GAB SAFA Illuminates the Beautiful and the Bleak on “BEAUTY TEARS”

BEAUTYTEARS

GAB SAFA has returned with BEAUTY TEARS, a debut single that confirms her as one of the most compelling emerging voices in contemporary pop. Out now, the track is intimate and expansive – a meditation on love, grief and the stubborn persistence of the human spirit.

Sonically, BEAUTY TEARS is anchored in forward thinking pop and high energy dance movement, but it refuses to stay in one lane. Producer duo Myya Lal and Keandra Lal craft a soundscape that balances luminous synth textures, pulsing rhythms and experimental flourishes with moments of quiet introspection. GAB’s vocals are vulnerable and assured, taking the listener from fragile confessional verses into widescreen almost transcendental refrains.

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What makes the track remarkable is its thematic ambition. BEAUTY TEARS explores the coexistence of beauty and suffering, of light within darkness and of resilience amid loss. GAB’s perspective as a third culture kid shapes the song’s narrative, giving it a richness and depth. Yet, despite its introspection, the track manages to resonate culturally as it taps into universal feelings of longing and hope.

The song’s emotional arc mirrors a kind of prayer: a reckoning with what we carry and a celebration of the ways we continue to choose love, even in difficult times. It’s a rare combination of danceable energy and contemplative depth, a reminder that pop music can be both cathartic and transcendent.

But BEAUTY TEARS is not just any single. It’s an invitation into GAB’s singular creative universe. When everything around us seems so uncertain and void of hope, she cements herself as an artist who is unafraid to explore the paradoxical, messy and beautiful elements of life and to turn that exploration into music that is cinematic and also deeply human in its themes.

About GAB SAFA

GABS channels raw emotion into bold, immersive art defined by storytelling, ethereal rhythms and a daring vision.

An amalgam artist at heart, she moves fluidly across genres and mediums as a singer, songwriter, actress and multihyphenate creative force, blending music, film, writing, creative direction and performance into her own singular artistic language. Identifying with the third culture kid experience, she often returns to the feeling of being from everywhere and nowhere, delving into themes of identity, where to call home, and all of the spaces in-between.

Her work reflects on love, grief, resilience and the emotional legacies we carry. Never one to exist inside a box, especially ones she didn’t build herself, GABS approaches every medium as an act of authorship, self-sovereignty and liberation, creating immersive worlds that invite audiences to experience the beauty in life’s complexity.

Connect with GAB SAFA on her Website

Stream music on Spotify and Apple Music

When Feelings Catch You Off Guard – A Is for Atom’s Brand New Single “Out of the Blue”

outoftheblue

If you’ve ever found yourself drawn to songs that deal in nostalgia but don’t get stuck there, songs that understand the past is only really useful when it collides with the present, then A Is for Atom might already be on your radar. And if not, the new single Out of the Blue, which is the title track of the upcoming album, is as good a place as any to start.

We’ve all heard songs about that moment. The sudden shift, the emotional plot twist, the “how did I not see this before?” realization. But what makes “Out of the Blue” work is that it lingers in the build up, in the shared history and in the small, seemingly insignificant details.

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Trying to pin the sound down is a bit like trying to describe a memory you’re not quite sure you remember correctly. There are shades of indie rock, of course, but also a gentle electronic undercurrent subtle enough to shape the mood. Guitars shimmer rather than shout, rhythms move with a quiet insistence.

“Out of the Blue” isn’t really about a big moment of realization. It’s about that in between space when something has shifted, but you’re still figuring out what it means and what to do with it. The song looks back to childhood, to shared experiences and the kinds of bonds of friendship that only time builds, but it also acknowledges that life does not stand still long enough for you to examine these feelings deeply. Things change. People change. And sometimes, those changes arrive without any warning and ask you to catch up emotionally.

What does that all mean? It means “Out of the Blue” is one of those rare songs that could easily be about your life. It’s about recognition, not just of someone else but of yourself and how you have changed without noticing.

Mike

About A is For Atom

A Is for Atom is the creative project of songwriter, producer, and multi instrumentalist Mike Cykoski. His music is thoughtful indie rock mixed with subtle electronic textures and a strong sense of atmosphere.

With a background that includes a Master’s in Music Technology from New York University, as well as time spent at The Juilliard School, Harvest Works and Dubspot, Cykoski brings technical precision and creative instinct to his work. That balance is a defining part of the A Is for Atom sound – structured but exploratory and polished.

Over the years, he has performed internationally, with highlights including shows in Ireland, Mexico City and Toronto (NXNE and Canadian Music Week), alongside appearances in major U.S. music hubs such as New York City and Austin. Releases like Song for You and Last Man on the Moon have earned critical acclaim for their depth and detail, establishing A Is for Atom as a quietly distinctive voice in the indie music landscape.

Jon and Roy Honor Friendship and the Forest on “Maywell,” Lead Single of New I Can Dream EP

Contemporary folk group Jon and Roy return with a brand new EP entitled I Can Dream. Anchoring the release is its lead single, “Maywell,” a song inspired by an annual winter pilgrimage deep into the mountains behind Victoria, British Columbia. 

