New Lease Music’s New Music Round Up – 14/11/25

Welcome to the second edition of NEW LEASE MUSIC’s New Music Round Up!

Why not continue to tuck in and discover great music from indie and unsigned artists. If you like what you hear, don’t forget to comment below.

NEW LEASE MUSIC’s New Music Roundup will be featured on Mondays or Fridays. If you are a indie or an unsigned artist and would like your music featured on the list, send your music links and a short info about the release to submit@newleasemusic.com, with NEW MUSIC ROUNDUP in the subject line.

Thank you for visiting and I hope you enjoy the music!

albii – pTsd

Emerging Australian alt-pop artist ALBII closes out 2025 with the deeply personal and emotionally charged single ‘PTSD’, a haunting yet beautiful exploration of her journey through breast cancer. Combining dreamy alt-pop textures with minimalist, intricately arranged melodies, ALBII transforms pain and resilience into a raw, captivating soundscape. ‘PTSD was released today (14th November). Check it out below:

caelina – rachel harlow

Berlin-based indie artist RACHEL HARLOW unveils her powerful new single ‘Caelina’, a deeply emotional and cinematic offering that closes out the year on a note of reflection and release. Coming from a challenging childhood and shaped by her early classical training as a violinist, Harlow’s music exists in the space between vulnerability and strength, where haunting melodies meet unflinching emotional honesty. ‘Caelina’ was released today (14th November). Check it out below:

New Lease Music’s New Music Roundup – 07/11/25

Welcome to NEW LEASE MUSIC’s first ever New Music Roundup!

You can now discover great music from indie and unsigned artists at a quick glimpse! If a release catches your ear, don’t be shy – share your thoughts below in the comment box!

NEW LEASE MUSIC’s New Music Roundup will be featured on Mondays or Fridays. If you are a indie or an unsigned artist and would like your music featured on the list, send your music links and a short info about the release to submit@newleasemusic.com, with NEW MUSIC ROUNDUP in the subject line.

Thank you for visiting and I hope you enjoy the music featured!

Lavendine – Deep Blue

Sister duo LAVENDINE, share their album, ‘Deep Blue’, out today (7th November) across all leading platforms. Produced by Mark Needham of The Killers and Fleetwood Mac, the album is a raw, powerful exploration of faith, perseverance, and hope in the face of life’s toughest challenges. Why not check it out here: https://ffm.to/lavendinedeepblue

samuel evanson – christmas bells

Welsh singer-songwriter SAMUEL EVANSON rounds off 2025 with a gift for listeners everywhere, his brand-new festive single, ‘Christmas Bells’, out today (7th November). Known for his spellbinding blend of introspection and pop brilliance, Evanson offers a modern twist on the classic Christmas anthem, channelling his love for 1980s synth-pop while embracing the warmth and wonder that define the season. Check it out here:

sebastian horton – stay (when the light does down)

At just 19 years old, UK-based artist SEBASTIAN HORTON emerges as a vibrant new voice with debut single, ‘Stay (When The Light Goes Down)’, a dance-pop and R&B-pop number, fusing infectious rhythms, soulful emotion, and a story of resilience. ‘Stay (When The Light Goes Down)’ was released 31st October. Check it out here:

rena angel – beauty when i bleed

Brooklyn-born singer-songwriter RENA ANGEL returns with her most evocative release yet, the hauntingly beautiful new single, ‘Beauty When I Bleed’. Blending the intimacy of indie pop with the cinematic textures of alt-leaning soundscapes, Rena’s music feels like a confession whispered at a party; soft, emotional, and impossible to forget. Check it out here:

Handshake In Space shares new single ‘Feel This Free’ – A Powerful Tribute on National Coming Out Day

Swedish EDM artist HANDSHAKE IN SPACE returns with a strong and meaningful new single, ‘Feel This Free,’ released last Saturday, 11th October, on National Coming Out Day. In a year when LGBTQ+ rights are being challenged worldwide, HANDSHAKE IN SPACE sees it as especially important to release this song as a celebration of the power of love and freedom.

