Fresh New Tracks, Vol. 48 – eLxAr, Joe Peacock, Kevin Robertson, Sorry Ghost

Time for another installment of my Fresh New Tracks series. Today I’m featuring new songs by, in alphabetical order, Italian electronic/synthwave duo eLxAr, English singer-songwriter Joe Peacock, Scottish singer-songwriter Kevin Robertson, and Los Angeles-based indie pop/rock band Sorry Ghost. I’ve previously featured the first three on this blog, while this is the first time I’m writing about Sorry Ghost.

eLxAr – “Lights at the Edge of the Road”

eLxAr is a fascinating electronic/synthwave act from Italy consisting of Luca, a pianist, composer, producer and game designer, and Alex (short for Alexandra), a singer-songwriter, digital designer, illustrator and multi-faceted artist. Not only are both of them multi-talented and creative, they’re also passionate about social justice and environmental issues. I first wrote about them in March 2024 when I reviewed their powerful anti-cyberbulling single “Nessuno Vede”. They’ve since released a lot more music, and I thought it was time I featured them again on this blog. Their latest single is the enchanting instrumental track “Lights at the Edge of the Road”. About the song, the band states: “I think there’s something mystical about traveling at night. Look out the window and it’s only darkness. Darkness and the streetlights, passing by the car as if they were divine fires, falling directly from the sky.” The darkly sensuous groove and crystalline synths beautifully capture the aura and mystery of a night drive.

Joe Peacock – “Not Love”

Joe Peacock is a British singer-songwriter and musician born and raised in rural Herefordshire and now based in Birmingham. Describing himself as “a genre-hopping storyteller, whose music has been compared to Bowie, Blur and Costello”, he’s a hard-working, thoughtful and talented musician who continually experiments and pushes himself beyond his comfort zone. And like eLxAr, Joe also cares deeply about the environment, social justice and inequality. The prolific artist has released a tremendous amount of music over the past four years, including three albums – I’m Only Here in 2021, Before the robots told us where to go in 2021, and Mirror Neuron Generator in 2022 – as well as numerous singles and five EPs, two of which, The curse of the mind and Beast Mode, I reviewed. He’s also one half of art-folk duo The Missed Trees, his side project with singer/fiddle player Louisa Davies-Foley.

His latest single is “Not Love“, an alternative rock song exploring the futility of trying to make someone love you when they’re just not interested. Joe elaborates: “The single’s about reversing the traditional lines in songs about unrequited love, as I find that a bit creepy and people should realise that going after someone who doesn’t reciprocate never works and just makes both sides unhappy. All the incels and toxic masculinity stuff comes in there a bit, too.” I love his shimmery and grungy psychedelic guitars as well as clever lyrics like “I tried to woo her with charm and wits, but she was just not having it./ I danced close to her in a club to get the opportunity to rub myself against her body.” 

Kevin Robertson – “Kings Of Most Of Yesterday”

Hailing from Aberdeen, Scotland is Kevin Robertson, a singer-songwriter and guitarist who makes a very agreeable style of jangle and psych pop. Strongly influenced by a range of influences including 60’s pop, classic and psychedelic rock, 80’s jangle music and 90’s Brit pop, he’s been actively recording and releasing music both as a solo artist and as a member of Aberdonian (I love that word) jangle pop five-piece The Vapour Trails since 2019. In a relatively short period of time, Kevin has released an impressive amount of music under his own name, including four albums – Sundown’s End in 2021, Teaspoon of Time in 2022, Magic Spells Abound, an aptly-titled collection of nine exquisite songs I reviewed in 2023, and The Call of the Sea in 2024.

Now’s he’s back with his latest single, “Kings of Most of Yesterday“, which dropped yesterday, June 20th. The song is the second single from his forthcoming fifth album Yellow Painted Moon, to be released July 11th. Written and sung by Kevin, who also played acoustic and electric guitars, the song includes additional eclectric guitar and bass played by his son Scott Robertson, with drums and mellotron by Nick Bertling, who also produced the track. The song features Kevin and Scott’s beguiling twangy guitars that remind me in spots of Dire Straits’ “Sultans of Swing”. It’s a beautiful song with an understated, yet powerful message about the ephemeral nature of each generation’s dominance within a given culture, with each gradually passing the torch to a younger generation who will then lead: “Change it has to come. The generations live and die. The kings of most of yesterday shall fall. Tomorrow goodbye.”

Sorry Ghost – “polyester (yes sir)”

Without question, one of the most irrepressibly charming – and might I add best-looking – bands around today is indie pop/rock four-piece Sorry Ghost. Originally formed as a pop punk band in Baton Rouge, Louisiana by guitarist and vocalist Matt Polito and bassist and vocalist Dan Anton, along with Ryan DeJean and Nick Broyles, they released their debut EP Win By Default in late 2016. Ryan and Nick later left the band and Tyler Hernandez briefly joined the lineup as drummer, at which point they released their debut album The Morning After in April 2020. Tyler departed in 2021, after which Matt and Dan relocated to Los Angeles, where they were eventually joined by Tate Silver on drums and Sean Duong on guitar and vocals to complete their current lineup. The new location and lineup steered their musical direction toward a breezier indie pop/rock sound, and their popularity has continued to grow.

The guys have a wickedly cheeky sense of humor, calling themselves ‘iconic indie idiots’ whose music is “a potent blend of optimism and frustration, loud and soft edges, encouragement and rejection“, and frequently delight their fans and followers with hilarious and endearing video reels of themselves on Instagram and TikTok. I follow then on Instagram, and their posts never fail to put a big smile on my face. Their videos are also highly entertaining and creative, evidenced by the one for their new single “polyester (yes sir)“, which dropped yesterday. Directed by Jeremy Stewart, produced by Katherine Myers and shot by Luis Adrian Lara, the video shows the guys performing the song in a bucolic setting in the Santa Monica Mountains, with Dan playing a decidedly frustrated office executive. My take on the lyrics is that they speak to feeling stuck in a job or lifestyle you hate, acting out a part that doesn’t feel genuine or fulfilling, with ‘polyester’ representing the wardrobe you’re forced to wear: “When I step right into line. Just a little to the left. Step right don’t you lie, There’s so little to me. Left my life ‘low the frame. Now I’ve found me to blame. Polyester that’s a yes sir, I can’t take another gesture.” I love the song’s mellow vibe that sits in a sweet spot between sunny and melancholy, as well as the colorful blend of jangly and chiming guitars accompanied by pleasing harmonies.

