Sunday, 22 March 2026

2026, week 12. 10 singles

The personal events of the past few weeks are mostly of unspeakable sadness and in a sequence and speed that make it impossible to grasp and mourn individually. There will be a little on that in the coming week on the blog. Listening to music helps. Music is soothing and allows the mind to focus on, well, nothing but the music really. Hence, there is a singles section this week anyway for you to explore and enjoy new music anyway.

Trickle Down. SPRINTS 

Just over a week ago SPRINTS kicked off its European tour supported by Amsterdam band Marathon. To celebrate, the Dublin based band released a new single. Kathy Chubb gives a lesson on trickle down economics. Isn't that the theory that even if only a few people earn a lot of money, that wealth will trickle down to the rest of society. Well, my guess is that most people have learned by now that it does not work that way. That same few just accumulate more and more and more, until a government pays put to that. Chubb is mostly telling the listener about it, while the band plays. En passant, she admits she want to be like Amy Taylor (of Amyl & the Sniffers). When band and singer come together, they rock like SPRINTS can. Trickle Down may not be a high flyer but even a medium flyer in the SPRINTS universe is something most bands can only dream of.

Over/Thru. High on Stress

With Over/Thru High on Stress released a strong powerpop single that not only brings back fond memories from songs decades old but adds another favourite in the very first listening session already. The song starts with a sole guitar that after the band joins in takes off in a nice intro solo straight away. In the verse the band holds back to unleash itself in the chorus. This band knows how to use dynamics in a song that is immediately singable as well. Hailing from Minneapolis, the band shines a very positive light on the city with this song. Fans from Gin Blossoms to The Jayhawks and back should be very pleased hearing a song like this in 2026. For those wanting to hear more, there's a whole EP out with the same name.

Clipping. Special Friend 

With Clipping French band Special Friend finds itself for the second time on this blog. Where I compared 'Breakfast' to the erratic songs of postpunk icon Lene Lovich, Clipping shows a totally different side to Special Friend. It is an alternative rock song with an electric guitar solo that could come out of the 1970s. In the verses it drops away. An acoustic guitar takes over, laying down a strong rhythm together with the bass and drums. Drummer and singer Erica Ashleson accompanies guitarist and singer Guillaume Siracusa in such a way that it is like an angel singing behind him. Dreamy, not attached and free floating. It gives Clipping a second vibe. All together it makes Clipping a strong single that makes me very curious to hear the album called 'Clipping' as well. It was released on the 20th of this month.

Shareholder. Pastel Blank

 “Dance music for people who don’t know how to dance,” that is how Canadian artist Angus Watt describes his music, including a mention of Talking Heads as one of this inspirations. Now a long time ago Talking Heads with e.g. the live version of 'Burning Down The House' was a band that made me want to dance. So, I get it where Pastel Blank is coming from or going to be more precise. Shareholder has that eclectic rhythm and a host of weird sounds, while when everything is said and done, the song rocks in its own special and weird way. It makes Shareholder fun to listen to, recognisable and yet ready for 2026 as well. Pastel Blank's debut album Unmade In Minutes is released on 24 April. 

Bingo. La Sécurité

We have to go back 15 months to find Montréal band La Sécurité on the blog with single Detour. Here is Bingo and where my review is concerned I could more or less repeat it. Bingo is not round music but square. Think of the early albums by Talking Heads and The B52s. Bands that may have started out in the punk scene but became new wave and/or postpunk avant la lettre. La Sécurité pulls parts out of both genres and creates a very danceable track in a way that Dutch postpunkers Global Charming are so good at as well. Bingo does not give you a single moment of rest. It is ecstatic and wild. Weird riffs fly around as it should in postpunk. Album 'Bingo' will be released on 12 June. 

Jet Stream Heart. Temples

To find Temples on this blog you have to go back to 2014 and its album 'Sun Structures' and one odd single in 2020. With Jet Stream Heart the U.K. psychpop band returns. It is an upbeat song, where (Brit)pop meets psychedelia and eastern melodies. The song revolves around an eastern sounding riff that keeps appearing in the song, until it is expanding into a (saxophone?) solo. Together with the beat that certainly invites some dancing, it makes for light listening. It is as if The Black Angels decided to release a pop track. This is something I would allow that band to do, to make it sound just a little more upbeat in between the darkness it excels in. Temples has found the right mix with Jet Stream Heart. To hear the album we need to be patient. 'Bliss' will release on 26 June. 

Forever. Portland

Can a song like Forever come from another country than Belgium? Before I had found any information on the band, my mind said dEUS, Zita Swoon, Millionaire, Metal Molly. Sure, there are more than enough differences but also enough similarities. Forever is a song with a melody that seems normal and yet. I can't really lay my finger on it but songs from a lot of indie and alternative rock bands from Belgium sound different from the rest of the world and so does Portland. Portland is led by Jente Pironet with Sebastian Leye on guitar, Boris Van Overschee,bass & keys, Nina Kortekaas vocals & keys and Bram Vanhove drums & percussion. Pironet has a ton of words to share with the listener over a song that goes and on and is only stopped for a short while just before the chorus comes in. Like most songs this week, Forever is not your average song. The album is called 'Champain' and is out for some time already. 

The Come To Jesus Moment. Ryan Hamilton

Finally, a second song that is straight forward. Ryan Hamilton rocks like artists from the U.S. can and it is not even released on Boston's Rum Bar records. (It's on Wicked Cool Records.) The Come To Jesus Moment is the kind of powerpop song that by 2026, whole generations of bands and artists are popular with. E.g., The Knack, The Hooters and The Outfield right up to Geoff Palmer and Brad Marino. Ryan Hamilton has that same optimistic, nothing can hurt me attitude to the song. Everything about it is shiny and new, of the kind that makes me smile and want to bring out a host of other singles like it. The drive of the drums and the bass are pure gold. Everything above it is sprinkled with magic. Just listen to that backing vocals! From start to finish it is hallelujah alright and please don't burn that bridge down as I will want to hear The Come To Jesus Moment again and again. 

I Am a Cat and I Love My Dog. Animaux Formidables

Garage fuzz rock? Yes, I can live with that description of Animaux Formidables' latest single. The Italian duo consists of Mr Formidable and Mrs Formidable on respectively vocals & guitar and percussion & synth. In the video and on photos they do not disclose their identity as well. Musically they present an amalgam of synths and electronic drumming combined with heavily fuzzed out guitars. The singing undergoes a little treatment as well. But like all rock duos Animaux Formidables knows how to explode and to hold back, while kicking up dust in the accents in all the right places. Animaux Formidables with I Am a Cat and I Love My Dog presents excitement for all who need it fast.

Twentyfour7. Jaguero 

We end this week with another band from Italy, Jaguero. The band debuted with its previous single 'Lit' on this blog and here they are once again already. Twentyfour7 may hint at punk but in my ears is more emo than punk. The tempo is lower, the lyrics deeper. Emo without a tear in the voice though. The depth of the sound, the la la la part and the length of the song, 2.07 minutes, push it towards punk as well. The sluggish tempo that is created mainly by the sludgy rhythm guitars, makes the song stand out. The singer leaves no doubt that the person he's singing about makes him feel alive again and that is the title of the album to be released on 10 April. Based on the two singles that is something to look forward to.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght 


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