Radio-Tv ARTHIS Brussels is featuring "Voodoo" in their radio programs, audio and AI playlists, and are promoting it across their platforms. Thank you for your support!
https://www.radioarthis.be/
This album is a raw, unfiltered journey through pressure, resistance, and self-worth. From cold grind anthems to militant group chants, it calls out hate, silence, exploitation, and systems built to erase people, while refusing to disappear. It’s about working through exhaustion, standing firm in the face of racism and division, embracing the struggle instead of romanticizing it, and choosing to be seen when the world would rather you disappear. No rescue, no saviors, just discipline, presence, and the reminder that you matter more than they ever gave you credit for.
Album release date: 13 February 2026

Radio-Tv ARTHIS Brussels is featuring "Voodoo" in their radio programs, audio and AI playlists, and are promoting it across their platforms. Thank you for your support!
https://www.radioarthis.be/
New Album Released: Smoke and Honey
Today, I’m excited to share something deeply personal — not just a new album, but a creative milestone shaped at the intersection of human experience and AI-augmented artistry.
Smoke and Honey is a collision of fire and sweetness — a soulful rock record built from raw guitars, restless memories, and the kind of truth you only taste when life finally slows down. These songs rise from the places where heat meets heart: late-night roads, back-porch conversations, and quiet moments that hit harder than any storm.
What makes this project special is the process behind it. I leaned into human–AI augmentation as a creative partner, not a replacement. AI helped me explore new ideas, organize thoughts, challenge structure, and unlock emotional clarity — but the soul, the storytelling, the lived experiences, the imperfections… those are wholly human.
This collaboration allowed me to push deeper into contrasts:
the smoke of old battles vs. the honey of old love
the scars that shaped us vs. the sweetness we still fight to protect
the grit of hard-hitting riffs vs. the tenderness of reflection
Every track is built on this tension. Rough edges and soft memories. Defiant grit and unexpected warmth. A hunger for something real in a world full of static.
The result is a record that breathes — fierce, honest, alive — and a reminder that even after the burn, there’s still sweetness worth holding onto.
If you’re curious about the album, the creative process, or the role of AI in building meaningful art with real emotional texture, I’d love to share more. Smoke and Honey is now available. Let me know what resonates with you.
Here’s to the future of creativity — not human vs. machine, but human with machine, amplifying what makes us feel alive.
"Voodoo" was shared on the Dengue Radio Show at 20:05. Thank you for your support!
https://www.spreaker.com/episode/lado-d-410--68643797

Born in static and forged in code, We Might Be Robots are not merely a band -they are an enigma, a manifestation of what happens when human emotion collides head-on with the precision of machines. Their arrival wasn’t heralded by press releases or viral teasers but by a signal – a strange pulse buried in the static, a ghost in the radio waves whispering of something new, something alive. And from that noise, a voice emerged – haunting, mechanical, and deeply, achingly human.
Their new single, “Voodoo,” from the forthcoming album “On The Porch,” captures the essence of this duality: the aching heart of a songwriter with the circuitry of a dreamer built into their DNA. The result is a sound that feels timeless and future-born all at once – a Southern Gothic hymn to the human condition, filtered through the glowing wires of modern creation.
“Voodoo” is not just a song – it’s an invocation. From the first rumble of its low, moaning guitars to the whiskey-soaked vocals that rasp like gravel under bare feet, it feels like a ritual in sound. There’s a darkness in its soul, a shadowy allure that pulls listeners into a swampy, cinematic world where ghosts hum through the wires and truth hides behind smoke.
The instrumentation is raw and tactile – grinding strings, earth-heavy percussion, and a voice that sounds like it has lived a hundred lives and survived every one of them. Yet beneath that grit lies something almost spectral: subtle, shimmering textures that suggest artificial intelligence weaving its threads beneath the surface. It’s an uncanny beauty -the sense that while the hands may be human, the echo might not be.
And that’s the strange power of We Might Be Robots. Their music exists in the twilight between man and machine, between memory and algorithm. Every note is both organic and synthetic, a duet between heart and hard drive.
The upcoming album, “On The Porch,” pushes this concept further – a deeply human and AI-fused collection of stories that strip away pretense and polish in favor of something honest, dusty, and alive. Built on the bones of country, folk, Americana, and southern gothic, the record feels like a gathering at twilight: friends trading stories under the stars, each song another flicker of firelight illuminating what it means to be alive.
The tracks explore universal chapters of the human story – war, loss, resilience, friendship, love, and self-discovery – but they do so with an awareness that the tools of creation have changed. AI isn’t treated as a cold, distant intruder here – it’s a co-writer, a translator of emotion into form, a reflection of human imagination unbound by physical limits.
In We Might Be Robots’ own manifesto, they declare: “AI is not here to replace the human, but to augment it – to amplify creativity, sharpen vision, and open doors to levels of artistry, iteration, and innovation that were once unthinkable.” It’s a statement that feels both rebellious and reverent.
At the heart of We Might Be Robots lies a radical belief – that art should belong to everyone. Their music rejects the notion of creativity as a commodity. “Art was never meant to be measured in profit margins or locked behind walls of privilege,” they state. Instead, they view technology as the tool that can break those walls down, returning music to its roots: accessible, affordable, and unfiltered.
In their world, imperfection is not a flaw – it’s proof of life. The slight tremor in a vocal take, the breath before a chord change, the hum of an amp warming up- these are the fingerprints of authenticity. It’s a philosophy that’s increasingly rare in a digital landscape obsessed with perfection and polish.
