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Ella M

Till The Love

Listen: Till The Love — Ella M

October 31, 2020 in stream

Till The Love is the new single from musician Ella M, and it opens with a lovely laid back sunshine dappled guitar riff and easy shuffling drums.

Having recently left London to live in LA, Ella M’s Till The Love not only depicts that moment in time, but it also sounds like it. Ella’s vocals have an earthy honesty that feels distinctly London, yet that sunny instrumentation is pure California.

The final track to be released from Ella’s Yellow Blazer EP, Till The Love sees the artist describe her final moments in London. Having found someone she was attracted to, her experience was defined by the fact that she intended to stay as long as the relationship retained its sense of fun and romance.

Ultimately, Ella was there, in London and in the relationship, “until the love runs out”. The feelings we have about places are often complex, much like those for people — filled with complexity and feelings that are hard to distill down. Sometimes you can’t bear to be apart, and sometimes it feels like it’s time to move on to something new and exciting and unknown.

𝖊𝖑𝖑𝖆 𝖒. is a singer-songwriter from Reading, England, (now living in LA) who uses her two loves of pop and jazz music to create songs exhibiting love, strong melodies laced with nostalgic audible

Tags: Ella m
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Abrahamblue

You

Listen: You — Abrahamblue

October 27, 2020 in stream

Abrahamblue is a Belgium-based musician whose desire to escape the everyday trappings of modern urban life in Antwerp led him to turn to music making. Having felt overwhelmed, Abrahamblue says, “Life just felt like a race, city life was overwhelming”. Music became his escape:

“It reminded me how I felt when I quit school at 17 to chase my dreams, with nobody to show me the way, so I had to learn to play all the instruments myself.”

As a person, Abrahamblue is familiar with the experience of being an outsider. Born to Syrian-Palestinian parents, he moved to the city of Antwerp when he was just five. Without access to a TV, his cultural experience was focused on classic Arabic singers, leading him to experience an identity crisis which made him unable to feel the security of home.

In time, music became Abrahamblue’s path out of his uncertainty — James Brown and Michael Jackson exposed him to pop music, and the myriad of genres that converge on it. In time, he discovered Miles Davis, and from there got deeper into jazz, bossanova, hip-hop and soul, before eventually starting to teach himself how to play.

You, Abrahamblue’s latest release, rides on a soft and melodic cloud of gentle melancholy. The vocals convey an easy-going earnestness, the emotional gravity front and centre. At the same time, there is an easiness that dispels any notion of melodrama.

The style of Abrahamblue’s performance on You reminds me of André 3000’s flow — artistically embellishing the music’s emotion without making it feel like a ‘performance’. It suits the jazz-like free form experimentalism on display here — the vocal is part of the music, another instrument to convey feeling, as opposed to being above the music or dominating it. The result feels natural, like slipping on someone else’s coat and deciding it suits you better than your own. Abrahamblue brings me into his emotional truth, one of longing met with slight uncertainty, and suddenly, it feels like mine.

Tags: Abrahamblue
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Kitten Heel

Nothing Constructive

Watch: Nothing Constructive — Kitten Heel

October 24, 2020 in video

The video for Nothing Constructive’ kicks off with the prerequisite sass deserving of a record that sounds like it has already checked out, the band’s singer walking into a room with his band already playing, as if he is running late for practice. Before he has really found his spot, he has launched into his vocal - this time as if he can’t wait to get it done.

Kitten Heel are a six-piece outfit hailing from the NSW city Wollongong in Australia, led by writer/producer pair Jareth Leslie-Evans and Jourdain Vitiello. The sound of Factory Records and Modular channels through their music, but you can also hear more than a dash of DFA and LCD Soundsystem in the nervous energy on display here.

The tense anxiety Nothing Constructive seethes with is rooted in an everyday reality we all have to deal with, as the described by Kitten Heel:

“Nothing Constructive is essentially about my detachment from Social Media. The sheer volume of false and ill-informed opinion, all championing a self-righteous chest beating — is baffling. For a long time, it snared my ability to do anything else. I’d become angry, it crippled my creativity — which in turn scared me beyond comprehension. So, I deleted all platforms and let blissful ignorance sooth me once more. The clip plays with the dominant and submissive nature of that relationship.”

You can see that dominant and submissive relationship is invoked in the bindings that ensnare the band as they play, gradually crippling their free will.

The attitude stoked vocal gives Nothing Constructive a feeling of lethargic ambivalence, but those brooding synths make it feel like it could tip over into anarchy with a moment’s notice. Nothing Constructive never quite goes there, but I would love an extended version of this — I can imagine the chaotic cacophony of instruments increasingly disjointed from the locked groove like melody they start with. An artistic protest evoking the din we so readily expose ourselves to on social media.

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Andrea

I Know

Premiere: I Know — Andrea

October 23, 2020 in stream, premiere

A song that starts with its vocal front and centre, I Know takes the best part of a minute to unveil its true colours. And when it does, those colours are luminous... this is a song that could stand on the strength of Andrea’s vocal performance, but instead it embellishes them with production that conveys the feelings the vocals do.

