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Ormiston

Rebel

Listen: Rebel — Ormiston

February 10, 2021 in stream

Hailing from Montreal, Ormiston is a singer, songwriter, musician and producer focused on making music that channels disco, indie chillwave and yacht rock. It’s the latter sound that I feel sets Rebel, Ormiston’s debut single apart. There is a frisson at play at the interplay between Rebel’s indie scratchiness and the laid back, sun-baked feel of the bass work.

Having been born into a bilingual family, Ormiston grew up surrounded by female musicians. Having produced a tracks for a number of other musicians, he is now looking to release his own music, working on an album set to be released in spring 2021.

Rebel is an infectious piece full of taught and urgent instrumentation. Together, the layered guitars, bass and drums surround Ormiston’s vocal in a way that feels deliberately opaque - aloof yet dreamlike. It’s the sort of thing I could imagine feeling at home in a Sofia Coppola movie. Check it out below;

Ormiston - Rebel (Audio) 1st single off my upcoming album coming in 2021 on Lisbon Lux Records. Follow me: Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/ormistonmusic​ Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/ormistonmusic​ Lyrics I tried to be right I’m afraid it might be the wrong choice It’s always the same thing Broken mirrors on the floor Help me girl I’m sorry ‘bout the things I said Ah, ah You need to know I’m not trying to pretend no more I’m a rebel sometimes I know Oh I know I’m a rebel sometimes I know Yeah I know That’s right I must have been mad Found myself again on the wrong side You can see all around you Broken mirrors on the floor Help me girl I’m sorry ‘bout the things I said Ah, ah You need to know I’m not trying to pretend no more I’m a rebel sometimes Oh I know Oh I know I’m a rebel sometimes I know Yeah I know That’s right When I cross the line And you can’t think twice And I cross the line Can’t you see it’s fine I’m a rebel sometimes Oh I know Oh I know I’m a rebel sometimes Oh I know Yeah I know That’s right Ah… Ah… Ah… Ah… Ah… Yeah ah…

Tags: ormiston
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Sophie Blair

Are You Thinking About Me??

Listen: Are You Thinking About Me?? — Sophie Blair

February 06, 2021 in stream

One of the universal truths of being human is the fact that we can only truly know our own experience. An implication of that is that we only really know ourselves from the inside — we can hazard a guess at how others see us, but never fully know. I sometimes find myself trapped in that thought, and as a result pondering how odd it is that I can know another person better than anyone, and yet I still can’t know them the way they know themselves. The fact that we can’t see us through the eyes of others, even those that love us, is one of the magical tragedies of our existence.

Sophie Blair’s new single, entitled Are You Thinking About Me??, buzzes with the nervous urgency that comes from becoming so fixated on someone that they take on an otherworldly quality in your mind. It is the experience of asking, “How can this other person who has left an indelible mark on me possibly feel anything close to that about me?”

When you are madly hooked on someone, the very knowledge that they could be thinking about you is thrilling, and it is that sensation that fuels this song. Blair successfully leans into that feeling with a breathless vocal set against a pulse-quickening backing track that channels Carly Rae-esque pop hooks combined with classical flourishes.

The classical components in Are You Thinking are subtle, but reflect Sophie Blair’s upbringing and introduction to music. Blair grew up as a Mormon in Provo, Utah, a small town with an unusually vibrant music scene. As a violist, she attended a Mormon university planning to major in classical music. Whilst, in time, she left her college and her faith behind, music continued to be a major passion for her.

Experimenting with a loop pedal and her viola, Blair began making pop music, soon getting the opportunity to collaborate with established local musicians before playing festivals and touring, performing with The Killers and Bruce Springsteen among others.

Are You Thinking is the lead single from Sophie Blair’s sophomore EP, Flatline. Describing the song, she says:

“Are You Thinking About Me?? was the culmination of my obsession with pop music after years of classical-music training. I realized how similar the symphonies I'd played were to the top 40 radio hits I was spinning. In both, there was an intricacy that fascinated me. With this song specifically, I was imagining my typical, compulsive, head-over-heels dive into relationship after relationship with a new backdrop -- a beach, champagne, and roses instead of porches, PBRs, and house parties. Articulating that idea: the psychotic, unending rush of a new romantic chase against the soundscape of the articulate hooks I was so in love with felt thrilling.”

Check out Are You Thinking About Me?? Below:

Tags: Sophie Blair
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Leebo Freeman

Technicolour Chandelier

Watch: Technicolour Chandelier — Leebo Freeman

January 23, 2021 in video

Technicolour Chandelier is the woozy-sounding new single from musician Leebo Freeman, and it combines elements of vintage 80s-sounding electronic pop with thick, psychedelic 70s sounds in a way that feels new. Overdubbed vocals give the feeling of layered, disorientated moments in time, a little like someone moving backwards and forwards in their own mind in search of something they can’t find.

Perhaps that feeling is no coincidence. Technicolour Chandelier was written back when Freeman was stuck in a toxic relationship that saw him seeking a way out of “dark state it put (his) mind in”. He goes on to say:

“The song was me speaking to myself about finding the courage to lift myself out and to start anew, finding light and solace in anything I could (like music and my imagination) … I felt myself not only speaking to myself in the lyrics but also wanting to extend a helping hand to anyone silently going through something by themselves no matter what the situation.”

