Showing posts with label Lala Hayden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lala Hayden. Show all posts

Sunday, 31 May 2026

Lala Hayden - Veronica D’Souza - Dateline - Dalinda - Fragile Animals - Dea Doyle - Ellie Heath

Photo - Bella Howard
Lala Hayden - Queen of Midnight (EP).

London/Barcelona-based pop artist Lala Hayden today releases her new EP 'Queen of Midnight' via Goldun Egg. The EP release arrives alongside news of new UK / EU tour dates supporting Kita Alexander in October, along with a headline show confirmed for 18th November in London. Written across pregnancy and into early motherhood, Lala Hayden's new EP captures a period of identity shifts and emotional recalibration, pairing sleek, hook-led alt-pop with moments of stark vulnerability - shifting between confession and full-bodied release.

Speaking on the release of the EP, LALA said: "I’ve always felt like postpartum has been treated as a “women’s issue”, something quietly endured rather than fully expressed. And because of that, it’s been largely absent from the pop culture I grew up with. For a long time, that made motherhood feel like something that would consume me completely. Like I would disappear into it and not come back. When I found out I was pregnant last year - and that I was having a girl, something shifted. I decided to explore it instead of fear it. To document it in real time, in the studio. The love, but also the crashes. The fear.

"So many of the most intense moments happen in the middle of the night. And in that loneliness, I kept thinking about all the other women awake at the same time: holding babies, holding themselves, singing, dancing, trying to make something, trying to make a living. I started writing this EP in my first trimester, and I’ve been writing and recording throughout every stage since. Releasing it now, around eight months postpartum, feels like a kind of full circle." 


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Veronica D’Souza - No One Is A River.

Veronica D’Souza is an Indian/East African/Danish independent producer and songwriter, with a feminist, multicultural, and artistic approach to music and the world. With her new single ‘No One Is A River’, Veronica D’Souza turns her attention to endings, not as something to mourn, but as something to move through.

“I think celebrating endings is just as important as celebrating beginnings,” she says. “For me, the song is about practising letting go with joy, more than with grief. There is so much to be sorrowful about in the world right now, and that’s exactly why I believe the best things have to be built from a place of joy.”

At its core, ‘No One Is A River’ holds a simple insistence: letting go does not have to mean letting go of the dream. “I needed that,” she adds. “To be able to release something without closing myself off. To keep dreaming, even as something ends.” Rather than framing loss as absence, ‘No One Is A River’ offers a counterpoint, where endings can be marked, honoured, even danced through. Through crystalline synths and stunning soaring harmonies, Veronica captures this juxtaposition with poignancy and grace as her melancholic reflections coalesce with joyous surrender, framed in a huge moment of epic alt-pop.


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Photo - Kate Glasson
Dateline - Meltdown.

New Zealand born and based alt-indie band Dateline revealed their brand new single ‘Meltdown’, serving fans with an enticing teaser ahead of their UK tour later this year. Meltdown was recorded on Karangahape road, in Auckland at Jon Pearce (The Beths) studio. Recorded by Jon Pearce & MIchael Howell. Produced and mixed by Pip Brown AKA Ladyhawke and Mastered by Tom Healy.

 Honest and punchy, ‘Meltdown’ emerges from the beautifully chaotic and conflicting reality of being a mother. Through building guitars and cathartic percussion, Katie Everingham’s effortless vocals capture the complete upheaval that occurs the moment you  decide to bring a new life into the world. Sharing more, Katie explained: “Not a day goes by where I am not so grateful for my daughter and so aware of how lucky I am to be her mum; however , in the last 4 years I have also experienced some really significant personal challenges that arose from parenting. 

There is immense pressure to get it right and this little person exists who knows exactly how to push your buttons and the combination lead me to some pretty tricky places from a mental health perspective. I wouldn't have things any other way but trying to be a good parent really does impact and change everything.”


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Dalinda - The Nile.

Born to Bosnian parents, raised in Libya, and based in the UK, Dalinda’s multicultural heritage is the beating heart of her musical identity. Her breakout debut album, Turquoise (ARC Music), was produced by the legendary late Hossam Ramzy (Shakira, Peter Gabriel, Page & Plant) and immediately captured a dedicated global audience, featuring on major radio stations and world music charts. She followed this with massive crossover success in the Middle East alongside Hamid AlShairi; their collaboration, "Leish", dominated the Arabic Top Ten Charts for 17 consecutive weeks, won the ‘Best Song’ and became the region's most downloaded ringtone.