THE BRIGADIER – Album Review: “Sailing the Seven Neuroses”

Boat photography by Ben Yates.

I recently learned about The Brigadier, the music project of singer-songwriter, musician and producer Matt Williams, when he reached out to me about his new album Sailing the Seven Neuroses. Originally from Wales but now based in Devon, England, he’s had music in his blood since his teens. He grew up listening to his parents and older siblings’ records that ran the gamut from rock and roll, country and bluegrass to 80s pop, new wave and rock, plus his dad plays guitar and banjo and was always in bands. Matt started learning to play guitar at the age of 13, and began playing in a series of bands. By the early 2000s he was living in Brighton, where he fronted a band called Brigadier, where he was the main songwriter and singer. Though they rehearsed for quite a while, the band never really took off, and when they eventually fell apart he kept the name as a solo artist.

In 2007, he released his debut album View from the Bath, and over the next 10 years he released another five excellent albums, as well as four seasonally themed EPs. Influenced by some of his favorite acts like Queen, The Beach Boys, The Beatles, Nick Lowe, The Divine Comedy, early Genesis and Pink Floyd, Steely Dan, Black Sabbath and Led Zeppelin, as well as country rock, 60s, 70s & 80s pop, and synthpop, his highly melodic music is a pleasing blend of power pop, rock, folk and synthpop elements, featuring relatable lyrics reflecting his life and relationship experiences expressed through his comforting low-key vocals.

In addition to his prolific music output from 2007-17, Matt also produced and recorded soundtrack work for documentaries and short films, and his music garnered both local, national and international radio coverage, including BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio Wales, BBC Southern Counties and Radio Devon, as well as performing live sessions and interviews for BBC Southern Counties and BBC Devon, and in USA and Europe, as well as magazine coverage. He’d intended to continue with his music, but life, family and jobs took precedence, leaving his time and energy for making music rather depleted. Now, after an eight-year hiatus, he’s back with his seventh album Sailing the Seven Neuroses, which dropped yesterday, June 18th.

Photo by Digital Horse Brasses

All songs on the album were written, performed and produced by The Brigadier, with the exception of drums on “The Purge” and “Hot Solace”, which were played by Emily Dolan Davies, “What about tomorrow?” by James Carmichael Dooley, and “It’s you I think about” and “Don’t go to bed with a bad mind” by 444. Mastering was done by Wayne Bassett (who’s also a member of Welsh electro/art punk band Head Noise, who I’ve featured several times on this blog) at Robot Recordings. And rather interestingly, like all previous albums by The Brigadier, Sailing the Seven Neuroses features 13 tracks.

I’m always a bit apprehensive when an artist I’m unfamiliar with approaches me about possibly reviewing their album, but my reservations were quickly put to rest as I listened to Sailing the Seven Neuroses, as there’s much to like here. The album opens with “Bleak Companion“, a marvelous power pop song that hooked me right from the start. The lyrics speak to dealing with the day to day routines of work and obligations that seem to get in the way of living: “I’m so tired of having to get out of bed to do the things I have to do, but there’s no other way.” In addition to the infectious driving melody and stellar guitar work, I love the airy synths and Matt’s exquisite layered vocal harmonies.

The song gently segues into the lovely second track “The Purge“, and as the song unfolds it’s clear Matt hasn’t lost a step during his long time away from music. In fact, his musicianship and vocals sound better than ever. This song reminds me of some of Todd Rundgren’s early work, though the harmonies seem to channel the Beach Boys in spots.

Those wonderful harmonies are on full display on the incredibly pleasing “Blessings“, which features some gorgeous jangly guitars and spirited piano keys over a lively, upbeat melody. The Brigadier admonishes us to appreciate what we’ve got and not compare ourselves to others: “Count your blessings before you mess things up reflecting on the stuff you haven’t got. Don’t compare and contrast, ’cause you’ll only take a fast track to feeling pretty down about your life.

The great songs just keep on coming. “Peace within the Poison” has a delightful retro 60s vibe that calls to mind some of the great pop songs by the Lovin’ Spoonful and Beach Boys, but with a contemorary treatment. And once again, I must call out The Brigadier’s lush vocal harmonies, which are also nicely featured on the enchanting “Perfect Surprise“.

The Brigadier takes us into the 80s with the exuberant, synth-dominant beauty “Hot Solace“, a song about not letting petty problems and slights get the best of us: “I won’t let the melancholy come over me. I let the pouring rain wash away the pain.” Midway through the album is the title track “Sailing the Seven Neuroses“, a somewhat quirky but beautiful instrumental track with a bit of a tropical flair that ventures toward ethereal psychedelia at the end. Next up is “Man about the House“, a terrific power pop gem serving up grungy guitar work and insistent piano keys layered over a strong toe-tapping beat.

On “Heaven’s in my Heart“, he creates an enthralling otherworldly soundscape with a colorful mix of spacey and carnival-like psychedelic synths and resonant guitar work that seem to channel Pink Floyd in spots. His little symphonic flourishes and soothing breathy vocals are delicious. Those 80s influences are back on the irresistible love song “It’s you I think about“, featuring sparkling synths and warm guitar lines. And on the effervescent “Everyday an Ordeal“, vibrant piano and organ take center stage, fortified with arresting rock guitar chords and Matt’s joyful comforting vocals as he sings of wanting to find a bit of escape from life’s daily struggles: “Everyday an ordeal. Everyday the frustration is real. Everyday the struggle within. You just want to find a place to hide away.”

With it’s stomping beat, soaring choruses and exuberant blend of chiming, twangy and gnarly guitars, “What about tomorrow?” reminds me somewhat of “Hot Love” by T.Rex with a bit of Pet Sounds-era Beach Boys thrown in for good measure. And saving the best for last, The Brigadier closes the album with “Don’t go to bed with a bad mind“, a glorious five and a half minute-long tour de force that really showcases his impressive songwriting and musicianship. He seems to effortlessly pull together beautiful melodies, numerous time changes and fascinating musical textures from a dizzying array of styles and elements, yet it all works beautifully. And I know I’m beginning to sound like a broken record, but once again I must make note of those gorgeous harmonies that so strongly echo the Beach Boys. And in fact, in a recent interview with Aldora Britain Records, Matt responded to a question as to his favorite artist with “Queen or The Beach Boys depending on the day.”

