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Lynz

Just Wanna Be Yours

Listen: Just Wanna Be Yours by Lynz

July 23, 2025 in stream

Buffalo-born songwriter and producer Lynz started making music at the young age of 12, performing at local festivals, venues, and charity events. She then went on to produce her debut album, Dusk At Dawn, at the age of 16, before winning the Buffalo Music Hall of Fame songwriting competition. Following the win, Lynz was awarded a full scholarship from the GRAMMY Camp to study Audio Engineering at the University of Southern California, all whilst she was still in high school.

Having since moved to Los Angeles, Lynz has been further enhancing her production capabilities at Westlake Studios whilst building a standing as a sought after collaborator on the LA indie-pop scene. Just Wanna Be Yours is Lynz’s second release in 2025, following on from the playful Fallin’.

Where Fallin’ taps the fizzy excitement of new-found attraction, Lynz’s follow up represents a darker side to love. The playfulness is gone, and in its place, a gently strummed guitar channels the naked vulnerability of someone yearning to have their affection reciprocated. As the song progresses, however, the guitar is consumed by synths, creating a cool yet somewhat aloof feeling.

The instrumental pairing reflects the central tension of the song. Whilst the song’s title and chorus could be mistaken as those of a conventional love song, a closer listen to the lyrics reveals that Just Wanna Be Yours is really about the push and pull of love. Lynz’s vocal reflects a need to pull away, even while knowing she is hurting her partner. The music builds to a dramatic crescendo before fading away, leaving the song’s central plea front and centre, presumably alone, with Lynz having already left.

Lynz’s latest single is one of several set for release this year, ahead of a planned sophomore album. The sophisticated production and emotive vocal performance of Just Wanna Be Yours mark her as one to watch.

Tags: Lynz
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Rosk, Lea Shico

Our Love

Listen: Our Love by Rosk, Lea Shico

July 08, 2025 in stream

Inspired by, well, fucking everything right now, Our Love is a passionate and determined song about rising above the increase in bullshit hate speech and discrimination we are currently experiencing in the world. It follows rollbacks in the rights and equality extended to the LGBTQ+ community, including the removal of the ability to discuss gender identity in schools in the US, and legal efforts to restrict passports to showing gender assigned at birth.

Our Love is the result of a collaboration between Lea Shico, a Colombian artist who combines queer pop, electronic music, and Latin rhythms, and Mexico City’s Rosk, the pop and electronic rock project of Roman Sashida. Having already been partners in life, the pair came together out of a painful need to be heard at a time when many are attempting to quiet voices like theirs. In sharing the song, the duo said, ‘This song is not just a response. It’s a promise: we’re going to win this war by loving.’

Despite the dark and depressing nature of the subject matter, Our Love is an uplifting and optimistic song. The eclectic, colourful and layered sound reminds me a little of the rise of Day-Glo indie in the 00s from the likes of I’m From Barcelona and Architecture In Helsinki. Layered vocals create the rousing, inclusive and inspiring experience of pride protest marches.

When Rosk sings the line, ‘You dirty patriarchs don’t you try to erase, you know that we know how to slay’ you could almost feel sorry for the people whose worldviews are so inevitably going to be cast aside. If they weren’t so toxic, of course. Rosk is bold and forthright as the song hits its Star Wars referencing chorus, ‘Our love will outrun your dumb, glum hate speech’. Despite the deeply painful political reality of our moment, it’s hard not to believe her. Those that love and include and embrace will win.

Tags: Rosk, Lea Shico
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Théa Marie, Kiriku

Says I’m Home

Listen: Says I’m Home by Théa Marie, Kiriku

July 07, 2025 in stream

On her new song, Says I’m Home, Théa Marie combines a wistful guitar melody with pulse quickening bass guitar to create something beautiful and haunting. Her vocal takes centre stage, however, acting as a cooling balm against the baking sun and the creeping sense of alienation that can come from extended time away from home.

Hailing from France but finding herself floating aboard a narrowboat on London’s canals, it is perhaps unsurprising to hear Théa create this ode to home. Having collaborated with producers from around the world to release 52 songs in a single year, the singer, songwriter, and vocal producer is now focused on creating her own sound and space. Here on Says I’m Home, Théa is collaborating with Kiriku, who lives between London and Ibiza. Both homes influence Kiriku’s sound, which spans from groove-led downtempo to clubby, organic house.