Composed by HANDSHAKE IN SPACE, with lyrics and melody by Tim Heller, ‘Feel This Free’ combines a driving kick drum with a warm heartbeat, emphasizing the theme of freedom and the strength found in loving openly and without fear. With lyrics like “All I’m ever gonna need / Is a kick drum and your heart beat” and repeated choruses urging to Feel this free, the song captures a feeling of rebellion, community, and courage.

‘Feel This Free’ is an anthem for anyone fighting to be themselves, a call to not let any rules or obstacles stop love. With an uplifting message and danceable beats, the song is equally a celebration of freedom as it is a reminder of the importance of solidarity and acceptance.

HANDSHAKE IN SPACE has become a voice in the Swedish EDM scene with previous releases, and this single strengthens messages of hope and resilience during a time when they are needed more than ever.

A tribute to love, freedom, and feeling free, ‘Feel This Free’ is on all major streaming platforms…why not check it out below…

Connect with HANDSHAKE IN SPACE via:
FB: https://www.facebook.com/handshakeinspace
IG: https://www.instagram.com/handshake_in_space
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@handshakeinspace

Source: Stefan Halling (Handshake In Space)

You Don’t Need a Fancy Studio — Just This Room, This List, and Some Patience

Image via Freepik

You don’t need a record deal or a platinum budget to make music that sounds clean, full, and intentional. What you need is a room that works with you, not against you — and gear choices that feel like extensions of your hands, not puzzles. It’s less about perfection and more about not making the same three mistakes over and over again. If you’ve got a laptop, a bit of space, and enough time to mess up twice before you get it right, you can absolutely build a recording setup that punches above its price tag. But there are some choices — physical ones, technical ones — that will either lock you into headaches or open you up to momentum. Here’s how to avoid the traps and build a studio that earns its keep.

Start With the Room You Already Have

You’ll be tempted to chase gear first. But honestly, where you put the gear matters more — especially when it comes to your monitors. If your room is a square, things get weird fast. Bass builds up in the corners, reflections slap back at you, and you start mixing to compensate for ghosts. A quick fix that changes everything: set speakers along the longest wall. It helps flatten the low-end response, which is where most home studios fall apart.

Don’t Just Absorb — Also Break Up the Sound

Everyone thinks slapping some foam on the wall solves things. But absorption is only half the story. Sound bounces, and unless you’re also scattering it, you’ll end up with a room that sounds flat but still unpredictable. To get usable clarity, especially when tracking vocals or mixing soft elements, you need to diffuse and absorb sound waves together. That could mean adding bookshelves, odd‑shaped panels, or even DIY slats — the goal is variety. A room with texture lets your ears make real decisions.

Your Cables Are Talking Behind Your Back

You can spend thousands on mics and monitors and still get hiss, dropouts, or strange hums if your wiring sucks. This part isn’t sexy, but it is surgery — and bad routing clogs the veins of your signal. Label everything, avoid tangles, keep power and audio separated when you can. And when you’re connecting gear that needs clean voltage or balanced signals, don’t just assume it’ll work — check your ends, your grounds, and your distance. You can prevent audio dropouts with wiring that looks boring but works every time. That’s the goal: reliable silence when nothing’s supposed to be making noise.

Your Studio Has Power Needs — Don’t Wing It

Let’s talk electricity — because nothing kills a session like an overloaded strip or a mystery buzz that turns out to be a ground loop. You’re plugging in sensitive gear, computers, speakers, interfaces, maybe even preamps or analog outboard later. That stuff doesn’t like power spikes or inconsistent grounding. Before you pile it all on one outlet, step back and ask if your studio corner is really built for it. You might need to manage the studio’s power needs safely, especially if your home is older or you’re pulling a lot of load. If you’re renting, or not ready to hire an electrician, at least make sure you’ve got surge protection and clean grounding in place.

