• Cupons – Turn Her Down

    Girls in the Garage volume 6

    The Girls in the Garage compilation series unearthed many long forgotten songs from the 1960s, all sung and performed by girl bands. They showed that a group of women back then could release great pop songs without the involvement of that guy and his wall of sound. One of my favourites from the series is Turn Her Down, a 1962 song by Cupons (think The Crystals going lo-fi punk), who may have released only one other song. I’m not the only one intrigued and someone else found a bit more and also discovered this ‘male version’ of the song.  

    Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

  • Ryli – I Think I Need You Around

    Ryli - Come And Get Me

    I keep forgetting about Oakland, California’s Ryli and then when I listen to their debut album Come And Get Me (released last June on Dandy Boy Records) again I remember how good the four-piece really is. I Think I Need You Around, which had previously been released as a single in 2024, is my favourite song from the album. The perfect pop reminds a bit of Camera Obscura, as if that band had grown up next to the San Francisco Bay rather than the river Clyde. If they keep putting out songs like this, I do really need Ryli around.

    Bandcamp | Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

  • Assistant – Flowers

    Flowers by Assistant day side

    Look, I like good lyrics as much as the next music fan. But for me the biggest catch of Assistant’s Flowers is the “do do do do do do do do” throughout this song. The three-piece from Brighton, England lists Felt, Stereolab and the Field Mice as its influences but at least on this song (Flowers appears on a split 7” with Manchester’s Goodbye Wudaokou) sounds a lot more laid back: a simple acoustic indiepop song that you can just imagine listening to while walking along Brighton beach at night. While humming “do do do do do do do do”.

    Bandcamp | Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

  • Yasmine Hamdan – Shmaali شمالي

    Yasmine Hamdan - I remember I forget بنسى وبتذك

    In its overview of the best global albums of 2025, The Guardian calls Lebanese singer-songwriter Yasmine Hamdan “a staple of the region’s indie music scene since the 1990s”. I hadn’t heard of her until recently and I am writing this from an Arab country, so double shame on me. Shmaali ( شمالي in Arabic, meaning North) is heavily rooted in Arab music – again, I can’t claim to be a connaisseur – but also with clear influences from dub and electronic music. It is very good and should be a good starting point for a musical journey through the region.

    Bandcamp | Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

  • The Chills – Pink Frost

    The Chills - Kaleidoscope World

    Happy 2026! This year it has been three decades since I left my small hometown for a much larger university town. Which meant I was finally able to see decent bands play live, the first of which were Dunedin, New Zealand’s The Chills. I knew only one song, Pink Frost, that someone from Canada had put on a mixtape. I don’t remember much of the concert and it took me years to fully appreciate The Chills, but this dreamy psychedelic song with its solid drum rhythm (as the song’s Wikipedia entry rightly calls it) remains my favourite song of theirs.

    Bandcamp | Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

  • Count Jaakola – Boy Bingo

    Count Jaakola - Kind Eyes

    From one Finugrian female singer to another. Tiia Jaakola, the woman behind Count Jaakola, is Finnish but lives in London where among other things she is a touring member of Allo Darlin’. That’s great for her and for them, but musically Count Jaakola doesn’t share a lot with Allo Darlin’. It sounds more generic female-fronted indie, with quite a bit of variation between the songs. Boy Bingo (“It doesn’t matter if you’re Tom, Ben, Trevor or whatever”) sounds like of a less dance-y Saint Etienne and is my favourite song from her debut album, Kind Eyes.

    Bandcamp | Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

  • Mariin K – Beach

    Mariin K - Rose Skin

    Mariin K is a project from Mariin Kallikorm, who plays guitar in the band of trip hop musician Tricky. But it is also a band who share a drummer with fellow Estonians Pia Fraus, whom I wrote about earlier, and who are a much better musical reference, for they both fish from the same dreampop pond. I’ve been pretty obsessed with Mariin K lately (their debut album Rose Skin was released earlier this year on Seksound, Pia Fraus’s own label) and with Beach in particular, which keeps popping up as a background sound in my head, like a beautiful dream.

