Cold For June – "This Town" and the Sound of Something Real
Cold For June are a two-man alt-rock project made up of Alan Reitman and Mike Ferraris. They are not trying to present anything overly polished or carefully packaged. Instead, they write emotionally heavy music that feels lived in, sometimes rough at the edges, and honest enough to land properly. Their sound sits in that space between alt-rock weight and a looser country influence that creeps in when it suits the moment rather than when it is expected. There is also a running joke in their world that Mich Ultras are never far away, treated with the same seriousness as the music itself, which probably says as much about their attitude as anything else.
At the centre of their current work is This Town, a track that captures what they tend to do best without overthinking it. This Town does not try to explain itself too neatly. Instead, it feels like a snapshot of place and memory, the kind of song that carries fragments of conversation, late-night thinking, and the sense of somewhere that still lingers even after you have left it behind.
What stands out most is how unforced it all feels. Alan Reitman and Mike Ferraris keep the arrangement straightforward but expressive, letting the guitars stretch out where they need to and pulling back when the emotion calls for space rather than noise. There is a subtle country tone in places, not as a statement but more as an instinct, something that slips in naturally rather than being pushed forward.
The vocal delivery fits that same approach. It is not overly clean or carefully smoothed out, but instead carries a slightly worn quality that suits the mood of the song. It feels like it belongs to the same world as the lyrics, rather than sitting on top of them. That sense of alignment is part of what gives the track its weight.
For all its restraint, there is still a clear sense of scale. The hook in This Town arrives with enough force to stay with you, even if it never turns into something oversized or theatrical. Cold For June seem more interested in emotional impact than polish, and the song reflects that balance well, building intensity without losing its intimacy.
Taken as a whole, Cold For June comes across less like a carefully constructed project and more like two people following instinct. Alan Reitman and Mike Ferraris are not chasing genre boundaries so much as ignoring them when it suits the song. That approach gives their work a looseness that feels intentional rather than careless.
This Town sits comfortably within that identity. It is not trying to be definitive or final. It just exists as a piece of music that holds feeling without overexplaining it, which is often where Cold For June are at their best.

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