Podge Lane – “The Dregs”

Irish-born, New York-based songwriter Podge Lane stirs with a memorable folk ballad in “The Dregs.” Recorded live to reel-to-reel tape in a rural Irish fishing shed, the stripped-back track pairs solemn acoustic guitar with a mournful harmonica. It stands as a stark, storytelling masterpiece exploring themes of isolation and regret with artistic lament.

A riveting combination of soaring harmonica and solemn acoustics opens the track, giving way to a poetic vocal introspection — equating a state of aimlessness with “swimming in the dregs, of a lake that was half-emptied, over twenty years ago.” The guitars remain a steady presence as the vocals lift to an impactful questioning, asking “how the hell do I get out of this place?” following those depictions of trudging slowly and admitting to having “already sank too low.” The perspectives on needing a “new direction” are particularly resonating as the harmonica element re-emerges.

“And no one hears a song if there’s no one singing along,” the vocals continue, reflecting on the loneliness that arises alongside these personal trials, capturing a paralyzed inability to move forward. Heartfelt vocals, sturdy acoustics, lovely harmonica, and fantastic lyrical sentiments on personal growth result in a wholly immersive listening experience from Podge Lane.

This and other tracks featured this month can be streamed on the updating Obscure Sound’s ‘Emerging Singles’ Spotify playlist.

We discovered this release via MusoSoup.

Mike Mineo

I'm the founder/editor of Obscure Sound, which was formed in 2006. Previously, I wrote for PopMatters and Stylus Magazine. Want to submit your music? Check out our Submissions Page. For full PR campaigns -- personalized outreach to hundreds of blogs and playlist curators -- see my Music PR Services.

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