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New Music Radar Featuring: Love Ghost, Disco Partisan, and Moon Mansion

Plastic Hearts - Love Ghost ft. Angel Vox

Love Ghost teams up with Angel Vox on Plastic Hearts, and the pairing works fast.

The track opens with a cold, hazy mood. It pulls you in without forcing anything. Love Ghost brings that familiar alt-rock sadness. Raw. Controlled and honest. It feels personal, like a late-night thought you can’t shake.

Angel Vox floats in with soft, Slavic-leaning vocals. Light but sharp. Her tone adds space and calm to the tension underneath. The real moment hits when their voices meet. The duet feels natural as they sit together clean and smooth.

The production stays cinematic but simple. Nothing feels overdone. Each layer knows its place. Plastic Hearts feels relaxing and heavy at the same time. It sounds sad, but not draining. You sit with it. You breathe with it.

This track fits headphones, long drives, and quiet nights.

Hey Danny by Disco Partisan

Hey Danny by Disco Partisan feels like a Valentine’s card written with a Sharpie and zero respect. On paper, it’s a love letter to the Spotify CEO. In reality, it’s a roast with guitars. Sweet on the surface. Petty underneath. Exactly how punk should handle billionaires.

The song moves fast and hits hard with loud opinions and sharper jokes. It laughs while throwing punches. Disco Partisan sounds like an immigrant punk rocker who actually means it. You hear hunger, sarcasm, and real love for music in every line.

Not love for the system. Love for the chaos around it. The Clash influence is there, but it doesn’t cosplay. It steals the attitude, then picks a modern villain. That choice makes the track feel current instead of dusty.

Hey Danny doesn’t cry about streaming. It mocks it. That’s why it works. If punk is supposed to annoy the people in charge, this track did its job.

How To Live by Moon Mansion

How To Live by Moon Mansion comes in loud and confident.This California-based project clearly knows its lane. They don’t warm you up. They hit play and go straight for the neck.

The track is heavy and tight from start to finish. The structure feels planned, not messy. Every shift makes sense. No wasted parts. No random noise pretending to be depth.

The instruments do their job well. Guitars stay thick and controlled. The rhythm section locks in and pushes the song forward. You can tell this band actually plays together, not just stacks tracks. The raspy vocals seal the deal. Rough, gritty, and full of attitude. They match the theme instead of fighting it. Nothing feels forced or over-sung.

How To Live sounds like a band that’s done experimenting and decided to commit. It fits perfectly inside the 3P EP while standing strong on its own.

This is the kind of track you blast when you want energy, not advice. If this is Moon Mansion setting the tone, where do they push it next?

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