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Artist Spotlight

C’est Ça mourns and celebrates friendship in new single “Home”

Belgian indie band C’est Ça’s new single “Home” is one of their most personal songs to date. It’s a heartfelt tribute to Loues, their late drummer and co-founder. The song depicts a very human loss, showing how hard it is to be sad and grateful at once.

Loues died, and the song is about missing someone while trying to reach the light. The words and how this song is sung are like memories: broken, fragile, and real. The band’s simple production lets emotion take the lead, which makes it feel more like remembering than performing.

Joran’s voice has both pain and acceptance, and the arrangements build up slowly without ever being too much. The song’s emotional heart is in its quiet moments of realisation, like the idea that home isn’t a place but people who make us feel like we belong.

“Home” is one of the five songs that will be on C’est Ça’s first EP, which will come out in 2026. It is the end and the start of something new. It reminds us that art can help us deal with our grief and that making things can help us feel like we belong, even when we’re sad.

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Artist Spotlight

“Black Woman Are Not Cheap” by Deportee is a hip-hop statement of respect and identity

Deportee

Deportee returns with “Black Women Are Not Cheap,” a powerful and emotional single that is a hip-hop record with weight and purpose. The song is a tribute to Black women, but also speaks to the wider Black community about dignity, identity, and respect, built on a base of raw intention and social reflection.

It’s hip-hop from the ground up, steady percussion that keeps the message front and center. The beat complements a narrative that feels urgent and intimate. The lyrics of “Black Women Are Not Cheap” are inspired by a moment of discomfort and realization, inspired by a visual scene in popular media where the lack of identity reduced a woman to an objectified presence. That answer becomes the emotional spine of the song, recontextualizing frustration to make a larger statement about how Black women are viewed and valued.

Every line is a piece of a larger message that challenges harmful portrayals while reclaiming the narrative. What makes “Black Women Are Not Cheap” stand out is because it combines protest energy with musical control. It is a statement, a composition of observation, emotion, and cultural awareness. This release is a deeper dive into a scene often marked by surface-level themes, a reminder of hip-hop’s place as a voice for truth and reflection.

Connect with Deportee on | IG | Spotify | Website |

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Artist Spotlight

Louie Sace sets the dancefloor in motion with latest release “Body Bend”

Louie Sace

Louie Sace is turning up the heat with his latest single, “Body Bend”. This upbeat and catchy track is guaranteed to have listeners on their feet from the first beat. The track is a celebration of movement, confidence, and pure musical enjoyment, with irresistible rhythms, polished production, and an undeniable dancefloor spirit.

Body Bend” gets down to business from the get-go, embracing its purpose. It’s a song that picks up steam, club-ready production with a sprightly groove to catch your attention right away. Every element is carefully crafted to create an immersive experience, encouraging audiences to shed their worries and get lost in the rhythm.

What makes the single particularly impressive is Louie Sace’s part behind the scenes. Not only does “Body Bend” showcase his performing prowess, but it also demonstrates his creative vision and technical proficiency, as it is a completely self-produced project. The production is slick, energetic, and modern, and shows a clear understanding of what makes a dance track resonate with listeners across different audiences and settings.

Connect with Louie Sace on Spotify || Instagram || Facebook

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