Aketous Unveils Rubicon: A Genre‑Bending, Lyrically Driven Rock Odyssey for the Modern Age
Los Angeles, CA — April 2026 — Aketous, the creative identity of American singer‑songwriter Darren Farris, announces the release of Rubicon, a 13‑track album that marks a decisive turning point in his artistic evolution. Known for blending poetic lyricism with genre‑fluid production, Aketous steps into a new era with a record that is both deeply personal and sonically expansive.
“Rubicon is the moment I stopped negotiating with the past. Every track is a signal flare from the other side of who I used to be — a reminder that once you cross that line, the only direction left is forward.”
With this album, Aketous delivers a body of work that stands at the intersection of rock, electronic textures, and narrative‑driven songwriting, echoing the emotional intensity of artists like The Killers, Muse, 30 Seconds to Mars, and the melodic storytelling of David Bowie and The Smashing Pumpkins. Yet Rubicon remains unmistakably its own creature — a hybrid of modern production and old‑school rock sensibilities.
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A 13‑Track Journey Across Identity, Memory, and Reinvention
Rubicon features thirteen tracks that explore transformation, digital consciousness, and the tension between nostalgia and futurism. Highlights include:
– Space Disco Cowboy — a cosmic, swagger‑charged opener
– Back This Way (Power Punk Version) — a high‑energy, guitar‑forward anthem
– Looking Glass (Rubicon) — a reflective, cinematic centerpiece
– Gotta Run, Gotta Run! (featuring Darren Farris) — a kinetic, urgent chase through sound
– Touch My Soul (Elated Version) — a soaring, emotional release
– This Is Las Vegas! (Go Cat Go) — a party song for that never leaves your head
Each track carries the signature Aketous blend of melodic intensity, lyrical depth, and genre‑bending production.
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A Songwriter First: The Poetry Behind the Sound
Farris’s approach to songwriting has always been rooted in the written word — a philosophy that sets Aketous apart in an era dominated by production trends.
“If I’m going to be remembered at all, I’d rather be remembered as a poet. Words can stand on their own for decades. That’s what I love about songwriting — even if the melody or production fades with time, someone a hundred years from now can read the lyrics and still feel exactly what I meant.”
This literary approach places Aketous in the lineage of artists like Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, Brandon Flowers, and Billy Corgan — musicians whose lyrics stand independently as poetry.
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The Rock‑and‑Roll DNA Beneath the Modern Sound
Though Aketous often blends electronic, pop, and cinematic elements, the foundation remains rooted in rock.
“There’s always this unforgivable but unrepentant melodic streak in Aketous music. I grew up in an era when radio stations played everything — pop, rock, R&B, country — and we just called it Rock and Roll. Every song I write still starts with that framework. Even when a track leans into EDM or modern production, a rocker can hear the edge buried in the layers.”
This cross‑genre upbringing gives Rubicon a timeless quality — familiar yet futuristic, nostalgic yet forward‑leaning.
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Aketous in the Modern Landscape
In a music world shaped by artists like Imagine Dragons, Coldplay, The Weeknd, Nine Inch Nails, and Daft Punk, Aketous occupies a unique space:
lyrically driven, emotionally charged, and sonically adventurous.
The album’s blend of rock, electronic, and pop‑rock elements positions it alongside modern genre‑blenders while maintaining a distinct artistic identity.
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A Point of No Return
Rubicon is more than an album title — it’s a declaration.
Aketous has crossed a threshold, leaving behind the constraints of genre, expectation, and past identity. What emerges is a project that feels both intimate and cinematic, grounded and otherworldly.
This is Aketous at full power:
poet, storyteller, rocker, futurist.
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Availability
Rubicon is available now on all major streaming platforms.
For more information, visit https://aketous.com.
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Media Contact
GRM Records / Aketous Media Relations
Gordon Levine
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