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Indie Art Pop

maxhauer – fifteen: Cerebrally Melodic Indie Pop

Maxhauer’s sophomore single, ‘fifteen’, sweeps listeners into an indie pop sphere of celestial fluidity and exhibits how the innovative artist has honed his sound after a promising 2023 debut to re-emerge with a melodically cerebral piece that cradles his vocals which are so light they become the oxygen you breathe as you follow the diaphanous progressions as they lead to gentle, ambient crescendos.

Positioned somewhere between the evocative expressions of Death Cab for Cutie and Elliott Smith, maxhauer channels the introspective spirit of these indie legends while marking his territory as the boygenius of a new era. His sophomore single reveals an artful orchestration, seamlessly weaving expansive, lush harmonies that paint a vivid scene of emotional intensity, satisfying those yearning for a more complex, emotionally dense soundscape.

Maxhauer, as a multi-talented producer and vocalist, will undoubtedly become revered for his unique ability to infuse the nuanced longing of adolescence into his music. His compositions are both a revolution and an evolution in the indie music scene, where plaintive vocals and expansive harmonies intertwine to create a sound that gnaws at the listener with its raw, poignant beauty.

After one hit, your rhythmic pulses will crave the emotive journey for the catharsis in the candour. Safe to say, he’s one for every indie fan’s radar.

Stream fifteen on Spotify now.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Carey Clayton rebooted retrofuturism with the seraphic synths in his latest single, Future in a Past Life

Carey Clayton brought the sound, synths and soul of the 80s to their latest in a long line of seminal singles, Future in a Past Life, while etching into the nostalgic hallmarks with his indelibly scintillating sonic signature which scribes beyond contemporary trends.

The title alone is enough to spark a profound meditation on its poetic meaning; when you sink into the release, you’ll start to swim in the temperate, tonally seraphic spectres of reflection, artfully amalgamated by the LA songwriter, producer, composer and multi-instrumentalist, who has become revered for his stylistically expansive body of work.

Future in a Past Life, caged within his third LP, Headless, may be composed of different aural anatomy from his previous releases, but fans who came to adore Clayton for his past work will find their appreciation for the visionary renewed by the sense of spirituality which drifts between the instrumentals in the polished production.

Clearly still humble after his music being sought after by Netflix, NBC, ABC and the Tribeca Film Festival, Clayton synthesised straight from the soul with Future in a Past Life, which fuses the arcane emotive air of Cigarettes After Sex with the kicks and grooves of Django Django.

Future in a Past Life was officially released on July 19th; stream the single on Spotify now.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Miss Terious exhibited the power and pain of alter-egos in ‘Misty’

Miss Terious’ latest single, Misty, bridges the gap between the tender indie pop magnetism of boygenius, the artful expression of Kate Bush, and the gothic sombre glamour reminiscent of Evanescence. This coalescence is perfectly interwoven in the arcane atmosphere of the indie piano pop ballad, where the sparse instrumentals allow Miss Terious’ emotionally heightened vocals to spectrally overpower the production.

Each verse tightens the heartstrings as you become consumed by the raw emotion conveyed through the confession of how pseudonyms can deliver confidence while concealing the person behind the greatness. The deeply felt pain of being wanted through association rather than true connection resonates throughout Misty; anyone who has experienced this pain will find the ultimate consolation within the candour.

Miss Terious is a British-born alternative musician from the West Midlands, known for her originated mix of electronic and classical instruments. Since debuting with her EP Bleeding Green in 2020, she has tackled topics such as abuse, mental health, and her separation from the ballet industry. In 2022, she was honoured as BBC Introducing’s Artist of the Month for Coventry and Warwickshire and performed at the Backyard Festival in Leamington Spa. Her contribution to the music scene earned her the Local Hero Award for AIM Awards 2022.

After hearing Misty, there isn’t an industry accolade we wouldn’t see her as fit for.

Misty was officially released on July 19; stream the single on Spotify now.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

CARLOTTA answered existential questions with etherealism in her debut single, Angel

Fans of The Neighbourhood, Lana Del Ray, and boygenius have a brand-new emissary of ethereally-hued indie pop to affix to their radar after CARLOTTA, an openly avowed poetic symphonist to the dreamers and lovers, released her debut single, Angel.

