The Penske File Explore Memory, Loss, and Quiet Resilience in the Heartfelt “Rocking Chair” Video from Their New Album “Reprieve”

Hamilton, Ontario punk rock lifers The Penske File share the official video for “Rocking Chair,” a standout track from their new album, Reprieve, released October 3rd. The song captures the trio’s reflective side, exploring themes of mortality, memory, and acceptance with a warmth and honesty that’s become their hallmark.

“‘Rocking Chair’ is a special kind of song to us. One that arrived naturally and inspired, seemingly out of thin air, as we sat around the fireplace with a guitar in a rented house in Germany on an off night on tour in the summer of 2024,” says frontman Travis Miles. “It’s a hopeful, yet bittersweet song about looking back on a full life from the end of the road. I think we all hope that, someday, when death comes for us and our loved ones we’ll be at peace. That’s what this song is about.”

Recorded live in producer Adam Michael’s living room, “Rocking Chair” preserves the raw intimacy and emotional immediacy of the moment it was written. With longtime collaborator Victor Wiercioch capturing the session on film, the video offers an unfiltered look at a band connected by decades of friendship and shared purpose. “Being so emotionally connected to the way the song originated, we decided to try and capture that initial spark of inspiration on the record,” Miles explains. “We set up a few mics and got the whole thing down in one live take.”

As one of Reprieve’s most poignant moments, “Rocking Chair” distills the spirit of the record: confronting change, loss, and the passage of time without losing sight of the light. The Penske File have long made their name on high-energy punk rock anthems, but here, they lean into restraint – offering a moment of quiet beauty amid the chaos.

Acclaimed Singer-Songwriter Jeffery Straker Captures Holiday Nostalgia and Wonder on Heartfelt Roots-Folk Ballad “Never Too Old To Wish”

With warmth, wit, and a deep sense of reflection, Saskatchewan-born singer-songwriter Jeffery Straker shares “Never Too Old To Wish” – a piano-driven roots-folk Christmas song that celebrates the magic of memory, the joy of togetherness, and the beauty of growing older without losing your sense of wonder.

“It seems with each passing year that the meaning of Christmas has evolved or changed for me, bit by bit,” Straker shares. “When I was a kid, it was all about the gifts from Santa. Over time, the magic of Santa faded, but the magic of the season didn’t – it just shifted. It became about connection, gratitude, and joy.”
Blending tender storytelling with a timeless piano-driven melody, “Never Too Old To Wish” explores the emotional evolution of the holidays – from childlike excitement to nostalgic reflection. The song’s message, Straker explains, is one of celebration rather than sorrow: “It’s not a sad longing, rather almost kind of a celebration of reflections. I think that’s why the old Christmas songs never get old – they’re soundtracks and underscores to our past joy.”

Written in the wake of losing both of his parents, Straker’s new single reflects on the ways memory deepens the meaning of Christmas. “Though the look of the season changes every year – the fancy LED lights, the giant inflatable snowmen, a few more grey hairs – there’s still plenty of magic,” he says. “When I was little, I used to dream about Santa arriving on his sleigh. Now I dream about having some of the people with me who are no longer here. I’m still wishing – just wishing about different things.”

Rooted in Straker’s signature piano style and warm, narrative voice, “Never Too Old To Wish” feels both deeply personal and instantly familiar – a comforting reminder that the spirit of the holidays endures in our memories and the people we hold close.

Original Pairs Unpack Existential Longing and Emotional Catharsis on Surface Tension, Anchored by the Haunting Focus Track “Curiosity”

Toronto-based rock ensemble Original Pairs return with Surface Tension, their fourth studio album and a potent exploration of personal longing, existential dread, and the human condition. Anchored by Andrew Frontini’s resonant baritone, the album spans ten musical parables set against twangy, reverb-drenched guitars, bluesy organ textures, and deep retro synth stylings from keyboardist Jon Loewen. Buttressed by Lynda Kraar’s melodic bass and Lisa Logan’s precise, orchestral drumming, Surface Tension balances haunting reverie with savage rock energy, mining the depths of a life lived in rock‘n’roll purgatory.

Surface Tension taught us to experiment and improvise. To lean into our musical backgrounds, drawing upon a lifetime of playing and listening to music,” says Frontini. “It’s always intense, trying to get a lot done in a very compressed time period. The whole album was recorded, including overdubs in five days.” The album’s themes invite listeners to embrace life’s anxieties, fears, and doubts, breaking through the “surface tension” of everyday existence into greater understanding.

At the heart of the album is “Curiosity,” a dark and moody track inspired by the perils and powers of the imagination. Frontini describes it as “a cautionary tale about the dangers of curiosity – art’s catalyst that can make you crazy.” A period of daydreaming and obsessive self-reflection fueled the song, and the resulting composition captures the tension of a mind teetering between fantasy and reality.

The recording process highlights Original Pairs’ commitment to organic, live-off-the-floor performance. “We never use click tracks and we don’t cut and paste,” explains Frontini. “We aim for a live performance with the maximum of emotional intensity that it brings. It’s never perfect but always real.” 

The song’s final climax features a layered interplay of guitars, Rhodes piano, Moog synth, and driving drum fills, building to a dramatic, chaotic peak that mirrors the narrative of obsession and inner turmoil. Producer John Dinsmore’s final mix emphasized the dramatic arc from ponderous and wistful to anxiety-fueled freak out.

Romantic R&B Visionary Justin Maki Unveils Groove-Soaked New Single “Nine Lives”

Japan-born, Canada-raised artist Justin Maki follows up his recent single “Technicolor Dreams” with “Nine Lives,” an effervescent pop-funk anthem rooted in love, loyalty, and the immortal pull of connection. The FCLMAwinning singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and producer delivers his most romantic statement yet – a bright, syncopated celebration of devotion that feels timeless and cinematic.

“The statement comes across as a striking romantic hypothetical,” Maki explains. “If I had the opportunity to live more than one life or to live a much longer life – I would choose you over and over again, day in and day out, despite the other options, despite my instinctual desire for variety, because I just love you that much.”

The phrase “Nine Lives” evokes the mythic resilience of cats – creatures said to survive anything. But for Maki, it becomes a metaphor for eternal love: “It’s the ultimate 2025 Breakfast Club boombox moment.”

Maki co-wrote “Nine Lives” with Drew Shalka (Mute Choir) during a snowstorm-stranded session in Nashville – the same partnership that produced his previous hit, “Technicolor Dreams.” “It was one of the most productive writing sessions I’ve ever taken part in,” says Maki. “We wrote the entire song – lyrics, melody, arrangement, and demo – in the span of about six hours, then capped the day with his partner’s homemade tuna casserole. With 100 songs written for this project and eight selected for the record, it’s truly a statistical miracle that two of the eight were co-written with Drew.”

Working once again with VAŪLTS – the JUNOwinning production duo of David Mohacsi and Maïa DaviesMaki reshaped the song’s early melancholy into a radiant anthem about love’s endurance. “You wouldn’t know it, but this song was originally about unrequited love,” he recalls. “It started off as a documenting of a failed relationship that could and would never rekindle. I wrote: if I had nine lives, I’d try almost anything… but nine lives ain’t gonna make you love me. When David and Maïa suggested a revamping of the message and the lyrics, I originally resisted, but I’m so glad that I trusted them and the process.”
The single’s lush rhythm section and stacked vocal harmonies evoke vintage disco and modern funk while maintaining Maki’s signature sincerity. The song’s bridge, in particular, shows his willingness to push creative boundaries – a rhythmic tangle of drums, vocals, and guitar that collide in unexpected ways before resolving into a warm, cathartic finale.