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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

ECHOFLIP inspires faith and fire with triumphant anthem on “Kingdom Rise”

ECHOFLIP

ECHOFLIP marches forward with commanding purpose on “Kingdom Rise,” a single that not only demands attention but also commands it. Driven by pounding drums, soaring melodic textures, and full-conviction lyricism, the song arrives like a battle cry with the heart of worship. Bold and energized and spiritually charged from beginning to end.

“Kingdom Rise” is street realism meets kingdom vision at its heart. It’s got grit in its pulse but grace in its message as well. Each bar rings with resilience with ECHOFLIP, a record that embodies struggle, perseverance, and steadfast faith in the face of adversity. The result is music that is rooted in reality while reaching for something much larger.

What makes the single particularly compelling is how seamlessly it combines high-energy Christian trap with uplifting spiritual themes. The hard-hitting production has edge and urgency, and its faith-centered focus gives it soul. It’s motivational without being pushy. Worshipful without momentum loss, without losing authenticity. Ideal for trap gospel, inspirational rap, and urban playlists that aim to uplift as much as energize, “Kingdom Rise” delivers on all fronts. It moves the body, it sharpens the mind, it stirs the soul.

Connect with ECHOFLIP on Spotify

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Muddy’s purest truth lies in heartfelt reflection on “All Love”

Muddy

“All Love” opens a very human dialogue with Muddy, a single built around one timeless truth, love is worth living for, and if necessary, worth dying for. In a world that often seems restless, distracted, and uncertain, this song is a quiet but powerful reminder to cling tightly to what matters most.

Muddy handles this theme honestly, without overcomplicating it. When the message is this good, you don’t need anything extra. Instead, “All Love” is sincere, letting its emotional heart speak for itself. That openness is what makes the song hit. It’s lived-in, reflective, and undeniably real.

With “All Love,” Muddy arrives at a kind of truth that transcends genre and moment. It is close, soulful, and grounded in something universally understood. Sometimes the most powerful songs are the ones that remind us of what we know deep down already, and this is one of those.

Connect with Muddy on Spotify

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