“Love Sonnet for Mikey” is over almost as soon as it starts, and yet it doesn’t feel slight. If anything, the short runtime sharpens its impact. It arrives, says what is needs to say and then departs.
The song is built around a poem written in 2019 after the death of the author’s brother, Mikey. Instead of rewriting the text to fit a standard song structure, j dylan paul lets the poem take the lead here. The lyrics stay exactly as they are, and that decision gives the songa gravity that is totally natural. One line “to help the grass grow arms to cradle you” is echoed briefly like a thought circling back on itself.
“Love Sonnet for Mikey” lives in a quiet corner of indie and electronic music. Synths hang in the background, guitar slips in without calling extra attention to itself and the drums move steadily underneath.
Its the vocals though where the song really takes shape. Paul has spent years releasing instrumental music, and working behind the scenes as a mixing engineer, and it’s this track that really marks one of their first steps forward as a singer. The voice works because it’s not forced or overly produced. It sounds like someone choosing to sing because the song requires it.
The final recording replaces the demo’s programmed elements with live performances – drums by Tim Stefaniak and recorded at New Alliance in Somerville, MA, with guitar by Sherman Tsui. Those choices give “Love Sonnet for Mikey” a physical presence that keeps it grounded, even as the song itself feels almost fragile.
Where this song started out as a personal gesture, it ends up becoming a complete turning point. Short, careful and quietly affecting, it leaves the listener with the sense that whatever comes next is going to matter more because this exists.
Hamilton, ON blues-rock outfit Thomas Duxbury and New Mother Nature share “Istanbul” – an energetic, riff-driven release that pairs upbeat, sun-soaked guitar work with deeply melancholic reflection. Equal parts homesick postcard and blues-rock catharsis, the track captures the ache of being split between places, people, and past lives.
“I wrote the song when I was living abroad and feeling homesick,” Duxbury explains. “Before I left for Scotland, I was standing in my driveway talking with my buddy Bruce – who plays keys on this track/bass with us live – and we chatted about potentially doing a trip to Istanbul while I was in Europe. That’s where the line I’m leaving but my heart’s still full, I can’t wait to see you in Istanbul came from. Fast forward about a month – I’m sitting in my dorm room with my guitar, playing what eventually became the riff for this song. I’m writing some words about being alone, feeling away from home… but I can’t find a chorus. Then that memory of the driveway comes to me and I think, ‘that’s the line.'”
Tell us the story of this song, why did you choose to visualize this song specifically?
I feel like there is always this feeling of wishing you were somewhere else. Even now being back I miss the friends I made over there. Once you live away you basically (to be dramatic) doom yourself to a life of missing friends and family. With that said, it also creates the opportunity to meet new amazing people and make new friends. That hole in your heart somehow finds a way to fill itself with wonderful experiences and people. In this example, the wonderful music community of Aberdeen Scotland. Shoutout to my friends over there. In a different experience of mine in living in BC, the wonderful people I met working for Sea to Sky Parks/BC Parks. Shoutout to my Sea to Sky friends! Now, all that said, I wrote this song when I was living abroad in Aberdeen Scotland. I was sitting in my flat picking my guitar my first week there and I was feeling homesick. Wondering if maybe I made a wrong decision or something. It was a cold rainy October late afternoon on a Saturday. I’m thinking back to saying goodbye to my good friend and bandmate Bruce Cole and we’re discussing the idea of potentially doing a trip to Istanbul at some point. And I’m thinking of this line that Bruce had said “I’m leaving but my heart is still full, I can’t wait to see you in Istanbul”. And it clicks. It works with what I am playing at that moment, it works with what I’m feeling at this time. The rest of this tune kind of just came together from there. Following this, I decided to go on an adventure in town! I end up going to this local club thing with a DJ playing top 40s and like some first years or something. To be honest it wasn’t really my thing. I leave… I start walking to the bust stop, almost accepting defeat. But alas! I hear some punk music in the distance, and I think back to something my friend and fellow musician Jeremias said, “when you are lost in a new city you must follow the music”. So! I do! I sneak my way into this punk show, meet some wonderful people that I end up going on a bar crawl with. End up at this place called Krakatoa! And this place is magic. Like a neon tiki pirate punk bar. I ended up finding my way home this evening! The next night! I see that this Krakatoa place is doing an open mic, so I carry my ol’ Stratocaster there and do my best at ripping some tunes. Get invited to hang with some kind folks who eventually ended up working on some upcoming projects that are to be announced. And yeah, this experience I feel perfectly embodies this feeling of the world presenting these experiences so long as you are open. The other side of it too is that I’m always here. I have a line in this tune, “don’t hesitate to call my name from the bottom of a bottle”. Life gets low sometimes and it’s hard to forget that there is love everywhere. I left, my heart was still full, and I cannot wait to see those I care about again. But, there is love everywhere. I am so happy to have these opportunities to live these new experiences and meet such wonderful people along the way. Easy to forget sometimes that although life can be low and painful sometimes there is love everywhere.
