Ian Ureta

A tenured media critic known working as a ghost writer, freelance critic for publications in the US and former lead writer of Atop The Treehouse. Reviews music, film and TV shows for media aggregators.

21 Grammi, the New Album From Giuseppe Cucè, Completely Disarmed Me

I’ll be honest: I understand only a bit of Italian; just enough to recognize when someone is talking about love, death, food, or all three simultaneously, which is about 90% of Italian music anyway. And yet 21 Grammi, the new album from Giuseppe Cucè, completely disarmed me. It’s one of those records that bypasses language, […]

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With Go Tell the Bees, Bastion’s Wake Doesn’t Just Level Up; They Arrive

On my last deep-dive on Bastion’s Wake, you’ll remember his central argument: that the band’s debut showed a lot of potential. It was a blueprint, a proof-of-concept; the sound of musicians circling the perimeter of something bigger, stranger, and more emotionally ambitious than their own early confidence could fully articulate. Go Tell the Bees, their

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Love It All Has Become Something Larger Than Its Components: A Person

Bailey Grey enters the indie arena with Love It All, a 15-track debut that behaves less like an introduction and more like someone finally deciding to live with the lights on. It’s a near-hour of emotional overabundance; the kind of debut that refuses to politely occupy a corner of your listening queue and instead sprawls

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Across Six Songs, Weiss Pokes at the Weird, Tender Machinery of Adulthood

There’s something refreshingly unpretentious about Shani Weiss’s All About Life. It’s not trying to reinvent folk-rock or redefine singer-songwriter introspection. Instead, it’s quietly confident; the sound of an artist who knows that small truths hit harder than grand statements when they’re sung with sincerity. Across six songs, Weiss pokes at the weird, tender machinery of

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“Forsaken” Is the Kind of Song That Sounds Like It Was Built in a Thunderstorm

Here’s the thing about “Forsaken”: it’s not content to just exist as another riff-heavy alt-rock track. It feels like it’s arguing with itself; a slow-motion collapse disguised as a song. Rooftop Screamers, the ongoing project of Portland veteran Mike Collins, has always been a space for collaboration, but here, with Stephen McSwain on vocals, Collins

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“Wasteland Whispers” Is Quiet, Deliberate, and Utterly Disarming in Its Refusal to Dress Pain Up as Spectacle

Every so often, a song comes along that doesn’t try to overwhelm you. It just sits beside you, patiently, until you realize it’s been saying something important the whole time. “Wasteland Whispers,” the new track from Indianapolis alt-rock outfit Pentrilox, is one of those songs. It’s not a cry into the void so much as

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Blind Man’s Daughter’s “Harbor Boulevard” Sounds Like Memory Itself

Every artist has one song that feels less like a career move and more like an act of preservation; a way to keep someone, or something, alive in sound. For Ashley Wolfe, the Denver-based artist behind Blind Man’s Daughter, that song is “Harbor Boulevard.” A departure from her usual genre-defying mix of progressive rock, metal,

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“The Ones Remembered” Is Proof That Sincerity Still Matters, Even When Written in Binary

“I’m my biggest fan,” Trueclaw admits, and honestly, fair enough. If I wrote something this pretty, I’d probably be insufferable too. That line isn’t bravado; it’s survival. When you’re an independent artist from Uppsala, Sweden; writing, producing, mixing, and probably spiritually communing with your DAW at 3 a.m, self-belief isn’t a luxury. It’s a fuel

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By the End, “Truth Over Lies” Feels Like a Conversation That’s Still Happening After the Song

When I reviewed Michellar’s “Never Say Sorry,” I called it a diary entry set to music; a song that quietly refused to play by the rules of modern pop vulnerability. It was small, deliberate, and human in all the ways streaming culture tends to erase. But with “Truth Over Lies,” Michellar flips that intimacy outward.

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Lisa Lim’s “Lucky One” Doesn’t Reinvent Anything; It Doesn’t Need To

Lisa Lim’s “Lucky One” is one of those songs that sneaks up on you. It doesn’t hit you over the head with drama, and it doesn’t drown in sentimentality. Instead, it just breathes; slow, steady, confident. The kind of song that sounds like it’s been sitting by a river for an hour, thinking about life

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