Her artful approach to poignantly reflecting on how love, faith, and self-discovery often intersect as we try to comprehend our intrinsic identity while grappling with external factors capable of knocking our authenticity out of kilter tracks the highs and lows through the juxtaposing transcendent and turbulent tones.

The singer-songwriter’s vocal register is rendered with the same raw evocative power as Angel Olsen as she pours her heartbroken candour on the instrumentals that allow Angel to become so much more than your average lovelorn hit. CARLOTTA existentially questions what it means to believe in something that has dematerialised and how possible it is to find hope in desolation.

“The message behind ‘Angel’ is that even when love is hard or fails to last, it’s important to believe that it exists in the world and most importantly, that you remain a believer in the goodness of people despite your heartbreak. It’s a song about faith and holding onto nothing except this exact moment.”

Angel was officially released on June 6th; stream the single on Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

In Conversation with London’s Queen of Indie Candour, Lucy Wroe

Today, we’re thrilled to welcome Lucy Wroe to A&R Factory, a paragon of authenticity in London’s indie music scene. As we sit down amidst the anticipation of her latest single, “Heartbeat Wipers,” set to grace our ears on April 5th, Lucy offers us a glimpse into the emotional odyssey that shaped this deeply personal track. From the lingering echoes of a past relationship to the artistic metamorphosis it spurred, join us as we delve into the heart of Lucy’s musical journey, exploring the intricate layers of her latest creation and the ripples she aims to create in the music industry.

Lucy Wroe, welcome to A&R Factory; we’d love to dive into the emotional themes of your upcoming single, Heartbeat Wipers, which is due for release on April 5th. What does the single lyrically explore?

Thanks for chatting to me about my upcoming single! Heartbeat Wipers is definitely the most emotional song I’ve written. It’s really about having to move on from someone and feeling the empty space that is left behind. It’s partly coming to terms with that loss but also accepting that you’ll always carry a part of them with you. Some of the verse lyrics are more specifically about that person still existing in your life but in a different way, and having to resist that weak spot of returning to them; ‘You are the water seeping through the cracks, the wolf watching the door’.

The single feels incredibly personal. Could you share the story or inspiration behind Heartbeat Wipers and what makes it so special to you?

Yes I have put a lot of myself in this one, it’s about a long-term relationship that ended last year. The person in question is also a long-time collaborator of mine who I still work with now. It was a very strange time because we agreed we needed to move on to separate spaces, but equally knew we needed to continue working together. So we’ve been muddling our way through this shift in our relationship and working out how to make music together while living separate lives. In a way, having to carry on working with them made me swallow a lot of the grief I felt in this period, so when I started writing ‘Heartbeat Wipers’ it was a real outlet of all this pent-up sadness, confusion, loss and frustration.

The lyric ‘Same goodbye a million times, and I…’ seems to be quite poignant. Could you elaborate on its significance in the song and the emotional journey it represents?

This was the big lyric for me, when I came out with it I realised how affected I had actually been by this relationship ending. It’s the statement that encapsulates the whole meaning of the song; feeling like an essential part of you has been taken away, but having to see them every day and maintain peace between you. Of course this was a decision we made, because I didn’t want to lose our friendship or working relationship. But working alongside them, then walking away, feels like leaving each other over and over again. Like the ending is repeated and the feeling of loss is fresh each time.

What do you hope your listeners take away from Heartbeat Wipers?

I hope this song can act as a catharsis for anyone out there who has experienced this loss, although it’s quite a rare situation haha! But it can also relate to any feelings of loneliness and change; I always feel it’s good to confront these things and get it all out (sometimes everyone needs a good cry). I actually have a playlist called ‘Have a good cry, go on’, because I have a bad habit of bottling things up and pushing on, until I feel it all coming to the forefront. The songs on there definitely help me get it all out, so maybe Heartbeat Wipers can become an official part of everyone’s ‘have a good cry, go on’ playlists! Who knows you might just feel totally refreshed.

You mentioned that each of your releases is completely fresh. How does Heartbeat Wipers represent your evolution as an artist compared to your previous work?

