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.

Darling I Dreamt’s ‘Wake Up’ Understands What It Means to Be Too Tired to Fall Apart

There’s a very specific kind of insomnia that doesn’t feel like panic; it feels like paperwork. That’s where Wake Up lives. The debut EP from Darling I Dreamt isn’t so much an emotional breakdown as it is a carefully-filed stack of late-night thoughts, catalogued during the long, grey hours where your brain refuses to shut […]

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Andrea Pizzo and The Purple Mice’s We Are All Bots Is a Loud, Shiny Existential Crisis

We Are All Bots is what happens when a rock band stares too long into the glowing eyes of a Boston Dynamics dog and asks, “What if this was operatic?” In just under ten minutes, Andrea Pizzo and The Purple Mice manage to craft a concept EP that sounds like Queen crash-landing into 2001: A

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Gravity Sessions by Rosetta West is bluesy, hazy and occasionally haunted until you’re ready to really listen

There’s a certain kind of silence that follows an old tape hiss. It’s the kind that feels like the room itself is holding its breath. I heard it once in a half-abandoned church where someone had left an old cassette recorder running after choir practice. The reverb, the warmth, the eerie calm; it all stuck

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What makes GAMETIME by Brandon Mitchell land so hard is that it doesn’t try to transcend struggle; it sits with it

Brandon Mitchell’s GAMETIME is what happens when someone decides that instead of making another playlist-friendly rap project, they’ll drop a motivational playbook wrapped in boom-bap soul and unflinching honesty. It’s not just a collection of songs. It’s a PowerPoint presentation with 808s and scripture references, delivered by a guy who’s clearly done the reading and

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Disaster on Neptune by Mang is not just a debut; it’s an unfiltered signal broadcast directly from someone’s inner collapse

Disaster on Neptune is what happens when someone locks themselves in a room with a synthesizer, a few unresolved emotions, and absolutely no intention of making “party music.” This is Mang’s solo debut, and it’s not here to hold your hand. Rather, it’s here to hold a mirror up to your face, dim the lights,

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John D. Contradiction is versatile, self-assured, and cut from a different cloth

There’s something refreshing about hearing an album that doesn’t sound like it was built in a playlist lab. No chasing trends. No streamlined-for-Spotify formula. Just bars, beats, and a vision that doesn’t care if you’re ready for it. 37, the latest project from John D. Contradiction, isn’t trying to go viral; it’s trying to outlive

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Soul Reflections by Sista Soul just exists; in all its moody, spiritual, sometimes-painful glory

On her sophomore release Soul Reflections, Sista Soul dives deep into a personal and emotional journey, crafting a soundscape that’s as smooth as it is stirring. Blending rich elements of soul, R&B, and jazz, the album moves with rhythmic grace, weaving through themes of joy, pain, hope, and inspiration. It’s a record that doesn’t just

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Under the Influence Vol 4.2.0 Side A by Khern$ is here to rewrite the rulebook, dazzle your eardrums, and raise the bar so high you’ll need a telescope to see it

Under the Influence Vol 4.2.0 Side A is the latest installment in Khern$‘s annual tradition, dropping every April 20th like clockwork. It’s an artistic ritual that’s as much about personal reflection as it is about celebrating the hustle. But don’t let the 4/20 release date fool you; this mixtape isn’t about to drop a bunch

Under the Influence Vol 4.2.0 Side A by Khern$ is here to rewrite the rulebook, dazzle your eardrums, and raise the bar so high you’ll need a telescope to see it Read More »

NONXM isn’t interested in being king, they’re too busy enjoying the real world

There’s a rare and deeply underappreciated serenity that settles in when you start a rap album and realize that it has absolutely no interest in being a TikTok trend. No trap-snare tantrums engineered for 15-second dopamine loops. No wink-wink challenges for teenagers in LED-lit bedrooms. No frantic metaphors desperately auditioning for a slot on a

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