KiTe Turns Reflection into Art on “Shadows”

The Singapore born, Melbourne based artist delivers a tender and cinematic RnB moment that explores what lingers when love fades.

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On “Shadows,” KiTe proves that restraint can be its own kind of power. The Singapore born, Melbourne based R&B and pop artist strips things back to the essentials with a gentle beat, hazy guitar textures and a voice that sounds like it’s caught somewhere between a dream and a memory.

This is a track that you will want to play on repeat just to catch the details you missed the first time.

“Shadows” unfolds slowly, like light seeping through half-drawn blinds. KiTe’s vocals are smooth and his phrasing carries an emotion that is intriguing. When he murmurs lines about love’s lingering ghosts, you can almost see the late night streets, the flicker of neon and the empty spaces that once felt full.

Listen here:

“Shadows” sits in that sweet spot between R&B sensuality and minimalist pop. The production feels handcrafted with each layer adding on to the next, and a slow burning atmosphere building. What makes this track stand out is how KiTe leans into vulnerability, and turns solitude into something more cinematic in structure.

KiTe is emerging as a promising new voice in modern R&B. And he is an artist who understands that connection is not build on perfection per se, but on presence. This is music for the moments in between, for the long drives, quiet nights and the spaces where reflection becomes its own kind of comfort.

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About KiTe

Singapore born and Melbourne based, KiTe is a rising R&B / Pop artist who beings smooth and soulful melodies together with early 2000’s inspired emotion.

Influenced by Keshi, ASTN, DEAN, Junny, and Bryson Tiller, his music balances contemporary production with timeless sentiment.

A former engineering student turned now full time musician, KiTe began producing at sixteen from a simple dining table setup. His journey from Mando Pop singing contests, where he earned a Top 5 finish, to performing live and writing for other artists including K-pop groups, has shaped his signature sound.

Stream KiTe’s music on Spotify and Apple Music

Zoey Tess Opens the Door to Revolution on “Knocking at Your Front Door”

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There’s an unmistakable sense of reckoning in Zoey Tess’s new single, “Knocking at Your Front Door.” Tess doesn’t hide behind any metaphors or soften any blows. Instead, she steps forwards, steady and to say what too many are afraid to.

The song opens with Zoey’s voice front and center. “I had a dream the world was burning, no one cared, the earth kept turning” is a lyric that lands like a hard truth that nobody wants to hear.

Recorded at the legendary Clubhouse Studio in Rhinebeck, New York, the song captures a kind of analog immediacy that sounds live. Produced by Spencer Hattendorf and engineered by Paul Antonell, “Knocking at Your Front Door” brings together a sharp and intuitive band with Teddy Kumpel on guitar, Reed Sutherland on bass, and Nate Mondschein on drums. All of them work together to serve the emotions of this song.

After the initial sessions, Grammy winning engineer Mario J. McNulty (David Bowie, Prince) handled the mix, giving it a clean and open feel that allows each lyric and texture to breathe. Dave McNair’s mastering gives it that final polish. This is protest music, after all. It’s supposed to make you a little uncomfortable.

What makes “Knocking at Your Front Door” so effective isn’t just its political bite, but its clarity. Tess reckons with the present moment. With the noise, the hypocrisy, fatigue and the flickr of hope that refuses to go out.

It’s the first single from her upcoming debut album, There’s Gonna Be a Reckoning, which was written earlier this year amid a growing sense of civic and spiritual unease.

The album, according to Tess, was born “from a need to speak out against rising authoritarianism, religious hypocrisy, and deep inequality.”

By the final verse, Tess sounds more like a mirror than a messenger and reflects back the chaos we have all grown a little to accustomed to. The revolution she is calling for is not just political, but it is moral, emotional and deeply human.

About Zoey Tess

Zoey Tess is an American singer songwriter, producer, and musician whose work bridges the confessional edge of 90’s era singer songwriters with the fearless spirit of 60’s folk protest music.

Born in Coral Springs, Florida and raised in Newtown, Connecticut, Tess began studying piano and violin at a young age before attending the Interlochen Center for the Arts in Michigan and later Berklee College of Music.

Leaving Berklee after a year to pursue her own artistic path, Tess worked under the mentorship of producer Vic Steffens (Whitney Houston, The Blues Brothers) and performed with the jazz fusion group Artful Soul. Her 2020 single “Late Night Thoughts” highlights her R&B and soul influences, but her forthcoming debut album, There’s Gonna Be a Reckoning marks a bold creative leap into folk rock territory.

The album, which was recorded at The Clubhouse Studio in Rhinebeck, New York, features production by Spencer Hattendorf, collaborations with Dave Eggar (Coldplay) and mastering by Chris Gehringer and Dave McNair. Taking inspiration from Bob Dylan, Townes Van Zandt, Fiona Apple and PJ Harvey, Tess has a sound that is fiercely contemporary and one that refuses to look away from the world as it is.

Keep up with Zoey Tess on her Website

The Dream Eaters Toast Absent Companions on Gothic Indie Pop Single “Dead Friends”

Brooklyn, NY/Toronto, ON-based indie rock/pop duo The Dream Eaters return with their macabre yet comic new single, “Dead Friends,” a track that transforms loneliness and loss into something strangely celebratory. Blending humour with the surreal, the song tells the story of a trip back to your hometown, only to realize the life you once knew has vanished. Friends are gone, but their ghosts remain – so you invite them over for dinner.