What was the inspiration behind this video (visuals, storyline, etc.)?
I wanted to film this at the Hamilton airport for a number of reasons. I feel like I have such an emotional connection to this place from going to the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum as a kid when my dad used to volunteer there. The number of spontaneous adventures I’ve gone on from that airport. When I used to have an old pickup truck, I used to bring my dates there to watch planes land and take off. Wondering where people are going or coming from. I wouldn’t say there was much of a story to this video, it’s more of just like a “oh wow this is kind of a neat shot” kind of gorilla videography with some lyric edits. But this place and everything to me I feel fosters such an emotional connection. I feel the video expresses this idea of travel and motion just via its setting basically.
3.What was the process of making this video?
Yeah, so my buddy Dan Sullivan and I took my old high 8 VHS camera out there right before a sunset and filmed as much as we could before the battery died. So here we are, lining up this first shot with the plane in the background and all. And aside from a car driving by and giving me a weird look and honking (hopefully in support lol) we get the perfect shot! This is the main one you see featured in the video. Then, we look back… The trunk of my car was open the whole time… But its okay, we were racing this sunset, and the shot was too perfect anyways so we keep this open trunk in the video. Get our other shots looking for some cool locations or b footage to shoot yada yada… Decide we should get a shot of a plane landing. So I load up flight radar and find a jet. We are driving around trying to find what runway it will be landing on. Feels like some proper gorilla filmmaking. We get a spot, and boom! Battery dies… so okay great we have the main stuff we need here though. Overall, a successful day. I drop off Dan, and I drive home. I open the camera to take the tape out and forget that the battery is dead. Immediately, the cassette starts spitting out all the tape. At this point I’m thinking well… we’re going to have to redo all that. But the winter is about to start coming and we won’t get these fall themes… Luckily I was able to find a spot that repaired high 8 tapes so they were able to get it all sorted. They were confused why I didn’t want to also digitize it though. I was explaining I like to do some analog editing effects and stuff. You’ll see some glitchy type cuts and such. That’s why I digitize at home. Anyways I was able to get it all sorted and it came out great. We got an absolute magical sunset too. I recently lost a good friend to cancer pretty much within the same week as this was filmed. I like to think this sunset was some sort of gift from him maybe.
There’s something special about albums that feel instantly recognizable without leaning on cliché. The kind of record that welcomes you in, but still leaves space to surprise you. Eric Selby’s Five. lives comfortably in that space, familiar yet quietly adventurous, grounded but always searching.
From its first moments, Five. establishes itself as an inward-looking record, one that moves at its own pace and trusts the listener to follow. The opening track, “The Water,” feels less like an introduction and more like a deep breath. It’s driven by longing, not just for connection with another person, but for the grounding presence of water itself. Lakes, rivers, oceans, places where time slows and thoughts soften. Selby has spoken openly about how the beach is where he feels most at ease, and that sense of calm runs through the song. The lyrics don’t over-explain or overreach. They simply exist, ebbing and flowing the way water does, emotional without being overwrought.
“Supposed To Be This Way” shifts the album into a more reflective space. Written in Hawaii in the aftermath of the 2024 election, the song captures a moment filled with uncertainty and quiet processing. Without a guitar on hand, Selby recorded the song as a voice memo, shaping the melody and lyrics straight from instinct. That raw origin remains intact in the final version. His vocals feel exposed and honest, paired with steady piano lines that don’t push or pull too hard. The song leans toward light rather than darkness, not by ignoring complexity, but by allowing the emotions to settle naturally without dramatics.
A sense of wonder enters the record with “Spare Oom,” a track that balances playfulness with reflection. The song nods to childhood imagination through references to beloved stories like The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and Peter Pan, using those images to explore how easily that sense of magic can fade as life becomes heavier. Rather than sounding nostalgic for nostalgia’s sake, the song feels like a reminder. Growing older doesn’t have to mean letting go of curiosity. Selby manages to sound both wide-eyed and grounded, which is no easy feat.
Elsewhere, “Shake the Blues” highlights Selby’s strength as a songwriter who understands restraint. The guitars shimmer softly, circling the melody like light filtering through leaves. Lyrically, it’s a song about acceptance and the quiet realization that sometimes walking away is the only way forward. His harmonies blend effortlessly, reinforcing the emotional pull without crowding it. Nothing here feels rushed or forced. The song knows exactly what it wants to be.