Now, Dalinda returns with a new single, "The Nile" (released May 29th). Marking a striking stylistic departure into melancholic indie, the track is a deeply personal exploration of love and loss. Produced alongside Pete Murray using authentic live instrumentation and zero samples, the track's emotional core transcends language; upon hearing it, Dalinda’s non-English-speaking mother, whose portrait graces the single's cover art and who inspired the track, was moved to tears. Anchored by a sweeping, world-infused bridge, "The Nile" perfectly merges Dalinda's musical legacy with contemporary indie-pop textures.

Crossing genres, Dalinda has secured several sync placements, including MTV’s The Sarah Silverman Show and delivered electronic / tribal collaborations with Phil Thornton and Simon Williams (Mandragora / Earthdance). Her collaborative spirit continued with the simultaneous release of her independent crossover album, Waternixie, and the traditional Songs from Libya (ARC / Hossam Ramzy). Produced by Pete Murray, Waternixie showcased her songs performed in English, Arabic, and Serbian.


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Photo - Kelsey Doyle
Fragile Animals - Dead Stop (EP).

Brisbane shoegaze risers Fragile Animals just shared their new six track EP, Dead Stop (May 29th). Produced by Elliot Heinrich, the new EP Dead Stop was written in the aftermath of the band’s breakthrough 2025 EP Tourist and their first UK and European tour - a 14-date run across Germany, Poland, Ireland, England, and Scotland, including sold-out shows and festival appearances. That period marked both a creative high and an emotional unravelling. The EP reflects the disorientation of coming down from momentum, the cost of ambition, and the fragile determination required to keep pushing forward.

Victoria Jenkins explains: “I think this record means something slightly different to each of us, but there’s also a commonality there that relates to us all making the commitment to take another step forward. Personally, I actually find it hard to articulate what this record is about and what it means to me. I think that’s because, truthfully, it was written in a profound state of confusion and the tangled mess of feelings that it carries are just as confusing now as they were then.

We started writing this EP immediately after we wrapped up touring Tourist last year. We’d just lived a dream. I’d never loved doing anything so much or felt more like my true self. At the same time I’d never felt so frayed or fragile. The risks and sacrifices it took to make that record and tour happen really shook me, and it wasn’t until it was all over and we were sitting in a hotel in Manchester trying to write a new record that I kind of fell apart. 

Anyone walking around near John Rylands Library last August might have actually seen me crying in the street. Haha. The weird part is that when I wasn’t waking up in a panic or crying in public I felt insanely happy. I was really proud of what we’d just pulled off as an independent band and I loved the music we were writing. I felt like if we could just keep ourselves moving, and cross our fingers hard enough to prevent the world falling apart around us, we might actually get everything we wanted. If I’m honest, I’ve spent the last year trying to keep my terror in a box so that I can keep moving. That’s what this record is for me.”

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Dea Doyle - Marina.

Dea Doyle is a West London-born singer-songwriter stepping into a new chapter with her deeply personal return single, “Marina.” After taking time away from music, the track marks a shift in both her sound and her storytelling, introducing what she describes as “the most honest version of this project so far.”
Rooted in indie-pop with touches of folk, soul and classic singer-songwriter influences, Dea’s music has always carried a sharp sense of observation.

Growing up in a musical household and writing her first song at nine, she built her early releases around witty reflections on relationships. Now, her perspective has widened. “As I’ve got older, my writing has become less centred on love and a bit more varied,” she explains. “I’m writing about more real, difficult experiences that have shaped me.”

“Marina” sits at the heart of that evolution. Written in memory of her aunt, who passed away from cancer, the song is a moving portrait of grief, love and legacy. “She was my favourite person, my biggest inspiration, and honestly, all the best bits of me are her,” Dea says. “Everything I do is for her, but this track especially.” Balancing warmth and loss, the song captures how even joyful moments are coloured by absence, held together by lines like, “What I’d give to tell you all that you’ve missed since you’ve been gone.”


