Showing posts with label HIGHDRIVE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HIGHDRIVE. Show all posts

Tuesday, 5 May 2026

Kidsmoke - Loosey - The Slackers - Tangients - Jody King Ft. Larry Cordle - Highdrive

Photo - Tom Mason
Kidsmoke - I’m Always Getting Carried Away.

Kidsmoke return with 'I’m Always Getting Carried Away', a shimmering new single and their first release since their acclaimed debut album 'A Vision In The Dark'. Written on New Year’s Day, the track carries a sense of urgency and renewal as the band step into a new chapter. Built around the dual meaning of its title, the song moves between moments of being swept up in feeling and something more physical and final. Bright, melodic and quietly weighty, it pairs the band’s dreamlike indie with reflections on memory, mortality and the passing of time.

Vocalist and guitarist Lance Williams explains: “The lyrics came really quickly and are built around the song’s title, playing with the meaning of being ‘carried away’, whether it be emotionally or physically.” The song was shaped in part by Williams’ work visiting a dementia support group, an experience that brought the fragility of memory into focus. “It was both beautiful and heartbreaking,” he says. “It made me appreciate how our memories bind us together… I think I was trying to highlight how precious the little moments are.”

On the music, bassist James Stickels adds: “I know I wanted it to sound like a song I’d of written in the early 00’s, so I was channeling The Strokes, Bloc Party, Futureheads sort of thing… It’s deliberately simple, written from a place of nostalgia and longing for simpler times.” The chorus opens out into something moving and uplifting, shaped by a gently lilting diminished chord that carries a hint of George Harrison. Layered backing vocals, including the band’s children, draw out the harmony and create a real standout moment that adds even more beauty.

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Loosey - We See We.

Loosey recently announced a new LP and now they are back with a brand new video from their upcoming "A Retrospective: 2023 - 2025" LP. Following the tragic end of shooting star punk greats New York Hounds, Loosey began as a coping mechanism for a pair of friends with a shared love of rock ‘n’ roll-transforming a time for mourning to celebration of life. The resulting ideas took the big stomp of Slade, the classic power pop of Teenage Fanclub, and riffy pub rock like AC/DC and packaged it all with a DIY aesthetic, creating finely-crafted, hard-rockin’ confections with an undercurrent of punk grit, ready-made for downing an icy one during a good old-fashioned singalong.

Once Loosey began to take life, the earworms added a healthy dose of stage swagger, catching on quickly with audiences. Their reputation for owning the stage quickly lead to fly-in gigs across the states, shows with the Templars, The Marked Men, Sheer Mag, Nothing, RIXE, Murphy’s Law, Haywire, The Chisel, in addition to touring stints with Beton Arme, Angel Dust, Alvilda and others.

The band recorded several tracks in 2025 at Studio G in Brooklyn, NY with Daniel Schlett at the helm for engineering mastering and mixing. Respected artist and musical journeyman Matt Sweeney (Chavez, Zwan, Iggy Pop band) shared co-production credits with the band as well, adding guitar to the track “Need You Baby.” The result is twelve new tracks coming out in North America on TKO Records on May 8th. The band also just announced a release show and a run of shows with Generación Suicida.


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The Slackers - The Whole World Was In On It.

We are a week late in sharing this video, however The Slackers are to impressive for Beehive Candy not to do a little catching up! Background... NYC ska/reggae legends The Slackers have released a brand new music video for the single "The Whole World Was In On It!" The video was shot by Eric Durkin & Alyssa Tennyson, edited by Pat Byrne, and completed with post-production & creative direction by Rock and Roll Creative. This song comes from the NYC ska/reggae legends' latest EP, Money is King.

“The Whole World Was In On It” is about the events that leave their mark on your life, and it was written by guitarist Agent Jay, who says: "The summer of ’77…there was a fire in my building in Queens, Elvis died, and New York fell into a legendary blackout. In my mind, as a kid, all these events happened on the same night, and were all related. The blackout caused Elvis to die, and my building to catch fire...which caused the blackout, etc. Everything was connected…the whole world was in on it!

But of course, Elvis did not die during the blackout...although I’m not sure [of] the night of the fire in my building. Things aren’t as connected as we’d like them to be. Nothing makes sense anymore."

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Tangients - Embers (Album).

