Premiere: Coffeeshop x Ty Taylor Answer the Noise on “Hear The Call”
- Jennifer Gurton

- 2 hours ago
- 2 min read

There’s a lot of “uplifting” music out right now that feels hollow, vibes with no backbone, motivation stripped of meaning. “Hear The Call” doesn’t fall into that trap. Coffeeshop and Ty Taylor come in swinging, delivering a track that actually earns its sense of purpose.
Coffeeshop, aka Giacomo Alloesio, has always had a knack for emotional clarity. Even when he’s working in pop-leaning or electronic spaces, there’s intention behind the sound. But on “Hear The Call,” he steps outside his comfort zone and into something rougher, louder, and more confrontational. The shift into alternative rock isn’t a costume change; it’s a natural evolution. The fuzzed-out guitars hit hard, the pacing is relentless, and the atmosphere feels like a city on edge. Sirens wail in the distance. Tension never fully releases. That’s the point.
Then there’s Ty Taylor, an absolute cheat code of a vocalist. His voice doesn’t just sit on top of the track; it commands it. That husky, lived-in delivery carries years of soul, rock history, and survival instinct. You hear someone who’s stood on massive stages and still knows how to make a song feel personal. Taylor sounds like he’s singing for people who’ve been pushed too far but refuse to stay quiet. No theatrics, no over-polish, just conviction.
Lyrically, “Hear The Call” leans into resistance without turning preachy. It acknowledges darkness, abuse, mistreatment, and systems that crush people, without glorifying it. The song’s power comes from what rises after the chaos. It’s about choosing to stand up when silence feels safer. About answering something inside you that says: enough.
The music video pushes that message even further. The dystopian, anime-inspired visuals feel intentional, not gimmicky. Following a young girl hunted by a red-eyed villain, the story mirrors the song’s emotional core: escape isn’t easy, and freedom comes at a cost. Watching her fight back, endure, and finally stand victorious hits harder because it feels earned. Pain doesn’t disappear; it transforms.
“Hear The Call” isn’t background music. It’s not algorithm-bait. It’s a song for people who are tired of being told to “stay positive” while the world burns. Coffeeshop and Ty Taylor aren’t offering empty comfort; they’re offering a spark. And honestly? We need more of that.