A self-proclaimed American-Brit, Leebo hails from “the dynamic opposites of Sunny Florida and Rainy Manchester”… Those influences seemingly create some of the warm friction the gives Technicolour Chandelier its edge — the moody Manchester atmospherics draped in melting synths reminiscent of the Florida coast. Check out it comes to life below:

Tags: leebo freeman
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Wooden Peak

Who Blinks First (Electric Version)

Listen: Who Blinks First (Electric Version) — Wooden Peak

January 22, 2021 in stream

Ahead of their forthcoming fifth album, Electric Vesions, Leipzig-based indie/electronica duo Wooden Peak have unveiled Who Blinks First. Originally released on their 2013 album Polar, here Who Blinks First appears in a slightly more minimal form. Trading off the earthy, folkiness of the song’s original version, here synthesisers mingle with brass and woodwind instruments.

The resulting song has a wintery, Scandinavian atmosphere — the warmth of your favourite coat, gloved hand-in-hand, a touching embrace. It will be interesting to hear the remaining versions when the album comes out. Describing the album, the duo say:

“The idea in the new album has been simplicity and reduction. Interpreting the original tracks sensitively and reinventing them with gentle beats, to play them live in a small ensemble. In the studio we decided to record synthesiser melodies as well as unison parts using real instruments. Our favourite orchestration has always been clarinet and trombone, as it was already evident on our polygon EP in 2015. Therefore, we reached out to Antonia and Wencke again. When we started arranging and recording we immediately realised we wanted to come together as an ensemble again.”

Check out Who Blinks First below, and look out for Electric Versions, due on 26 February 2021.

The Leipzig based Indie/Electronica Duo Wooden Peak is back, having grown into a quartet. Their fifth album "Electric Versions" will be released 26th February 2021 and the second glance into the material is named “Who Blinks First” (22.01.2021). “Electric Versions” combines newly arranged pieces in special realization with live electronics, guitar, bass clarinet, trombone and vocals. Wencke Wollny (Karl Die Große, Fatoni) and Antonia Hausmann (Karl Die Große, Suntje, Clueso) blend with Wooden Peak as if they were always meant to. Interweaving clever rhythms and minimalist electronics, they draw eccentric pictures with catchy shapes. “The idea in the new album has been simplicity and reduction. Interpreting the original tracks sensitively and reinventing them with gentle beats, to play them live in a small ensemble. In the studio we decided to record synthesizer melodies as well as unisono parts using real instruments. Our favourite orchestration has always been clarinet and trombone, as it was already evident on our polygon EP in 2015. Therefore, we reached out to Antonia and Wencke again. When we started arranging and recording we immediately realized we wanted to come together as an ensemble again.” The second single "Who Blinks First" was first released on Wooden Peak 's third album “Polar” (2013) and happens to be a slow burner between broken beats, minimalist arrangements and the quiet exuberance, that is so typical for Wooden Peak. The one who ́s lost the game, is the one who blinks first.

Tags: wooden peak
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Be Good

Young Strangers

Listen: Young Strangers — Be Good

January 15, 2021 in stream

Starting up with a wavering synth line and some deep bass, Young Strangers has a crisp and initially slightly clinical feel. In contrast to this sound, the track centres on a hurt but hopeful vocal, performed by four-piece Be Good’s singer, Ash Cooke. The sound of Cooke’s vocals, contrasted as they are against a clean yet unfussy electronic backing, evoke the sound of early Hot Chip… Those pre-The Warning tracks that benefitted from a rawness that always tends to rub away with commercial success. It grants Young Strangers an authenticity that is hard to buy.

This is a song about a breakup - the period where two people try to unpick and tease out the edges of their own identity. Sometimes that is carried out slowly and cautiously, sometimes rapidly and dramatically, and occasionally one then the other. Regardless of how it happens, it always happens - thoughts and feelings that were shared become private once more, and with that comes a sense of loss.

That feeling of loss is perfectly conveyed here - the bruising, the feeling of lost perspective both still fresh. But that loss also comes with the weird sense of gratitude, and even hope, inspired by the fact a connection was created in the first place. There is a beautiful line where Cooke references stealing a picture that hints at the complexities in what we feel as things fall apart. The thing that initially sticks out is the hurt felt, and implicitly shared (the picture will be identified as missing). And yet, that action comes from a love that still hums in the background, behind a breakup, particularly those played out more cautiously.

Ash described that feeling as he talked about the creation of the song:

“Some of the lyrics and melodies for Young Strangers had been floating around various voice memos and recording sessions for a while, but they didn't really feel like they had found a home until we paired them with this simple synth bass pattern. (Drummer) Charlie and I spent a few evenings delving into stories from each other’s past relationships to find vignettes to capture in the song. We tried to convey the ambivalence of a certain type of heartbreak where two people are still in love but know they aren't good for each other.”

Young Strangers is taken from Be Good’s forthcoming sophomore EP. Check it out below:

Everything's Alright In The Evening EP out now https://BEGOOD.lnk.to/EverythingsAlrightInTheEveningSo

Tags: Be Good
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