ROBOTIC
Nov 25
Issue No.1
RADIO
FEATURING: The Family Battenburg, Ratboys, UNIVERSITY, KennyHoopla, Sorry, Queentide, Portugal. The Man, Cults, POLIÇA, ear, Johnny Goth, Spoon, Panic Shack, Soft Surface, 26fix, Baxter Dury, & Water From Your Eyes.
ALT | INDIE | RETRO | RADIO
Playing music we found in a cupboard under the stairs.
The Family Battenburg - Foggy | Ratboys - Light Night Mountains All That | UNIVERSITY - Bee | KennyHoopla - monalisa, we miss you// | Sorry - Echoes | Queentide - burn | Portugal. The Man - Denali | Cults - Compaction | POLIÇA - Wasted Me | ear - The Most Dear and The Future | Johnny Goth - Alone With You | Spoon - Chateau Blues | Panic Shack - Unhinged |

Fazerdaze
Motorway
Released 22 May 2025
“Motorway” sees Amelia Murray (Fazerdaze) leaning back into her dream-pop and shoegaze roots, but this time with a grittier, more introspective tone. The song opens with fuzzy, distorted guitars and a flat, almost numbed vocal delivery that immediately suggests emotional exhaustion. There’s a tense, looping quality to the rhythm that mirrors the song’s themes—being caught between destinations, both literally and emotionally. Hovering synths add a layer of unease before the track slips into a subtle groove, giving it just enough propulsion to keep moving. The production is intentionally raw yet meticulous, creating a soundscape that feels both spacious and suffocating, perfectly echoing the lyrical mood of longing, repetition, and dislocation.
Lyrically, “Motorway” sits comfortably within the sonic world of Soft Power, but it also signals Murray’s evolution into deeper, darker emotional terrain. She describes the track as a reflection on the search for belonging—in cities, in people, and in oneself—and the unsettling realization that none quite offer it. The motorway becomes a symbol for aimless movement and the illusion of progress. Critics have highlighted the track’s ability to blend abrasive guitar tones with melodic, almost danceable moments, making it emotionally weighty but still accessible. Ultimately, “Motorway” showcases Fazerdaze’s growth as a songwriter and producer, offering a raw but artfully composed meditation on alienation and inertia.

























































