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Vitesse X

Take a Picture

Watch: Take a Picture by Vitesse X

May 22, 2026 in video

Having loved the heavenly progressive pop of her 2023 single, Right Now, I’m excited to have another jam from Vitesse X to feed my ears.

In the piece linked above, I mentioned how Right Now reminded me of the stuttering emotional electronics of BT. A group in a similar vein, who I haven’t thought about in years, are Swansea progressive breakbeat outfit Hybrid. Their orchestral breakbeat track Finished Symphony, and its accompanying album Wide Angle, sounded like the future when I was in my late-teens. In 2000, the group released a mixed album of Hybrid remixes, Entitled Remix and Additional Production by…, and on it was a remix of the rock band Filter’s Take A Picture. It was a crunchy piece that blended fractured beats with (ex-Nine Inch Nails guitarist) Richard Patrick’s surprisingly laid back and blissed out vocal.

It therefore feels like completing the circle to hear New York producer, vocalist, and DJ Vitesse X take on that same Filter track. She plots a journey that is much closer to Patrick’s original than Hybrid’s, her vocals imbuing the music with a similarly cracked performance, so close to Patrick’s delivery that it feels slightly uncanny. Where the original was all sunny grungy guitars and looping baggy drums, however, Vitesse X employs broken beats and soaring new age melodies, all whilst retaining a feeling of relaxed looseness.

When I asked, Vitesse X confirmed she wasn’t previously aware of the Hybrid remix of Take A Picture, and she only discovered track’s late 90s club remix history after recording her cover. The track has long sat on the edge of Filter’s catalogue, a little different to everything else Patrick released under that moniker. And Vitesse feels she was responding to the same elements that lead to others creating remixes — an underlying psychedelic atmosphere. She notes the way the song struck a chord with her, leading to the cover:

‘I was listening to Take a Picture in the car in the winter, deep in some heavy emotions. I was feeling really detached from the current state of music and exhausted by the demands of the modern world. When the song came on, I was immediately transported back to a feeling I had completely forgotten existed. A time where life felt tangible and simple and pure. It was honestly transcendental. I opened up my phone notes to remind myself to make a cover, and a month later it came to fruition.’

Check out Take a Picture below.

In addition to listening in the post, you can find almost all the music BlackPlastic covers on the music player of your choice. Add the dedicated playlist below:

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Maisy Kay

Bitter

Listen: Bitter by Maisy Kay

May 21, 2026 in stream

With muted, steely guitars, the new single from British-born, LA-based alt-pop artist Maisy Kay’s wears its heart on its sleeve from the beginning. Picking over the wreckage of a terminated relationship, Kay portrays herself as fragile, ‘Like a hummingbird trapped in a cage of porcelain’, and drinking again.

That muted guitar is gradually surrounded in a wrapping of deep bass and loose, textured percussion, much as Kay’s lyrics gradually strengthen her fragility with something resembling a skeletal strength. The chorus cements Kay’s position, overdubbed vocals reflecting an increasing stamina.

Bitter comes in at the point after a relationship where the determination to survive kicks in. Kay’s lyrics swing between a sense of heaviness, weighed by the lost hope of what a relationship could have been, and a resolve to heal and move on. Between a gradually building vocal and some deft instrumentation, Kay has created an emotive piece.

Born in Claverley in Shropshire, Maisy moved to Los Angeles at the young age of 16, the same year she won her first ASCAP award. She has since been gradually building her reputation as an indie pop artist. Check out her latest song, Bitter, below.

In addition to listening in the post, you can find almost all the music BlackPlastic covers on the music player of your choice. Add the dedicated playlist below:

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Malaika

Simple Like That

Watch: Simple Like That by Malaika

May 13, 2026 in video

With low slung bass and light vocals, the new single from Malaika is built around contrast.

On Simple Like That, the Dorset-raised, London-based artist brings together elements of grunge instrumentation with a dream-pop aesthetic. Beyond the kind of bass Kim Deal would be happy with, drums punch with the vinegar of a garage rock outfit. In contrast, pillowy soft synths bring a feeling of innocence, as Malaika’s angelic performance floats on the surface. The tension is right there in her performance, the delivery honey-sweet, yet the lyrics simmer with disappointment.