    Bandcamp | Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

  • Rocketship – Hey, Hey Girl

    Rocketship - Hey, Hey Girl

    I’m perfectly fine with today’s digital-first music world, if only for the convenience of not having to carry boxes of heavy vinyl in yet another international move. But I do sometimes miss the evenings where I would continuously play 7” singles. Such as this 1994 debut single by California then Oregon’s Rocketship, who later went on to release a really fine full album on Slumberland. It’s less shoegaze-y and more clear pop (Unrest, anyone?) than their later work, but just as good, and I’m glad I can still listen to it on all the online platforms.

    Bandcamp | Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

    In true 7″ fashion, the Bandcamp link (and embed) includes both songs from the A-side of the single. But that’s okay as Naomi & Me, about Galaxie 500’s Naomi Yang, is also a really good song.

  • Eux Autres – Another Christmas At Home

    Eux Autres - Another Christmas At Home

    Yeah life got busy, but it’s Christmas and while I’m in a place where they don’t know it’s Christmas time at all, I found the time to write about what has been my favourite Christmas song for about two decades. Eux Autres is a brother-sister duo from California (later the drummer from the Aislers Set became an adopted family member) who sing catchy jangly indiepop, with this sarcastic Christmas-themed song being one of my favourites. Even when listening to it through my AirPods, it’s hard to resist clapping along. “Dad slides a fiver over / Play me Hotel California, little one”

    Bandcamp | Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

  • Saint Etienne – The Last Time

    Saint Etienne - International

    I only became a fan of Saint Etienne gradually, joining their fan base late, via the side entrance. Over the years though, the London three piece has become one of my favourite bands, putting out many of my all time favourite indie dance songs. And now, after a tour next year, the band is quitting. They end on a high note though, for I really enjoyed their last album, of which The Last Time is a very fitting closing song. “Now I′m really glad we made the trip // Because only three survived”. Thank you for all the awesome music.

    Bandcamp | Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

  • Samuel S.C. – Evergreen

    Samuel S.C. & POHGOH - split single

    There is a lot of good power pop coming out of the United States these days: Joe Cusumaro, Strange Passage and now Samuel S.C. A five piece from Virginia, just outside the country’s capital. Like so many bands in the genre it’s really about a few songs that really stand out for me. But that wasn’t a problem when I fell in love with Magnapop’s Merry decades ago (this reminds me a lot of that) and isn’t a problem on this very catchy Evergreen (from a split single with Florida’s POHGOH) either.

    Bandcamp | Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

    The YouTube link is to a live version.

  • Dead Moon – Until It Rains

    Dead Moon - Strange Pray Tell

    Ever since I mentioned Dead Moon the other day I’ve had Until it Rains in my head. My favourite song of the Portland three-piece and also the only one I actually remember. When I discovered the garage rock band through Dutch radio in the mid 1990s the fun fact about them was that the two singers were grandparents – which was extremely rare in an era when musicians in their 50s were ancient. Three decades on and Dead Moon is two-thirds dead (only Toody Cole is still alive and making music) but lives on in my head through this great song.

    Bandcamp | Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

  • Zea & Drumband Hallelujah Makkum – Pine En Tiid II

    Zes & Drumband Hallelujah Makkum - In Lichem Fol Beloften

    Zea, once a five-piece indie rock band from the Netherlands, buried indie rock years ago and for almost two decades has been the experimental solo project of Arnold de Boer, now also the singer of equally experimental punk band The Ex. On most songs on Zea’s latest album, Arnold is joined by the marching band of his home village, who on this song in particular provide a rhythm-heavy background to Arnold singing some kind of ballad in his native Frisian — a minority language from the north of the country. It works really, really well.

