Zach Riley Turns Escapism and Emotional Restlessness Into Summer-Ready Pop-Rock Anthem “Wasting Away”

Winnipeg-based artist Zach Riley shares “Wasting Away,” an upbeat and emotionally charged pop-rock single that captures the desire to leave everything behind and disappear somewhere new with the person you love most. Blending energetic hooks with driving guitars and sun-soaked production, the track transforms emotional overwhelm into a liberating anthem built for open roads, warm nights, and fresh starts.

At its core, “Wasting Away” explores the universal fantasy of escape; the urge to run from the weight of everyday life and start over somewhere unfamiliar. “I’m sure a lot of people get that feeling at some point in their life to just pick up everything and run away to a place where nobody knows who you are,” Zach explains. “Life can get overwhelming a lot of the time and the idea of starting over can be really enticing.”

The song began through an unexpected collaboration with producer Auston Beeding, who initially discovered Zach through Instagram. Bonding quickly over a shared love for artists like The Band CAMINO, the pair found an immediate creative chemistry that shaped the track’s effortless energy. “He basically already had all the instrumentation ready to go so all I needed to do was write a melody and lyrics,” Zach shares. “The song almost came together too easily.”

That natural momentum remains embedded throughout the recording. Built around bright pop melodies, energetic rhythms, and explosive rock guitars, “Wasting Away” leans fully into its carefree emotional atmosphere without losing the vulnerability underneath.  “It’s got a very upbeat, poppy vibe but with loud rock guitars in the chorus,” Zach explains. “It just gives it that summery vibe that makes you want to be outside in the sun.”

Wasting Away” will appear on Zach’s upcoming EP, a project unified less by strict narrative than by a shared emotional and sonic atmosphere. “Even though the lyrics to some are happier than others, they all sort of have that summery vibe to them,” he says.

PICKLE JUICES Shares Epic New Single “Back 40”

Revelstoke, BC alternative rock band PICKLE JUICE share their sophomore EP, The Whiteroom, released alongside lead single “Back 40,” a turbulent and emotionally charged collection that captures the band stepping fully into their identity. Blending indie rock hooks, garage rock grit, and explosive alt-rock energy, the project channels themes of loss, uncertainty, addiction, and personal transformation into something loud, restless, and cathartic.

Following their debut EP, PICKLE JUICE resisted the urge to immediately jump into a full-length album. Instead, The Whiteroom became an opportunity to dig deeper into their chemistry as collaborators and songwriters. “It feels like a snapshot of the band finding its identity and becoming more confident in what PICKLE JUICE actually is,” they share.

Recorded over the course of a dedicated week in studio with producer David Ziehr, The Whiteroom marks the first time the band approached a project as a complete body of work rather than isolated singles. That process allowed them to focus on how the songs connected emotionally and sonically, shaping a record that feels cohesive while still embracing the unpredictability at the core of their sound.

Thematically, The Whiteroom explores the struggle to see clearly while navigating emotional chaos. The title itself references a snowboarding term describing the moment when heavy powder blinds your vision entirely, leaving you at the mercy of momentum and instinct. “It captures the themes of the songs pretty well,” the band explains. “The loss of clarity, reality, and control.”

At the centre of the release is “Back 40,” an energetic and emotionally volatile indie rock track that reframes heartbreak as a reckoning with your former self. Written during a period of personal transition, the song reflects the disorienting experience of grieving parts of your identity while trying to accept change. “It genuinely felt like I was grieving a part of myself while also trying to reassure myself that things were going to be okay,” vocalist Tim van der Krogt shares.

Musically, “Back 40” leans fully into the band’s chaotic live energy. Packed with sharp dynamic shifts, roaring guitars, and relentless momentum, the track balances tightly wound tension with explosive release. One standout moment arrives in the song’s climactic solo section, where the bass and lead guitar weave around each other before colliding into a high-energy finish. “Whenever they play it I feel like an audience member,” Tim says. “Fully captivated by what’s happening on stage.”

That same intensity shaped the recording process. While tracking vocals late into the night, PICKLE JUICE struggled to capture the emotional weight of the verses, which sit at the very bottom of Tim’s vocal range. After hours of frustration, they abandoned the session and returned the next morning. “I came in first thing the next day, we hit record, and got it in one take.”

The Bankes Brothers Debuts Indie Rock Track “Aaliyah”

Victoria, BC indie rock outfit The Bankes Brothers share “Aaliyah,” a warm and melodic new single that transforms personal devotion into something universally resonant. Built around fingerpicked acoustic guitars, soaring melodies, and heartfelt lyricism, the track captures the feeling of holding onto hope while navigating distance, uncertainty, and the passage of time. Equal parts intimate and uplifting, “Aaliyah” finds the band leaning into one of their most emotionally sincere recordings to date.

