LA based Artist Quincy Mumford Drops A Blissful Piece “Green Light”
The new song "Green Light" released by Los Angeles-based American artist Quincy Mumford includes melancholy, passion and above all emotiveness. The track begins with a wistful and poignant guitar strum, coupled with a low-fi vocal memo that builds to a much more substantial vocal performance. Indeed, the song's lyrical ethos presents the concept of being valued as a serious paramour by one' s crush.
In other words, it's about getting lucky on the first night with someone out of one' s league — and that blissful, self-confident, ecstatic feeling is embedded in this honeyed, moonlit production courtesy of singer Quincy, recently signed to LA's LOWLY label.
TRENDING NOW
A dusk-coloured confession drifts out of Denmark and echoes through Lisbon’s old streets; “Før Du Går” finds CECILIE turning a goodbye into a slow-burning spiritual. Rooted in acoustic pop and alt-folk, the song opens bare: soft, cyclical guitar figures cradle her soulful…
Every year has one song that feels like a diary left open on the kitchen table; for Alexa Kate, “Forever” is that unguarded page. Over mid-tempo, indie-folk-kissed acoustic pop, she dissects time…
Midnight is that strange hour when the sky feels half-closed, and Hayden Calnin’s Middle Night sounds like the diary you write there. Recorded in his coastal studio, this seven-song cycle of adult contemporary, alt-pop and indie folk lingers in the quiet…
Every copyright lawyer’s worst nightmare might sound a lot like Nada UV’s Ideas Won’t Behave—three tracks of neo-soul and indie R&B that treat intellectual property as a cosmic joke rather than…
They say the soul weighs twenty-one grams; Giuseppe Cucé answers by asking how much memory, desire, and regret weigh when they start singing. 21 Grammi is his response—a nine-song indie-pop cycle that treats that old myth not as a scientific claim…
Every quarter-life crisis deserves its own hymn, and Drew Schueler’s “I Thought By Now” arrives like a confession whispered over blue light and unpaid dreams. The title track from his EP Vulnerable For Once turns the myth of linear success…
It’s a common knowledge that every lost summer has a soundtrack, and Brando’s “When You Stay” volunteers itself as the quiet anthem for the moments you replay in your head long…
Every revolution needs a bar jukebox, a desert highway, and a girl who refuses to shut up. ILUKA’s the wild, the innocent, & the raging album arrives as exactly that: a neon-lit road movie of an album where witchy cowgirls, runaway girls and manic pixie…
They say winter teaches the pulse to whisper; in SIESKI’s “Close,” that whisper becomes a hearth, glowing steady as snowfall along a quiet Canadian street. Catchy piano keys chime like frost-bright porch lights, while a cello moves beneath them…
From time to time, a song feels like a screenshot of bad decisions you haven’t made yet; for Savanna Leigh, “Nothing Yet” is that prophetic snapshot. Built on soft, chiming piano and a mid-tempo alt-pop pulse, the track begins with her raspy voice…