Next Week’s Washing Debuts “All You Fear Is All You Feel”

Toronto indie quintet Next Week’s Washing shares “All You Fear Is All You Feel,” an exciting new single that fuses driving post-punk instrumentation with shoegaze textures. As the final release from their debut EP, the track captures the overwhelming experience of navigating a world saturated with noise, opinion, and constant digital connection.

“It’s about the challenge of knowing what’s real when you’re getting bombarded with opinions and people trying to sell you something,” explains singer Miles Duffy. “All the noise really gets under your skin. It’s all-consuming.”

Born from the disorienting effects of the digital age, “All You Fear Is All You Feel” reflects a deeper generational anxiety. “It came out, being bombarded with media at all times. It can be really difficult to disengage from that stuff sometimes- Especially for young people. It’s overwhelming, and it’s turned into something that you can’t opt out of. It’s a world that is designed to take us out of the moment, and that’s really scary,” Miles shares. “Eventually, fear and anxiety start to feel like part of your existence rather than a reaction to something specific.”

That tension is mirrored in the track’s sonic identity. What began as a slower acoustic song evolved into a full-band arrangement, driven by propulsive drums and distorted guitars. The track represents a fusion between driving post punk energy and the more atmospheric elements of shoegaze music- a fusion that reflects the wide array of music that the band is inspired by.

“We wanted the music to reflect the lyrical tone,” Miles explains. “It feels very relentless, and induces (at least for me) feelings of anxiety just by listening to it. That was the goal haha.”

Eric Reinhart Brings the Energy on New Single “Keep It Simple”

Building on the momentum of his debut single, “Chances,” emerging pop artist Eric Reinhart returns with “Keep It Simple,” a sleek, edgy, and self-assured new single that channels frustration into clarity. Built around a tough, no-nonsense mindset, the track captures the moment of choosing to cut through drama, trust your instincts, and move forward without overthinking.

“I found myself in a really frustrating situation,” Eric shares. “Someone did something I just couldn’t believe, and I had to deal with it. I hate drama, but I had no choice. So I just told myself: keep it simple, don’t overthink it, move forward. That mindset became this song.”

More than just a reaction, “Keep It Simple” reflects a personal philosophy. “It’s kind of a personal motto,” he explains. “I can naturally overcomplicate things, so I’m always reminding myself not to. Life is better when you strip things back.” That mindset drives both the song’s message and its confident, stripped-yet-impactful delivery.

What sets the track apart is its dynamic production. A whispery, tension-building pre-chorus gives way to a bold, high-impact chorus, while the bridge shifts the song into entirely new territory. The production pulls from a wide palette of rap cadences, subtle Spanish guitar textures, and polished pop sensibilities while maintaining a cohesive, unmistakably Eric Reinhart sound.

Keep It Simple” came together quickly, but not by accident. Written during a first-time session with producer Sam Shrieve, the chemistry was immediate. “He built this beat with a real Justin Timberlake kind of energy, and we both just started losing it,” Eric recalls. “I started freestyling over it, and the whole song came together in about two hours.” That spontaneity remains embedded in the track’s energy, giving it a sense of urgency and authenticity.

Mark Fenster Debuts Epic Release “Cascades, part one: Glacial Riverflow”

Furthering his lifelong exploration of music as a source of healing, reflection, and connection, Montreal-born/Gabriola Island-based composer, vocalist, and meditation leader Mark Fenster shares “Cascades, part one: Glacial Riverflow.” A transporting blend of new age, neo-classical, and meditative sound design, the piece draws inspiration from the natural rhythm and resonance of rushing mountain waters.

Rooted in Fenster’s deep connection to nature, the track captures the immersive experience of sitting beside a glacial river, where light, motion, and sound intertwine. “I’ve always loved the feel and sounds of water,” he shares. “I can sit for hours listening and feeling the rush of life and love in every passing drop.” That sense of presence flows through every moment of this composition, offering listeners a space for calm, reflection, and quiet inspiration.

Originally conceived in Montreal in the 1990s, the piece takes on new life as part of a larger, evolving vision. Now forming the first instalment in a three-part suite, “Cascades, part one: Glacial Riverflow” reflects both patience and creative intuition, with parts two and three set to appear on an upcoming full-length release. The expansion into a multi-part work came naturally, guided by what Fenster describes as an inner calling to fully realize the composition’s emotional and sonic potential.

At the heart of the track is a flowing interplay of layered guitar lines, feathered by Jose Vieira’s soaring solo phrases, all moving independently to converge in harmony, mirroring the unpredictable yet cohesive motion of water through rapids. Accompanied by delicate strings and marimba textures, the arrangement is carefully shaped to evoke movement, light, and depth without ever disrupting the piece’s sense of stillness.

Stylistically, every element serves a singular purpose: to recreate the feeling of being immersed in nature’s rhythm. The result is a composition that feels both grounding and expansive, balancing gentle motion with emotional clarity.

Teagan Johnston Comes Alive on “Beat a Dead Horse”

Horse,” a deeply reflective and emotionally charged single that examines the lingering impact of past relationships and the process of releasing what no longer serves you. Rooted in indie rock and singer-songwriter sensibilities, the track moves through grief, awareness, and ultimately toward a renewed sense of hope and forward motion.

The song was sparked by an unexpected moment during a psychic reading in New York City. “I’m not sure what I believe when it comes to psychics,” Teagan shares, “but something she said really hit me. She told me I was allowing old experiences of dark and painful love to dictate how I love now and in the future.” In that moment, Teagan felt a renewed urgency to step out of cycles of emotional repetition and into something more present and alive.