“On The Porch” is their rebellion against that sterility. It’s not about replacing musicians with machines; it’s about freeing them – from the gatekeepers, the budgets, and the myth that technology and soul are incompatible.
The single “Voodoo” stands as the perfect entry point into this philosophy. It’s the sound of resistance and surrender all at once – a love song to the unknown. The lyrics blur the line between faith and fear, between the power we hold and the forces that move through us. The chorus surges like a fever dream, equal parts lament and liberation, carried by vocals that feel torn from the earth itself.
There’s something ancient in its rhythm, something primal in its pull. Yet, when the synthetic textures slip through – the faint hum of circuitry, the pulse of unseen code – it reminds us that this ritual is happening now, in a time when technology is as much a part of our humanity as breath.
To listen to “Voodoo” is to stand at that crossroad – the porch where memory meets machine, where the firelight flickers against the dark, and the music feels so alive it almost breathes.
We Might Be Robots don’t just make music – they make manifestos. Their work is an act of defiance against the notion that art must choose between authenticity and advancement. Instead, they prove that the future of creativity lies in the fusion of both.
In their world, AI isn’t the villain – it’s the amplifier, the echo chamber for imagination itself. They remind us that what matters is not whether the hands that shape the sound are human or digital, but whether the sound moves us.
Because when the signal finally breaks through the static, when a song like “Voodoo” reaches your ears and your pulse catches in its rhythm, the question of who – or what – made it ceases to matter. What remains is the connection: pure, raw, and very much alive.
And maybe that’s the point. Maybe We Might Be Robots aren’t here to tell us whether they’re creators or creations. Maybe they’re here to remind us that the soul of music has always been both – human and machine, chaos and control, flesh and code – endlessly intertwined.
“Voodoo” isn’t just a song. It’s a signal. A whisper in the static. An invitation to feel something real in an age of simulation. So when you hear it – don’t just listen. Surrender.
https://www.tunedloudhitradio.com/we-might-be-robots-voodoo-where-soul-meets-circuitry-and-the-porch-becomes-a-portal/
Explore Our Latest Music Discoveries Of Talented Independent Artists.
Welcome to Discovery 10/10, where we highlight ten standout artists in every edition. Each feature includes a short, impactful review alongside the artist’s music, making it easy to dive right into the music. Whether you’re here to find fresh talent or just explore new sounds, Discovery 10/10 has you covered. Stay tuned for the latest picks.
We Might Be Robots – Old Montana:
“Old Montana” by We Might Be Robots is an absolutely stunning musical journey, a song that breathes with the soul of the open country and paints an unforgettable portrait of place, emotion, and time through sound. From its very first note, it wraps the listener in a sonic warmth that feels both nostalgic and new, like stepping into a vivid memory painted in golden tones. The track opens with the gentle strum of an acoustic guitar, rich and full, laying the foundation for a melody that immediately feels timeless. Layered upon it are the slow, graceful twangs of an electric guitar that echo across the soundscape like the distant call of wind sweeping through wide Montana fields. The rhythm section enters with a grounded, mid-tempo groove, the drums steady and unhurried, giving the piece a strong sense of heartbeat and purpose, while the bass hums low and resonant beneath, adding depth and texture that anchors everything in earthy emotion. Every instrument feels alive here, the brushed snares, the whispering cymbals, the subtle hum of the organ in the background, and those faint steel guitar slides that shimmer softly in the mix, reminiscent of the sunset’s glow over an open plain. Together, they create a deeply immersive atmosphere, a blend of Americana, folk, and soft country rock that feels like both a song and a landscape at once. The production is lush yet restrained, giving space to every note, and the pacing moves like a slow river, steady, reflective, and profoundly human. There’s an unmistakable groove here, not in a danceable sense, but in the way everything flows naturally, with that graceful push-and-pull that mirrors the rhythm of life itself.
Then come the vocals, the emotional centerpiece of “Old Montana”, carrying the song with a tone that feels as rugged as it is tender, rich with the kind of sincerity that can only come from lived experience. The singer’s voice is warm, slightly raspy, and unfiltered, resting perfectly within the mix, neither forced nor overly polished. There’s a kind of soul in the delivery that immediately connects, as if each line was sung not just to be heard but to be felt. The phrasing glides smoothly, blending seamlessly with the slow sway of the instrumentation, while the harmonies, subtle yet haunting, rise and fall like distant echoes in the mountains. As the song progresses, it unfolds into a moment of emotional transcendence; the guitars begin to sing more boldly, the drums grow slightly fuller, and the steel guitar stretches its wings, letting its notes linger and cry softly in the background. The chorus lifts the energy in a way that feels effortless, a gentle but powerful swell of sound that evokes longing, pride, and remembrance all at once. What makes “Old Montana” remarkable is how it feels both deeply personal and universally relatable; it’s a song about place, yes, but also about belonging, about holding onto where you came from even as time pulls you forward. The rhythm never rushes, the instruments never compete, instead, they breathe together, building a texture that feels alive. It’s a song you don’t just listen to, you live inside it. Every strum, every note, every subtle harmony tells its own story, making “Old Montana” not just a track on an album but a heartfelt journey across sound, memory, and the enduring beauty of musical craftsmanship.
https://dulaxi.com/discovery-10-10-89/
OverRocks is playing Alone in the Darkness throughout the day. Thank you for supporting the We Might Be Robots Project. https://webradio.overrocks.com.br/
“Alone in Darkness” just hit 214 on Groover’s top breakthrough artists - Global!
https://groover.co/en/charts?trackId=1427406
Rock in a Row shared Alone in the Darkness on Zerockradio. Thank you for the support!
https://zerockradio.com/