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.

“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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“Great Escape Famine” Shouldn’t Work but It Does, Spectacularly

Imagine you’re listening to a song about famine and instead of despair, it gives you hope. And not, like, Coldplay hope. Actual, data-driven, Steven Pinker-style hope. That’s “Great Escape Famine,” the second track on Transgalactica’s upcoming album Onwards and Upwards, and the middle child of their “Great Escape” trilogy which, by the way, sounds less

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“It Was Written” Is Designed to Sit With You, Like an Afterimage Burned Into Your Vision

There’s a certain type of rapper who doesn’t need to scream about how authentic they are because the authenticity is baked into every syllable. Black Silver, better known as The Navigator, falls squarely into that camp. His new single “It Was Written” doesn’t so much announce itself as it does loom into view, slow and

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Dee Dasher’s Conscious Home May Be a Debut, but It Carries a Timelessness That Feels Far Beyond First Steps

Dee Dasher’s Conscious Home is an album that’s simultaneously grounded in her Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania roots and ambitious enough to flirt with big legacy energy. Let’s get one thing out of the way: Dee Dasher’s voice. If Stevie Nicks ever wandered into the 21st century folk-pop landscape, clutching a ukulele instead of a tambourine, she

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Why “Falling 4 U” Works: It Doesn’t Try to Be Anything Other Than Devastatingly Earnest

Every once in a while, a love song sneaks up on you, not because it’s saying anything particularly groundbreaking, but because it’s delivered with such brutal sincerity that you’re forced to sit down and reckon with it. Enter Cydan’s “falling 4 u,” a track that feels less like a song and more like the emotional

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Here’s the Thing About Different Now: It Thrives in Contradiction

So, Meena put out an album called Different Now. And honestly? It is. Different, that is. It’s one of those records that refuses to sit down politely and say, “Here’s a genre you can file me under.” Instead, it leaps across shoegaze, trip-hop, electronics, and whatever other moods happen to pass through the studio, then

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Breakups Don’t Often Feel Clean; Neither Does Wotts’ Terminal and That’s What Makes It Stick

Breakup songs are a dime a dozen. Half of Spotify’s indie playlists are padded with them, and most sound like someone opened GarageBand, whispered into a USB mic, and called it “vulnerable.” But “terminal”, the new single from Ottawa duo Wotts, does something different. It doesn’t cry at you. It doesn’t romanticize collapse. Instead, it

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BruceBan$hee Doubles Down on Something Simpler and Riskier: Sincerity Through Chaos

There’s a certain type of rapper who spends years buffing their sound until it’s as glossy and frictionless as a Spotify playlist made for dental offices. BruceBan$hee is not that rapper. His new EP, 4th Wall, is what happens when you take the polite façade of modern alt-rap, set it on fire, and then throw

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