Sailing the Seven Neuroses is a beautiful album that keeps sounding better with each listen. Every track is superb, with no weak ones that make me want to skip past, which isn’t something I can say about very many albums. The Brigadier is most definitely back!

The Brigadier’s socials:  FacebookInstagram 

Find his music on BandcampSpotifyApple Music / YouTube

Top 30 Songs for June 15-21, 2025

Photo of Lord Huron by Christian Waite

Another favorite music act of mine is American folk rock band Lord Huron. Originally formed as a solo act by singer-songwriter and guitarist Ben Schneider in 2010 after he relocated from Michigan to Los Angeles (his name was inspired by the Great Lake he grew up near), Lord Huron eventually became a four-piece that now includes Miguel Briseño on bass, keyboards & theremin, Tom Renaud on guitar, and Mark Barry on drums & percussion. Their uniquely beautiful music is a glorious mash-up of folk, western, rock and roll, pop, surf rock and new age, and has been described by music writers as evoking the ‘high-lonesome’ sound of such legendary acts as The Band and Neil Young, as well as newer acts like Fleet Foxes and My Morning Jacket (whose song “Time Waited” has spent the past three months on my chart, peaking at #1). The most striking features of their sound are the lush twangy and shimmery guitars, backed by stirring orchestral strings, and lead singer Ben Schneider’s beautiful warm vocals, which often convey an arresting and heartfelt vulnerability.

They’ve released four outstanding albums – Lonesome Dreams in 2012, Strange Trails in 2015, Vide Noir in 2018 and the gorgeous Long Lost in 2021, which is one of my favorite albums of the last 10 years. Their beautiful ballad “The Night We Met”, from Strange Trails, was their breakout hit and, shockingly, their only song to ever chart on the Billboard Hot 100, where it peaked at only #84. Nevertheless, it’s been streamed more than three billion times on Spotify. In January they released “Who Laughs Last?”, a hard-charging rock song featuring spoken word verses from actress Kristen Stewart, which they followed in late March with “Nothing I Need”. Those tracks, along with their latest single “Looking Back”, will be included on their forthcoming fifth album The Cosmic Selector Vol. 1, scheduled for release on July 18th.

“Nothing I Need” is gorgeous, featuring the band’s signature rich and colorful guitar work and Schneider’s marvelous vocals. It takes over the #1 spot on my latest Top 30 chart, marking Lord Huron’s third song to reach #1, after “Not Dead Yet” and “Mine Forever”, both from Long Lost, and both of which ended up placing in the top 10 of my 100 Best Songs of 2021 list, with “Mine Forever” ranking #2.

The bittersweet lyrics tell of a man lamenting his lost youth and the love he squandered away through his endless traveling, possibly for his career that now brings him no pleasure: “I fell asleep and when I woke up, I was old. I said goodbye to my youth and my blood ran cold. I got a feeling I just had to get away. I left it all behind on an endless road, but I see her face everywhere I go. I got everything I want and I got nothing that I need.” Schneider, who wrote and sang the lyrics, stated “Nothing I Need” “wonders if it’s possible — within the short time you’ve got — to ever truly know what you want, if it’s worthwhile wanting anything at all, and if there’s any point in pondering what’s down the roads you didn’t take.

In other chart highlights, sombr‘s “back to friends” continues its strong upward movement, climbing three spots to #3. Three songs enter the top 10 after hovering in the low teens the past few weeks – “Archbishop Harold Holmes” by Jack White, “Barbarian” by L.A.-based alt-rock band AWOLNATION and “Porcelain (Losing All My Patience)” by Irish indie pop-rock band Somebody’s Child – all advancing three spots to #s 8, 9 and 10, respectively.

There are two new debuts again this week, the first of which is the exuberant “Ripple” by English indie rock duo Good Neighbours. Based in London and comprised of Oli Fox and Scott Verrill, they released their debut single “Home” in January 2024, The song was successful, reaching #26 in the UK and #2 on the Billboard AAA chart. I was never wild about that song, but I do like “Ripple”, which I find more infectious and appealing. The second debut is the wonderful “Better Off Eventually” by British Columbia, Canada-based alt-rock band Bealby Point, which I featured in the same Fresh New Tracks post as last week’s debut entry “Moody” by Royel Otis. 

  1. NOTHING I NEED – Lord Huron (3)
  2. IT’S AMAZING TO BE YOUNG – Fontaines D.C. (1)
  3. BACK TO FRIENDS – sombr (6)
  4. THE TURNAROUND – DelCobras (4)
  5. WALLS – Frank Joshua (2)
  6. LAREDO – Leon Bridges (5)
  7. SNAKESKIN – NAVE (9)
  8. ARCHBISHOP HAROLD HOLMES – Jack White (11)
  9. BARBARIAN – AWOLNATION (12)
  10. PORCELAIN (LOSING ALL MY PATIENCE) – Somebody’s Child (13)
  11. LET THINGS GO – Caamp (14)
  12. POOR SAD INDIE EVERYTHING – Icarus Phoenix (10)
  13. BASIC BEING BASIC – Djo (17)
  14. THREE SIX FIVE – Shinedown (18)
  15. CATCH THESE FISTS – Wet Leg (20)
  16. MORTAL WOUND – The Veils (7)
  17. BAD LARRY – Cloakroom (8)
  18. EVERYTHING IS PEACEFUL LOVE – Bon Iver (19)
  19. RITALIN – Dexter and The Moonrocks (22)
  20. SPACEMAN IN TULSA – Counting Crows (23)
  21. BONNET OF PINS – Matt Berninger (27)
  22. SCARS – Secret Postal Society (25)
  23. FEELS RIGHT – Talk in Waves (26)
  24. WHAT WAS THAT – Lorde (29)
  25. MOODY – Royel Otis (30)
  26. THE NIGHT BEFORE – The Black Keys (15)
  27. TIME WAITED – My Morning Jacket (16)
  28. SO LONG – Wavves (21)
  29. RIPPLE – Good Neighbours (N)
  30. BETTER OFF EVENTUALLY – Bealby Point (N)

THE ZANGWILLS – Single Review: “Beers With The Beekeeper”

The UK is overflowing with scores of talented musicians and bands, and among those who’ve impressed me the most in recent years are British four-piece The Zangwills. Based in Cheshire, they consist of Jake Vickers (vocals, guitar, keyboards), Ed Dowling (bass, backing vocals), Sam Davies (lead guitar) and Adam Spence (drums, backing vocals). Influenced by some of their favorite acts like David Bowie, Arctic Monkeys, The Cure, The Rapture, The Smiths and The Strokes, their exciting, highly melodic music is outstanding, with a maturity and excellence in their songwriting and musicianship as fine as many top big-name bands around today. 

