Entering with the kind of bass line that threatens to chin you, Jaguar is Blumi’s first release for Capitane Records, and provides a preview into her forthcoming debut LP, Steady Heart.
The tension at Jaguar’s core is concerned with the dichotomy between the individual and society — our need for space and solitude, combined with the desire for connection. That cool bass line is complimented by a percussion section that feels like a pan about to boil over. Together, they underpin the verse, which forms the portion of Blumi’s song concerned with herself — time alone, contemplating, reflecting. It evokes a kind of rhythm and blues that suddenly shifts gear into a psychedelic Day-Glo kaleidoscope of a chorus. Blumi declares, ‘People make me happy… People make me happier!’, a series of bright chords underlining her sense of connection.
Blumi’s song code switches between these collective and individualistic moments throughout the song, much as we do in our day-to-day lives. As someone right in the middle, with equal preference for introversion and extroversion, I recognise this back-and-forth. Time alone creates a yearning for connection, which initially provides and then depletes energy, requiring time alone to recharge.
As someone who seeks salvation in her time alone, Blumi created Jaguar as a tribute to the beauty and chaos that comes from connection — here depicted as the large speckled cat, something we run from but, in the case of friendship and connection, for no real reason. Describing her inspiration, Blumi says:
‘I used to think, with great drama and hand-on-forehead-flapping, that what I needed the most was solitude. If only everyone would leave me be — leave me tranquil, as we say in French.’
Blumi is the musical project of French-British singer, songwriter, composer and multi-instrumentalist Emma Broughton. Having left her position as a political sociology researcher, she established Blumi, creating a musical universe shaped by everything from folk, to jazz, and classical music. Since then, she has collaborated with artists that include Bon Iver, Feist, and The National. Here on Jaguar, we experience a kind of avant-pop, as she performs a video imbued with an Art Nouveau aesthetic. The drama here flows all the way through to Jaguar’s fantastically type-faced closing credits. The result is artful, yet accessible.
Check out Jaguar below, and look out for the album Steady Heart in early 2027.
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