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Album Review

Shara Strand rises triumphantly from life’s heartbreaking storms with her debut album “Love Forever”

Shara Strand

After weathering life’s challenges with introspective creativity and resilience, two-time Billboard-charting dance artist Shara Strand makes a noteworthy return to the spotlight with her most refined and sophisticated work to date: “Love Forever.” This dazzling 13-track debut album celebrates many dimensions of love in its romantic, spiritual, familial, and self-love multifaceted forms, all framed within a compelling narrative of heartbreak, healing, resilience, and emotional rebirth.

Love Forever” manifests a transformative elegance born out of grief, functioning both as a personal diary and a musical manifesto. From the outset, Shara establishes her artistic identity with conviction. The opening track, I Will Be Here,” introduces an ethereal promise of unwavering loyalty delivered through soaring vocals and a stirring melody that lingers like a heartbeat. It is an empowering anthem of emotional presence, grounded in the complexities of love, one that echoes with universal truth and timeless emotion.

Following spontaneously behind is My Green Light,” a sultry, soul-tinged ode to passion, presenting a vivid tapestry of life’s challenges and openness. With layered harmonies and shimmering production, Shara channels the electric highs of intimacy alongside the quiet boldness that feels like love’s inner beast. Followed by Always Your Baby,” this notable track emerges as a soulful pop composition that deeply resonates with listeners. In this piece, a blend of maturity and musical sophistication is evident as Shara delivers a poignant tribute to the purest and most enduring form of love.

Additional tracks such as I Will Follow and Anthem further exemplify her genre-blending capabilities. The former offers a lyrical portrayal of confident yet emotional protection from adversity, serving as a piano-driven affirmation of perseverance and inner strength. Conversely, the latter radiates with vibrant energy, motivating listeners to transcend the emotional challenges of life. Collectively, these songs demonstrate Shara’s adeptness in merging openness with unwavering resilience, particularly when confronted with the potential to be undermined by external influences.

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Shara explores a more ambient soundscape in Happy Ending,” a composition soaked in memories and romantic closure. It exemplifies the allure of happiness beyond imagination, drawing audiences into a familiar melody marked by significant influence. The intricate seventh track, Desperado,” resonates with introspective melancholy, showcasing a sparkling complexity that captures the solitary moments felt in loneliness. However, the emotional core of the album lies in the eighth track, Second Chances,” which underscores the eternal impact of granting a deserving second chance in interpersonal relationships. Lioness exudes empowerment and celebrates bold femininity, a flirtatious, rhythm-charged tribute to emotional freedom and the exhilarating thrill of being entirely lost in time.

In Surrender,” Shara Strand stirs audiences into a safe and breathtaking space that offers peace of mind, encouraging them to surrender to the yearning for emotional belonging. Meanwhile, Soul Dad provides a deeply personal glimpse into the intricacies of emotional renewal, rooted in the cherished memories and life lessons learned from paternal bonds that shaped her identity. Furthermore, My Sweetest Boy captures the intimate and reassuring essence of familial love, rich with gratitude and sincerity. It conveys her affection for someone who means everything to her and makes her life complete.

Closing out the record is the thirteenth track, Ascended,” perhaps the album’s emotional apex. This cinematic, dark-pop masterpiece captures the beautiful impression of joyful liberation, celebrating the moment we rise above fear and reclaim our joy. With tremulous vocals and evocative production, it leaves a lasting impression, a final exhale of triumph, closure, and fearless self-expression. Recorded at NYC’s Engine Room Audio in collaboration with longtime producer Gregory Phace Fils-Aime, the album presents a masterclass in emotional alchemy and versatility. The album is polished, purposeful, and poignantly personal. Each track is a crucial chapter in a larger melodic manifesto centered on self-discovery and human connection, offering listeners a mirror to their own experiences.

Shara Strand is on a mission to reclaim her unique artistic voice and is poised to build on her momentum, solidifying her position as a prominent artist in the music world. Her latest album, “Love Forever,” contributes to her already impressive discography, and with her potential firmly ignited, she aims to transform the raw elements of her emotional experiences into a sanctuary of music. The album reiterates themes of reflective and unapologetically human creativity, skillfully turning feelings of sadness into something beautiful and transforming vulnerability into triumph. It represents an essential addition to numerous playlists and is a must-listen for enthusiasts who appreciate authentic, soulful music with profound introspective charm that keeps your heart beating.

 

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Album Review

Saint Escape sets the past on fire with latest release “Look At What You Made”

Saint Escape

Saint Escape isn’t here to reconcile the past, they’re here to torch it. Now, with the release of their new single “Look At What You Made,” Saint Escape have unleashed a punishing, nu-metal-infused anthem that just sounds like an equal measure of reckoning and release. It is loud, confrontational, and honest, exactly what a purging rock record should be.

Produced and mixed by Joe Rickard, Starset, Three Days Grace, Breaking Benjamin, the track delivers a tight punch that fuses wild aggression and arena-sized power. “Look At What You Made” doesn’t stop. Rickard’s slick production redoubles Saint Escape’s raw edge rather than sanding it down, and the song takes on a huge, modern rock sound without losing its bite.

“Look At What You Made” is a primal response to toxic authority figures, the kind who kept order through fear, misinformation, and control, and knew where best to leave emotional scars. On “Look At What You Made,” the anger boiling beneath the surface becomes something purposeful, an anthem for anyone who’s been moulded by manipulation and left in its wake. The effect is communal shake-off, a determination not to be shaped by the past.

And lead vocalist Matt Cox provides a threatening, buffed clean vocal performance, of sorts as well, one that’s heavy with anger and determination. There is rage here, but also clarity, a sense that this is less about revenge than about reclaiming autonomy. As Cox puts it, the song is a purge, a reminder that the future belongs to those willing to to take it back. “Look At What You Made” is a testament to strength and newfound independence, it’s further evidence that Saint Escape are bleeding their past into something louder, stranger, and harder to ignore.

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Album Review

Big O redefines artistic evolution with “When it’s Not Said, But Done” album

Big O

Big O’s “When it’s Not Said, But Done” is a whisper of transformation narrated through rhythm, texture, and space. Across its fifteen tracks, spanning just under forty-seven minutes, Big O sacrifices flash for feeling and ego for essence.

The production feels like an artist who has finally quit chasing something external and is instead listening inward. The flow of the album is methodical but organic, with each track leading into the other as if they were diary entries. On “Free Spirit,” Big O creates a soundscape that embodies freedom in action, with rhythms that propel you forward. It’s one of those rare songs that can be at once contemplative and propulsive, with a slow revelation. And also, “New Found Joy” is an anthem for rebirth.

Big O’s production vision here is sweeping and cinematic, but also intimate. The presence of live musicians gives an organic texture. Jeronimo G’s xylophone on track nine tolls like an intimate conversation, while IB Delight’s saxophone on track ten blows satisfying warmth and longing into the mix. These collaborative moments are the crucial parts of Big O’s unfolding language.

Every choice, from the minimal artwork by Andriyan Robby to the in-house mixing and mastering by Big O himself, is consistent with the album’s spirit of transformational thought. In “When it’s Not Said, But Done,” Big O has created a statement on silent courage. It is an album for those who know that, in reality, real change does not need to be shouted from the mountaintops, but only heard, felt, and lived.

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