One of the album’s most striking moments comes with “The Chesapeake.” Musically expansive and more experimental, the track leans into atmosphere and movement. Selby allows the groove to stretch and breathe, drifting into cinematic territory where each instrument feels intentional and alive. Electric guitars swell and recede, blending progressive rock textures with storytelling rooted in place and memory. It’s a track that trusts space as much as sound, and the result is immersive.
At its core, Five. feels like a snapshot of who Selby is right now. Not a definitive statement, but an honest one. It reflects the ways people change, circle back, and reimagine themselves over time. Themes of water, love, fear, home, and self-reflection weave throughout the record, creating a personal landscape that still feels universally relatable. Listening to it feels like being invited into someone’s journal, only to realize parts of it sound like your own thoughts.
Recorded at The Facility Nashville, the album favors authenticity over perfection. You can hear the room in these songs. The air around the drums, the way the bass settles into the mix, the organic interaction between instruments. Nothing feels overly polished or smoothed down.
In a time when many artists either play it safe or push so hard they lose emotional grounding, Five. finds a rare balance. It’s thoughtful without being heavy, inviting without being obvious. Eric Selby has crafted a record that feels like discovering a hidden space inside something you thought you already understood. Comfortable, surprising, and quietly powerful.
A is For Atom’s latest single “Enola” starts with a strong electronic pulse that is modern in quality without trying too hard. It’s the kind of groove you can imagine in an indie club or on a late night drive.
But this track quickly reveals itself as more than a beat. It’s built on a concept that feels both personal and bigger than one person. It’s a reflection on what we inherit, what we carry and what we can’t leave behind.
The Atomic Age imagery isn’t just a stylistic choice. It’s a metaphor for the way past decisions continue to echo. The title nods to the Enola Gay, a Boeing B-29 Superfortress bomber that became infamous for dropping the first atomic bomb, “Little Boy,” on Hiroshima, Japan in 1945. The aircraft played a decisive role in bringing World War II to an end. But this song is more interested in the fallout, in the emotional residue of growing up in a world that keeps shifting beneath your feet.
Mike Cykoski, the man behind A is For Atom, has vocals that very much sit in the center of the track like a witness to the story. There’s a sense of tension in them as if he is telling you something that he hasn’t fully processed. The lyrics move through scenes that are lived in – cruising through Fort Collins, the guilty of Catholic school upbringing, the adrenaline of rock and roll, and then reframing them inside a country that feels very volatile and unstable right now.
What’s striking about “Enola” is how it balances contrast. It’s nostalgic, but also anxious. It’s loud, but it’s not careless. It’s a song that wants to move you but it also wants you to think. It’s a critique of America, but it’s wrapped in autobiography which makes it that bit more human.
In the end, “Enola” is a strong new release from A Is for Atom because it’s not trying to be anything other than what it is. A thoughtful and bold song that sounds familiar but still manages to carve out its own space.
Cadillac today announced the appointment of internationally acclaimed DJ, violinist, and producer Esther Anaya as a Global Brand Ambassador, further reinforcing the brand’s commitment to innovation, cultural leadership, and the future of luxury performance.
A Shared Vision of Innovation & Performance
Esther Anaya’s rise, from classically trained violinist to global electronic music artist performing on some of the world’s most prestigious stages, mirrors Cadillac’s own recent evolution: bold, future-forward, and uncompromising in performance.
Known for seamlessly blending live violin with high-energy electronic production, Esther has become a defining figure at the crossroads of music, culture, and technology. Her artistry embodies precision, emotion, and power—values deeply rooted in Cadillac’s DNA.
“Cadillac isn’t just a vehicle, it’s a statement,” says Esther Anaya. “Innovation, presence, and confidence matter in everything I do, and Cadillac represents that at the highest level. This partnership feels like a natural alignment of vision and momentum.”
The Cadillac Escalade IQ: Electrifying the Flagship Experience
No vehicle better represents this partnership than the ESCALADE IQ, Cadillac’s first full-size electric SUV, which will take center stage throughout the relationship.
As Cadillac’s most advanced SUV to date, the Cadillac Escalade IQ delivers a bold reimagining of the iconic Escalade, now fully electric and engineered for the future.
