Artist Spotlight
Five Tracks You Need in Your Playlist Right Now
This week, we’re featuring five artists who prove that being on the cutting edge is integral to their craft, blending genres, emotions and energies in a sound that’s worth your valuable ear time. From rap anthems to soulful R&B odysseys, from jazz forays to narratives built on heartbreak and humor, these five tracks make it clear that the next generation of artists is here to be heard.
$tackmoney j – FIRST OFF
$tackmoney j wastes no time setting the tone with “FIRST OFF.” You can feel him bring his confidence to the room from his first beat drop. His delivery is sharp each bar rapped like he’s trying to get the job done, telling you not just that he got shot, but why you should understand and believe and remember it.
Yet what makes “FIRST OFF” so compelling is the ferocity of his performance. He sounds like a talent grabbing the mike and demanding attention. The instrumental is just as unstopping, this time bearing a heavy bounce to match his flow. And though the production is slick, it grit remains. This song plays like a manifesto, an announcement of the fact that $tackmoney j is here and doesn’t want to blend into the wallpaper. It is the kind of record you play when you want to feel unstoppable, a soundtrack for ambition, grind and resilience.
zayscottii – PHASES
zayscottii’s PHASES is a slow-burn beauty, the sort of track that worms its way into your mind and doesn’t leave long after you hit stop. With its breathy production and plush vocals, it manages to create an air that feels as deeply intimate as endlessly expansive.
There’s a duality present the track is intimate, like an after-hours whispered conversation, but also cinematic enough to score an entire season of life changes. The production skews more into alternative R&B sounds, with some warm textures and spacey tones for zayscottii’s voice to shine. His flow is slippery and deliberate, all drenched in feeling, heavy with thought and vulnerable reflection.
Lyrically, PHASES seems to be a rumination on life’s cycles, growth and loss and recovery, and the in-between moments that mold us. It doesn’t hurry to resolve, and that makes it all the more true. It just sits in that gray area, allowing the listener to project their own experience onto the song.
This is that type of record, perfect for midnight rides or headphone hours, the band that suits the mood you like to stay in when everyone else is asleep. Through “PHASES,” zayscottii shows that return is being made in soundscapes.
madanes – Your Dog
Charming in an off-kilter way, madanes handles love and loss with unexpected twists of humor and bitter poignancy. The idea is simple and brilliant. It’s tongue-in-cheek storytelling that makes you smirk and tugs at a chewy bread roll of something tender inside.
The songwriting is sharp, and it wrings humor from heartbreak without reducing the stakes of heartbreak. Rather than wallow in self-pity, “Your Dog” makes rejection sound almost liberating. The tune is filled with witty lyrics, but beneath the smart wordplay lurks a more fundamental truth, that sometimes we end up finding contentment in unexpected places, even if things don’t always work out romantically.
The track flows along breezily and feels easily digestible, with melodies that lodge themselves into your brain almost immediately. There’s a breeziness to the production that reflects the whimsy, but still allows for sincerity to break through. madanes’ vocal delivery is sincere and easygoing, walking that tightrope of self-awareness and vulnerability. In the end, “Your Dog” is evidence that heartbreak doesn’t always have to sound like melodrama. Sometimes, it can even be funny and renewing dull sense of comfort.
Scarlette Ember – Ultimate Jazz
Scarlette Ember’s “Ultimate Jazz” lives up to its title by taking jazz beyond what is currently possible in this day and age. Though the song nods to the classics, and has that combination of brassy horns, tricky rhythms and smoky textures down cold. Instead, it implants modern touches, taking a sound that is both timeless and refreshingly new.
The track glides along with adventurous spirit, its moods shifting throughout without ever losing cohesion. One moment it’s intimate and moody, the next bursting into lively, expansive bursts that fill your ears. For lovers of jazz, “Ultimate Jazz” is a love letter to the genre. For beginners, it provides an easy on-ramp to a universe that can seem daunting at times. That’s the genius here, Scarlette Ember is somehow able to pay homage to jazz’s roots while dragging it into conversations with today’s landscape.
Listening is like walking into a smoky club in which past and present intermingle, where improvisation hangs out with innovation. Ultimate Jazz is not just a song it’s an experience, one which solidifies Scarlette Ember as an artist with vision and boldness.
