The Big Five: The following tracks are a selection of those submitted through Musosoup that deserve your close attention!
Read MoreInterview: Grids & Dots - What Happens To Friendships?
After spending the last few months delighting us with an array of light and breezy indie-rock offerings, Australian outfit Grids & Dots recently returned to unveil their shimmering new EP ‘What Happens To Friendships?’.
Read MoreReview: Georgie Weston - Never Be That Age Again
What do you get if you mix The Beatles and David Bowie? The answer is Georgie Weston’s new single - Never Be That Age Again.
Read MoreReview: Goldrain - Dragonfly
The Big Seven: Jordan Mackampa / Jane N' The Jungle / Richy Mitch / Boxteles / The Great Dictators / Stonerpop / Gideon Conn / PYX
The Big Seven: AGAT / Flint Moore / Gabriela Eva / Right Shitty / Frameworks / wwoman / Amelle Rose
The Big Seven: Gnarlah / Ben Maier / Lara Snow / Sail By Summer / Jay Marwaha / Jericho Noguera / DEYO
Interview: Golden Idols - Uneasy EP
As Golden Idols release their witty and melodious new EP ‘Uneasy’, lead singer Patrick tells Annie Rew Shaw of the band’s hugely eclectic influences and realist approach to romance
Read MoreListen/review: Gabriel Garzòn-Montano - Golden Wings
“Golden Wings” shows that, with his astounding musicianship and purposeful lyrics, Gabriel Garzón-Montano’s music will undoubtedly keep climbing to new heights.
Read MoreListen/review: Gabriel Garzón-Montano - The Game
Garzón-Montano offers a hopeful perspective on the winding paths through the trials of everyday life.
Read MoreInterview/Listen: Gringo Star - Get Closer
Lost In The Manor has a chat to Gringo Star ahead of their crazy US tour
Read MoreWatch/review: Goat – I Sing In Silence
The diversity of Goat is what makes them so appealing, drawing influence from African music as well as Spanish and Native American sounds. ‘I Sing in Silence’ brings vitality and freshness
Read MoreListen/review: Greys – No Star
Written about the racist reaction to the Paris attacks in 2015, ‘No Star’ is electrifying from the start, hooking you with thumping, pounding drums and thrashing riffs
Read MoreListen/review: Les Gordon – Atlas
Fervour for all music, regardless of time and place, informs Les Gordon's latest EP. The French producer treats us to a moving melancholic (and joyous) piece that expresses feelings that can’t be vocalised.
Read MoreWatch/review: Guadalupe Plata – Calle 24
The plot of Guadalupe Plata's lo-fi promo zips along surreally at an urgent pace, all matching the fuzz-toned garage-blues rumble of ‘Calle 24’ itself, a tune that hovers between the Soledad Brothers, Dick Dale and The Cramps.
Read MoreWatch/review: The Garden – All Smiles Over Here :)
"The Garden's philosophy of 'Vada-Vada', described by Wyatt as 'an idea that represents pure creative expression that disregards all previously made genres and ideals' seems to be more alive than ever as the brothers effortlessly defy categorisation."
Read MorePhotos: Guitars Have Ghosts, Dolls, Immigrants, Princes Of Maine – 30th Jan 2015, The Finsbury
Photos: Chris@lostinthemanor.co.uk
Guitars Have Ghosts - https://www.facebook.com/pages/Guitars-Have-Ghosts
Dollshttps://www.facebook.com/thisisDolls
Immigrantshttps://www.facebook.com/pages/Immigrants
Princes Of Mainehttps://www.facebook.com/PrincesOfMaine
Listen/Review: The Grubby Mitts – Worm of Eternal Return
Andy Holden, Roger Illingworth, Johnny Parry, John Blamey and James MacDowell have been playing together in various line-ups since they were 12 years old. Seven solo albums, one book and numerous art exhibitions later, they became The Grubby Mitts.
Read MoreWatch: Generationals – Reviver
Follow the example of the jovial spectators in Generationals’ speedway-centric new video and you'll find plenty to cheer in the band’s typically upbeat new release, taken from their latest album, ‘Alix’.
Read MoreListen/Review: Gypsy Hill – Caciula Pa Ureche
A riotous mash-up of almost every rootsy vibe you might encounter on a bar crawl from the Black Sea to Brixton, the debut album by South London’s Gypsy Hill has been out for a couple of months now, but it’s always worthy of a quick blast to clear the pipes. Mixing Balkan swing with Big Beat by way of strident brass, guitars, bass and rhythmic breaks both turntabled and trad, Gypsy Hill’s ‘Our Routes’ is sure to get the limbs flailing.
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