Atwood Magazine
Atwood Magazine Premieres New Music From Josh Rennie-Hynes
Sometimes we find ourselves lost in what could be instead of what simply is. Always striving for what’s next and not appreciating what’s right in front of you. It’s almost as if we’re racing to get to the next thing, as if time is running out. We have one foot is in the present and one is in the future, instead of being all in on the now. Australian native Josh Rennie-Hynes reminds us to be present with his latest roaring indie-rock gem single, “Caught in a Dream.”
Grand Canyon Shares a New Track at Atwood Magazine
Since pop music led by hooky melodies and lush production started dominating the current scene, many have issued rock music a death sentence. However, rock music is still alive and going strong, and Grand Canyon are here to prove it.
Atwood Magazine premieres Justin Roeland’s newest single “Desolation”
The more you age, the more you come to recognize that the “straight and narrow” simply doesn’t exist. One can have a plan and work hard to stay the course, but life has this nasty, glorious habit of always getting in the way; you never quite know where you’re heading. The only thing we can really know for certain is where we are right now, and often times it’s not exactly the place we hoped to be. A fervent moment of clarity, Justin Roeland’s rollicking “Desolation” marries prudent reflection with inner turmoil in a colorful, raw indie rock avalanche. READ MORE…
Patrick Damphier shares new live video at Atwood Magazine
Here’s to the wanderers and wonderers, and all the in-betweeners: Patrick Damphier’s “Odd Man Out” shines with infectious energy in its jangling embrace of keeping outside the norm and going against the grain. An underground or underdog anthem depending on how you hear it, “Odd Man Out” affirms Damphier’s place as an artist-to-watch over the coming year. READ MORE…
Atwood Magazine Gives Exclusive Premiere of Michael McArthur’s “Ever Green, Ever Rain”
It’s understood that the grass is always greener on the other side, but this tough-love cliché fails to acknowledge what makes the grass so vibrant in the first place. Singer-songwriter Michael McArthur delves into the not-so-sunny reality of metaphorical flora with “Ever Green, Ever Rain,” his latest single premiering exclusively via Atwood Magazine.
Backed by no-frills acoustic orchestration, the melancholy cut from McArthur serves as a poetic lecture on the grappling aspects of love that go so often unsung. While many romantic tunes fit into two ends of the spectrum — either blind infatuation or heartbreak — “Ever Green, Ever Rain” visits the grey area, acknowledging the impossibility of a lush forest without the downpour that makes it flourish.