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Dr Rift's latest single, “Like a Charm”, puts self-sabotage under a microscope.

  • Writer: GRAHAM
    GRAHAM
  • 11 minutes ago
  • 2 min read
Dr Rift's latest single, “Like a Charm”, puts self-sabotage under a microscope.
Dr Rift's latest single, “Like a Charm”, puts self-sabotage under a microscope.

Canadian multi-instrumentalist and songwriter Kyle Halldorson, also known as the founder of the Western Canadian Music Award-winning project Dizzy Mystics, emerges with a transformative and emotionally charged debut under his new musical moniker: Dr. Rift. Born out of a deeply personal period of grief, isolation, and creative rebirth, Dr. Rift is a sprawling blend of psychedelic rock, folk, funk, indie, and progressive music -- presenting an unfiltered reflection of Halldorson’s healing journey after the passing of his father, Owen Halldorson. A revered guitarist in Winnipeg’s country music scene and a central muse behind the project, Owen’s legacy is woven into the fabric of every note, rhythm, and lyric.


This fun yet focused track offers a tongue-in-cheek exploration of self-doubt, poking fun at the moments when you’re face-to-face with your ambitions. Shaped around a progressive fusion of hypnotic psych and off-kilter funk, it’s a rumination on second-guessing your abilities, even when you know you’ll excel, but struggle to get started. "Knock outta the park, if I swing bat at the ball," the lyrics capture the tension between doubt and rising to the occasion.



Losing my dad just days before we were set to record the album shifted everything,” says Halldorson. “I was paralysed at first, but finishing this record became my way through. It became the thing I clung to—my way to grieve, to remember, to feel alive again.” The song started with all hooks and rhythm, and I feel like it's composed entirely of choruses. It’s a reflection of those moments when you're caught in your head, trying to push forward but unsure of whether you're truly on the right path. The song’s theme came naturally, as I've been known to doubt my potential or be overly self-aware when striving for something.


The track's inception began in early 2020, in the quiet chaos of pandemic lockdowns. Armed only with his phone and bursts of melodic inspiration during workdays, Halldorson recorded beat-boxed rhythms and non-verbal melodies, which he volleyed to longtime friend and former bandmate Edward Oakes (from their progressive punk group Discovenant). Oakes transformed these raw sketches into live drum tracks, recorded remotely and later meticulously woven into full-band arrangements by Halldorson.



The result is a bold, kaleidoscopic body of work, rich with rhythmic intricacies and panoramic melodies. Fans of Queens of the Stone Age, Fleet Foxes, Soundgarden, Radiohead, and White Denim will find themselves at home in its genre-fluid terrain. The song moves like a multi-sided die -- off-kilter, catchy, and emotionally complex -- guided by Halldorson’s intuitive songwriting and raw vulnerability. Mixed by Cory Hanson of L.A. psych rockers Wand (Drag City Records) and mastered by Riley J. Hill at No Fun Club, the track showcases a level of craft and experimentation rarely heard in debut projects. Live, Dr Rift comes alive through a dynamic lineup featuring Tanner Stregger (guitar, vocals), Kyle Fox (bass), Aaron Bacon (drums), and Tirian Plett (keys), with Halldorson front and centre—donning his signature night-blue blazer and a bolo tie containing his father’s ashes.


For more information, follow Dr. Rift on Spotify, Instagram and Facebook.

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