The Zangwills (from left to right): Sam Davies, Adam Spence, Ed Dowling & Jake Vickers. Photo by Edie Lees.

They began actively making music in 2017 while still in their teens, and have since released 16 singles and two EPs. Two of their singles, “New Heights” and “Patio Paradise”, have each garnered over 1.1 million streams on Spotify alone. I’ve previously featured them twice on this blog, when I reviewed their magnificent singles “Never Looked Back” (2021) and “Backpatters and Shooters” (2022) (you can read those reviews by clicking on the “Related” links at the end of this post). Both songs reached #1 on my Weekly Top 30 chart, with “Never Looked Back” ranking #24 on my Top 100 Songs of 2021 list and “Backpatters and Shooters” ranking #16 among my Top 100 Songs of 2023.

Now they’re back with their 16th and latest single “Beers With The Beekeeper“, which dropped June 6th. Like their previous singles, the song was produced and engineered by longtime colloborator Mark Winterburn (5 Seconds of Summer, The Script, Plan B, James Arthur, Don Broco) and mastered by Ben Booker (David Guetta, Bob Dylan, Elton John, PJ Harvey, Scissor Sisters, 5 Seconds of Summer). The song reflects on the often-therapeutic nature of having deep conversations with near strangers, as well as a nod to unlikely friendships forged with regulars at local pubs.

Band frontman and lead vocalist Jake elaborates: “You often feel that you can say anything to those people, especially when you’ve got no link to them such as mutual friends or family, there’s no judgement. It’s funny because it really does remind me of conversations that I’ve had, when you’re both in a bit of a state and you think you’re both talking about the same thing, but you’re not. Of course, the beekeeper in the song isn’t a real guy, and neither is the country pub where the scene is set, but there are references there to real people, and real conversation.” I know from experience that it can sometimes be easier to confide in or share deep secrets with total strangers than with loved ones or close friends.

They state that the alias of the beekeeper came about early on in the writing of the song. The lyric about being “stung by love” is intended to have a double meaning in both a physical and emotional sense, with a beekeeper acting as a metaphor for someone getting physically stung.

“Beers With The Beekeeper” opens strong with a torrent of jangly melodic guitars and assertive drumbeats creating a glorious cinematic soundcape. The music calms a bit in the verses as Jake sings in his distinctively beautiful plaintive vocals, still accompanied by the dynamic guitars, only to burst back open with the aforementioned cinematic flourishes in the choruses that gradually fade out as the band sings a refrain of “Ooh la la la la la la la la la“. It’s another superb song by The Zangwills, but then, I’d expect nothing less from these talented guys.

Perched up
In the corner of a former farmhouse
Country pub
Talking ‘bout the times that we've been stung
By love
And the things that we hold dearly
Beers with the beekeeper
Walk home thinking clearly


Won't you come and listen again tonight?
I’m out the door ready to speak my mind
After last time things felt so much easier
Won't you come and listen again tonight?
I’m out the door ready to speak my mind
After last time things felt much more clear
Be my ear


First up
In falling behind
Tough rut
Tight the rope that binds
My words
To the post that keeps them near to me
Loosen up the knot
I need to see them running freely

Won't you come and listen again tonight?
I’m out the door ready to speak my mind
After last time things felt so much easier
Won't you come and listen again tonight?
I’m out the door ready to speak my mind
After last time things felt much more clear
Be my ear


Ooh la la la la la la la la la (x16)

The Zangwills Socials: FacebookInstagramThreads / XTikTok

Find their music on SpotifyApple Music / YouTube

Top 30 Songs for June 8-14, 2025

Photo of Fontaines D.C. by Masashi Yukimoto

I just love Fontaines D.C., who’ve become one of my favorite bands over the past couple of years. Formed in 2016 in Dublin, Ireland (the D.C. in their name stands for Dublin City, to differentiate them from another band named the Fontaines) but now based in London, England, they consist of the dangerously charismatic Grian Chatten (vocals), Conor Curley (guitar), Conor Deegan III (bass), Tom Coll (drums) and Carlos O’Connell (guitar). Their latest single “It’s Amazing To Be Young” rises to #1 this week, making it their third song in a year to top my chart. Their song “Starburster” is my #1 song of 2024, with “Favourite” not far behind at #8.

Written and performed by all members of the band, and arranged, produced and mixed by James Ford, “It’s Amazing To Be Young” was inspired by the birth of band guitarist Carlos O’Connell’s first child. Bassist Conor Deegan III elaborated about the song for Genius: “It sounded more like a lullaby or a music box, but with the same lyric ‘it’s amazing to be young’. The feeling of hope a child can give is profound and moving, especially for young men like us. That sense of wanting to create a world for them to grow up in happily. It’s a feeling that fights against the cynicism that can often overtake us in the modern world. So we wanted to declare which side we were on – it really is amazing to be young. We are still free, and want to make that feeling spread. We want to protect it for the others around us, and maybe in doing that, can also help protect it for ourselves.

The video for this song was directed by one of our favourite collaborators Luna Carmoon. Luna has a very visual ear and found a way to bring out the world of our songs, somehow making the feelings more clear and more dreamlike at the same time. This video in particular has many special moments, but I think the way it unifies the different characters together is brilliant, because it embodies the message of not just the song but the album- youth is magical, and stories can become interwoven unexpectedly and feel like worlds colliding. That is youth, that is young love, and I think oftentimes that is romance.

The video’s fairly long with a few breaks in the song, so here’s an audio video if you’d like to just hear the song itself:

Two songs blast their way into the top 10 this week: the bittersweet folk rock beauty “Nothing I Need” by Lord Huron (which is currently #1 on the Billboard AAA chart, with “It’s Amazing To Be Young at #2) jumps eight spots to #3, while sombr’s cinematic “back to friends” (which sits at #2 on the Alternative Airplay chart) leaps 10 spots to #6.

