Friday Project - Something, Anything
4 h : 17 min

The latest single by Friday Project, “Something, Anything,” feels like a breath pulled from the lung-full nostalgia of ’90s alt-rock and reshaped through the restless urgency of teenagers who actually have something to say. The track opens with a bang and it doesn’t stay polite for long. Jack Galloway’s riffs swell into a gritty, melodic push that pairs seamlessly with his expressive vocal delivery, while Noah King’s bass anchors the song with a warm, muscular presence. Aidan Girardo’s drumming hits with both control and spontaneity, giving the track an energy that feels alive, unfiltered, and true to the indie music scene the band is quickly becoming part of. The production elevates everything without sanding off the edges that make Friday Project special. The mix uses a vivid dynamic range, allowing the verses to breathe before the chorus bursts open with emotional weight. The guitars spread across a carefully crafted stereo field, creating a sense of space in the distorted spectrum that enhances the track’s mood of yearning and unrest. The result is a song that feels intimate and cinematic at the same time. Something that would slip seamlessly into a dark comedy film. It could sit comfortably in the sharp, stylish world of “Heathers” or underscore a tense, off-kilter moment in “The Art of Self-Defense.” Its combination of melancholy and momentum lands with the exact kind of punch those stories thrive on. By the time the final notes fade, “Something, Anything” stands as a showcase of how far Friday Project has come -and how much further they can go. From three Oakville friends who started recording in Jack’s living room to a band crafting richly textured, emotionally resonant songs, their story is still young but already compelling.