“It’s about taking a trip to your hometown, and the loneliness of realizing that what you knew as your life there has disappeared,” explains Jake Zavracky (vocals/guitar/programming). “So you go back to your apartment and have dinner with their ghosts. It’s humorous and surreal but also about celebrating the moments we shared with the people who have left us.”

What makes “Dead Friends” unique is its unflinching embrace of the macabre through something as ordinary as food. “I don’t know that anyone has ever written a song about making dinner for ghosts,” adds Zavracky. “It’s also about food, and how we use food to show love. Making dinner for people is the best way to show love for your friends.”

The track was mixed by Zavracky’s longtime friend John Dragonetti – known for his work in The Submarines and Jack Drag – adding another layer of nostalgia and connection to the release. It also draws inspiration from Italian chef Gennaro Cantaldo, who once cooked a lemon pasta for his late friend in a moving video that inspired Zavracky to write “Dead Friends” instantly. (Watch it here, but be warned: tears are inevitable).

Next Week’s Washing Channels Youthful Determination and Reflection in Dreamy New Single “To Carry On”

Toronto-based Next Week’s Washing captures the moody resolve of today’s youth in “To Carry On,” their dreamy new single. The track blends richly layered vocal harmonies with the band’s signature guitar ambiance and forthright lyrics, creating an experience that is both atmospheric and assertive, reflecting the best of indie band culture and looking boldly to the future. Summoning the confidence to face life’s challenges both thematically and through its driving, straight-to-the-soul sound, “To Carry On flies high. 

Written as part of their breakout EP, “To Carry On” showcases the band’s nuanced creativity and expansive musicianship. “The song has more vocal layering than any other song on the EP, and we spent a lot of time perfecting it,” they explain. “There’s a tempo change at the end that takes the song in a different direction, giving it a completely new vibe from what’s come before.” 

Engineered by Dylan Frankland (Tallies) and mastered by Noah Mintz, the song features backing vocals by Julian Duffy and Rhys Newman, the band’s two guitarists, adding to its depth and distinctiveness on the EP. 

The Penske File Hold On to the Glow of Youth on New Album, Reprieve, Featuring Anthemic Lead Single “Almost Young”

Hamilton, Ontario punk rock lifers The Penske File return with Reprieve, a cathartic, high-energy collection of songs about aging, change, and clinging to the light. The album captures the trio’s sharpened bond and renewed creative spark, with lead single “Almost Young” serving as both a thematic and emotional centerpiece.

While “Almost Young” offers one of the record’s most personal and reflective moments, Reprieve is far from one-note. Written in the wake of renewed touring energy after 2023’s Half Glow, the album swings between blistering punk catharsis, brooding rock anthems, and spacious, melodic reflections. The Penske File set out to capture the communal fire of their live show on record, tracking drums, guitar, and bass live-off-the-floor at Halo Studios before layering vocals and guitar overdubs at their longtime best friend and producer, Adam Michael’s Shrimp Studios.

“This record taught me that creating a body of work with my best friends feels like home in a unique and pronounced way that can’t be replicated,” says frontman Travis Miles. “When I can bring something to the rehearsal space that excites both [bass/vocals] James [Hall] and [drums/vocals] Alex [Standen], after all these years, it feels like I’ve struck gold.”

At its core, the record’s focus track, “Almost Young,” is about holding on to the tenacity and glow of youth as it begins to slip away. Written in the midst of conversations about having children, Miles reflects on fear, change, and self-discovery before arriving at a hopeful realization: growing older doesn’t mean losing what’s beautiful about youth. “It’s like saying, we’re not getting old … we’re almost young,” he says.

The track evolved through intense collaboration. Standen and Hall shaped the vocal hooks and harmonies, while the band’s friend Chuck Coles penned the killer guitar lick that runs throughout. Michael encouraged restraint in producing the arrangement, keeping the focus on the song’s most resonant parts. The result is a soaring punk rock anthem that Miles first sketched out in fear and later listened back to with joy as his daughter crawled on the floor beneath the speakers. 

JEEN Channels Resilience and Pop Grit on New Single “Look What You Did,” Taken From Upcoming For the Romance EP (Out October 30th)

Toronto alternative mainstay JEEN makes her return with “Look What You Did,” the entrancing new single from her upcoming For the Romance EP, set for release on October 30th. Blending a light, infectious sing-along chorus with just enough teeth to bite, the track embodies JEEN’s ability to turn hardship into hook-heavy perseverance.

Originally recorded in January 2025, the song almost didn’t make it to release. “A couple months after recording, I had some unexpected music business trouble that completely derailed me and the whole release came to a full stop,” JEEN shares. “I was crushed, so I was about to trash the whole EP and just start again, but I had a change of heart over the summer. I ended up using three of the original January recordings and one of them was ‘Look What You Did.’”

At its heart, the song captures the feeling of surrendering to something irresistible. “At the end of the day, it’s a pop song so I just wanted it to be light and easy to sing along with but hopefully still have some teeth/grit,” JEEN reflects. “It’s about being entranced by someone or something and following that feeling all the way, even though you can’t see where it will lead yet. I’ve had to learn a lot of hard lessons in this industry and 2025 tested me more than ever on that front, but for the first time in a while, I’m happy I’m still here, even if I have to follow a bit blindly for now.”