Mm I love to change things up. This song is the first I will release with Philipp Koerver, who I have played alongside since 2018 but never properly written with, so the style is quite different. My previous releases have gone from folky acoustic stuff with my first single and EP, to the smoother jazzy EP ‘Same World’, to punchy produced pop with ‘Better’ and more lofi-pop with my recent EP ‘WAVES’. ‘Heartbeat Wipers’ is almost a combination of all these influences, with some very lofi/indie production styles and samples partnered with those chill indie instrumental foundations. Creatively I feel I’ve definitely evolved a lot with production and structure; I love how this song develops, it’s so dynamic but also really tender and there’s a lot of detail throughout. I’ve become much less formulaic with my songwriting over time as I’m actively embracing that natural flow of creativity these days and thinking less about what’s popular.

Can you walk us through the creative process of Heartbeat Wipers, particularly the detailed production and structure?

There’s so much to say here I’d love to do a whole interview just on the production elements!! So I was in the back of an Uber one evening near Dalston, stuck in traffic in torrential rain. All I could hear was the heavy rain on the roof, and rhythmic windscreen wipers which I captured in a voice-note, threw into a session and played an acoustic guitar riff over. I wrote the first two verses straight away and took this to Philipp (co-writer and producer), as I knew this track would suit his production style really well. We spent a few months working into the evenings at his flat and in the studio, building on my demo starting with the original guitar line which quickly changed into a synth. Each section has these layers which come and go and they’re all so unique to the moment. Like the end of the second verse with that growing bass and synth-wash; that was inspired by a moment in ‘And Dream of Sheep’ by Kate Bush. Also in the third verse with the fleeting reverb tail on the vocals or the dancing guitar patterns that enter halfway through. The whole end section with the building vocal layers was re-structured about three times because it never had the impact it needed. In the end, we scrapped it entirely and started from the most basic layers, then began weaving together vocal lines until it grew to the highest point we could get it. One of the most inspired details we added right at the end is the B in the bass that steps up the big ending, it hits such a lamenting note there and it always gives me that swelling feeling in my chest, it really made the whole end section work.

The forthcoming music video sounds fascinating. What was the concept behind the cinematics of the video, and how does it complement the song?

Yes! So excited to release this video. It was filmed at GOOT studios in Dalston, really close to where I captured the wipers sample last year. Max, who runs GOOT, is an amazing videographer who I met last year and knew I’d love to work with on this project. The concept was to create a vision of what it’s like in my head, to capture a real sense of isolation and melancholy. Each main shot shows me in a static pose under a hazy blue light, and gradually zooms in over the course of the video, ending on an extreme close-up of my face for the final line. I wanted it to reflect the gradual build-up of the song, so as the shots zoom in, the edits also get quicker. Only one of the shots shows me singing and that is direct to the camera, as we wanted it to feel more like the viewer is seeing a private moment in my head, with one shot voicing my thoughts. It represents more of a feeling and a moment in time rather than a narrative. The blue light was essential to get the feeling across too, so it’s very dark and focused, as I imagined it would be inside my head at the time I was feeling all these things.

You’ve expressed a desire to support change in the industry for independent artists. What are the positive changes you want to see reflected in the music industry?

Absolutely, I’ve come to realise that when you first join a music scene, especially in London, it’s easy to get dragged into the ethos of ‘take every gig, listen to everyone’s advice, do everything because you never know’. But in truth, that’s an environment tailored to those who act as ‘gatekeepers’ and hold their status by making you think you’re at their will. Especially as a woman in the industry, it’s easy to go along with things and feel you have to endure them just for a potential breakthrough. I want to be an advocate for inclusive spaces, and for spaces that allow autonomy for independent musicians. Fair pay is a massive topic; exposure is not payment, and some promoters have just become booking agents, pushing all the actual promotion onto the artist. Social media can be a great thing, but I want it to be an additional tool, not the core of a musician’s life. It just feels like there is a chasm forming between the top 5% and everyone else, which is dangerous for artists in my position. I especially want to see streaming platforms value every stream equally, so if there are artists who have worked hard to grow a regular listenership, they will get the payment they deserve even if the algorithm doesn’t catapult them onto ‘New Music Friday’. Independent blogs, just like this one, and sites like Bandcamp, represent the industry that I want to support. They help you build a real, lasting community, and give you the encouragement and support you need to carry on making music.

Looking ahead, are there any upcoming projects you’re particularly excited about?

