March 16, 2026
Active since 2009, alternative artist Nick Ryan has built a catalogue defined by directness—songs that don’t dress up the truth or soften the edges. Rooted in alternative pop/rock but always flirting with an electronic pulse, his discography spans five albums across studio releases, live recordings, and remix projects. What’s remained consistent is Ryan’s emotional candour: the sense that each track is written in real time, with the volume turned up on feeling.
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Now he returns with ArchNemesis, an EDM-infused remix LP that reimagines his earlier album Nemesis through a darker, more house-driven lens. Rather than a simple rework, ArchNemesis feels like a parallel universe version of the original—sleeker, heavier, and built for late-night systems, while still carrying the same unfiltered emotional weight. Across the record, Ryan threads themes of politics, freedom of speech, relationships, and personal reflection into a listening experience that’s bold, defiant, and charged with release.
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Produced by GRAMMY winner Robert Eibach, the album leans into punchy EDM rhythms and club-ready momentum, but never at the expense of Ryan’s songwriting. The hooks still land with alt-pop clarity, and his vocals are given space to soar above the beat—urgent, wounded, and confrontational in equal measure. It’s the kind of record that moves like a body in motion, but thinks like a diary: kinetic on the surface, intimate underneath.
One of the album’s most immediate standouts is “Good People Are Hard to Find,” a cathartic anthem that turns frustration into fuel. Ryan’s chorus—“Good people are hard to find / I’m going crazy, I’m losing my mind…”—hits with the blunt universality of a thought you’ve tried to swallow and couldn’t. In the verses, he sharpens that honesty into attitude and irreverent wit: “Hey! I don’t like you/you ghosted me / so I ghosted you too…” It’s messy, funny, human—and that’s exactly the point. Ryan doesn’t posture as the hero of his own story; he shows you the cracked mirror and lets you decide what you see.
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“I was inspired to create ArchNemesis after I recorded the Nemesis album,” Ryan explains. “I originally intended to wait until I released my third studio album and create a ‘greatest hits’ remix album, but when the ArchNemesis title popped into my head, I went in that direction.” He points to Rihanna’s Rated R Remixed as a key reference—“a dark, cohesive remix album produced by a single visionary”—and says bringing Eibach into the process made the concept fully click. “I enlisted GRAMMY winner Robert Eibach to work on the project, and I couldn’t be happier with how it turned out.”
With ArchNemesis, Nick Ryan proves that remix culture isn’t only about bigger drops and louder bass—it can also be about reframing emotion, re-entering old wounds with new tools, and letting the dancefloor carry what the heart can’t hold alone.

Image provided courtesy of Publicity Nation

 

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