Alternative-pop artist Lyubov Kay unveils her bold and emotionally charged new single, “shoulda run,” a powerful anthem about realizing your worth and walking away from what no longer serves you. With its striking blend of evocative storytelling, fierce instrumentation, and Kay’s signature smooth yet commanding vocals, “shoulda run” captures the emotional weight of staying in a one-sided relationship for too long—and finally breaking free.
Kay’s songwriting shines as she reflects on the disappointment of giving your all to someone who was never fully present. The song is both a reflection and a declaration—acknowledging past mistakes while celebrating the strength it takes to move forward.
“shoulda run” is an anthem for anyone who’s ever looked back and thought, “Why did I keep going?” The track encapsulates that bittersweet moment of finally seeing the truth and choosing yourself.
I wanted “shoulda run” to feel like a release—a song for anyone who’s been in a situation where they weren’t getting the love or commitment they deserved. It’s about that moment of clarity when you finally snap out of it and realize your worth. It’s fierce, it’s liberating, and it’s a reminder that sometimes walking away is the strongest thing you can do. – Lyubov Kay
International Acoustic Music Award winning songwriter Robert Thomas and his band, the sessionmen, cast a playful groove-laden Americana track with their latest single, “Cast a Line.” Inspired by some unconventional dating advice from Thomas’ father back in 1976—delivered, fittingly, in the form of a fishing metaphor—the song takes a tongue-in-cheek look at the idea that love is just a matter of casting out a line and waiting for the right catch. With its irresistible rhythm, clever storytelling, and a Little Feat-style groove, “Cast a Line” has become one of Thomas’ most enduring and requested songs, covered by artists across the industry.
Written in 1990 and predating the popular dating site Plenty of Fish, the song’s central metaphor still resonates today. A testament to the unpredictability of songwriting success, Thomas reflects on how a humorous idea sparked by questionable advice turned into one of his most lucrative and beloved tracks.
I always get a chuckle every time we perform this song or every time I open my SOCAN statement. I feel like I got away with a bit of a bank robbery in that such a goofy idea actually turned into one of our most popular songs. – Robert Thomas
Ian North, the celebrated Canadian folk-rock artist, returns with a fresh and buoyant instrumental single, “Malahat.” Named after the scenic highway on Vancouver Island, this driving track captures the spirit of adventure and the joy of the open road. The instrumental piece is a celebration of both the beauty of the Malahat drive and the personal journey that led to its creation.
Produced by Chris Gartner, “Malahat” takes listeners on a sonic journey that moves between soaring crescendos and subtle, intimate moments. With intricate finger-style guitar, the track builds in intensity before returning to a quiet yet reflective finish, capturing the unique ebb and flow of the Malahat highway itself.
The song’s title holds personal significance for North, whose family has deep roots in British Columbia. He explains, “The Malahat is the highway that runs down the east coast of Vancouver Island from Nanaimo to Victoria. I’ve driven it many times, and the cover image of the song is a photo I took of my daughter walking along a wall at a lookout on that very highway.”
North continues, “I wanted to develop the song beyond a simple acoustic guitar piece, and working with Chris Gartner helped me achieve that. We worked together to create a sound that matches the scenic beauty of the Malahat with energy and motion.”
Canadian singer-songwriter Ian James Bain, a core member of Nicolette & the Nobodies and guitar player for Jeremie Albino, unveils his latest single, “Come & Gone,” a heartfelt country anthem that reflects on the struggle of trying to make a career in music while grappling with self-doubt, burnout, and the pull of nostalgia. A deeply personal track, “Come & Gone” paints a vivid picture of the uphill battle faced by independent artists, balancing romanticized dreams with the harsh realities of life on the road.
Rooted in classic country storytelling but infused with Bain’s distinctive modern edge, “Come & Gone” blends traditional form with unexpected chord changes, creating a sound that is both timeless and fresh. Lush pedal steel and twangy guitars carry Bain’s introspective lyrics, culminating in a song that feels both melancholic and reaffirming.
