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.

Come Out Lazarus I – Life Is Over Is Cinematic, Emotional and Quietly Daring

“Come Out Lazarus I – Life Is Over” doesn’t behave like a typical opening track. Instead of easing the listener into People Zero, the concept album by Andrea Pizzo and The Purple Mice, it drops you straight into its emotional and philosophical deep end. As the first chapter of People Zero, the song functions less […]

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By Embracing Distortion, Ambience and Melancholy, EL$ON Has Crafted a Project That Feels Cohesive and Emotionally Grounded.

There’s a specific kind of tension that runs through Sorry Not Sorry, the second EP from London-based singer, songwriter, and producer EL$ON. It’s the tension between wanting to move on and not quite being ready to let go. This project feels less like a comeback and more like a confession. The shift in identity isn’t

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“Even Steven” Is Playful, a Little Weird and Ultimately Sincere

“Even Steven” arrives with a grin on its face and a strange little secret under the hood. At first listen, it sounds like a lost single from some alternate late-’70s radio dial; it’s warm, slightly off-kilter and charming in the way only songs with actual personalities can be. But behind that easygoing retro glow is

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What Ultimately Makes Omnesia’s “Dirty Love” Work Is Its Comfort With Contradiction

Omnesia’s take on “Dirty Love” isn’t just a cover so much as it is a controlled detonation of Frank Zappa’s original spirit, rebuilt with modern tools and a deliberately unstable sense of identity. Where Zappa’s version was sleazy, satirical, and knowingly grotesque, Omnesia approach the song like a piece of “future vintage” art; something dug

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Vincent Projects Offers Something Refreshingly Straightforward: Heavy, Melodic, Theatrical Rock That Sounds Like It Escaped From Another Era and Decided to Stick Around

I guess the easiest way to explain this EP is to say that Vincent Projects sounds like someone found a lost heavy metal band from the late ’70s, right before they accidentally flew into the Bermuda Triangle, and decided to finish mixing the tapes out of sheer curiosity. Not in a nostalgia-bait, “remember when rock

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“Fire Escape” Stands Out by Being Patient and Deeply Human

“Fire Escape” feels like the musical equivalent of standing on your apartment balcony at 2 a.m., staring at nothing in particular, and suddenly realizing you might be okay. Not fixed, not magically transformed into a better version of yourself, but okay enough to keep going. That quiet, hard-earned reassurance is the emotional center of Cooper

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“The Crow” Doesn’t Sound Tentative or Experimental; It Sounds Assured, Like the Work of an Artist Comfortable Inhabiting Emotional Gravity Without Apology

There’s something quietly audacious about releasing a song called “The Crow” and then opening it like you’re trying to resurrect the emotional gravity of a lost Roy Orbison ballad. Arn-Identified Flying Objects and Alien Friends doesn’t just flirt with that lineage; it commits to it fully, leaning into melodrama, loneliness, and old-school romantic despair with

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“Love Is Everywhere” Lands Exactly as It Should; Gentle, Hopeful, and Quietly Profound

Intercontinen7al has always been less of a band and more of a science experiment that accidentally produced real songs. Their entire premise of “what if musicians from every continent tried to make something together without ever standing in the same room?” began as a lockdown hobby and somehow escalated into a four-year, globe-spanning collaboration involving

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In a Musical Landscape Increasingly Dominated by Immediacy and Optimization, Hearty Breakfast, Sensible Dinner Feels Almost Subversive in Its Steadiness

There is a particular kind of bravery in making an instrumental album in 2025. Not the obvious bravery, like “I am challenging the listener” or “this is a bold artistic statement,” but the quieter, more dangerous kind: the willingness to trust that people will sit still long enough to let the music explain itself. Hearty

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