Jake Hoskins‘ new single arrives wrapped in warm indie-rock textures and easygoing melodies, but underneath sits a quieter frustration with performance, image and the exhausting cycle of external validation that increasingly shapes modern music culture.
Written after stepping away from city life in the aftermath of the pandemic, the track reflects Hoskins’ attempt to reconnect with himself after feeling buried beneath pressure and expectation. Rather than treating that experience with bitterness, ‘Smoke and Mirrors’ approaches it with a kind of weary clarity. The song’s central metaphor, appearance versus authenticity, stretches beyond personal relationships and directly into the mechanics of the music industry itself.
“There’s this feeling I’m always searching for through music. That oneness where you’re completely in the zone and time stands still.”
Raised in Cowaramup among blues records, surf culture, road trips and campfire storytelling, Hoskins draws from indie rock, roots and alternative influences without sounding overly indebted to any one tradition. ‘Smoke and Mirrors’ carries traces of nostalgic guitar music, but the songwriting stays grounded enough to avoid slipping into imitation. Instead, the track feels shaped by somebody trying to simplify things after spending too long caught inside noise.
What gives the song its weight is that Hoskins never frames authenticity as some grand revelation. It arrives more as a gradual process of stripping things back and remembering why music mattered before ambition complicated it.
Jake will be heading out on tour soon-catch him at the venues below.