The fit between a song’s story and its sound is always the key to the best music, in my opinion. It is for that reason that I can get behind vocal processing when Drake and The Weeknd apply it to vocals, but not when it is applied without thought, as a crutch. Those R&B stars rose to fame with music that dealt in shame and obsession, and those vocal effects existed as if they were wanting to anonymise themselves — sins admitted within the relative safety of the confession booth. Yet I can’t stand to hear them applied so damn often these days, without any apparent thought, mimicking that sound but none of the emotion.

I Know is a love song that quivers with the excitement of an instant attraction, and Andrea worked with composer and producer Aleksandar Masevski to bring that feeling into the music itself. As it transitions from its slow and considered opening, I Know opens up like a bird unfurling its wings, drum & bass percussion and big rave-like synth stabs and acid synths lifting the track to create the kind of transcendent energy that we feel in those moments of weightlessly falling in love.

Andrea’s sound draws on her experience as a child in Harlem, surrounded by gospel, soul and R&B during a trip her parents took for a year whilst she was five. Upon her return to her native North Macedonia, she was hooked on music. Here on I Know, Andrea channels her musical roots whilst elevating them with modern accents, having been encouraged to invest in her talent by Masevski.

Check out the Premiere of I Know below:

With her debut release "I Know," Andrea boldly claims "what's burning in me, it's pure fire." It started as an innocent child in Harlem, feeding an addiction to gospel, soul, and R&B. On returning to her native N. Macedonia, she pursued her musical career with resolute dedication, developing modern accents to her musical roots. Her richly textured voice exudes her confidence that success is a foregone conclusion.

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Slow Shudder

Time Now For Ghosts

Listen: Time Now For Ghosts - Slow Shudder

October 17, 2020 in stream

As we entered into the final week of September, I noticed how quickly our days were filled with autumnal sensations... In one week, my son went from wearing shorts to school to wearing a rain coat, and I suddenly found myself still working at the point where my Mac would flip over to dark mode… Something I had kind of forgotten it even did.

Normally I head into the closing months of the year with a heavy heart. I much prefer the long evenings and warming sensations of summer over the other seasons, and yet this year I find myself longing for the coziness of autumn. The idea of being able to wear long sleeves and jumpers, and slipping into a coat and sturdy leather boots before heading out suddenly feels comforting. I have no doubt this has a lot to do with COVID-19 and little to do with me changing. For one, I am sure most of us will be glad to see the back of 2020, but I also think there is something pleasing about seeing the passing of time at a point where most other things seem unchanging.

Into this transitional experience enters Slow Shudder’s Time Now For Ghosts, a song the manages to sound like browning leaves releasing their grasp from tree branches and riding the winds to places unknown. Quietly beautiful vocals spin and twirl, buoyed by the melodic movement portrayed by electronic synths. The resulting piece feels contemplative, mildly melancholic and yet forward looking.

That feeling suits the emotional theme of the song, which was inspired by introspection about unresolved past relationships, itself triggered by a series of unusually vivid dreams. The experience of thinking about those kinds of relationships can be an intriguing one. Recognising, much like those brown leaves, how we have aged and changed in the time that has passed. Wondering whether that change would have brought us closer together or pushed us further apart from that person, or those people, with whom intense connections never quite blossomed in the way that we might have hoped.

Slow Shudder is Amanda Mayo, a producer, DJ, vocalist and songwriter who now resides in Seattle, WA, having previously lived in Miami, New York, London and LA. The song comes from Mayo’s experiences of unpacking her memories, something she has only found the time and space for as a result of being in lockdown. That, in combination with a healthy dose of the weird world of Haruki Murakami, gave rise to Time Now For Ghosts:

“When lockdown went into effect, I began having daily dreams about the first person I romantically loved, who unexpectedly passed away just over four years ago, as well as other people in my life with whom I was previously involved. I recognized that there were a lot of unprocessed emotions there, which I’d compartmentalized over the years instead of fully accepting and feeling.

Throughout this time, I was reading 1Q84 by Haruki Murakami, which explores the concept of parallel realities. The song title Time Now For Ghosts is a line from the book that struck a chord with me, as it made me think of a concept within physics: quantum entanglement, described by Einstein as ‘spooky action at a distance’.

It’s interesting to think about the concept of entanglement within the framework of relationships and memory. Obviously, when writing, I was considering it less from a particle physics standpoint and more as a thought experiment, based in emotion - I suppose you could call it an emotion experiment.”

Check out Time Now For Ghosts below.

Performance, songwriting, production: Slow Shudder Mix & master: Slow Shudder Cover art photography & design: Aanya Nigam (@pixuhl) Press contact: Robin at Feathered Friend Media - https://www.featheredfriend.media/ Connect: Instagram - instagram.com/slowshudder/ Twitter - twitter.com/slow_shudder Facebook - www.facebook.com/slowshudder/ Email - xslowshudderx@gmail.com

Tags: Slow Shudder
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