A surgeon who spent forty years writing songs in his head, a Miami debut distributed by Sony, an Albuquerque studio built outside the Nashville machine, a Corby bluesman on his second album, and a Tampere multi-instrumentalist who knew when to ask for help: indie folk this week is five very distinct bangers. Let’s get stuck in.

Tim Camrose – Break The Chains

camrose’s “Break The Chains” is a stunning Americana rock single: written in New York City and carrying the kind of direct emotional weight that it needs to make it work

“Break The Chains” was written during Tim Camrose’s last overseas trip to New York City with his late wife Deb, and the weight of that context sits in every bar. It draws a melodic and structural line from that Cat Stevens’ banger “Father and Son,”. It’s got an almost motown feel to the chorus which I love, especially when the chords shift and the backing vocals come in. It’s fantastic. Extra points to this absolute zinger of a guitar solo, contributed by Jim Kirkpatrick, which sends the outro to the moon. Sadly though, minus points for the fade out, because fade outs are awful, but we can look past it this time. Excitingly, ‘Break the Chains’ will feature on the forthcoming album American Stories, dedicated to Deb’s memory.

Tim Camrose is a singer-songwriter based in the north-west of England who grew up in London and left music behind for over forty years to pursue a career as a surgeon and university professor. Not your typical career change, but we’re glad he’s back. Melodies and lyrics continued to come to him throughout that period, during long journeys and across extensive travels in the United States, where he trained in Chicago and Palo Alto. It’s a great single, and I’ll definitely be diving into the album when it comes out.

Micayla Shafran – Fallen

Micayla Shafran’s “Fallen” is a superb and genuinely affecting piece of ethereal folk-pop, and well worth your attention this summer.

“Fallen” draws on vintage, dreamlike and mythological imagery to build something that feels both intimate and ceremonial. Shafran describes the song as an anthem for people who have sacrificed their own wellbeing to hold things together for someone they love, and the production earns that ambition. The track is released through The Orchard, distributed by Sony Music Group, a significant milestone for a songwriter whose previous work had been self-managed. But best of all, it’s a hazy, dreamy banger and captures a real mood in a fantastic way.

Shafran is a Miami-based singer-songwriter who works in a mode she describes as haunting ethereal pop, pulling from vintage and mythological sources. “Fallen” is her first release under a major distribution deal, a development she has spoken about with notable candour as entirely unexpected, given how personal and exposed the material is. That honesty sits at the core of what makes her work interesting: the songs feel like they come from a real and specific place rather than a carefully managed persona. We’ll certainly be watching her next releases with a very close eye.

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Vincent J. Rigney – My Love Is Just Enough

Vincent J. Rigney’s “My Love Is Just Enough” is an excellent blues-inflected indie folk single: soulful, direct, and proof that Corby has a genuinely distinctive voice in British roots music.

“My Love Is Just Enough” is taken from Rigney’s second album Steel Town Boy, a 2026 release that follows Songs from the Water Tower, his debut recorded in Saffron Walden at Lime Monkeys studio with producer Edd Hartwell, whose credits include Robbie Williams, Amy MacDonald and Ed Sheeran. The new album continues his focus on personal storytelling rooted in life in and around Corby, the Northamptonshire steel town where he grew up, and the production blends blues and alternative rock in a way that keeps both elements active rather than letting one swallow the other. International blogs, radio stations and playlists have already picked up the track.

Rigney is a singer-songwriter, guitarist and producer from Corby, a town whose industrial heritage runs through the emotional geography of his work as visibly as it does through the place itself. He performs with a confidence and stage presence that has been building his live fanbase steadily alongside the recorded output, and his reach has extended well beyond the UK through radio and playlist support. Steel Town Boy is his current album.

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Grekula – Detached

Grekula’s “Detached” is a gorgeous piece of introspective alternative rock: a DIY Tampere multi-instrumentalist, a pianist colleague from the day job, and a track that neither of them could have made alone.

“Detached” was recorded partly in Grekula’s own studio space and partly at home, and its centrepiece is a piano performance by Mathias Thijssen, a colleague Grekula works with day-to-day who turned out to be the element the track needed. Grekula recognised the limits of his own keyboard playing and brought Thijssen in specifically to realise the emotional mood the song required, a decision that gives the track an unusual depth for a home production. The subject is the way memory becomes increasingly strange and distant as time passes, how past versions of yourself begin to feel like someone else’s experience entirely. Released 22 May 2026.

Grekula is a multi-instrumentalist from Tampere who typically handles every instrument himself, building alternative rock with a soulful, introspective quality drawn from the moody lineage of Greg Dulli’s work in Afghan Whigs and Twilight Singers. “Detached” is the first time he has brought in an outside collaborator for a central performance, and the results make clear it was the right call. His willingness to prioritise the song over the method is one of the more interesting things about how he works.

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