Tangients, the collaborative project of Chelsea Hope Ray and Be Hussey, unveil their debut album, Embers — a deeply introspective and sonically immersive body of work that navigates the intersections of time, memory, loss, and renewal. At its core, Embers is an emotional reckoning; a sweeping meditation on the fragile persistence of hope. The album traces the arc of a wounded identity in flux — capturing heartbreak, self-reflection, and the quiet resilience required to endure. It is, as Ray describes, “a cry for nostalgia in its most yearning form as well as an awakening to the unknown.” 

Across its runtime, Embers explores the tension between past and future, ultimately grounding itself in a singular, universal imperative: survival. Much of the album came together with an almost uncanny immediacy. Songs and lyrics emerged instinctively, as if waiting to be uncovered, later revealing themselves as reflections — and at times, premonitions — of lived experience. In hindsight, Embers carries a darker emotional weight, shaped by a period marked by personal struggle and disorientation. “There were moments where I was letting life happen to me instead of creating my own direction,” Ray reflects. “This record documents that, but it also marks the beginning of choosing a different path.” 

The album opens with “We Are Listening,” a standout track that encapsulates the project’s emotional and sonic scope. Built from a synth foundation provided by Hussey, the song evolves into something both sacred and spectral — “like going to church in a cemetery,” Ray notes. Anchored by the haunting tones of a 1963 Hammond A-100 organ, the track carries a deeply personal resonance, serving as an homage to Ray’s late grandmother, a lifelong church musician. The opening lyric, drawn from her grandfather’s familiar refrain — “Feelin’ like a million. If I felt any better, I would have to take a pill for it.” — grounds the song in lived memory, while its sweeping arrangement and mid-song tonal shift deepen its sense of longing and return. 


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Jody King feat. Larry Cordle - Jet Airliner.

Jody King shared the story behind the recording: “During my college days, a buddy and I were hanging out in his parents’ basement listening to music. ‘Jet Airliner’ was playing, and one of us picked up a guitar and started playing the opening repetitive riff. After a few minutes of messing around, it had morphed into bluegrass mode. The chorus section was perfect for improvisational soloing and made for a smoking bluegrass tune, accented by the signature riff and those well-known, catchy lyrics.

I’d always loved The Steve Miller Band and that song, but playing it this way really reinforced that love. I’ve wanted to record it ever since. Fast forward a few decades, and after working with Larry Cordle for years, I knew he had a soft spot for this era and style of music. He also has the voice and instinct to pull it off. I was thrilled when he agreed to do it, and even more thrilled to hear his performance on the track. My hope is that folks listening will appreciate the same love that Larry and I share for this music—and the same excitement that a couple of college buddies once felt in that basement years ago.”

Cordle added: “When Jody King played me the track for ‘Jet Airliner,’ I was absolutely knocked out. What a great idea to take this Steve Miller rock standard from the ’70s and reimagine it as a driving bluegrass number. I knew I was listening to something special. What I didn’t know at the time was that he had played every instrument on the track except the mandolin. He left that detail out when he played me the song. When I asked who the other musicians were, he said, ‘Well, I played the bass and guitar parts,’ as if to suggest anyone could do that. It’s remarkable that this man could be this proficient on all these instruments.


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Photo - Derek Bremner
Highdrive - Passing By.

Brighton (UK) five-piece Highdrive have shared their third single 'Passing By', out today on Venn Records. The new single follows the release of recent tracks 'Something I Said' and 'Cherry' and arrives ahead of upcoming shows in Brighton and London, plus festival appearances at 2000 Trees and Brighton Psych Fest. Highdrive have quickly become a fixture of the south coast live scene, scoring early shows alongside Marmozets, English Teacher, Do Nothing, TTSSFU, Deadletter, Welly and Glare.

On latest single 'Passing By', their live intensity hits head-on. Scorched guitar lines lurch and coil around Lucas Leitch’s soaring vocal, tracing the messy fallout of a relationship. As big, hooky moments force their way through layers of distortion and tension, the song builds to its breathless finale.

Speaking on the track, the band said: "Passing By is a song about grief, focusing on remembering the bad things and the reasons why the relationship ended in the first place, rather than looking back through rose-tinted glasses."

Forming in 2024 with a mutual appreciation for acts including Deftones, The Jesus and Mary Chain and DIIV, those disparate influences have carved out a unique lane for the Brighton upstarts as they go from strength to strength.

