Groove through the week with indie rock ft. Estrada Music Project, Neil Potter & SickRichard
- Music Maniac 1

- Aug 17
- 2 min read
Fuel the fire with refreshing rock with music from Estrada Music Project, Neil Potter & SickRichard. Listen to the grooves and feel here with us and follow these talented artists:
Estrada Music Project-I love when you see through my eyes
Some make music because they can. Some make it because it's part of their reason of staying alive. Estrada Music Project works in a hospital the majority of the day. In the evening, he translates melodic poetry into what you are going to listen to. I love when you see through my eyes is simple, yet layered. Soft chord progressions have a distorted electro pad that transitions softly-while a powerful percussion keeps the song going. In the harmonics, there is a lot that happens with just one artist composing and executing it all. It is the kind of buzz that you will instantly connect to if you have been in love. The track buzzes with an admiration, for the gratitude of being able to play music and an out pour of love:
Neil Potter-Over the Hills
When you listen to a musician from Liverpool write songs, there’s a certain something about it. I don’t want to call it a “Beatleffect”, but there’s purpose and narrative to the music written. Neil Potter is a music educator as well-so he’s able to bring a structure to the music that is way more nuanced than what would be radio friendly pop. What sounds like the opening tempo and chord delivery of Dream On by Aerosmith-has a range of fluctuations and breaks that make this music like watching a complex abstract painting. He is able to mirror the punctuations of the lyrics in the instrumentals, while bringing some amazing chords to the spotlight. Vocals are divine and sung with feel and intent:
SickRichard-Pure Morning
Know that feeling of realisation on certain mornings? That’s your conscience speaking. SickRichard tap into that moment to create Pure Morning, a song that rides on melody. The unique composition is bass heavy, playing with the lead and the driving lyrics. You get a rusty taste of the guitar in between, coming in like a powerful hum. You start focusing on each of the elements that have been stratified so incredibly well-all coming together to one power packed chorus. The band works towards that build-making sure there is detail and drive behind the notes. In production, SickRichard makes sure the feel of the song comes in a steely, industrial container-with 3 live wire members powering an entire system, against the system:
Find more gritty, inspiring music like this on the indie rock playlist here!:




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