Edgar Allan Poets – Noir Rock Band | This Place is Reeya Banerjee's Album Out Now
This Place is Reeya Banerjee’s Album Out Now

Good Day Noir Family,
Reeya Banerjee’s This Place hooks you right away.

This Place is Reeya Banerjee’s Album Out Now

The record opens with Picture Perfect, a track built on sharp guitar rhythms and a drumbeat that instantly recalls the 1990s era of alternative rock.

The energy is direct, unfiltered, and refreshingly human. Nothing here feels processed or artificial; instead, it carries the grit and immediacy of a live performance, the kind of honesty often missing in over-produced records.

The mood shifts with Snow, which begins in a hushed, mysterious way. A reverb-laden vocal enters as if carried from another dimension, floating over a cadence that mirrors falling snow. As the track builds, it retains its air of mystery, offering layers that feel delicate and haunting. It’s the type of song that invites replay, each listen revealing another small detail hidden in the production.

Misery of Place stands out with a guitar riff that briefly nods to the spirit of Smashing Pumpkins before taking its own turn. Banerjee proves she isn’t content to mimic her influences. Instead, she folds them into her own distinctive approach, shaped by years of writing and performing. The song balances rawness with precision, making it one of the album’s strongest moments.

Momentum surges again on Runner, a high-energy track that brushes against Foo Fighters territory but quickly reasserts Banerjee’s identity. Her vocal tone is striking—solid, expressive, and anchored in a rock tradition that feels closer to the unpolished sincerity of the past than the glossy voices of today. It gives her music a timeless quality.

Later, Good Company shifts into dreamlike terrain, recalling The Cranberries with its atmospheric introduction and refined chord progressions. The chorus lifts into something almost anthemic, the kind of refrain that makes you want to sing along. Closing track Upstate Rust pushes the album into more reflective territory, opening with a guitar line that evokes The Edge before spiraling into hypnotic patterns. Hints of Alanis Morissette flicker through the melody, yet the song ultimately remains very much Banerjee’s own.

What makes This Place impressive is its balance: it channels the best parts of 90s alt-rock while forging a voice that is mature, visionary, and distinctly personal. Reeya Banerjee has composed an album that feels alive, confident, and artistically rich.

This Place is Reeya Banerjee’s Album Out Now!


Authentic!


This Place is Reeya Banerjee’s Album Out Now

Reeya Banerjee is a songwriter, storyteller, and voice artist whose work bridges narrative depth with raw emotion. With a background in playwriting, film, and creative nonfiction, her songs draw on memory, loss, and resilience, blending the lyrical weight of Fiona Apple and Alanis Morissette with the melodic force of 90s power pop and post-grunge.

A Pushcart Prize nominee and Staff Writer at Story Screen Presents, Reeya has also been featured in Streetlight Magazine, Fatal Flaw, and Peauxdunque Review. Beyond music and writing, she lends her voice to brands such as Beats by Dre.

Whether leading her band, the Merseyside Darby, or performing solo, Reeya transforms personal narratives into immersive live experiences built on connection and catharsis.


Find Reeya Banerjee Here:

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