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THE BODY IS A DANCEFLOOR
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Soma

In The Night

Listen: In The Night — Soma

May 21, 2021 in stream

Stockholm-based musician Soma last appeared on these pages last year with her effervescent single, Slow, which energetically portrayed the experience of cautiously moving on from someone.

What struck me about Slow was the way it still felt like it hinted at possibility and hope, whilst dealing with a topic that ultimately invokes sadness. In a sense, In The Night picks up where that song left off, in that it shimmers with an excited sense of possibility. Where Slow was about letting go and moving on emotionally, In The Night is a tribute to humanity, and more specifically our bodies. Describing the song, and the significance of its release now, Soma says:

“This is a song I’ve had with me for the past 3 years. It has seen many phases, several different productional styles and finally found its form on the cusp of the pandemic that we’ve all come to know so well. In March 2020, I made the decision to put the release on hold. At a time when the world was, and still is, struggling to cope with deep shock, friends and family members losing their jobs, and some their health and lives, a song that so brutally celebrated the body felt like a sin.

“Today, the same song that started out as a catchy tune with no remarkable depth, is nothing short of a tribute to our magnificent human bodies. Big or small, confined or free to move, in pain or in bliss, our human bodies are the containers and the pure expressions of life-stories. From our nearly unbearable intergenerational trauma to our secret one-night-stands.”

In The Night is the first track Soma has produced herself, and comes in advance of her upcoming EP, Make Me Human. Check it out below:

Tags: soma
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KIND. x Wyldest

21

Listen: 21 — KIND. x Wyldest

May 14, 2021 in stream

With production work from KIND. and lyrics and vocal courtesy of Wyldest, 21 floats on like a daydream, recalling snatched memories from a point in life when you grow and mature. The song depicts the growing self-confidence of being in your early-20s.

KIND. is the moniker of London electronic producer Julian Wharton. Having played with successful dream pop band Dios Mio, Wharton got experience writing music in the group as he played guitar. In 2018, he began to focus on his own sound as KIND., initially producing and engineering for other artists before exploring a solo career that continues to draw on his dream pop roots.

KIND. and Wyldest met when sharing a stage in London’s live music scene, Julian at the time playing with his former band Dios Mio. Together on 21 they have created something contemplative, cinematic and yet also accessible. As it launches into the chorus, 21 conjures a certain sense of self-assured determination and I particularly appreciate how it contrasts with a more reflective sound in other parts of the song.

Tags: kind, wyldest
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RYD feat. OK Button

Sleep

Watch: Sleep — RYD feat. OK Button

May 10, 2021 in video

Regular readers of BlackPlastic will likely know that I suffer from anxiety. One of the things I haven’t discussed much is how this impacts my sleep. The moment when everyone else goes to sleep can be a trigger for me — I am never as alone as during those hours when everyone else is asleep.

At the end of a long day, bedtime is where our brains start to unspool and process what has happened. Unfortunately if you suffer from anxiety, it is also the point at which your brain can get tied up in what certain things mean. Why did that person say something in a particular way? Is it significant that someone didn’t respond to a message? Why did I do that stupid thing? In the light of day, the edge on those questions has a tendency to dissolve but, at night, they can swallow my whole brain. Unanswerable, unresolvable and yet seemingly impossible to ignore. In those moments, the night seems to expand to infinity and the potential for loneliness can seem endless.

RYD is the creative alias of 25-year-old producer and songwriter Ryan Downie, and Sleep comes as the title track of a new EP, out now. Sleep is RYD’s first release since his 2019 eponymously named debut album.

The song Sleep feels like an exploration of those moments when you are trapped between sleep and being awake, caught up in the snatched memory of someone. The song’s central repeated refrain, “Now I’m losing sleep over what you said to me”, encapsulates perfectly an experience I know all too well. The layered vocals create an experience not too dissimilar to that of drifting in and out of consciousness, unable to shut my brain down but also unable to control it — snippets weave in and out to create cyclical, endless thoughts. And yet RYD’s production work gives the whole thing a quasi-peaceful feeling: you are safe, in your bed, and it will be okay. It’s a sensation only further cemented through the contribution of the lovely OK Button, who appeared on these pages back in 2018.