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Ellie Heath - Pushing Forty (Album).

Canadian singer-songwriter Ellie Heath shares her debut album Pushing Forty alongside its bright and empowering lead single “That Sunshine’s Mine.” Rooted in joyful reflection and forward momentum, Pushing Forty captures a pivotal chapter in Ellie’s life; standing at the edge of change while embracing both the excitement and uncertainty that come with it. Blending pop, synth, indie, and rock textures, the record radiates with an effervescent energy that celebrates growth, transformation, and the beauty of stepping into something new.

“Pushing Forty began as a way to document a specific season of life,” Ellie explains. “I was entering the final year of my thirties, moving in with my partner, settling into a home and just about to welcome a dog into our lives. It felt like I was closing certain doors while opening others and I wanted to capture that emotional crossroads; the excitement and the nerves!”

At the heart of the record’s uplifting spirit is “That Sunshine’s Mine,” a playful yet powerful anthem about protecting your joy. What began as a lighthearted challenge in the studio quickly evolved into something more personal and resonant. “We joked that writing a sunshine song was basically a guaranteed hit,” she says. “From there, it evolved into something more personal about protecting your joy and not letting others dim your light.”

Driven by punchy, high-energy production and a sense of uninhibited fun, “That Sunshine’s Mine” leans into a bright, confident pop-rock sound. Its fast-paced momentum and communal gang vocals create a feeling of spontaneity and release, tapping into a kind of childlike freedom. “It makes me feel like a kid in the best possible way,” Ellie notes. “It feels fun, empowered, mischievous and free!”



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Wednesday, 8 April 2026

Rachel Carmen - Thomas Duxbury and New Mother Nature - Sparkle Blood - Darryl Scotti and Big Yard - Lala Hayden

Rachel Carmen - Whole Again (Live Acoustic).

Good things take time. Rachel Carmen also took this saying to heart, allowing her music to mature. The singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist from the idyllic Swiss village of Muotathal earned her stripes, among other things, with the cover band Coverstreet. From the snow-covered peaks of Switzerland to the sunny beaches of Spain, she also won over audiences as a singer and bar pianist.

In 2014, she won the Prix Walo “Sprungbrett” (breakthrough award). This was followed by radio appearances, a duet with Piero Esteriore and the Esteriore Brothers on Donnschtig-Jass, a performance at the KKL Lucerne, and a spontaneous jam session with Büne Huber of Patent Ochsner.

It is therefore high time for a new beginning—for stepping into the wider public eye—with her own single “Whole Again.” The soulful, danceable electropop anthem marks the start of a series of further singles as well as an EP set to be released next year. Rachel Carmen’s sound matured in Los Angeles, where she spent considerable time a few years ago gathering new creative impulses and further developing her style.

As a songwriter, Rachel Carmen is active internationally: she regularly takes part in songwriting camps and sessions in Switzerland, Norway, and London, where she collaborates with other artists to create new songs. In 2025, Rachel further expanded her artistic expression through acting training, strengthening her stage presence and emotional depth even more.


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Thomas Duxbury and New Mother Nature - Already Dead.

Thomas Duxbury and New Mother Nature continue to ride the momentum of previously released singles “Istanbul” and “She Never Knows” with “Already Dead,” a brooding and deeply introspective blues-tinged garage rock track that captures the disorienting weight of sleepless nights and spiraling thoughts. Built around eerie guitar textures and restless energy, the song finds Duxbury grappling with isolation and exhaustion while searching for some glimmer of light beyond the darkness. It arrives as the latest single from the band’s forthcoming album, set for release on May 19th, 2026.

“I was lying awake in bed, anxiously stuck in my thoughts and unable to sleep,” Duxbury explains. “It felt like I had been awake for weeks and was losing touch with reality. In my mind I kept picturing myself driving my old red Ford Ranger down a dirt road at dusk, trying to clear my head. I wanted to try and fight my way back to some sort of light and hope that I could cling to.”

“Already Dead” sits in the uneasy space between awareness and detachment. Duxbury describes moving through crowds and conversations while carrying a private internal battle no one else could see. “There was a war going on in my mind that I was alone in and the people around me were completely unaware,” he says. “I didn’t want to talk about it. I just wanted to keep it to myself.”