There are two new debuts again this week, the first of which is “What Was That” by New Zealand singer-songwriter Lorde, who became famous in 2013 at the age of 16 for her monster worldwide hit “Royals”. It’s her first new music since her 2021 album Solar Power (though she did release a single of her cover of “Take Me to the River” that she contributed to the 2024 album Everyone’s Getting Involved: A Tribute to Talking Heads’ Stop Making Sense). The song is the lead single from her fourth album Virgin, set to be released on June 27, and it’s nice to have her back! The second debut, entering at #30, is the endearing “Moody” by Australian guitar-pop duo Royel Otis, which I featured in a recent Fresh New Tracks post. Their marvelous cover of Sophie Ellis-Bextor’s “Murder on the Dance Floor” is my #4 song of 2024.

  1. IT’S AMAZING TO BE YOUNG – Fontaines D.C. (2)
  2. WALLS – Frank Joshua (1)
  3. NOTHING I NEED – Lord Huron (11)
  4. THE TURNAROUND – DelCobras (5)
  5. LAREDO – Leon Bridges (6)
  6. BACK TO FRIENDS – sombr (16)
  7. MORTAL WOUND – The Veils (4)
  8. BAD LARRY – Cloakroom (3)
  9. SNAKESKIN – NAVE (9)
  10. POOR SAD INDIE EVERYTHING – Icarus Phoenix (10)
  11. ARCHBISHOP HAROLD HOLMES – Jack White (12)
  12. BARBARIAN – AWOLNATION (13)
  13. PORCELAIN (LOSING ALL MY PATIENCE) – Somebody’s Child (14)
  14. LET THINGS GO – Caamp (15)
  15. THE NIGHT BEFORE – The Black Keys (7)
  16. TIME WAITED – My Morning Jacket (8)
  17. BASIC BEING BASIC – Djo (18)
  18. THREE SIX FIVE – Shinedown (19)
  19. EVERYTHING IS PEACEFUL LOVE – Bon Iver (20)
  20. CATCH THESE FISTS – Wet Leg (22)
  21. SO LONG – Wavves (21)
  22. RITALIN – Dexter and The Moonrocks (24)
  23. SPACEMAN IN TULSA – Counting Crows (25)
  24. ANKLES – Lucy Dacus (17)
  25. SCARS – Secret Postal Society (28)
  26. FEELS RIGHT – Talk in Waves (29)
  27. BONNET OF PINS – Matt Berninger (30)
  28. METAVERSE – Cage the Elephant (23)
  29. WHAT WAS THAT – Lorde (N)
  30. MOODY – Royel Otis (N)

The Rat Utopia Experiment – Single Review: “Creature Comfort”

Hailing from Tacoma, Washington is The Rat Utopia Experiment (aka T.R.U.E.), who describe themselves as “a band that can only exist because kids who grew up listening to their parents’ Nirvana and MCR CDs and watching Fight Club, suddenly experienced the world around them falling apart in their most formative years. Informed by grunge, emo, and nu-metal and fueled by late-stage capitalist cynicism, this is music for disaffected youth searching for a greater purpose.” After listening to their hard-charging music that also incorporates generous servings of punk sensibility, I would say that sounds about right.

Formed in 2022, the raucous five-piece consists of 16-year-old frontwoman Phia Lane ( lead vocals, guitar), Evan Fry (drums, vocals), Maddox Mullins (lead guitar), Francis Green (bass), and Casey Waldbauer (rhythm guitar, vocals). All but Evan, who recently turned 21, are still in their late teens. I’m really impressed by their strong musicianship as well as Phia’s intelligent, brutally honest songwriting that reveals a wisdom and maturity beyong her young age. Their musical influences include such artists and bands as Nirvana, Adolescents, The Gits, David Bowie, The Runaways, Korn and Stone Temple Pilots.

After dropping a string of nine hard-hitting singles throughout 2023 and 2024, they bundled eight of them into their debut album No Hit Wonders., released this past March. Now, after a couple of changes in lineup, they’re back with their first single of 2025 “Creature Comfort“, which dropped May 29th. The song is a blistering takedown of corrupt politicians who screw over their constituents and game the system with the help of unscrupulous lawyers and fellow politicians.

The song opens with a quote from President Nixon’s farewell speech to his Cabinet and staff members, in which he quoted a paragraph he’d read in a book about former President Theodore Roosevelt:

And this quote is about a young man
He was a young lawyer in New York
He’d married a beautiful girl
And they had a lovely daughter
And then suddenly she died
And this is what he wrote
This was in his diary

As Nixon’s words progress, the band layers a building reverb that soon explodes into a maelstrom of furious pounding drumbeats and screeching guitar riffs as they repeatedly yell “Hey, hey!“. Then it’s off to the races with an unrelenting adrenaline-raising onslaught of riotous gnarly riffs, deep, chugging bass and thunderous stomping drums, fueled by healthy doses of punk-infused reverb and feedback. Phia’s commanding vocals, which remind me at times of Willow Smith, match the ferocity of the music note for note, resulting in an electrifying spine-tingling performance as she practically spits the scathing lyrics:

It was a hot young day in September
When the baby boy was born
Lost his mommy in a car crash
And his daddy’s gone to war
He knew that he was destined to do something that was more
But he was pushing drugs
He was rotten to the core

Creature Comfort
No condolences
Gotta show up to whoever’s poll it is

Hey, hey

It was a cold old day in June
When the rich man came to town
He said, “Listen, boy, I ain’t here to fuck around”
The boy said, “Gosh, I ain’t got my law degree”
And the rich man just replied,
“That shit don’t matter to me”

Creature Comfort
No Condolences
Gotta show up to whoever’s poll it is
Creature Comfort
They don’t care
About your health or your wealth
So grow a fucking pair

Hey, hey

But it all came crashing down
When the rich man got cocky
The boy ain’t gone to law school
And he gets real talky
Their secret is out,
And the rich man is screwed
He tried to cheat the system,
But got spat on and chewed

Creature Comfort
No condolences
Gotta show up to whoever’s poll it is

Hey, hey

But what of the boy?
Well, the rich man don’t care
He leaves him to fend for himself
Don’t even spare a prayer
He’s pushing,
And drinking,
Man, what a swine
He takes his bloodline down with him
While the rich man stays blind

Creature Comfort
No Condolences
Gotta show up to whoever’s poll it is
Creature Comfort
They don’t care
About your health or your wealth
So grow a fucking pair

Hey, hey

The rich man’s in trouble
And he stands before the court
The senator, however,
Likes the man’s earnings report
He fucks his districts and his mistress
The justice system, too
He makes one call, and the rich man’s free
Almost like brand-new

Creature Comfort
No Condolences
Gotta show up to whoever’s poll it is
Creature Comfort
They don’t care
About your health or wealth
So grow a fucking pair

The song ends with the famous excerpt from Nixon’s “I am not a crook” speech made during a press conference in November 1973, when he was facing allegations of corruption related to the Watergate scandal:

I have never obstructed justice
I think, too, that I can say
That in my years of public life
That I welcome this kind of examination
Because people have got to know
Whether or not their president is a crook
Well, I am not a crook
I’ve earned everything I’ve got

“Creature Comfort” is a brilliant, hard-hitting song by this astonishingly talented young group, and I can’t wait to hear what T.R.U.E. comes up with next.

