There are songs that play, and there are songs that take you somewhere. Goldilocks Zone does the latter in spectacular fashion. Map of the Woulds sound like a band having the time of their lives while simultaneously rewriting the rules of what modern psych pop can be. From its first off-kilter groove, the track feels like stepping into a rocket ship built out of funk, prog, and pure imagination.
Inspired by Bowie’s Space Oddity, Goldilocks Zone is the imagined anthem of a fearless astronaut leaving everything behind in search of the perfect planet, the place that is “just right.” It is a beautifully strange concept that becomes even more powerful through the band’s playful yet thoughtful songwriting. Beneath the warped guitars and bouncing rhythms is a story about sacrifice, ambition, and the wild hope that drives humanity to chase the unknown.
What truly makes Map of the Woulds stand out is their genre-bending confidence. They blur the lines between angular rock, dark jazz, avant pop, and goofy funk so effortlessly that it feels less like a fusion and more like a natural language only they speak. It is music that challenges your mind while still making your body move, the kind of track that leaves you smiling in confusion and hitting replay.
The trio of Woody Frank on guitar and vocals, Andrew Woods on bass and vocals, and Adrian Woods on drums and vocals operate with a rare chemistry. Formed in 2019, they embraced the flexibility of the three-piece setup and turned it into a playground for ideas, proving that even “simple 17-chord pop” can feel accessible, groovy, and endlessly surprising.
Goldilocks Zone is not just a song. It is an invitation to drift, dance, think, and wonder. Map of the Woulds have created a track that feels like floating through space with a disco ball strapped to your helmet, and somehow, it makes perfect sense.


