Riatto & The Dog understands something fundamental about folk music. The best songs sound like they’ve always existed. “Carry On” achieves this rare quality through genuinely organic production that strips away studio polish in favour of raw, analog warmth.
The result feels like stumbling upon a forgotten recording session from the 1960s, yet the emotions land with immediate relevance.
The song tackles life’s bitter moments head-on. When relationships sour and homes become unfamiliar territory, the lyrics capture that specific loneliness of feeling like a stranger in your own life.
Lines about free falling through restless dreams and gambling without realising the stakes speak to the universal experience of watching things crumble whilst trying to maintain forward momentum. Yet “Carry On” never wallows.
What makes this collaboration particularly effective is how the male and female vocals interweave. The harmonies of Riatto and LÉO recall Simon & Garfunkel’s intuitive blend, where two voices create something greater than their individual parts without competing for space.
The instrumentation keeps your foot tapping throughout, grounding the wistful lyrics in an upbeat energy that refuses to let melancholy take full control.
“Carry On” rewards repeated listening. First play, you catch the infectious melody. Second time, the production details emerge: the way the vocals sit in the mix, the subtle instrumental choices that build texture without clutter. A third listen reveals how carefully the song balances its contradictions: uplifting whilst acknowledging pain, nostalgic yet present, intimate despite its energetic delivery.
This is indie-folk that trusts its craft enough to keep things simple. No overproduction, no unnecessary flourishes, just artists who understand how to turn personal struggles into communal anthems. Sometimes carrying on just means singing along.

