Our top ten tunes of the week – March 26


These are the songs that have been getting us going over the past seven days:

1. Jungle – Keep Moving

The British producer duo have returned with a brand new single from their forthcoming album, due 13 August.

2. Julia Stone – Fire In Me

This new single stands as the fifth taste of Julia’s much anticipated third solo album Sixty Summers, which will drop on 30th April.

3. Lucy Kruger & The Lost Boys – Evening Train

This is taken from upcoming album, Transit Tapes (for women who move furniture around), which lands on the 2nd June.

4. Snapped Ankles – Rhythm Is Our Business

Snapped Ankles will be on tour in the UK and EU in October and November in support of their upcoming new album, Forest Of Your Problems.

5. Evann McIntosh – JENN!FER AN!STON

In Evann’s words: “I wrote this song about wanting to see someone in a different light, as a different character other than the love interest. It’s about the constant continuation of the same pattern. It’s about trying to force a change that won’t come. You want better and you put in the effort but it’s unreciprocated either way. No commitment and no loss.”

6. Bob Evans – Concrete Heart

The second taste of upcoming album Tomorrowland (which is set for release on April 16), features our fave, Stella Donnelly, on backing vocals.

7. The Clockworks – Feels So Real

The London-based band from Ireland are signed to Alan McGee’s label, Creation23.

8. Budjerah – Higher

His debut-self titled EP is out today, along with news that he will also be heading on his first national tour this May and June.

9. YAAK – TOP FLOOR

This is his first release for the year, following an impressive run of singles in 2020 and the release of his debut EP ‘TIDES’ in 2019.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_o19mA4hx8g

10. Riva Taylor – Magic 

“Magic is typically a word to describe the buzz of feeling in love. Instead, this song is about the liberating feeling of having fallen out of love and questioning how something that once felt so powerful can become a vanishing act,” Riva explains.