Hidden Issues in the Walls Can Ruin Everything

Here’s the thing most people don’t want to think about: your house might already be messing with your sound. Old wiring, shared circuits with the fridge, breaker issues — it all bleeds into your gear. Buzz, drops, total outages. Especially if you’re stacking up multiple interfaces or drawing power from sketchy outlets. Before you drop a thousand bucks on gear that might fry or flake out, consider getting a home electrical warranty. It’s not glamorous, but protection against the random “pop” that takes out your speakers is real peace of mind.

Choose the Interface That Matches Your Workflow

You don’t need the most expensive box on the shelf — but you do need one that doesn’t fight you. Latency matters. So do driver updates and the number of inputs you’ll realistically use. If you’re planning to track a full kit, that’s a different world than just vocals and acoustic. Look at how you’ll work, not just what influencers recommend. The right way to choose an interface for performance is to figure out what breaks your flow, and don’t settle for gear that introduces more of that.

Build Like You’ll Still Be Using It in Five Years

A lot of people think short-term: what’s the cheapest way to get started. That works — until it doesn’t. You’ll outgrow shallow patch bays, awkward cable runs, and setups that can’t expand. Whether you’re going full analog later or adding synths, thinking ahead saves you from the pain of redoing everything. It’s smarter (and cheaper) to plan wiring for future expansion right now — even if you’re only using half of it today. That’s what makes a “home studio” feel like a studio that lives with you, not just in your head.

There’s no right way to build a home studio — just wrong ways that eat your time, budget, or trust in the process. You’re going to get frustrated. But if you treat your space like an instrument, not just a storage closet for gear, it’ll give back. Get the bones right, and you can upgrade over time without having to rip it all out again. Don’t chase perfection; chase utility that keeps you moving. What matters most is that it sounds like you, and that it keeps inviting you back to make more.

Discover the vibrant world of independent and unsigned artists at New Lease Music, where fresh talent and unique sounds come to life. Dive into our latest releases and let the music move you!

Canadian singer-songwriter Gena Perala unveils her newest single, ‘Lucky One’.

Canadian singer-songwriter GENA PERALA unveils her latest single, ‘Lucky One’, the fourth release from her upcoming 12-track album ‘Somewhere New’.

Equal parts biting, vulnerable, and defiant, ‘Lucky One’ dives headfirst into the contradictions of being human—too much of everything, not enough of anything, and somehow still finding a way to laugh through it all. With brutally honest lyrics like, “Drink too much, smoke too much, fuck just enough, talk too much,” Perala captures that razor-thin line between self-destruction and self-awareness. It’s raw, it’s self-exposing, and it’s delivered with a dark wit that cuts deep.

The song’s cover art features a striking photograph of Perala’s mother and godmother, taken during their days on the carnival circuit in the 1970s. For Perala—who spent her own childhood traveling with her family from town to town under the lights of the carnival—this image isn’t just a nod to the past. It’s a metaphor. A reminder of what “luck” really means in a place where the games are rigged, the odds are stacked, and people still show up, coin in hand, hoping for a win.

That same tension—between hope, illusion, and survival—runs straight through ‘Lucky One.’

The chorus lands like both confession and anthem:
“I’ve never been a sad girl, turning into such a sad world / I’ve never been the lucky one, count my blessings zero to some.”

While Perala has always acknowledged her blessings, she’s not afraid to admit that optimism doesn’t come easy. In a world that so often feels tragic and unjust, holding on to any kind of hope means confronting grief, loss, and all the spaces in between. ‘Lucky One’ lives in that uneasy emotional terrain—where joy and sorrow coexist without cancelling each other out.

“I’ve never really been the lucky one,” Perala reflects. “But maybe that’s the point—there’s strength in still showing up, still playing, even when the odds are against you.”

Following the momentum of her earlier singles, ‘Lucky One’ further cements Perala’s reputation for fearless storytelling and for finding beauty in life’s hardest truths. It’s not just a song—it’s a statement. One that reminds us that sometimes, showing up is its own kind of win.

Have a listen below…

Connect with Gena Perala via:
FB: https://www.facebook.com/GenaPeralaMusic/
IG: https://www.instagram.com/genaperala
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@genaperala
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@genaperala