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Wednesday, 18 February 2026

Col Gerrard - Viva Los Villains - The Krickets - HIGHDRIVE - Konradsen feat. Angie McMahon - Fantastic Cat

Col Gerrard - Col Gerrard (Album).

Col Gerrard is a London-born singer-songwriter whose work is rooted in classic songwriting and emotional honesty. Shaped by a life spent moving between places and experiences, his music reflects a deep appreciation for melody, musicianship, and storytelling. Influenced by soul, classic pop and timeless songwriting, Gerrard’s songs feel personal and direct, focused on melody and emotion.

His self-titled debut album is a twelve-track body of work that explores the emotional complexity of relationships and the heaviness they can leave behind in their wake. Written from a place of reflection, the record moves through themes of connection, miscommunication, longing, and the passing of time. Many of the songs sit with uncertainty, tracing patterns that repeat in love and life, the waiting, the holding on, and the slow realisation that some answers never become clear. The songwriter explains, “These songs came from looking back at moments I didn’t fully understand at the time. Writing them was a way of making peace with the parts of love that don’t always make sense.”

Recorded across several London studios including Abbey Road Studios, Metropolis and Kore, the album was entirely engineered and produced by long-time collaborator and Grammy-nominated producer Chris Potter (The Rolling Stones, U2, The Verve). The album delivers a piano-driven, emotionally charged sound, blending soulful, raspy vocals with organic instrumentation. It’s filled with driving guitars, upbeat percussion, and a touch of nostalgia, delivering something that is cinematic yet feel-good. Col shares, “There’s a lot of energy in these songs, but they’re coming from real places. That felt important to me on this record.” 


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Viva Los Villains - Hunter's Moon.

Rising from the coastal streets of Chichester (England), Viva Los Villains are carving out their own lane in the UK alt-rock scene, and their latest single Hunter’s Moon might be their most magnetic release yet. Blending alt rock grit, indie introspection, and a subtle folk-rock warmth, Hunter’s Moon captures that moment when love slips through your fingers, not with explosive chaos, but with a slow-burning realization. It’s raw. It’s reflective. And it lingers long after the final chord fades.

Built on distorted guitars, driving rhythms, and emotionally exposed vocals, the track walks the line between vulnerability and defiance. Lyrically, it dives into the aftermath of a relationship that once burned bright: “Don’t call me baby / One time it was love…”

There’s no melodrama here, just honesty. The repetition in the chorus feels almost hypnotic, mirroring the emotional loop of going back to someone you know you probably shouldn’t. The phrase “living rent free” hits with modern sharpness, grounding the poetic imagery of the Hunter’s Moon in present-day emotional reality.

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Photo - Jessica Long
The Krickets - If You Only Knew (Album).

The Krickets released their third full-length album, 'If You Only Knew' a couple of months back, however it's a really fine collection of songs & Beehive Candy doesn't want it to just pass us by. This album includes 10 tracks, each a different type of love song. For these love-centered songs, Lauren Springs, Emily Stuckey Sellers and Rachel Grubb, draw from their lived experience with all forms of love. Delivered with emotional depth and beautiful harmonies, this collection of songs offers a poignant reflection on the complexity and nuance of love, especially for those fortunate enough to have experienced it in its many forms over time.

If You Only Knew showcases the evolution of The Krickets’ vocal-focused Americana sound, pushing the range within that sound as far as they ever have. Throughout the different iterations of the band, that harmony-driven songwriting style has always been the connecting thread. “On this album, every song is a love song from a different perspective. From romance to friendship, longing to estrangement, your own mind to a hater, it’s an attempt to capture them all honestly.” Lauren shares, “We chose the title track ‘If You Only Knew’ because you could apply that phrase to each of those perspectives and it would only emphasize how big love can feel, good or bad, in all those scenarios."

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Photo - Derek Bremner
HIGHDRIVE - Something I Said.

Brighton five-piece HIGHDRIVE have shared their second single 'Something I Said' via Venn Records (Bob Vylan, Witch Fever, High Vis) - following the release of last year's debut single 'Cherry'.

Forming in 2024 with a mutual appreciation for acts including Deftones, The Jesus and Mary Chain and DIIV, those disparate influences have carved out a unique lane for the Brighton upstarts, with the band quickly becoming a fixture of the South Coast live scene before releasing any music, scoring early shows alongside Marmozets, English Teacher, Do Nothing, TTSSFU, DEADLETTER, Welly and Glare.