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Top 30 Songs for June 1-7, 2025

English singer-songwriter & producer Frank Joshua remains at #1 for a second week with his lush single “Walls”, while Fontaines D.C.‘s “It’s Amazing To Be Young” advances a spot to #2. Rounding out the top five are “Bad Larry” by Cloakroom, “Mortal Wound” by The Veils and “The Turnaround” by DelCobras (who just released their second single “Untied (She’s the One)” this past Friday), all moving up two spots. The biggest upward mover this week is the majestic “back to friends” by 19-year-old artist sombr, leaping eight spots to #16 (I find it interesting that some artists name themselves and/or their songs in all lower case).

I have two wonderful debut songs this week, the first of which is “Feels Right” by northern Virginia-based artist Talk in Waves (the music project of singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Jake Mimikos). The exuberant pop-rock song is a joyous celebration of a budding romance, where everything’s coming together and just “feels right”. Jake has released an impressive amount of music since 2015, and I’ve featured him numerous times on this blog. I’ve loved all his songs, five of which have reached #1 on my Top 30 chart. One of them, “Like You Do”, topped my 100 Best Indie Songs of 2024 list, and his previous single “You’re My Drug” reached #2 this past March.

The second debut, coming in at #30, is the marvelous “Bonnet Of Pins” by silky-voiced singer-songwriter Matt Berninger, who’s also frontman of alternative indie rock band The National. I love his warm baritone singing voice so much, he could literally sing the phone book and I’m certain it would sound captivating. The song is from his new album Get Sunk, his second release as a solo artist which dropped this past Friday, May 30th.

  1. WALLS – Frank Joshua (1)
  2. IT’S AMAZING TO BE YOUNG – Fontaines D.C. (3)
  3. BAD LARRY – Cloakroom (5)
  4. MORTAL WOUND – The Veils (6)
  5. THE TURNAROUND – DelCobras (7)
  6. LAREDO – Leon Bridges (8)
  7. THE NIGHT BEFORE – The Black Keys (2)
  8. TIME WAITED – My Morning Jacket (4)
  9. SNAKESKIN – NAVE (9)
  10. POOR SAD INDIE EVERYTHING – Icarus Phoenix (10)
  11. NOTHING I NEED – Lord Huron (17)
  12. ARCHBISHOP HAROLD HOLMES – Jack White (12)
  13. BARBARIAN – AWOLNATION (13)
  14. PORCELAIN (LOSING ALL MY PATIENCE) – Somebody’s Child (14)
  15. LET THINGS GO – Caamp (15)
  16. BACK TO FRIENDS – sombr (24)
  17. ANKLES – Lucy Dacus (11)
  18. BASIC BEING BASIC – Djo (18)
  19. THREE SIX FIVE – Shinedown (21)
  20. EVERYTHING IS PEACEFUL LOVE – Bon Iver (22)
  21. SO LONG – Wavves (23)
  22. CATCH THESE FISTS – Wet Leg (25)
  23. METAVERSE – Cage the Elephant (16)
  24. RITALIN – Dexter and The Moonrocks (26)
  25. SPACEMAN IN TULSA – Counting Crows (27)
  26. TAKE THIS HEART – Brian Lambert (18) 19th week on chart
  27. RUSHMERE – Mumford & Sons (19)
  28. SCARS – Secret Postal Society (30)
  29. FEELS RIGHT – Talk in Waves (N)
  30. BONNET OF PINS – Matt Berninger (N)

HOMELESS RADIO – Single Review: “Fed To The Teeth”

Cover art by Kostiantyn Borshch

Hailing from the war-torn nation of Ukraine are indie rock band Homeless Radio, a resilient group of musicians consisting of Andrii Yampolskyi (vocals/guitar), Fedir Orlov (guitar), Stepan Tkachuk (bass) and Ivan Orlov (drums). Guitarist Ihor Pankieiev is also technically still a member, though he’s been away, fighting in the terrible ongoing conflict with their Russian invaders.

Formed in the city of Kharkiv in 2016, the band incorporates garage rock, alternative rock, skate punk, grunge and pop influences to create music that runs the gamut from pleasantly melodic to relentlessly intense. I first learned about them at the beginning of 2024, at which time I reviewed their terrific hard-hitting single “Submarine“ (which ranks #34 on my list of 100 Best Indie Songs of 2024). Six months later, I reviewed their follow-up single “Sleep Not”. Now they return with “Fed To The Teeth“, their first new single of 2025.

Fedir, Ivan & Andrii taking it to the streets

About the song, Homeless Radio states: “‘Fed To The Teeth’ blends melancholic alternative rock with a fierce skate punk climax, channeling frustration, rejection, and raw emotion into one cathartic release. The track captures a personal transformation from isolation and doubt to indifference and power.” Band vocalist Andrii gave me some background as to what inspired him to write the song while still in his teens: “The song was originally written in 2014, during the war in Donbas which was active at that time. It’s probably the first Homeless Radio song I’ve ever written. At that time, I was finishing high school. We had really shameless and cruel propaganda during those days, so sometimes my classmates were talking real garbage, pushing pro-russian narratives and anti-LGBT agenda. Although it’s possible to find something like this even in modern Ukraine nowadays, at that time, it was almost a trend. I couldn’t agree with it and had numerous arguments that led me to write a song about societal rejection and prejudice. The times have changed significantly. Is it a pro-LGBT or anti-russian propaganda song? I guess so, although it was written during the time when both of these topics were quite different. It’s not a political song, but it was inspired by these political topics.”