Simple Like That is taken from Malaika’s debut EP, Dye My Hair Dark In The Summer, a release that deals with the reality of becoming an adult, as the artist describes:

‘Dye My Hair Dark In The Summer is an EP that encapsulates the last six months of my life. It’s about being a girl in your 20s and finding the fun in this world despite its hardships.’

Check out Simple Like That below, and listen to the full album on your service of choice here.

In addition to listening in the post, you can find almost all the music BlackPlastic covers on the music player of your choice. Add the dedicated playlist below:

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Antony Szmierek

Chalk

Watch: Chalk by Antony Szmierek

May 08, 2026 in video

Opening with a deadpan vocal and a low swagger of bass line, Chalk is the latest release from Antony Szmierek.

Depicting a game of 8-ball, there is a startling, poetic vividness to Szmierek’s description. Small references to a stack of 20ps (that’s twenty pence pieces, to non-Brits) and the line, ‘The chalk’s just there for comfort’ encapsulate perfectly the feeling of dingy pool and snooker halls.

The story telling is combined with a kind of electronic post-punk. Square 808s provide a pulse to Szmierek’s stress-inducing delivery as he says, ‘Everyone can face a crisis, but not everyone can make it home’. Akin to a moment of clarity, cool synths wash the song as our protagonist enters the zone, stating ‘I’m on the edge’. The song pings back into its darker origins, elastic bass bouncing like the balls on the table as he takes his shot.

Overall, Antony Szmierek has created one of the most cinematic yet naturalistic pieces of music I have heard in some time. It’s a thrilling and light stylised experience. Check it out below.

In addition to listening in the post, you can find almost all the music BlackPlastic covers on the music player of your choice. Add the dedicated playlist below:

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Ian Cobiella

Have I Been Good to You

Listen: Have I Been Good to You by Ian Cobiella

May 05, 2026 in stream

Opening with a cinematic pulsing bass line that evokes the movies of Tony Scott, LA-based musician Ian Cobiella’s single, Have I Been Good To You, has a pulse quickening magic from the very beginning.

That bass line quickly dissolves, however, giving way to bright piano chords and percussion that takes influence from the artist’s Cuban-Bolivian upbringing. The result is an intimate, sexy tribute, Cobiella’s vocals layered and stumbling gracefully over one another, full of excitement and boy-ish energy. Soft edged processing on elements of those layers creates a playfulness in the delivery. Like a conversation with one’s own emotions, we can hear Cobiella egg himself on, as he embraces his sense of affection.

The overall song comes together as a beautifully frenzied piece, a blur of colour and anticipation that reflects the destabilising loss of perspective that comes from falling for someone. As the song nears its conclusion, there is this brief-yet-wonderful jazz piano moment. It is like a rush of blood to the head, captured in this tiny little vamp.

All of this energy is deliberate, as Ian explains:

‘I wanted to make a song that moves because I want people to dance. The drum groove is built on a salsa clave, a pattern from Cuban music with this constant, almost obsessive forward momentum — which felt right with the lyrics. The song is sexy and manic, and I loved getting there in the writing and recording. This song is meant to feel like a tornado.’

Have I Been Good To You is the first single from Ian Cobiella’s forthcoming debut EP, All I Have To Give. Check it out below.

In addition to listening in the post, you can find almost all the music BlackPlastic covers on the music player of your choice. Add the dedicated playlist below:

Apple Music Spotify

Tags: Ian Cobiella
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BlackPlastic.co.uk is an alternative music blog focused on sharing the best electronic music.


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Watch: Take a Picture by Vitesse X
Watch: Take a Picture by Vitesse X
less than a minute ago
Listen: Bitter by Maisy Kay
Listen: Bitter by Maisy Kay
about a day ago
Watch: Simple Like That by Malaika
Watch: Simple Like That by Malaika
about a week ago
Watch: Chalk by Antony Szmierek
Watch: Chalk by Antony Szmierek
about a week ago
Listen: Have I Been Good to You by Ian Cobiella
Listen: Have I Been Good to You by Ian Cobiella
about 2 weeks ago

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