Each year, Jon, Roy, and close friends snowshoe through heavy terrain to a remote, rustic cabin. It’s a journey that is as physically demanding as it is emotionally rewarding. “The hike in was incredibly challenging,” Jon recalls. “We didn’t think we’d make it at times because the snow was so heavy. But once we got there, we had the most incredible time. Lots of laughs, deep talks, deep thoughts, and inspiration.”

The cabin was built by a man named Maywell, with the help of his friends, and the song stands as a tribute to his spirit; one that continues to offer refuge, joy, and perspective. Warm, catchy, and gently nostalgic, “Maywell” reflects the sense of gratitude and awe that comes from pushing forward and arriving together.

What sets “Maywell” (and the EP as a whole) apart is its recording process. For the first time, Jon and Roy recorded entirely to tape, a decision made on the spot in collaboration with their friend and engineer, David Parry

“Recording digitally is just fine, but it does have a tendency to hinder you in the sense that you know you have an infinite ability to edit and can keep tracking as much as you want,” Jon explains. “Tape is not nearly as forgiving so it forces you to be more present and go for the performance of the song more so than anything else.” 

Gay Nineties Capture Modern Disconnection on Punchy New Single “Internet, Sex & Drugs”

Vancouver, BC outfit Gay Nineties are sharing “Internet, Sex & Drugs,” a fast-paced, punchy new single that balances romantic tension with sharp observation. Blending indie rock urgency with flashes of new wave and power pop, the track explores emotional disconnection in a hyper-stimulated world, where distraction often replaces intimacy and self-awareness arrives just a little too late.

The song began with a guitar riff written by bandmate Pascal, which quickly sparked the musical foundation for the track. After recording an early instrumental demo in their rehearsal space, the chorus melody arrived long before the lyrics. “After a full week of bashing my head against the wall every day, the chorus fell out of my mouth and the song wrote itself very quickly,” explains lead vocalist/bassist Parker Bossley. Inspired in part by the emotional dynamic of Robert Palmer’s song “Johnny & Mary,” the narrative follows a relationship unfolding in real time where one person reaches for something genuine while the other remains consumed by hollow distractions.

Clocking in at just over two minutes, “Internet, Sex & Drugs” moves with restless momentum, each section introducing new melodic and compositional elements that build toward an ebullient climax. The track nearly didn’t happen at all; an early demo was initially dismissed as too “proggy” before Gay Nineties rediscovered its potential during rehearsal, where a cleaner, chorused guitar tone reframed the idea entirely and set the writing process in motion.

Stylistically, the band leaned into the emotional clarity and compositional instincts of artists like The Police, Tom Petty, and Kate Bush, aiming to capture the immediacy and melodic richness of classic 80s new wave while grounding the sound firmly in the present. The result feels both nostalgic and contemporary; bright, romantic, and rhythmically driven, while lyrically rooted in modern anxieties. A cheeky lyrical nod to The Rolling Stones’ “Start Me Up” adds a moment of humour that reflects Gay Nineties’ guiding philosophy: approaching darker subject matter from a place of joy.

Marty Kolls Goes the Distance on New Single “Drive”

Following years of writing, teaching, and performing music rooted in connection and self-reflection, London, Ontario–based singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Marty Kolls shares “Drive,” a hypnotic, consistent pop single that captures the quiet momentum of moving forward through uncertainty. Optimistic yet grounded, the track reflects on awareness, contemplation, and the importance of continuing on even when the road ahead isn’t fully visible.

Inspired by both time spent behind the wheel and her work as a songwriting instructor, “Drive” grew out of a lesson Marty taught her students. Beginning with a steady, driving rhythm, the song came together as she paired it with lyrics written during another class exercise. 

“I started with the driving rhythm, and it fit well with lyrics I had already written,” she explains. “I put myself to the test of writing all of the assignments along with my students. It was a great source of inspiration to be presenting for them at the same time as they presented to me.”

John Muirhead Debuts Intricate New Single “Loved You Well”

Toronto-based indie-folk troubadour John Muirhead shares his new single, “Loved You Well,” a tender and reflective meditation on unrequited love, yearning, and the quiet spaces where connection almost blooms. Rooted in simplicity and intimacy, the track captures those fleeting, ordinary moments that linger long after they’ve passed; the ones that live rent-free in our hearts because nothing ever fully came of them.

“‘Loved You Well’ is about replaying moments that never quite turned into anything,” explains Muirhead. “It was inspired by a real date where, on paper, nothing important happened. But that’s exactly the point. Sometimes the absence of something becomes the thing you can’t stop thinking about.”

Recorded in a single, immersive day, the song is deliberately stripped back to feel as if Muirhead is performing in the same room as the listener. Acoustic guitar and vocals form the foundation, with piano, pedal steel, and harmonies by Clayton White layered organically to preserve character and intimacy. “We captured something special,” Muirhead says. “I wanted the song to feel like being alone with your memories, wondering “what if…””