Slang Gang – No Love
From the outset, “No Love” lays down its mission statement, a track designed for anything gentle or diplomatic. Slang Gang comes with raw energy, spitting hard bars that slice through the inside of their message and lay bare the reality they are saying loud and clear. Each verse comes off as honed to a blade, with no room for indecision.
The production hits so hard, pounding with an up-tempo groove as relentless as the lyrics it accompanies. There’s a darkness to the beat, but it’s that very grittiness that enhances the rawness of the delivery. Together, it’s a track that doesn’t just play but vibrates in the chest.
“No Love” howls the truth. It’s a survival song, and a song about resilience, and the sort of experience that makes you tough. And in Slang Gang’s delivery, you’re never unsure that this is lived experience translated into music. That realness only makes the new track sting even harder. “No Love” is really a statement piece. This is about making space for a reality, however unspun it might be. The result is a street anthem that’s as cathartic as it is commanding, solidifying Slang Gang’s status as voices that demand attention.
Artist Spotlight
GOODTWIN shares reflection with indie-pop single, “Soak It Up”
The indie-pop project GOODTWIN offers a subtly stirring new single, “Soak It Up,” that’s sort of like taking a deep breath after drowning out the world for so long. The track combines avant-garde jazz elements with their indie-pop sensibilities. “Soak It Up” is more of a quiet rallying cry than a rousing proclamation.
The song gently explores the push-pull of life between external pressures and inner peace, the feeling of being pulled in multiple directions while seeking a soft place to land. GOODTWIN’s leading force and vocalist, Gus Alexander, wrote the song in response to that insidious, yet understated, influence on modern life, and the need for validation, doing something useful with your time today, and, at the same time, being attractive enough to get what you need gutted from someone else.
“Soak It Up” offers an encounter with the concepts by attending to how it was made, with a focus on presence rather than performance and on significance over distraction. The balance between warmth and precision in the production is immaculate. The track, produced and engineered by Carly Bond and Germaine Dunes of Sound and Hearing at Altamira Sound, has a refined yet raw feel that doesn’t seem polished but rather suggests a human element, which suits its introspective tones.
Jack Doutt’s mastering adds another layer of depth to a soulfully rich composition, leaving enough space for each element to shine without overwhelming the others. The result is a cohesive, immersive sound that feels intentional throughout. For fans of indie-pop with a sprinkle of jazz, introspective verses, and emotionally driven production, the track is an exciting addition to GOODTWIN’s blossoming discography. It’s a piece of music that invites a slower tempo, that forces attentive listening, and, with it, an experience more fully lived.
Artist Spotlight
G3 the Plug moves like a ghost on latest release “Danny Phantom”
G3 the Plug goes darker with his new single, “Danny Phantom,” a moody slice of hip-hop whose chord, and melody-led chills make it feel less like a song and more like this state of mind you have after the witching hour. Emotionally understated and raw, the track embodies that quiet intensity of moving through the city when everything is far away and everything seems blurred, half-seen.
Built on a minimal trap foundation, “Danny Phantom” excels in its simplicity. The production is intentionally loose, leaving room for the emotions to breathe rather than smother. It’s a beat that doesn’t beg for attention, it settles in, serving as an enveloping setting that mimics the song’s motifs of isolation, motion and presence. Every bit of sound seems deliberate, supporting the introspective mood rather than competing with it.
G3 the Plug doubles down on understatement. He chisels away rather than overexplain, allowing space to pass like streetlights out a car window. It has that drifting feeling, of being in a place while actually not being there at all, that gives the album its ghostly contours. The title seems right, G3 floats through the track like a ghost, invisible but powerfully present, in landscapes where silence is as telling as language.
The key to making “Danny Phantom” stand out is its emotional honesty. This isn’t a track intended for the spectacle, it’s meant for reflection. It’s a record that speaks to anyone familiar with the sensation of being alone in motion, tumbling toward some destination and hauling thoughts up from the depths after dark. Lying in the land between underground rap and atmospheric hip-hop, “Danny Phantom” makes clear G3 the Plug’s capacity to convey mood through music without forcing it. It’s a slow-burn record, one that uncovers itself with more listens, with the music lingering long after its final beat.
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