With Miles Away, Patience Please announce themselves as a band already thinking bigger than the rooms they’re currently playing. The six-track debut EP from the West London trio is an immediately confident record that literally had us focused in within the first 30 seconds of “Wasting Time”. Clocking in at a lean 24 minutes, the record wastes no time making its case, delivering a cohesive rush of indie pop rock that’s certainly polished, but still has an air of grit and endless power from start to finish.
There’s a special art to a rework that doesn’t overwrite its source but instead reframes it, letting familiar emotion glow under new light. Fantomacs accomplishes exactly that on “Carry You,” a dance-driven reinterpretation of the 2021 original written by Maddy Abela and Richard Samuel Smith. Rather than chasing novelty for its own sake, the track leans into the song’s emotional core and lifts it into a modern space that feels tailor-made for late-night drives, open dancefloors, and beyond. Trust us, the options are limitless.
There’s a particular kind of honesty that feels lived-in rather than performed, and Jesse Bloodgood taps directly into that space on Wishful Thinker. Released on February 6th, 2026, the four-track EP serves as his solo studio debut, and it arrives with the confidence of an artist who understands that vulnerability can be a strength rather than a risk. Rooted in upbeat indie rock but shaded with emotional depth, the record feels intimate without ever sounding small and undoubtedly reflective from beginning to end.
A debut single should feel like a statement, and on “Geronimo,” Tyler McGinnis makes his with confidence, heart, and a clear sense of who he is as a songwriter. Rooted firmly in country but stretching naturally into Americana and subtle folk territory, the track introduces McGinnis as an artist unafraid to lean into sincerity while still delivering something hooky and instantly engaging. It’s the sound of someone stepping into a solo chapter and after our first listen, consider us fans for life.
There’s something incredibly daring about taking a song that has survived for a hundred years and deciding not to polish it or modernize it for easy nostalgia. Instead, Mike and Mandy slow it down, darken the edges, and let its endless emotion sink in from the get go. Released on February 27th in celebration of National Retro Day, their reimagining feels less like a tribute and more like a séance. They’ve reimagined a classic into something perfectly tuned for 2026.