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Photo - Angeline Simon
Sparkle Blood - In Real Life.

Sparkle Blood is the kind of band that gets in, says exactly what they need to say, and gets out—no wasted time, no excess, just sharp, punchy songwriting delivered with total conviction. The trio, Tyler Stewart on guitar and vocals, Bailey Kate on bass and vocals, and Bre Day on drums, lock into a sound that feels both scrappy and impossibly tight, balancing sweetly fuzzy guitars with driving rhythms and melodies that hit instantly. 

There’s an easy chemistry between Stewart and Kate that calls back to the dynamic interplay of The Lemonheads and Pixies, while Day keeps everything grounded with a powerful, no-frills approach behind the kit. It’s hook-heavy, harmony-rich, and just rough enough around the edges to keep things interesting.

Their upcoming LP ZIP ZAP leans all the way into that energy, opening with “Mad About It,” a track that feels like a thesis statement, urgent, a little fed up, but still undeniably fun. From there, the band keeps things moving at a clipped, confident pace. 

“Totally Ignorant” barrels through in under a minute and a half, landing its punch with the kind of efficiency you’d expect from Ramones or Guided by Voices, while songs like “Burning Barrel” and “I Don’t Know” stretch things just enough to let the hooks breathe, pulling from the timeless melodic instincts of Buddy Holly and the punchy edge of Buzzcocks and Hüsker Dü. Across the record, Sparkle Blood strike that sweet spot between catharsis and celebration, pairing real-world frustration with undeniable charm. It’s the kind of album that sneaks up on you, quick, catchy, and quietly addictive after just a couple of spins.

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Darryl Scotti and Big Yard - State of Mind.

Lending 'acappella' Americana with a jazz nuance, echoing the warm atmospheres of Pentatonix pairing rich vocal harmony with open-road storytelling and an understated groove, State of Mind is an intimate, roots-driven track built for listeners who value authenticity, mood, and craft. With no heavy production, the voices carry the landscape, creating a cinematic vibe that feels grounded in a quiet uplifting reflective mood. 

Darryl Scotti is the creative force behind Big Yard, a sound grounded in rock, blues, and country soul - woven together with heartfelt storytelling. A veteran artist with authentic roots in classic Americana music and a pulse on today’s evolving scene, Scotti delivers songs that are raw, real, and deeply human.

With decades of experience as a performer, writer, and producer, his work continues to bridge generations - music that moves, inspires, and heals. Big Yard is where seasoned producers and one veteran singer songwriter collide to create a bold, genre-bending sound that fuses contemporary rock, pop, smooth jazz, big band, and R&B - all produced with a modern, hip edge.


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Photo - Hanna L Hayden
Lala Hayden - Goodthing.

London/Barcelona-based Lala Hayden today announces her new EP 'Queen of Midnight', out 8th May via Goldun Egg and shares new single 'Goodthing'. Produced by Jake Gosling (Lady Gaga, Paloma Faith), 'Goodthing' is a stark alt-pop examination of self-sabotage. Written during pregnancy and early motherhood, the track forms part of an EP that documents both the intensity of new life and the psychological shifts that accompany it, as identity begins to recalibrate.

Speaking on the release, Lala Hayden said: "I feel like I'm always one bad decision away from completely sabotaging everything in my life. It feels like most of the time I'm living in a bubble that can't last, constantly treading a fine line that could break at any moment. The sabotaging part in me is so loud, especially in times when I'm sleep deprived, hormonal, or feeling disconnected from my surroundings. Goodthing is a story of intimacy and absence, where love lingers in empty rooms, in memory, and in the quiet realisation that sometimes, the hardest thing isn’t losing something good but realising you’re the reason it never lasts."

Drawing inspiration from films such as The Dreamers, Blue Is the Warmest Colour and Paris, Texas - 'Goodthing' explores the tension of holding something real, while slowly pulling away from it.

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Alex Dupree - Yea-Ming and The Rumours - Forget Them Wendy - Maddie Zahm - CattSue - Jenny Gillespie Mason

Photo - Bill McCullough Alex Dupree - New Meaning. Alex Dupree has announced his new album 'Talking to the Dog which is due for release...