The song has somewhat of a retro late 1990s/early 2000s post-grunge feel, starting off with a melancholy fuzzy guitar riff accompanied by a galloping drumbeat, then transitioning into a rather complex melody of relatively quiet verses alternating with louder choruses featuring raging gnarly guitars and pummeling drums. The guys are skilled musicians, as Andrii and Fedir’s dynamic guitar work is truly electrifying, and Stepan’s sturdy bassline powers the song forward while Ivan’s aggressive drumming elevates the song to stratospheric heights. Each time I listen to the song, I discover wonderful little nuances and sounds, like the squealing horn-like guitar notes at the beginning of the line “You will tell and may get only things you’ve never felt“. As always, Andrii’s colorful, highly-emotive vocals bring all the passion necessary to drive the song’s powerful message home.

Invite me to a party, I'll feel like an outsider
You did this out of duty, 'Thanks for coming, you're a cutie'
'Hey, what's wrong? Why so sad?' - 'I'm okay, just hear the voice in my head -
Humiliation, torment session, 'Please stop now! This is my station!'


Why you running? Why you struggling?
You don't know why I am coming!
You're talking 'bout unknown
Never felt this, all in all


Just cursing and hating - oh no, I'm watching and waiting
You will tell and may get only things you've never felt
Prosecution and charges, behind them always darkness
The clamor of denial, in the name of the void and its empire.


Why you running? Why you struggling?
You don't know why I am really coming!
You're talking 'bout unknown
Never felt this, all in all


Oh, I hear the sound
Oh, it is so loud
You're always talking 'bout stuff you've never known
You're not a pro in this field, that much is shown
Oh, I can't stand to be like you, and by the way
To talk about anything, you must know it anyway

“Fed To The Teeth” is another impressive release by this talented foursome. And as I stated in my previous review, it’s admirable that Homeless Radio have managed to stay together as a band and make new music, despite the fact their country has been waging a valiant defense again their Russian invaders for more than three years. I hope they can remain safe and able to continue doing what they love.

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HEALER – Single Review: “London Town”

Artwork by Joel Hewitt

HEALER is an outstanding alternative indie rock band who’ve become one of my favorite British music acts over the past couple of years. Based in the historic fishing port of Grimsby, on the central eastern coast of England, the band is currently made up of Steve Dean Smith (lead vocals), Dave Harries (guitar), Jazz White (drums) and newcomer Joel Hewitt, who created the single artwork and filmed the video, on guitar. (For the recording of their latest music, Tony Edmondson played bass, however recently departed the band.) Their powerful songs explore themes of love, loss, and hope, wrapped in infectious melodies and beautiful arrangements, and delivered with masterful instrumentation and Steve’s wonderful distinctive vocals that make HEALER’s songs immediately identifiable. 

Since forming in 2022, the talented and charismatic five-piece have built a strong following in the British music scene on the strength of their exceptional music and riveting live performances, as well as garnering recognition and airplay on BBC Music Introducing and Amazing Radio UK/USA. Since the release of their debut single “Hurricane” in December 2022, the busy guys have followed with eight more singles and two remixes. I’ve previously reviewed three of their singles – “Bones“, “Wake Me Up” and “War” – with “Bones” and “War” each spending many weeks on my top 30 chart and “Bones” ranking #67 on my 100 Best Songs of 2023 list and “War” ranking #84 on my 100 Best Songs of 2024. (You can read some of those reviews by clicking on the ‘Related’ links at the end of this post.)

Photo by Joel Hewitt

Now they’re back with their ninth and latest single “London Town“, a gorgeous rock song that continues their unbroken string of stellar releases. The track was recorded and mixed by Pieter Rietkerk at Chapel Studios and mastered by Grant Berry of Fader Mastering. About the song, the band says it “explores the burnout of big-city life and the identity crisis that follows — when chasing your dreams starts to feel like losing yourself. It’s spacious, urgent, and speaks to the modern struggle of finding meaning in chaos. In the song, we personify London as a magnetic, almost haunting character — reflecting what it feels like to be on the outside looking in, and losing yourself in the city that was supposed to save you.”

To gain a bit more insight into HEALER’s new song and the Grimsby music scene, I had a brief interview with the band’s drummer Jazz:

EML: I’ve been following you guys for two years now, and first wrote about you when I featured your powerful song “Bones” on my blog in late May 2023. At that time, you’d been together as HEALER for about a year. In your bio on your website, you begin with the following line to describe your hometown: “Rising from the ashes of a once thriving but now forgotten fishing town, HEALER are...”, which I find both brutally honest and endearing. Is there much of a music scene in Grimsby? And what brought the five of you together to form a band in the first place?

Jazz: There is currently a great music scene in Grimsby. Historically, Grimsby (and Cleethorpes) has always had an amazing music scene, filled with bands that have done great things and have been on the edge of making it big. The scene seemed to die down a bit a few years ago, particularly throughout the dreaded Covid years, but that also seemed to be a bit of a catalyst to inspire a lot of the bands that had previously broken up to reunite or create new bands. Which is what brought us together. We all knew each other through either being in previous bands together or being in bands that did gigs together and we all just wanted to start making and playing music again, which is what we did. Now the scene is thriving, with an abundance of bands doing great things, even young bands getting signed, venues like Docks Academy and Yardbirds providing platforms for local artists to perform and support bigger bands and the best thing of all, is all of the local bands know each other and are supporting each other.

EML: Are any or all of you still living in Grimsby?

Jazz: We all still live in Grimsby. I think we would find it hard not to all live in the same area. We meet up regularly to rehearse, make band plans and just generally socialise together so it would be really difficult if we didn’t all live near each other.

EML: In addition to sounding great, your songs also feature intelligent, relatable and often poignant lyrics. How do ideas for new songs come about, and do all band members contribute to writing the music and lyrics, or does that job generally fall on one or two of you? 

Jazz: There isn’t really a clear process for how we write our songs. Steve generally writes most of the lyrics but we all contribute musically to each song. Sometimes Steve might come to a practise session with a new idea or maybe an old idea that he wants to rework, sometimes Dave might come to practise with a new riff that we all build on or sometimes we just randomly start jamming and come up with something brand new together. Sometimes these songs feel like they ‘fall from the sky’ and, sometimes, those are the best songs.

EML: You write that your new song “London Town” “explores the burnout of big-city life and the identity crisis that follows — when chasing your dreams starts to feel like losing yourself.” Is the song autobiographical, and have one or more of you spent any time living in London? Or do the lyrics speak more to the challenges and conflicting emotions that sometimes result when an artist or band puts so much of their time and energy into “making it big”?

