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Album Review

Mary Knoblock’s “Peach” album is a tender journey through love, loss, and rebirth

Mary Knoblock

Mary Knoblock’s new album, “Peach,” is a deeply emotional and cinematic world of sound, blending Americana folk, neo-classical dream pop, and storytelling into something intimate. The album is nine songs and just under forty-six minutes, with the feeling of a performance where every scene holds tenderness, heartbreak, longing, and quiet transformation.

“Peach” is inspired by the idea of emotional rebirth and welcomes you with warmth and honesty. Each track is a tender clutch of textures, poetic emotion, and experimental beauty. Her voice and compositions are finely tuned for a strength that makes every moment intimate and alive.

“Mustang Clover” is a free, contemplative track, while “Metal Neon Sky” is a luminous, mysterious, and desirable emotional landscape. The title track, “Peach,” is warm, tender, and exposed, and in a deeply heartfelt way, captures the emotional heart of the album. “Mother’s Eyes” is a piece of emotional depth and memory, and one of the most intimate moments of the project. The album continues with the quiet emotional weight of lead single “I Knew You,” graceful and restrained, balancing love and loss.

“Of The Alpine” evokes a drifting, cinematic sense of lonely isolation that is beautiful and lonely. “Maybe Tomorrow” is a lively, ambiguous song, while “Peach – Blue Grass” is a reimagination of the emotional heart of the album from a more rootsy perspective. “Mustang Clover – Deluxe” continues the reflective spirit of the opening track and adds emotional texture. “Peach” reveals Mary Knoblock as an artist not afraid to expose truth through sound, emotion, and imagination.

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A seasoned music writer at Honk Magazine, covering new releases and artist spotlights with a focus on blending insight with captivating storytelling, helping readers connect deeply with the music and the artists behind it.

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Album Review

Ricardo Bacelar and Airto Moreira deliver rhythm and soul on “Maracanós” (album)

Ricardo Bacelar and Airto Moreira

When visionary musicians come together with complete artistic freedom, the result can be timeless and unexpected. Ricardo Bacelar and Airto Moreira’s latest album, “Maracanós,” is just that, in eight rich tracks that weave through rhythm, experimentation, and emotion with remarkable ease.

Recorded in 2025 at Jasmin Studios in Fortaleza, Brazil, the project combines acoustic and digital instruments into a lush environment that feels alive from start to finish. The album begins with the earthbound energy and rhythmic motion of “Pé no Chão,” while “Mestre Novo da Guiné” generates a more pensive mood fueled by stacked harmonies. The driving, percussive force of “Bumbo Meu Boi” clearly reflects Airto Moreira’s unmistakable musical personality.

The great vocalist Flora Purim is on “Voo da Tarde,” making it more expansive and emotionally deep, adding a cinematic quality to the album. The title track, “Maracanós,” is one of the project’s more adventurous pieces, balancing improvisation and rich tonal textures. “Submersivos” takes the experimentation further, with shifting sounds and atmospheric details. The album offers a more intimate, calmer respite with “3 Minutos de Paz,” which invites delicate beauty and contemplation.

The closing track, “Pau Rolou,” makes an impression with its vibrant energy and dynamic musical interplay. Also featured are the arrangements of Liduíno Pitombeira and the Kalimera String Quartet from Rio de Janeiro, adding another elegant layer to this ambitious project. “Maracanós” shows us how jazz can still surprise you while also honoring musical tradition through bold creativity.

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Album Review

Block turns heartbreak into light on “Love Crash,” a raw journey through survival

Block

Block’s sixth studio album, “Love Crash,” is a 10-track rock record that takes a human, quietly hopeful approach to heartbreak. Illuminated by openness, humor, and a surprising sense of joy, the album is a 32-minute, 45-second journey through grief, reflection, and emotional recovery.

With the first track, “I Thought I Won The War,” Block sets a tone of emotional ambiguity where wins are dubious, and wars within are still raging. “California Calls” wants to be far away, wants to go away, but memory tugs the other way. “Over And Over” is about cycles of emotion that keep repeating, even when you want to move on. “Firefly” offers a softer light, pointing to fragile hope in emotional weight.

“All In My Head” explores the inner turmoil of the mind, which is louder than the world outside. “Song To Jamie” feels like a letter written from regret and memory. “The Heartbreak Song” is a total embrace of emotional collapse, but it’s structured and honest. “Carly Says” is about the voices outside that inform the decisions inside. “No One Ever Taught Me How” emphasizes the lack of emotional experience and difficulty in dealing with emotions. “Still Life” ends on a quiet note of pause, as if everything has been dealt with but not forgotten.

The album was written from a dark place, and each song was a step to emotional healing. Produced by Chris Kuffner, with final mixing and mastering by ECR President Blake Morgan, “Love Crash” is a patchwork of imperfect moments, sewn together with honesty, of an artist processing pain while still reaching for the light.

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Photo Credit: Dave Doobinin

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