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Emily James

Tired

Listen: Tired - Emily James

September 09, 2020 in stream

21-year-old New York native musician Emily James has today unveiled her new single Tired.

With the aim of helping everyone that may now be having a difficult time, Emily says of the release:

“I hope Tired can provide comfort to someone, letting them know that it's okay to not be okay, and they're not alone in the way they're feeling.”

Having written music since she was ten years old, James started releasing her work into the world four years ago. Taking inspiration from some of the world’s biggest artists, including Bob Dylan, Fleetwood Mac and Adele, James is clearly shooting for music that delivers melodically and yet has an emotional seriousness to it.

That aspiration feels jusitified in Tired. The soft production work here calls to mind Rumours and Tusk era Mac, but updated with a modern pop sensibility in the form of the lo-fi kick-drum-led percussion and synth work. That combination feels rich, steeped in emotion and feeling… James’ gorgeous vocal skips atop the sumptuous production whilst creating a sense of contrast with the melodic synth bass line that appears in the chorus.

I found myself wanting to reach for headphones and the ‘skip back’ button so I could really appreciate the detail in Emily James’ performance of Tired. Check it out below:

Tags: Emily James
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Vania

Wonder

Listen: Wonder - Vania

September 06, 2020 in stream

Vania has previously appeared on BlackPlastic back in 2018 when she featured on Du Tonc’s In My Mind. On Wonder, Vania is back but this time on her own.

Wrapped in layers of cold-sounding synths, Wonder carries itself with a sense of dramatic, industrial alienation. The song is an exploration of a sense of nostalgia Vania feels for her time spent at an eating disorder treatment centre:

“It was a few years into my recovery and I was frustrated with my progress. I craved the false sense of power that being ill gave me and all I wanted was to return to the place where I’d had the complete care and attention of the people around me. I was worried that this topic would be triggering for myself and for others, but I take comfort in knowing that, rather than resorting to old behaviors, I chose to mourn through my music.”

You can really feel the sense of growth and determination and vulnerability comes through in Vania’s performance, which is both strong and delicate.

Wonder was co-produced with Elliot Jacobson, who has worked with Ingrid Michaelson, Elle King and Vérité. Check it out below:

Tags: vania
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Frank Ivy

Deja Vu

Watch: Deja Vu - Frank Ivy

September 04, 2020 in video

Coming from Bay Area indie-electro songwriter and producer Frank Ivy, Deja Vu opens with a video slowly following a man into a shop to purchase a drink. We are 20% through the experience and have been confronted with our COVID age, in the form of a shop worked in a face mask, before the melody actually kicks in.

When it does happen however, it’s worth it. Deja Vu has a dreamy, disorientated sound. There is a glossy, sun-kissed West Coast feel here, evidenced in Ivy’s highly processed vocal delivery, but it also feels distinctively mediterranean. Synth melodies drop like heavy acetate as woozy psychedelic chords play out, the music wrapping in on itself. Deja Vu sounds like Frank Ocean fronting a Tame Impala track, and that’s a sound I can get behind.

Musically, Ivy typically starts his writing process with an instrumental melody before crafting lyrics, which in turn further refine and shape the melody. It’s a circular process that in some ways feels appropriate for a song called Deja Vu. The lyrics here are deliberately ambiguous, and it lends the song more of a feeling than a thought. I find myself enjoying existing in the space, without knowing exactly what that space is.

https://frankivy.com STREAM DEJA VU ON ALL PLATFORMS: SPOTIFY | https://open.spotify.com/album/0xZtv4aYyGA1vrgU83NB6f?si=B2ae7UpcQc2SaKHwJDNrlQ APPLE MUSIC |...
Tags: Frank ivy
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Aaron Taos x Spill Tab

Loneliness Pt. II

Listen: Loneliness Pt. II - Aaron Taos x Spill Tab

September 02, 2020 in stream

Both Spill Tab and Aaron Taos featured on these pages in quick succession in February 2019. I’d like to think that I personally brought them together, because on Loneliness Pt. II they have collaborated to make something just a little bit wonderful.

Loneliness Pt. II is a little more grounded and straight up than what I have heard from either artist before, but it really gives them both the space to shine. The song opens with a traditional melodic progression, Aaron’s vocal wrapped in reverb, giving a sense of music played to darkened rooms in a way that reminds me of dark nights searching for hope in The Roadhouse. Claire from Spill Tab lends her vocals to create a duet, and instantly turns Loneliness Pt. II in something that feels earthy and human, two star-cross’d lovers facing off against the world.

The gently played instrumentation forms the perfect home for the bruised vocal duet that Spill Tab and Taos have created, before a heart-breaking guitar riff eventually plays the role of some unknowable choas, consuming them both in darkness, amidst percussion that sounds like gun shots.

Loneliness Pt. II is a follow up to a song Taos originally made in response to a bout of depression, a tribute to the at-the-time girlfriend who saw him through the period. Having long wanted to recreate the song as a duet, Taos found the found he was looking for when he heard Spill Tab’s Calvaire. He reached out to her to ask if she would be interested in a duet, and as he explains, she said she was:

“I’m honored that she was and then when I finally heard what she had written I was blown away. Her vocals are so beautiful and haunting and in my opinion add a really unique perspective/vibe to one of my favorite songs I've ever written.”

Tags: Aaron taos, spill tab
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Iska Dhaaf

Crying In Your Sleep

Listen: Crying In Your Sleep - Iska Dhaaf

August 31, 2020 in stream

Iska Dhaaf are a producer-songwriter duo based in Brooklyn. Together they create indie influenced electronicic with a focus on textural soundscapes and lyricism.

Crying In Your Sleep is the latest song from Iska Dhaaf and it creates a lush, cinematic feeling. A slow pulse of electronic percussion gives the song a sense of movement, the sounds gradually layered upon one another whilst soft instrumentation comes together to create a dreamlike sound. If this is crying in your sleep, it sounds peaceful.

Overall it is Benjamin Verdoe’s falsetto vocals that really make Crying In Your Sleep stand-out, enveloping the subtle production with a sense of drama and emotion. The overall sound here evokes a warm, quiet type of disco, the result sounding like Yumi Zouma fronted by Rhye’s Mike Milosh. Crying In Your Sleep is soft, subtle, raw, vulnerable and blissful. Check it out below.

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


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