Artist Spotlight
The Hospital explores love’s quiet exit in new single “Shampoo”
Emotional endings fade in slowly like something that goes out of focus as life goes on around it. That quiet vanishing is celebrated in The Hospital’s “Shampoo” with startling honesty, morphing a familiar emotional truth into a gentle, dreamlike listening experience.
The dream-pop track is the third single from the upcoming EP “Without You Is Hard” and captures that uneasy space between staying and leaving. This is a hazy production, constructed of delicate textures and subdued layers to reflect emotional distance. The vocals are woven into the mix, inviting you in with a light touch and a sense of openness.
That delivery adds to the emotional weight of the song, a relationship that is still there physically but gone emotionally. The whole experience is fuelled by storytelling inspired by the lyrics. It is the moment when two people are still together but have already unconsciously known the ending. The beauty of “Shampoo” is that it doesn’t stop at heartbreak but goes on to explore the aftermath.
It’s a meditation on the uncanny familiarity of new relationships, where little things echo what was. Even a common object like a shared product turns into a symbol of emotional recurrence and memory. The Hospital has a track that feels intimate, reflective, and deeply human. “Shampoo” is a hanging in the space before it, where understanding comes too late, but changes everything.
Album Review
“Definition” by Elysian Fields paints a bold portrait of life and emotion (album)
Elysian Fields returns with their album, “Definition,” a journey through rock and pop textures grounded in strong songwriting and emotional clarity. James Shumway and Mark Roos are the main songwriters, with Roos on guitar and Shumway on keyboards. Kerri Murray’s soaring vocals, Dale Sandberg’s bass, and Jeff Francom’s drums are on all tracks, and producer Cliff Maag helped shape the recording of the album into a clean, powerful sound.
The album opens with “When The Days Get Hot,” a song that sets the tone for the album and a long, tense period in life where energy and thoughtfulness are intertwined. With a steady beat and warm instrumentation, “No Matter What” is a song about loyalty and emotional strength, while “My Fantasy” is more dreamy and has a softer way of expressing desire and imagination. “Here You Come Here I Go” explores push-pull relationships with sharp guitar lines and vocal contrast.
“Staying With You” picks up the pace and emphasizes commitment and human connection, and the next track, “Shattered Lives,” delves into a darker emotional space, dealing with loss and recovery. “Eternal Flame” grows in intensity and passion to flaunt the band’s ability to merge rock emotion and pop lift. The layered and flowing sound of “Waves” is inspired by nature and evokes a sense of movement and change, while “Desert Sky” produces vast, rolling sounds that suggest both despair and positivity. “Take My Hand” is a plea for help and for faith, and “Hillary’s Lullaby” is a soft, personal moment on the record.
The record ends on a high note with the last track, “Wings to Fly,” which has themes of freedom and new beginnings. “Definition” is a comprehensive emotional statement for Elysian Fields as the album spans the human experience from love and dreams to loss and renewal. Each arrangement is a fine balance of rock drive and pop melody, giving the album a timeless quality. The sound of Elysian Fields feels honest, bold, and deeply human throughout the album.
Album Review
LAOR delivers “ÊMOONÀ,” a sacred ceremony of faith, light and remembrance (album)
LAOR is back with a deeply personal, spiritual body of work, “ÊMOONÀ.” It is a 51-minute acoustic folk album presented as a ceremony. The project is a guided ritual of original and chosen medicine songs, and LAOR creates a shared space of presence, remembrance, and emotional clarity over its 11 tracks.
“ÊMOONÀ” is derived from the Hebrew word “Emunah,” which means faith, and the moon as a guiding presence. LAOR re-codes it into a new word that stands for love, light, and remembrance. The album opens with “Great Eagle” feat. Abuela Maria Valdivia Wakantitlan, a broad, grounding invocation that feels ancestral and protective. “Minha Estrela Guia” is a soft navigational, like following a quiet inner light, while “I AM” goes within and finds itself by stillness and awareness.
The name “Cainã” evokes an earthy, grounded feeling, rooted in human roots and belonging. The title track “ÊMOONÀ” feat. Sagiv Cohen is the core of the journey, blending faith and lunar symbolism into a unified sound of trust and flow. The “Indio Mensageiro” is presented as a messenger of messages at a distance and of spirit, and “Ay Aguita” is flowing, full of cleansing energy and catharsis.
“Breath” slows everything into a pure presence and awareness of life itself, and “Niftach” is an opening, a symbol of freedom and new beginnings. “HoduLeyah” has a devotional feel to it, of gratitude and quiet strength, while “I Ask My Father” is a personal prayer of longing and surrender. The album ends with “Eu Peço A meu Pai,” which carries into reflection, leaving space for silence and inner listening. The project is described as a gift from a global human family, “a gift of moments of connection across cultures and spirit.”
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