With “Lay on Grass,” Sam Stokes delivers a radiant reminder that sometimes the simplest thing you can do is stepping outside and breathing for a moment. Her newest single feels like winter is ending and the heat of spring is on the way, but in music form. From beginning to end, it’s instantly joyful without being overbearing, anthemic without forcing it, and deeply alive in the way only the best pop songs can be. By the end of our first listen, we were singing along!
On All The Moving Parts, Caroline Parke delivers a deeply human country record that feels hard earned and full of quiet grace. Across thirteen songs and just over forty minutes, the Alberta born singer songwriter leans fully into her strengths as a storyteller, pairing classic country instrumentation with a very subtle rock-edged backbone that gives the album both warmth and momentum. It’s a record shaped by real life and that authenticity shows in every corner of this outstanding listen.
With Butterfly, Daisy Tyler returns not with a grand declaration, but with a returned quiet confidence that feels far more powerful. After stepping back from music, she reemerges sounding lighter, freer, and completely in tune with herself. This latest single marks a fresh creative chapter, one defined by release rather than pressure, by openness rather than expectation. Let us say it plain and simple, Daisy Tyler is back and better than ever.
With “talk me thru it,” Tonii delivers a song that feels both intimate and effortlessly magnetic, like a late-night confession wrapped in endless rhythm. Released officially on January 30th, 2026, the track captures the quiet thrill of “sapphic desire” with a voice that knows how to linger, how to tease, and how to convey seemingly endless emotion from these undeniably catchy melodies. It’s the kind of song that slips into the room softly and before you know it, becomes the center of attention.
“Carts in the Rain” finds Acid Smoothie looking backward without nostalgia weighing him down. Instead, Paul Dunne uses his past as a base, setting it alight with the confidence and clarity of an artist who’s only leveled his style. The album, a collection of re-recorded material from several now-retired solo projects, does not feel like a retrospective or a cleanup job. It 100% feels like a full sprint forward, powered by years of trial, error, and a sharpened creative instinct.