Primary highlights of the Escalade IQ include: • All-electric performance with exceptional range and instantaneous torque • Striking architectural design blending sculpted luxury with aerodynamic efficiency; Spacious, ultra-luxury interior designed for comfort, creativity, and movement • Advanced immersive technology including next-generation displays and driver-centric interfaces • Celebrates Cadillac’s legacy in music with a 38-speaker AKG* Studio Reference Audio System with Dolby Atmos • Commitment to sustainability without sacrificing power or presence
For Esther, the Escalade IQ functions as both a performance vehicle and a mobile creative hub, supporting a global touring lifestyle that demands excellence, reliability, and distinction.
A Partnership Rooted in Culture & Global Impact
Esther Anaya’s relationship with Cadillac is built on continuity, credibility, and cultural impact. The global ambassadorship announced today marks the evolution of a partnership that first took shape during Esther’s 2023 campaign and tour with Cadillac, where the brand aligned with her live performances, media appearances, and cultural moments across key markets.
That initial collaboration demonstrated a shared commitment to forward-thinking luxury, creative expression, and authentic engagement, laying the foundation for what has since become a long-term global partnership.
A key catalyst in the development and expansion of this relationship has been Cameron Smith, Founder of TITANexp, whose strategic leadership and experiential vision helped bridge Cadillac’s cultural initiatives with Esther’s artistic world. Through TITANexp, Cameron played an instrumental role in shaping Esther’s past campaigns with Cadillac and continues to be a driving force behind the partnership’s ongoing global activation.
From live performances and high-profile cultural events to media storytelling and immersive brand experiences, Esther represents Cadillac at the intersection of music, luxury, and modern identity, bringing authenticity and global resonance to the brand’s evolving narrative.
“Esther Anaya brings a rare combination of artistry, authenticity, and global influence,” said Tom D’Angelo, Cadillac Regional Marketing Manager. “She represents where culture is going, not where it’s been. Building on the success of our earlier collaborations, we’re excited to formally welcome her as a global ambassador as Cadillac continues to define the future of luxury mobility.”
Looking Ahead
As a Global Brand Ambassador, Esther Anaya will continue to collaborate with Cadillac on international campaigns, cultural initiatives, and storytelling that highlights innovation, creative excellence, and the evolving definition of luxury.
Together, Cadillac and Esther Anaya are driving forward, electrified, expressive, and unapologetically bold.
About Cadillac Cadillac is a division of General Motors, committed to shaping the future of luxury through innovation, electrification, and expressive design.
About Esther Anaya
Esther Anaya is an internationally recognized DJ, violinist, and producer known for fusing classical musicianship with electronic music. Her performances span major festivals, stadiums, and global cultural platforms, positioning her as one of the most distinctive crossover artists of her generation.
Veteran singer-songwriter, producer, and entrepreneur Denise Marsa is redefining what it means to evolve as an artist, seamlessly moving into the dance music scene with confidence, creativity, and purpose. Known for weaving emotion and narrative into every note, Marsa’s work is a reflection of her own experiences, giving her music a depth that resonates across audiences and genres. Her style, often described as “pop with purpose,” continues to grow in sophistication and reach.
Marsa’s recent collaborations with UK remixers Jim Sullivan and Craig Jones have turned her most daring musical ideas into fully realized club-ready tracks. With seven consecutive Top Ten hits on the UK Music Week Commercial Pop Club Chart, the partnership has proven to be a powerhouse. The newest release, “HOLE (Until Dawn Remix),” is positioned to become their eighth chart-topping hit, with additional remixes from her forthcoming album RISK + HEAL already in the works. Marsa says, “Every remix is a fresh exploration. We’re connecting story and emotion with the energy of the dance floor, turning feeling into movement.”
“HOLE (Until Dawn Remix)” channels heartbreak into a sense of liberation. Bright guitar strums, buoyant synths, and infectious, shuffling beats create a sonic landscape that feels like stepping into sunlight after a storm. Listeners are invited not just to dance—but to dance through the struggle, discovering joy, connection, and release along the way.
The official music video enhances the track’s message by transporting viewers to The Music Inn, Manhattan’s oldest music store, where creativity and community collide. Marsa guides the audience through the store’s vibrant aisles and into its hidden West Village basement—a gathering space for musicians, friends, family, and fans. Joined by staff, owner Jeff Slatnick, her first NYC guitarist Frank (Francis) Bosco, and her niece Stephanie Colorado, the video captures spontaneous jams, laughter, and the unbreakable spirit of musical collaboration. It is a celebration of the artistry, dedication, and joy that music continues to inspire.
With “HOLE (Until Dawn Remix),” Denise Marsa proves that even in uncertain times, music remains a powerful source of hope, healing, and connection—reminding us that liberation, creativity, and community are never out of reach.
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