Total Fucking Darkness emerges from the abyss once more with “Take It Easy”—a pulsing rave anthem that invites listeners to dance and despair in equal measure.
The irony of the song’s title is no accident. “Take It Easy” drips with absurdity, wielding its platitudinous phrase as a sardonic weapon against the chaos. As the world burns, Total Fucking Darkness stands at the edge, grinning.
Written in real-time, “Take It Easy” was born from pure spite. Torquil Campbell (a man who once played a badger in a cartoon)wrote the lyrics while listening to the track for the first time—a feat that continues to baffle even his bandmates, Stephen Ramsay (tall and just on this side of handsome) and Tom McFall (English studio genius and synthesist whose engineering credits include the likes of REM, Bloc Party, Twin Shadow, Regina Spektor). And then, of course, there are the sheep.
There are sheep involved in the track. It’s not the first song I’ve heard with sheep in it this year. If you think about it, songs with sheep in them are an incredibly good sign, because there’s never been a bad song that mentions, or actually features, sheep. Think about it. – Stephen Ramsay
With Ghost Notes, Preacher Boy delivers a powerful, expansive record that draws from the raw emotional wellspring of country blues, the poetic sensibilities of American folk, and the experimental edge of alt-Americana. This 18-track album isn’t simply a return—it’s a career-defining statement, executed with clarity, confidence, and a deep reverence for the storytelling traditions that inform his work.
From the first track, Ghost Notes strikes with purpose. The arrangements are stark yet evocative, with slide guitar, gravel-toned vocals, and minimalist percussion forming the backbone of a sonic landscape that feels both rooted and restless. The instrumentation is never excessive; instead, it’s sculpted—crafted to serve the song rather than distract from it. Each note feels lived in, each lyric a fragment from a longer, untold story.
Preacher Boy has long operated at the intersection of form and innovation. While his work is unmistakably grounded in the blues, Ghost Notes stretches the genre’s boundaries. Songs like “New Red Cedar Blues” and “Chop Wood, Carry Water” are rhythmically assertive, marked by subtle shifts in phrasing and structure that keep the listener just off balance. Meanwhile, tracks such as “Light a Candle” and “Slow Crossing” lean into a more meditative space, allowing silence and restraint to speak as loudly as any chord.
Lyrically, the album is deeply introspective. Preacher Boy’s writing is mature and unflinching, weaving together themes of disillusionment, longing, endurance, and spiritual questioning. These are songs born from experience, not imitation. The narratives are fragmented and nonlinear—less traditional storytelling and more impressionistic sketches of a life shaped by movement and friction.
Perhaps what’s most striking about Ghost Notes is its refusal to conform. The album’s structure resists commercial formatting, its sound remains unpolished in all the right ways, and its thematic ambitions are unafraid to dwell in ambiguity. Tracks like “Don’t Know What to Think Anymore” and “Scene of the Crime” occupy a space between confession and confrontation. There’s no resolution, only a deepening inquiry.
This sense of defiance is reinforced by the production choices. The record sounds warm, but not overly refined—capturing the grit and grain of analog textures and acoustic imperfections. Vocals sit close to the ear, guitar strings rattle, room tone lingers. It’s an intimate listening experience that feels closer to a live performance than a studio product, as if the songs were captured in the moment rather than meticulously assembled.
As a body of work, Ghost Notes balances cohesiveness with breadth. Despite the number of tracks, the album never feels bloated. Each song adds something new to the emotional arc, whether it’s the swagger of “Bounce,” the elegiac mood of “No Rivers to Cross,” or the simmering tension in “Dashboard Dial.” This is a record that invites repeated listening—each return revealing a deeper texture, a missed detail, a previously buried truth.
In a musical landscape often dominated by trends and algorithms, Ghost Notes stands apart. It’s an album guided not by marketability, but by personal urgency and artistic integrity. Preacher Boy continues to push against the boundaries of what blues and Americana can be, without ever losing sight of where it all began. This isn’t just a career milestone—it’s a portrait of an artist still evolving, still questioning, and still carving his own path through the noise.
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