    Bandcamp | Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

  • Talulah Gosh – I Can’t Get No Satisfaction (Thank God)

    Talulah Gosh - Backwash

    Twee pop legends Heavenly are playing shows again, and they’ll even release a new album, their first in three decades. But before Heavenly there was Talulah Gosh, with largely the same line-up, who recorded some of the earliest – and best – twee pop songs. Of which I Can’t Get No Satisfaction (Thank God) is one of my favourites. The feminist anthem certainly has the best title. “Some of my best friends are bastards like you / At least they’re not neurotics too”.

    Bandcamp | Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

  • Olivia’s World – Sourgum

    Olivia's World - Sourgum

    A school friend who knew more about music than I did once taught me that punk was music that sounded like they were tearing things down. Well, about Olivia’s World he was wrong. For this Sydney, Australia band’s music is very much punk yet also sounds a lot of fun: like a party, or, at worst, getting slightly drunk to forget about a recent break-up. And then remind yourself of the good things in the world. Such as this song.

    Bandcamp | Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

  • Haley Henderickx & Max García Conover – Boars

    Haley Henderickx & Max García Conover - What of Our Nature

    Indie folk is a genre that, a few songs at a time, doesn’t easily get boring. I’m not exactly a connoisseur, but Oregon’s Haley Henderickx is a big name and here she is joined by Max García Conover, a Woody Guthrie inspired singer-songwriter from Maine (add Vashti Bunyan as a reference for Henderickx). Apparently, they recorded the songs for their collaboration straight to tape in a barn. I was a Mountain Goats fan in the 1990s, so I like the sound of that, and combined with the two vocals, in this Boars makes a pretty great song.

    Bandcamp | Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

  • Sharp Pins – Queen of Globes and Mirrors

    Sharp Pins - Queens of Globes and Mirrors

    I mentally file Sharp Pins somewhere between Elephant 6 and Guided By Voices – the voice of the band’s sole member Kai Slater reminds me of that of Robert Pollard. That’s the What does it sound like? question out of the way. I was a bit surprised that K Records released this, as it seems a little too ‘rock’ for the Olympia, WA label. But then, Sharp Pins does make some really fine songs, such as this Queens of Globes and Mirros.

    Bandcamp | Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

  • Rod McKuen – Soldiers Who Want To Be Heroes

    Rod McKuen - Soldiers Who Want To Be Heroes

    Soldiers Who Want to Be Heroes by singer-songwriter-poet Rod McKuen is probably the only song I still like that I discovered through my parents; a 7” single of it was among their pretty small (and very odd) collection. I loved this song as a kid, for even as a nine-year-old who could only speak a few words of English, I understood its anti-war message. Almost forty years later and a decade after McKuen’s passing I still like the song – and still think war is a pretty terrible idea.

    Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

  • Seventeen Years Old And Berlin Wall – A Flower Of The Ground

    Seventeen Years Old And Berlin Wall - Act

    Seventeen Years Old And Berlin Wall (or 17歳とベルリンの壁, which I found helps finding them on streaming platforms) is one of the oddest band names – even for Japan, I feel obliged to add, the country that brought us Cruyff in the Bedroom. That also happens to be a good reference for this band’s music, except Seventeen etc adds a few extra layers of shoegaze – so many that it becomes almost impossible to see one’s own shoes. Kinda like Hartfield then, or some early Rocketship, if you want a non-Japanese reference. Oh, and like those bands, it is really good.

    Bandcamp | Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

  • Lightheaded – Same Drop

    Lightheaded - Thinking, Dreaming, Scheming

    “I was scared / It was too much fun”. Hey, that’s me. Also me: the slightly awkward but happy way Lightheaded singer and guitar player Stephen was dancing to their own songs when I saw the band play live in Paris earlier this year. And also me: the music of Lightheaded and this song in particular, which reminds me of The Aislers Set (Alicia Vanden Heuvel of said band co-produced the album). It “makes my heart skip, shimmer, and stop”.

    Bandcamp | Tidal | Spotify | YouTube

Meta stuff

There’s some kind of About page at the bottom of the first post. There is an Instagram account and also a Bluesky account and a playlist on Tidal. I am Martijn and this is my personal-professional website.