coffee Finds Stillness on “Winter Whispers”
“Winter Whispers,” the new single from New Jersey songwriter Mourning Coffee, arrives with a sense of patience that feels increasingly rare. Written for the winter solstice, the song leans into the stillness of the season rather than resisting it. It does not rush toward resolution or dramatic release. Instead, it settles into a reflective space, allowing time, memory, and atmosphere to guide the listening experience.
By Chris Adamsabout a month ago in Beat
Dead Broke Return with “Hypernormal,” a Sonic Take on Modern Chaos
Toronto rock band Dead Broke have returned with “Hypernormal,” a track that delivers a clear-eyed, blistering critique of modern life. Anchored by jagged guitars, volatile dynamics, and a desert-rock pulse, the song captures the disorientation of living in a world where everything feels reactive, monetized, and endlessly overwhelming. Listeners find themselves doomscrolling through microdoses of trauma, losing any sense of what is real.
By Chris Adams2 months ago in Beat
Jeffery Straker Brings Prairie Charm to the Holidays with A Very Prairie Christmas
Saskatchewan-born singer-songwriter Jeffery Straker has released A Very Prairie Christmas, a 12-song collection shaped by nearly a decade of his annual holiday shows. The album blends nostalgic classics, intimate arrangements, and Straker’s signature piano-driven storytelling, capturing the way Christmas memories evolve while still holding their magic.
By Chris Adams2 months ago in Beat
Lance Marwood and "The Cherale" Exploring Family Folklore Trauma and the Dark Spaces Between Memory and Myth
Lance Marwood has built a reputation on instinct honesty and a refusal to smooth over the rough edges while The Cherale exists in a space where story atmosphere and emotional weight collide. Across writing revision and world-building Marwood approaches his craft with a clarity that is both deliberate and deeply human while the story of The Cherale balances folklore horror and psychological depth in ways that feel immediate and immersive. In this interview he opens up about navigating the challenges of creative momentum exploring the evolution of the story and the ideas that continue to shape its unsettling and layered world. He reflects on the importance of truth memory and inherited trauma in the narrative and how staying grounded in these themes allows the story to resonate with both emotional authenticity and literary tension.
By Chris Adams2 months ago in Beat
Sophia Hansen-Knarhoi Steps Into the Light With "Undertow"
With her debut album Undertow, out today, London-based composer and singer-songwriter Sophia Hansen-Knarhoi unveils a world where stark vulnerability meets a brooding, cinematic darkness. Built on the intertwined voices of cello and breath, the record carries an almost tactile sensitivity, drawing the listener into a space where memory and emotion live close to the surface. Undertow emerged from a period of confronting trauma and rediscovering sensuality, a time in which Hansen-Knarhoi allowed herself to sift through the tangled weight of love, loss, and the difficult clarity that comes with healing.
By Chris Adams2 months ago in Beat
Arlie Finds New Freedom and Emotional Depth on "Someone You Can Believe In"
Arlie’s Someone You Can Believe In is an album shaped by transition. It emerges from a period of introspection, creative rebuilding, and a decisive shift away from the machinery of the major label world. The record plays like an inward journey documented in real time. It is a concept album with a narrative spine, complete with spoken interludes, yet it feels strikingly personal.
By Chris Adams2 months ago in Beat