That sense of reflection carried directly into the song’s visual world. The accompanying video was filmed during a trip to Spain with Teagan’s parents, revisiting a place she hadn’t been since her time living there between the ages of 13-14. “Those years in Spain were before the trauma I reference in the song,” she explains. “It felt like the perfect place to reconnect with feelings of optimism and openness.”

Armed only with a digital camera, Teagan approached the shoot with a return-to-basics mindset, documenting beauty, colour, and everyday moments with a sense of curiosity and emotional clarity. The result is a visual companion that mirrors the song’s central theme: revisiting the past not to live in it, but to finally move beyond it.

Sonically, “Beat a Dead Horse” blends emotional lyricism with energetic indie rock and pop-inflected arrangements. The track balances vulnerability with momentum, reflecting the tension between holding on and letting go, while ultimately leaning toward release.

A Song in Motion -Wayward Sparrow Finds Form in “Gravel and Broken Glass”

waywardsparrow

If there’s one thing that runs through certain strands of Americana and modern folk songwriting, it’s the sense that stories don’t always arrive in straight lines. Many of them settle into meaning slowly. “Gravel and Broken Glass,” which is the latest single from Wayward Sparrow, leans into that idea with confidence creating a song that is as much about atmosphere and suggestion as it is about traditional song structure.

Detroit-based songwriter Rich Clark continues to develop Wayward Sparrow as a fully independent project, self producing and self recording the material with a deliberately stripped back approach to the arrangements. What emerges is not an attempt to recreate a genre in its polished form so much as to engage with its origin: storytelling, space, emotion.

On “Gravel and Broken Glass,” that philosophy is immediately apparent. The song did not begin in its final form. Originally written around a different chord structure, it shifted significantly during the recording process when Clark began experimenting with a new rhythm guitar part. That change re-directed the entire track. What was once a more conventional idea gradually became something darker and more atmospheric, shaped in real time rather than imposed from the outset.

he acoustic guitar carries a steady forward motion, and a Telecaster solo enters midway through not as a climactic moment, but as a tonal shift, slightly distant and bridging sections with a sense of mood rather than spectacle.

Vocally and lyrically, the song continues Clark’s focus on imagery and implication. Rather than spelling everything out directly, the writing leans into suggestion, letting meaning form gradually through repetition and reflection. It’s a style that feels closely tied to the broader intent behind Wayward Sparrow: lyrics that reward patience where interpretation is part of the listening experience rather than something resolved immediately.

Like much of Wayward Sparrow’s work, it feels less concerned with arrival than with the actual journey, much more about capturing the moment a song decides what it wants to be.

Wayward Sparrow copy

About Wayward Sparrow

Wayward Sparrow is the independent music project of Detroit-based singer-songwriter Rich Clark. Self-recorded, self-produced, and self-funded, the project embraces sparse arrangements that put honest storytelling and atmosphere at the forefront. 

With a sound centered in folk, Americana, and subtle bluegrass influences, Wayward Sparrow explores the darker, often unspoken corners of life through music that is intimate and deeply human. Clark’s work has been described as “whiskey lamentations and hymns of the hopeless.”

Follow Wayward Sparrow on Instagram

Stream music on Soundcloud and YouTube Music

Animals in Denial Channels Chaos and Cultural Friction on Latest Release “We’re Dangerous”

AID

“We’re Dangerous” arrives like a signal bleeding through from somewhere slightly off-grid. It’s too loud, too dense, too emotionally charged to behave itself in the way modern alt-rock often politely insists it should.

Animals in Denial don’t seem interested in that politeness anyway. Christian Imes builds this thing like he’s holding multiple ideas in his hands at once and refusing to drop any of them, even if they clash, even if they spark, even if they threaten to overload the system.

There’s an almost basement level urgency running through the track, the kind you used to hear when bands had something to prove and not much interest in smoothing the edges for wider consumption. Guitars are stacked and slightly unruly, not in a sloppy way, but in a way that feels human with small variations left in the mix, textures allowed to overlap instead of being neatly separated into their own lanes. It doesn’t sound “produced” so much as assembled under pressure like the song might have broken out of the room if it had been given just one more pass.

And yet, for all that abrasion, there’s something strangely controlled underneath it. The drums hold steady like a metronome refusing to be dragged into chaos. The bass sits deeper in the structure, doing its job without calling attention to itself. It’s the tension between those grounding elements and the surrounding noise that gives the track its shape. Without that discipline, it would collapse into pure distortion.

“We’re Dangerous” is a song about being misread. About generational friction. About the way language gets flattened when one group looks at another and decides it already understands them. But unlike a lot of modern “statement” tracks, it doesn’t reduce that idea into slogans or clean takes.

There’s a moment in the track where everything feels like it’s pushing slightly out of alignment with layers pressing against each other, vocals cutting through. That’s where the song really clicks.

And that’s something a lot of modern alternative music seems to have forgotten how to do. “We’re Dangerous” does the opposite. It leans into friction. It lets the rough edges stay visible. It trusts that intensity doesn’t need to be smoothed in order to be understood.

Is it chaotic? Absolutely.
Is it controlled? Just enough.
Is it necessary? That’s the real question.

Because somewhere inside all that distortion and density, there’s a clarity and the sense that this is what it sounds like when someone refuses to simplify themselves for easy interpretation.

It’s loud, it’s uncomfortable, and it doesn’t apologize for either of those things.

Keep up with Animals In Denial on the Website

Stream music on Spotify and YouTube Music