With Kiriku’s production work, Says I’m Home shimmers with the warm heat of a Balearic sunset. Centred on the sense of calm and belonging that ‘comes with returning home, especially to the Mediterranean’, the sun-baked aesthetic and feeling of relief that comes from Marie’s vocal are clearly both purposeful and striking. The song reaches a climax with a bridge that kicks in during its third minute, Théa’s vocal cut loose against a backdrop of scratchy instrumentation and shuffling percussion. It is a moment that begs to be extended, and with the EP, Shades Of Longing, featuring a remix from French musicians dOP, we have something akin to just that. For the moment, I’ll slowly click back to the song’s beginning, as I endure the UK’s current heatwave.

Tags: Thea Marie, Kiriku
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Bonbonfire

Costumes

Listen: Costumes by Bonbonfire

July 02, 2025 in stream

Opening with a reverb heavy intro, Bonbonfire’s new single, Costumes, is centred around piano keys that sound as though they are being scattered across bare floorboards. A vocal duet picks its way through an environment of emotional detritus, as layers of percussion and instrumentation gradually come together to create an increasingly resonant experience.

Bonbonfire are a US-based male-female duo. He is an electronic music producer, and she used to dream of being a country music star. Having both become certified music therapists, they work together to create a combination of electronic and acoustic sounds as a musical outlet.

Costumes was originally a single from 2020, but is a focus again as part of Bonbonfire’s 2025 album, This Wasn’t The Plan. The costumes in the title reflect the song’s exploration of imposter syndrome and identity crisis, themselves triggered by some of the world events through which we have all lived in the past few years.

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Idarose

Uppercut

Listen: Uppercut by Idarose

June 15, 2025 in stream

American musician Idarose positions herself as ‘the cross between brat summer and a theatre kid’ and, having previously produced and written for major artists including Joji, Suki Waterhouse, Two Feet and Lydia Night, she is now releasing her own self-written and produced music.

New single Uppercut is the exception that proves a particular rule of mine… One of my most frequent complaints about music that gets sent to me is a reliance on heavily processed vocals, but here on Uppercut, they lend the song a sense of urgent drama.

Opening with deadpan vocals performed on top of cinematic synths and propulsive drums, Uppercut channels an energy that is equal parts John Hughes and brat punk delivered with an attitude not dissimilar to Olivia Rodrigo. Idarose’s hushed vocals establish the context of a friendship turned sour, quietly seething, before she jumps into a chorus that gives the feeling of being in emotional free fall, buried grievances suddenly given the space and oxygen to ignite. As things proceed through the song’s duration, the whole thing burns bright like lithium.

Describing her inspiration, Idarose says:

‘Over the past few years, through my work with different artists as well as through the creation of an original musical, I’ve really started to figure out what I wanted my artist project to sound like again. After separately exploring both worlds, I began to realize, what if my artist project actually is a mix of the theater kid in me with so many stories to tell and the electronic pop producer in me who loves aggressively loud synthesizers and harmonizers? This song was the first one I had made in a long time that felt so innately Idarose — lyrics where I get to overshare and process emotions about a friendship breakup over production that is loud, dramatic and in your face. Uppercut felt like the perfect way to bring people back into my world as an artist.’

Tags: Idarose
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BlackPlastic.co.uk is an alternative music blog focused on sharing the best electronic music.



Latest Posts

alternative music blog
Listen: Just Wanna Be Yours by Lynz
Listen: Just Wanna Be Yours by Lynz
about 13 hours ago
Listen: Our Love by Rosk, Lea Shico
Listen: Our Love by Rosk, Lea Shico
about 2 weeks ago
Listen: Says I’m Home by Théa Marie, Kiriku
Listen: Says I’m Home by Théa Marie, Kiriku
about 2 weeks ago
Listen: Costumes by Bonbonfire
Listen: Costumes by Bonbonfire
about 3 weeks ago
Listen: Uppercut by Idarose
Listen: Uppercut by Idarose
about a month ago

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