The song began long before its title arrived. Written initially around a series of chords and evolving song sections, “Aaliyah” existed without a clear centrepiece for quite some time. A temporary lyric, “farewell Maria,” occupied the space where the hook would eventually land, but never felt quite right.

“It wasn’t until my girlfriend was saying how she wished she had been named Aaliyah because it’s such a beautiful name that it clicked and it all came together,” Nelson Bankes explains. “In the end, the song is dedicated to her.”

At its core, “Aaliyah” reflects the optimism that has long guided The Bankes Brothers’ songwriting. While many of their songs grapple with uncertainty, growth, and change, they often arrive at a place of resilience rather than defeat.

“Writing music has always been a very therapeutic thing for me,” Nelson shares. “I hope that people listen to most of the songs and get the sense that they’re optimistic. There’s enough bad emotions in the world. We try not to put more out there.”

That warmth extends into the recording process itself. Working alongside acclaimed producer Gus van Go, the band searched extensively for the right acoustic guitar tone to anchor the song’s delicate fingerpicked arrangement. After cycling through several instruments, the answer arrived unexpectedly.

“We probably went through two or three different clean sounding acoustics before Gus pulled an old Gibson off his shelf with dusty old strings,” Nelson recalls. “That slightly muted sound felt perfect for this song. Like playing the family guitar with strings that haven’t been changed in 10 years.”

The result is a recording that feels nostalgic and lived-in, perfectly complementing the song’s emotional core. Even its smallest details carry personal significance. One of Nelson’s favourite lyrics, “northeastern winds I’ll ride till then,” quietly references his girlfriend’s surname, serving as a subtle Easter egg hidden within the song’s broader themes of longing and devotion.

While “Aaliyah” stands comfortably on its own, it also offers an early glimpse into the band’s next creative chapter. Alongside several other songs from their forthcoming work, the single showcases an artistic maturity and confidence that reflects years of growth both on and off the stage.

Willem James Cowan Debuts Amazing Folk-Laced Single “Back to the City”

London, ON-based folk artist Willem James Cowan shares “Back to the City,” a sparse and emotionally heavy folk single that captures the strange disorientation of returning to a place once tied to love, comfort, and identity after everything connected to it has changed. Anchored by little more than voice and acoustic guitar, the track transforms post-breakup displacement into something deeply intimate and quietly devastating.

Written after Willem moved back in with his parents following the end of a long-term relationship, “Back to the City” reflects on revisiting Toronto after years spent building a life there with a partner. What was once familiar suddenly felt cold, distant, and emotionally unrecognizable.

“This song is about the feeling you get when you return to a place that you called home for so long, but now feels completely foreign,” Willem explains. “I still remember the lingering anxiety and dread that would well up inside me as I drove past the apartment buildings that line the Gardiner Expressway.”

At its core, “Back to the City” explores how memory reshapes physical spaces. The comfort and warmth once associated with a city become buried beneath grief and emotional residue, transforming everyday landmarks into reminders of absence and change. “It’s amazing how the good memories and feelings you associate with a place can be completely smothered by the bad,” he says.

The recording process mirrors that emotional directness. After unsuccessfully attempting fuller arrangements, Willem ultimately returned to the simplest version of the song: one live off the floor take featuring only voice and acoustic guitar, alongside a handful of subtle guitar swells added afterward.

“I think the sparseness serves the song much more,” Willem shares. “‘Back to the City’ is about loneliness, loss, and discomfort, and I think that shines through with just a voice and acoustic guitar.”

The single closes Willem’s upcoming album, What Should Happen Next?, out at the end of summer 2026: a collection of songs centred around loss, growth, transition, and the uncertainty of moving forward. As the final track, it functions less like resolution and more like quiet acceptance, sitting with discomfort rather than trying to outrun it.

ARK IDENTITY Debuts Epic Release “Social Dopamine,” from Title Track of Upcoming EP

Toronto artist and producer ARK IDENTITY (Noah Mroueh) shares “Social Dopamine,” a gritty 90s-inspired alternative single that examines the addictive pull of online validation and the slow erosion of self that can come with it. Blending fuzzed-out indie rock textures with emotionally direct songwriting, the track captures the tension between who we are and the carefully curated versions of ourselves we project into the world.

Written about the constant search for approval through social media, “Social Dopamine” explores the strange cycle of external validation that has become second nature for so many. “We’ve all curated our personas online so heavily. We’ve become so consumed by how we’re perceived that we start to lose touch with who we actually are,” Noah explains. At the heart of the song is the fleeting rush that comes with attention, a momentary high that quickly disappears, only to be chased again.