Today the band return with ‘Something I Said’ - produced by Coach Party drummer Guy Page. A dissonant burst of alt-rock turbulence that channels the relentless inner chatter of self-scrutiny, the track surges with sheets of wailing guitar and a thick, pressurised wall of noise, locking into a spiralling headspace of rumination and social-anxiety-fuelled tension, as vocalist Lucas Leitch explains:

"The lyrics on "Something I Said" dive straight into my self-made psychosis. It taps into my paranoia of saying the wrong thing. I can be overly self-conscious, feeling stuck in my own head and overthinking every word. I wrote the song whilst playing in an old band. Deep down I knew this was going to be the start of something new - and in many ways 'Something I Said' became the musical blueprint for what would become HIGHDRIVE."


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Photo - Marthe Thu
Konradsen feat. Angie McMahon - What I Aim For.

Northern Norwegian duo Konradsen the project of Jenny Marie Sabel and Eirik Vildgren - have announced their new album ‘Hunt, Gather’, due for release on 27th March via Norwegian independent label 777 Music. Alongside the announcement, they share new single ‘What I Aim For’, featuring Australian singer-songwriter Angie McMahon.

Blending cool, house-leaning electronic drums with Konradsen’s hushed, wide-screen indie-folk, 'What I Aim For’ pairs Sabel's intimate delivery with Angie McMahon’s breathy, close-up vocal, complemented by luminous piano contributions from Grammy-winning US songwriter and pianist Bruce Hornsby. The song centres on making space for calm, trust and connection amid the constant noise of everyday life. A reminder to pause, zoom out and recalibrate when life feels overwhelming, inspired by the idea of home as a place where one can gather strength and feel safe.

On the track's release, Angie McMahon said: “Last time I was writing a record, I listened to 'Baby Hallelujah' by Konradsen on repeat. Now, a couple of years down the line, they’re my friends. I got to hear their music on tour many nights in a row, and now I love it even more. I wear Konradsen merch on my head half the time. So while I’m now making my next record, they sent me the one they’re making and offered to let me sing on one of their songs. The highest honour! This song makes me feel tapped into some deeper realm of inner peace which is only accessible through good music. I’m so proud of my friends.“

The release is accompanied by a new interlude from the album 'Jona' - a sound collage built from everyday recordings at Jenny’s home in Hatteng - wind, distant noise, the rooster, and the voice of her son, with Bruce Hornsby’s improvised piano binding these fragments into a fleeting, intimate moment.


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Photo - Vivian Wang & Fikri Abdurakhman
Fantastic Cat - Don't Let Go.

Ignore your therapist's advice and stream Fantastic Cat's new single "Don't Let Go," an indie rock song that subverts indie rock cliches and healthy attachment styles to encourage our most toxic instincts. This is the latest peek at the band's third and most likely to prompt a lawsuit from the Meat Loaf estate album yet, Cat Out Of Hell, which releases on April 10 via Missing Piece Records.

“'Don’t Let Go' is a song about perseverance and the stubborn act of never giving up," says Fantastic Cat's Brian Dunne. "For a while, it felt like every new indie rock song was about finding inner peace, going to therapy, and the pleasures of a warm bath. This song intends to be the antithesis of that type of songwriting. It’s about holding onto something long after you should, no matter the cost. It does sound nice in the bath though.”

Featuring the combined talents of four widely lauded singer/songwriters—Brian Dunne, Anthony D’Amato, Don DiLego, and Hollis Brown’s Mike Montali—Fantastic Cat is like CSNY if none of them were famous, or The Traveling Wilburys if none of them were famous, or the Eagles if they really didn’t get along. Produced by the band and mixed by D. James Goodwin (Goose, Kevin Morby, The Hold Steady), Cat Out Of Hell elevates the band's trademark blend of craftsmanship and chaos to new sonic heights, capturing the freewheeling, lightning in a bottle energy of their must-see live show and channeling it into a ramshackle house party full of existential searchers, desperate romantics, and barstool philosophers. Last month, they shared a music video for their debut single "Donnie Takes The Bus," which found the harmony-trading, instrument-swapping four-piece replaced by some surprisingly buff body doubles. 


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Ruby James - Paper Citizen - Brook Fox - Murray & The Movers - Mon Rayon - Scustin

Photo - Sally Jaye Ruby James - Honeydripper. Some songs don’t announce themselves. They take their time. Ruby James’ “Honeydripper” moves ...