Jazz: ‘London Town’ is definitely autobiographical and is about the time that Steve spent living in London and some of the lyrics are directly about Steve’s experiences whilst living there. The song does also link to the challenges of being an artist from a small town and trying to make it and the frustrations of a lot of opportunities being more readily available for artists from ‘bigger cities’.

EML: You’ve released eight singles and two remixes since late 2022, with “London Town” marking your ninth original single. Are there any plans for a full album on the horizon?

Jazz: We recorded a batch of new songs in the studio recently which we will be releasing over the new few months, starting with ‘London Town’ but we have also been writing more new material, which we hope to get back into the studio later in the year to record. We’re not sure whether we will be releasing an album yet but we will definitely be releasing more new material, regularly over this year.

EML: If you could perform with another artist or band in a billing of your dreams, who would that be?

Jazz: That’s such a tough question, there are so many bands we would love to play with, especially because, although we’ve all got similar music tastes, we also all have our own individual tastes. Overall though, U2 seem to be a band that we all take inspiration from and all for different reasons. Bono is certainly a huge inspiration for Steve as a vocalist and they are one of the biggest bands in the world so we know that it would be a huge, packed out stadium show with high quality production throughout. 

“London Town” opens with a plucky guitar riff, then quickly builds into an anthemic rock banger. That smoldering riff continues throughout the song as more of Dave and Joel’s formidable guitar work enter the mix, fortified by Tony’s driving bassline and Jazz’s emphatic drumbeats. It all creates a powerful dynamic backdrop for Steve’s emotionally-charged vocals as he plaintively laments about the strong, unforgiving psychological hold London had on him and so many other musicians: “Can the city hear me singing in my town? Will London listen, does it even hear my sound? Am I loud enough, loud enough for you? We don’t have the same view. You’ve got England ’round your finger. Every song, every singer wants to call you home, while we’re just left alone. Can you hear me? Can you hear me now? Can you hear me London Town!” I love it, and it’s now one of my favorite HEALER songs.

The video, shot at the Grimsby Bus Depot, was filmed and edited by Joel Hewitt and features the band members as passengers on a bus.

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EML’s Favorite Songs – “All the Things She Said” by Simple Minds

Although Scottish band Simple Minds are most well-known (in America at least) for their 1985 hit “Don’t You (Forget About Me)” (which I do love), their 1986 single “All the Things She Said” is one of my favorite songs by them. I love everything about it – that slow-burn of an opening with wobbly synths accompanied by gentle drumbeats, followed by a sultry guitar riff that expands into a glorious soundscape of sweeping strings, intense piano keys, roiling guitars and dramatic percussion, finally ending with a flourish that’s like a rock version of a classical piece. Then there’s the double threat of lead singer Jim Kerr’s sensuous fervent vocals, accompanied by soulful backing vocals by American singer Robin Clark.

Simple Minds formed in Glasgow in late 1977 from the ashes of punk band Johnny & The Self-Abusers, who split up due to internal strife, with a lineup consisting of Jim Kerr, Charlie Burchill, Brian McGee and Tony Donald, all of whom were teenagers at the time. Donald would soon leave the band, while Mick MacNeil and Derek Forbes joined, and the band would continue as a five-piece through 1981. They released their debut album Life in a Day in 1979 to limited success in the UK, and finally broke through with their fifth album New Gold Dream (81-82-83-84) in 1982, which reached #3 in the UK and #69 on the Billboard 200 Album Chart, marking their first album to chart in the U.S. But it was their song “Don’t You (Forget About Me)”, used in the opening of the 1985 film The Breakfast Club, that catapulted them to international fame. Written by Keith Forsey and Steve Schiff, and previously offered to Billy Idol and Bryan Ferry before Simple Minds agreed to record it, the song became a chart-topper in the U.S. and many other countries around the world.

Over their 46-year-long career, Simple Minds have released 21 studio albums, 11 live albums, 10 compilation albums, 14 box sets, 68 singles, and five video albums, selling more than 60 million albums worldwide. They were the most commercially successful Scottish band of the 1980s, and despite numerous changes in personnel they continue to record and tour to this day.

But back to “All the Things She Said”, in an 2015 interview with Songfacts, Kerr said the song was inspired by an article he read about Polish political prisoners in the Soviet Union. “There was an interview with wives of guys that had been away for a long time, taken away, and some of the beautiful quotations that the women had used became sort of the background for that song.

The song was included on their seventh studio album Once Upon A Time, released in October 1985 and produced by famed music producer Jimmy Iovine. The album features their four highest-charting hits in the U.S. – “Don’t You (Forget About Me)”, “Alive And Kicking”, “Sanctify Yourself” and “All the Things She Said”. The song reached #4 in Ireland, #6 in the Netherlands, #9 in the UK and #28 on the US Billboard Hot 100, though it reached #9 on the Billboard Hot Rock Tracks chart.

Don’t you look back on a big lost world
Crying out tomorrow
Don’t you look down like the heroes say
Come tell me all about it
Take me to the streets where the bonfires burn
Take me in your arms and I’ll fade away
When I hear you say what you got to say

Anywhere you go, you know I’ll still be waiting
All the things she said, she said
Little darling close your eyes, there’ll be no compromising
Of all the things she said, she said

Throw me to the street where the heartbeats beating
“Beating all around me”
To the peaceful revolution
And the perfect wave, surround me
Tell me ’bout the ocean moving in slow motion
I see it glitter in the sun
Then it’s freezing in the moonlight
Never look back, never look back, never look away

If freedom comes and goes, you know I’ll still be waiting
All the things she said, she said
You’ve fought the fight so long, no surrender to temptation
Of all the things she said, she said

Stars will fall out for you
Luck will surrender
I’m calling out to you

Oh to be near you in the first morning light
I’d be with you, I dream about you
If I could leave here, I would leave here tonight
I’d be with you, I’d stay with you tonight
Tonight

Anywhere you go, you know I’ll still be waiting
Of all the things she said, she said
When I look into your eyes, I see a new day rising
Oh all the things she said, she said
Through the eyes of love, and to never know what hate is
Of all the things she said, she said
She said, this is our time, she said, this is our place
This is the space my heart wants to be
Little darling close your eyes, there’ll be no compromising
All the things she said, she said