CURIOUS FOR MUSIC: FRESH HITS (10.04.26)
- Apr 10
- 2 min read

Welcome to our bi-weekly round-up, where we spotlight the freshest releases, emerging voices, and genre-pushing music from across the globe. Whether it's a chart-shaker or an underground gem, if it moves us, it's here. Bringing you music that you should be curious about!
Walter Miller ‘Good Morning LA’
If you’ve ever wanted a rock song that could double as a stadium anthem and a personal diary entry, “Good Morning LA” is your jam. Miller’s vocals soar, the guitars swell, and somehow you feel like you’re both front-row at a concert and sitting across from him in a quiet café — all in three and a half minutes.
A Is For Atom ‘Out Of The Blue’
“Out of the Blue” is indie rock with a soft spot. It’s got that polished, easygoing vibe, but underneath there’s a whole swirl of feelings waiting to hit you mid-chorus. Think late-night thoughts, old memories, and that sudden moment of clarity you didn’t see coming. A Is For Atom make it sound simple — but it hits deeper the longer you sit with it.
Heather Ferguson ‘Broken Horned Kudu’
This track sneaks up on you — one moment it’s reflective and tender, the next it’s lifting you with lively rhythms and vibrant ensemble work. Ferguson manages to make jazz feel both sophisticated and totally accessible, like a story told with a beat you can’t help but nod along to.
DBsock ‘worse’
With “worse,” DBsock turns heartbreak into an almost meditative experience, like lying on your bedroom floor but somehow feeling seen. The production whispers while the lyrics bite, looping the obsessive thoughts we all know too well, and somehow making emotional detachment sound both tragic and strangely satisfying. It’s alt-R&B for the overthinkers, the late-night text senders, and anyone who’s ever loved a little too hard.
Marcello Cordova ‘You Got This’
If “You Got This” were a person, it’d be the friend who shows up with your favorite latte and a megaphone shouting, “You’ve got this!” Marcello Cordova and Evie Lizarraga trade verses with effortless charm over soaring guitars, punchy drums, and synth flourishes that somehow feel both intimate and epic. It’s motivational pop-rock that makes you want to fist-pump your way through Monday.
Dailla ‘lalalove me’
Imagine Olivia Rodrigo and Taylor Swift crashed into a rock concert, and Dailla was the DJ of emotions, boom, that’s “lalalove me”. Her vocals flip from vulnerable to fierce, the guitar motif sticks in your head like glue, and by the end, you’re cheering for yourself just as much as you are for her.