It’s Indie/Rock June 2026 #8th edition and we’ve rounded up some of the best indie/rock tracks we’ve listening to this month that will work for every mood you have. Listen to them in our full playlist. Click here.

Lewca – “Like Liam Gallagher”
Roy from IT called. He wants his Saturday back. Lewca captures that gloriously useless weekend energy where rebellion means a second beer and aggressively doing nothing important, in his single “Like Liam Gallagher”
The drums hit like a door being kicked open by someone who immediately forgets why. Lyrics drip with that brilliant sitcom frustration: loud, theatrical, ultimately harmless. It’s Oasis if Oasis grew up watching The IT Crowd reruns on a broken sofa. Pure punk spirit with absolutely zero consequences.
It’s a double tap for this one!
Roan Grevel – “Anna”
“Anna“ feels like something Roan Grevel has been carrying in his chest for years, finally exhaled into a microphone.
The intro motif authors every note that comes after with great care. Roan makes his statement so very clear with a voice that has been wanting to be heard for ages. The grunge influence runs deep but never overpowers the feeling. The instrument tones work so well together that you forget they are all separate.
And the slow burn outro earns every second it takes. “Anna” knows how to leave a room properly.


Trickshooter Social Club – “We’re Better When We’re Broken”
One word first: Delightful.
Now onto the rest. Somewhere in rural Scotland, a pub has no name, terrible lighting, and the best night of your life happening inside it. “We’re Better When We’re Broken“ lives permanently in that pub.
The songwriting takes the biggest piece of the cake. The lyrics goes deep without grabbing your collar about it. It feels like the singer is just sitting beside you, ordering another round, and say something true using his own experiences as an example.
Trickshooter Social Club understand that broken things, shared honestly over bad whiskey, become the most beautiful things in the room.
Toni Vere – “Broken People”
There is a particular cruelty in writing a hopeful melody about a broken world and Toni Vere pulls it off without flinching in “Broken People.”
The track resonates at a social level providing an emotional commentary on the class inequality that hits you in the centre of your heart.
The instrumentation floats eloquently and the melody is so naturally graceful, they could exist in a completely different, kinder song. But Toni’s voice breaks through in hopeful resistance offering solace to the listener’s broken heart.


Sutlej – “Tell Me You Care”
There are songs that entertain. There are songs that move you. And then, rarely, there are songs that locate something inside you that you didn’t know needed finding. Sutlej’s “Tell Me You Care” breaks you.
We’ve all had that specific, humiliating vulnerability of needing someone to say the thing out loud. Not assumed. Not implied. Said. And Sutlej carries that need without self-pity, without performance.
And that separates this from every other heartbreak track competing for your tears. This is your ‘It’s 3 AM – feeling lonely’ track but disclaimer: It may ruin you.

Find our previous indie/rock review here.