Always! I’ve been working with my good friend and producer Tom B on a couple of new things – both very different! The next release we are planning is a world away from ‘Heartbeat Wipers’; it’s actually fuelled by my anger about the modern music industry haha. It’s inspired by more electronic and experimental artists like Sophie, Charli XCX and Caroline Polachek. It’s wildly dynamic and uses a lot of vocal effects and processed samples, so that should be a fun release! We are also finishing a chill, dream-pop style song, more reminiscent of Wave ‘22. And then who knows! Hopefully a lot of exciting visuals, some gigs and summer festivals. But for now, Heartbeat Wipers is occupying my entire existence. I’m so excited to get it out there and I hope it reaches new people who can love it as much as I do…

Stream Heartbeat Wipers on all major platforms from April 5th.

Follow Lucy Wroe on Instagram and Facebook.

Interview by Amelia Vandergast

Starleen cinematically exhibited what it means to be human in her debut art-pop LP, To Give In

After making her art-pop debut in 2020 with her beguilingly dark EP, Life is Strange, Starleen came into her cinematically ethereal own through the unveiling of her ceremonially humanistic LP, To Give In.

To Give In explores our desires to succumb to the forces keeping us on our knees while celebrating our unwavering determination to endeavour the myriad of storms that our chaotic world unleashes upon us. With soundscapes that spill a jarring sense of unease around the assuredly celestial vocals that moodily paint the imperfection of the human experience around the pulsating indietronica rhythms, anyone who accepts the idiosyncratic beauty of the human experience will find a wealth of resonance across the seven soundscapes.

All too often, lyricism paints humanity, as a collective, as what we wish we were, what we aim for; an endless series of pretences held up by scarcely anyone for any enduring length of time before perfectionism becomes a crushing weight. Starleen breaks the mould by upholding the truth behind the facades. Paired with the cathartically artful structuring of the soundscapes, her bold daringness to encapsulate the most harrowing facets of the human psyche in To Give In unleashes a wealth of emotion.

For me, the highlight of the LP came in the form of the penultimate single, Out of Touch, which efficaciously reflects the multi-sensory nature of disassociation. Before the album concludes on the tranquility of the reverb-drenched melodies in From Myself. Any fans of London Grammar and Chelsea Wolfe won’t want to skip it. Actually, that goes for the entire LP. It’s officially in my collection of sad girl playlist staples.

“With this project, I knew I wanted to create a dark world. The message I try to convey is that in life, we have choices. Although going back may tempting, we have to move forward. People and their strength to overcome life’s battles always has been an inspiration to me.

Lyrically I have always gravitated towards artists like Nina Simone, Tom Waits, and Leonard Cohen because they talk about what it truly means to be human. And that is something I try to bring in my music.”

To Give In is available to stream on Spotify.

Keep up to date with new releases via TikTok and Instagram.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Fleeting artfully revived the alt-90s take on dream pop with his latest single, Enso

The angular indie ambience in the latest single, Enso, from the Philadelphian bedroom producer Fleeting is something for every alt-90s fan to get excited about.

Beyond the Gorillaz and Radiohead influences are the hazy textures of dream pop and Slowdive-Esque shoegaze guitars spliced with the trippy discord of the downtempo artfully placed breakbeats that keep you centred in the mostly instrumental mix. For even more catharsis, turn to the other 24 artfully orchestrated hits in his 2022 self-titled album. We know we will. Repeatedly.

Enso is now available to stream on Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

LJ Gomez proves that patience is a romantic virtue in his latest alt-indie single, Soon

LJ Gomez

Austin, TX alternative artist, LJ Gomez, let the soul pour in his hazily sweet latest lo-fi single, Soon. Fans of Radiohead, Bon Iver, Ye, and James Blake will want to bathe in the trippy tape-effect saturated guitar tones that complement the glitchy trip-hop beats.

By opening with the lyric, “is it possible to miss somebody that you never knew”, you’re instantly disarmed by LG Gomez’s candour and artful vulnerability. Even if the question was hypothetical, the answer is a resounding yes. There’s nothing quite as melancholy stirring as needing someone that doesn’t yet exist in your peripheral vision. And on the other hand, there’s nothing quite as sweet as the grasp of the belief that the right one is right around the corner.

Check out LJ Gomez on SoundCloud. 

Review by Amelia Vandergast