Social Dopamine” also marks the beginning of a larger chapter. The single serves as the title track to ARK IDENTITY’s upcoming EP, sitting at the centre of a new body of work that expands the sonic and emotional world Noah has been building.

The title itself gets to the core of that feeling. “It’s about that short-lived high we get from seeking attention and the approval of others,” Noah says. “It becomes addictive, a sort of ‘Social Dopamine’ hit that we keep chasing. But it never really satisfies anything deeper, so the cycle just keeps repeating.”

The songwriting process unfolded instinctively alongside co-writer Philippe Andre. Beginning with the lyrics, the pair built the track around emotional honesty rather than polish. “The lyrics came first, and then we tried to make something that felt honest, raw, and emotionally true to the words,” Noah explains.

Production-wise, ARK IDENTITY leaned into a distinctly 90s alternative palette, drawing influence from Nirvana, The Smashing Pumpkins, and Beck. Dirty guitars, fuzzed-out bass, and imperfect drums give the song its worn-in, human edge. Rather than sanding away those rough corners, Noah embraced them. “We didn’t want it to feel overly polished,” he says. “The imperfections make it feel more human, which fits the message of the song.”

Allegories Debut Bold New Single “Honestly, that’s enough honesty”

Experimental duo Allegories return with “Honestly, that’s enough honesty,” a buoyant yet introspective indie rock/shoegaze-leaning single that explores the fragile space between truth, performance, and self-deception. Built on shifting textures and genre-blurring arrangements, the track moves between dreamy catharsis and unpredictable emotional turns, embodying the duo’s long-standing fascination with unstable narratives and fractured perspective. It’s taken from Allegories’ upcoming new album, By accident, On purpose, set for release on October 16th, 2026.

At its core, the song questions the idea of authenticity itself. Written from the perspective of unreliable narrators, it reflects on how even our most “honest” expressions are shaped by distortion, memory, and self-mythology. “People often assume I’m a confessional songwriter,” Adam Bentley explains. “It’s not that elements aren’t drawn from my life, but the songs feel more like channeling characters and fragments of people I’ve observed.”

That tension between truth and invention becomes the emotional engine of the track. Rather than presenting clarity, it leans into contradiction: the idea that deception isn’t just unavoidable, but foundational to how we move through the world. “We’re all deceiving each other in the way we perform in public, and probably deceiving ourselves in private too,” they add. “Otherwise, how the hell would we keep living?”

Sonically, “Honestly, that’s enough honesty” continues Allegories’ tradition of genre mutation. Indie rock structures dissolve into shoegaze haze, buoyant melodic moments drift into unstable abstraction, and familiar forms are constantly recontextualized. The result is a track that feels both immediate and unsettled, grounding itself in hooks while resisting fixed interpretation.

The song also sits naturally within the duo’s broader creative framework for their upcoming record, where each track emerges from layered processes of transformation, rewriting, and reconstruction. What begins as something simple is continually reshaped until it becomes something entirely unanticipated, yet instinctively correct.

Honestly, that’s enough honesty” ultimately embraces contradiction rather than resolving it. It suggests that truth is not a fixed point, but something constantly refracted through performance, memory, and imagination.

Each Allegories record emerges through improvisation, trial and error, and a relentless pursuit of discovery. Within that exploration, however, are guiding lights. Their first record, Surreal Auteur (2008), began as a commission for a noise tape, though the early improvisations naturally drifted toward pop structures. The sounds of ‘60s pop, Motown and The Beach Boys in particular, became foundational references. Their next record, Endless, was inspired by forward-thinking electronic musicians with one foot in the club. House music formed its DNA, though abstraction continuously bubbled to the surface.

Their newest record, By accident, On purpose (October 16, 2026), began with every song written on ukulele, almost as a dare, choosing the instrument least associated with electronic music. From there, those skeletal foundations were gradually erased beneath Jordan Mitchell’s eclectic arrangements until the songs transformed into entirely new forms. Adam Bentley then wrote a second song overtop of the evolving structures, before both versions, vocals, melodies, and arrangements, were fused together into something new. Through that process, more organic and traditional rock elements re-emerged. Guitars, absent from Endless (2022), crept back in alongside live drums and bass. Shoegaze textures surfaced, and traces of Mitchell and Bentley’s decade spent together in indie rock band The Rest began to cut through the electronic experimentation.

Past releases have drawn attention from Pitchfork, Stereogum, The Needle Drop, CBC, and more, alongside live appearances with BADBADNOTGOOD, Future Islands, and Yo La Tengo.