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Charge your weekend with 3 in 1 kick-ass rock with Harry Kappen, Lawrence Timoni & Oliver Jordan

  • Writer: Music Maniac 1
    Music Maniac 1
  • 2 hours ago
  • 2 min read

This rock roulette smashes ceilings with rock from Harry Kappen, Lawrence Timoni & Oliver Jordan. Listen to their powerful music here and follow for more:


Harry Kappen-Break These Chains

This is called healing through melodies. Harry Kappen happens to be a music therapist along with being a brilliant rocker. This is nostalgic rock that used to dominate the radio waves along the 70s and 80s. He is able to retain that magic in the track Break These Chains–bringing that positivity and charge into the song. The distorted guitars punctuate the synth powered background, while Harry’s voice brings the coloured mood to the song. From his latest album Four, 10 songs on this album bring you unfound joy and revive the spirit of music in the most organic sense. This is guitar rock for the passionate, for those who want to travel the untrodden path–those who want to break the chains of mediocrity:




Lawrence Timoni-Brighter Still

Shuffle the cards of life and have them splice–with pure music. Lawrence Timoni is a brilliant musician, lyrically and compositionally charging his music to a whole new voltage. His latest song Brighter Still personifies a hot beverage that holds an heirloom secret to its charm. The Berlin based musician condenses the thrilling mix of genres he can offer into a concoction only he can contain and create. Brighter Still is a wonderful mix of powerful production, rousing progression and layered instrumentals to make it a journey worth exploring blindfolded. Lawrence packs the biggest surprises into envelopes for impact, creating a musical piece that is an engraving on his legacy he will be proud of. Let’s watch you match his thrilling vocal range and zeal:




Oliver Jordan-Black Butterfly 

Like an avatar of Layne Staley, there is something about Oliver Jordan’s compositions that scream-ekstasis. In this shrouded mystery, his music becomes a coveted journal to hold on to, and his song Black Butterfly does this persona justice. The progression is an exciting blend of melancholy and hopeful, a state of limbo that doesn’t really have a term. Verse after verse, he takes us on a journey that dichotomises self-image and projection with powerful imagery. Like the nihilist honesty of The Smiths, Oliver is able to capture something bittersweet and true, as the moment comes to the light. Lines like “napalm babies and love stories” have a powerful impact, an impression on how potent a performer Oliver is:



Listen to this music and more on the indie rock playlist here with us and give it a follow:



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