Having been the product of more than a year’s effort, the release of the Sleep EP comes together with an accompanying app, Sleep Room. The app aims to bring together the world of music, art and mindfulness, providing users with the opportunity to experiment with the loops that make up the songs on the new EP.

The inspiration from the app came out of the experience of lockdown last year, as Downie explains:

“A bedroom is a place where you generally feel safe and have no outside judgement looming, a paradise for introverts. Each item in the room triggers a different stem from the (Now I’m Losing) track, an intro to Sleep on the forthcoming EP. The initial tracks are a significant build-up of emotions, the introduction of different sounds and vocals coming as new thoughts that meld into one. All items in the room trigger different connotations and sentiments, of thoughts playing together in harmony like a stream of consciousness we can effortlessly converse with ourselves, moving from one unrelated thing to another whilst all seeming so natural.”

I love the level of thought that has gone into this release, but I also appreciate how well it landed for me emotionally. Check out the song Sleep below, the app here and look for the EP itself here.

Tags: RYD, Ryan Downie, ok button
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Dolly Ave

Play Fair

Listen: Play Fair — Dolly Ave

May 07, 2021 in stream

Dolly Ave’s new single Play Fair moves with a certain tenderness. It quivers with the desire to gently disengage from someone whose feelings you care about, a tenderness that exists despite the fact another person no longer represents your future. The vocal itself surfaces a series of questions and requests of an ex-lover, the song’s title seemingly an instruction Dolly herself, as much as the song’s subject.

Originally written in Chicago, Play Fair ended up sitting untouched and unfinished for a year. Initially unable to finish the song, it was only in California with producer Ciayo’s decision to incorporate hip hop elements that it evolved into what we hear now. The slow, brooding percussion and bass give the song a cautious atmosphere that struck me as suiting the song’s subject.

Dolly creates music that focuses on personal subject matters whilst leveraging a sound that blends pop, R&B, soul and electronic. Play Fair follows on from her debut single Birds and a collaboration with rapper Charlie Curtis-Beard that trended on TikTok this year. She is currently preparing to release her debut EP, Sleep.

Tags: dolly ave, caiyo
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Tal Simon

You

Listen: You — Tal Simon

April 14, 2021 in stream

You arrives in a flurry of piano keys, vocal samples and skipping rhythms, channeling the rave-like beach-combing sounds of Jamie xx, Caribou and DJ Koze. The first 45 seconds evoke the rapidly accelerating feel of a take-off, soon to be complimented by the weightlessness of flight. Singer/actress Sojourner Brown’s vocals flit in between synths and beats, with the whole thing feeling less like a singular structure than a collection of objects floating in space at the same time.

Channeling the sounds Tal grew up listening to whilst visiting family in London, on You he gives us an all too brief experience of what it feels like to just exist within the music… Literally, inside it. There is a flow-state like purity to what the 21-year-old Brooklyn producer has achieved here. Like a magpie, he takes what he needs from various forms of dance music — UK Garage, dubstep, house, dream pop — and puts us inside the resulting collage, free to wonder at all those sounds.

The inspiration for Simon’s music has come from the same loneliness and boredom many of us have experienced through quarantine. Rather than just sit with it, Tal spent his time revisiting disposable photos he had taken over the past five years and channeled that inspiration into something nostalgic but hopeful. Some of those disposable images have now been given new life as the photography artwork for his debut EP,Reworks. The release sees the producer take some of his favourite b-side releases, remixing and reworking them to creating something new, looking back to help us contextualise the future, in much the same way as those photos.

Check out You below, and listen to the full Reworks EP on Soundcloud here.

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


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