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THE BODY IS A DANCEFLOOR
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iVANA

Regulate

Listen: Regulate by iVANA

December 16, 2023 in stream

Regulate starts with a bass guitar riff that feels a little like the sort of thing Kim Deal would create… loose, low-slung, melodic. iVANA’s vocal drips in spit, sweat and attitude, as the snarls through the verse before ploughing into the song’s chorus, head on.

A song about the complexity of relationships, Regulate depicts the sense of yearning for a connection whilst feeling constrained and unable to break free. You can sense the tension in iVANA’s performance, particularly as a wall of grunge-y guitars bite in the song’s chorus.

Hailing from the Poconos in Pennsylvania, iVANA started making music during her college years, under a different name and in a different genre. She ultimately found her calling in the uniquely diverse experiences of New York City. Here, iVANA felt free to break free of conformity, liberating her to combine her love of indie rock with diverse styles and collaborators. Taking inspiration from Santigold and Lykke Li, you can clearly hear the eclectic and artistic aesthetic of the former on display here on Regulate. Check it out below:

Tags: iVANA
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Jaya Bremer

Our Potential

Listen: Our Potential by Jaya Bremer

December 15, 2023 in stream

Jaya Bremer’s new single, Our Potential, opens with a simple combination of elements. A softly rounded synth picks out a series of slow chords as a looped rhythm establishes a bed for Bremer’s haunted vocal.

As the song hits the chorus, it builds a stride. The contrast reflects a building confidence and assertiveness from Bremer. Born of a growing yearning, her vocal is louder, clearer, and underpinned by more forthright instrumentation. ‘I’m running out of patience’, Bremer sings, ‘the anticipation, of something new’.

Jaya Bremer’s path to this slice of minimal electronic pop is somewhat unusual. Based in Victoria, British Columbia, Bremer has been on the Victoria music scene for nearly ten years. Her credentials are diverse — fronting a manouche jazz quintet, a Patsy Cline tribute act, an indie-rock band named Wise Child.

Here on Our Potential, Bremer evokes the dance-floor based emotional vulnerability of Robyn, but blends it with the kind of subtlety portrayed by The Japanese House. I find Our Potential extremely effective — restrained and yet desperately emotive. It tracks down those thrilling moments where a physical intimacy is in the air and captures them, the spaces between two people as notable as the spaces their bodies actually occupy. Like the Miles Davis quote, it’s about the notes you don’t play, this is a song about the physical space not occupied. Describing the song, Bremer says:

‘This song is written about a crush developed outside of a committed relationship. It is about the longing, the fantasy of someone else that you know little about and can project your desires onto. Our Potential was written as an outlet for this desire, as a way of allowing myself to explore that longing without doing something I was likely to regret. This song is about not wanting to compromise, but to have it all, the freedom and fun, as well as the person waiting for me at home.’

As Jaya’s new single slides itself towards a conclusion, rising arpeggios echoing French touch, something is unleashed. ‘I wanna give up nothing’, she whispers, the music shaking free of all that restraint, desire soaring. Someone needs to loop that final 45-second portion into something that fully lets me get lost inside of it. My finger on the rewind button, as Bremer says, ‘I’m running out of patience… How about you?’

Tags: jaya bremer
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Anudo

Whatever

Listen: Whatever by Anudo

December 12, 2023 in stream

Anudo are a synth pop duo hailing from Italy, and Whatever is their new single. Positioned as a taste of their new album, Whatever simmers with a dark sense of drama.

Using synths, overdubbed vocals and a combination of rock and electronic sensibilities, Whatever reminds me of the kind of aesthetic employed by Foals. The song’s chorus has an introspective sadness to it, synths and bass tones creating a sense of motion as it builds, displaying a sophistication approach to production. Anudo do a remarkable job here, layering electronic and analogue elements together. A truly rude, loose bass guitar carries the song through the bridge at the song’s halfway mark, for example, before it morphs into a more electronic sound, a seamless, distinctive blend.

Overall, the sound Anudo create here has a distinctive sense of emotion and drama. Check out Whatever below, and look for the album, Orange, out now on streaming platforms.

Tags: Anudo
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Late Guest At The Party

Ramblin’

Listen: Ramblin’ by Late Guest At The Party

December 11, 2023 in stream

European-American outfit Late Guest At The Party position themselves as ‘sad boy dance music’, which, for the record, is 100% my jam. Here on Ramblin’ they have partnered with Joe Lambert (DFA Records, and Animal Collective) on mastering duties. And the resulting record is about the journey that ‘often happens in your head’ whilst making music… An exploratory journey of creation, destruction, and reconstruction.

With warm bass notes that have a slightly squelchy, acidic feel to them, Ramblin’ pulses with a nervous energy. Lyrics fly in a stream, a sense of determination creating a propulsive energy as the synths morph around the song’s vocals.

In the middle section, Ramblin’, throws out a cacophony of clattering beats and glitchy electronics, a bridge that gives birth to the song’s closing third. A vocal refrain repeats the line, ‘I’m gonna live in my head’, as the song moves through a slack bass phase, the percussion morphing as the song seemingly hits every single beat possible.

The nerdy beauty on display on Ramblin’ calls to mind the kind of thinking person’s dance music popularised by Hot Chip. I can’t wait to hear more from Late Guest At The Party, whose groove, smarts, and emotion feel equally abundant.

Tags: late guest at the party
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Wish Queen

Coast To Coast

Listen: Coast To Coast by Wish Queen

December 09, 2023 in stream

Opening with the kind of vocal melodies and heart racing drums that would sit at home in the opening of Twin Peaks, Wish Queen’s Coast To Coast has the kind of otherworldly, dreamlike quality I can’t resist.

Wish Queen is the musical pseudonym of Cleveland-based musician Grace Sullivan, and Coast To Coast is taken from her recent debut album, Saturnalia. Sullivan takes inspiration from a range of creative, bold and artistic predecessors, including Billie Holiday, Joni Mitchell, Fiona Apple, and Lana Del Rey. I also hear some Bat For Lashes here too, even if it is just as a result of a shared set of forebears, and her sound has been compared to Stevie Nicks meets Beach House.

All of which is a recipe to make me swoon. Grace’s glass-like vocals shimmer, like weightless crystals refracting the light to create a glistening beauty. In the song’s middle, the vocal is left almost in isolation, a hushed guitar strummed as the sole accompaniment. It is a beautiful moment of internal reflection that only serves to underline the heartfelt drama as the instrumentation returns.

Coast To Coast is positioned as the narrative climax of Wish Queen’s debut album, an album about ‘breaking patterns and self actualization, through the lens of the astrological "Saturn Return”’. Self-released, Saturnalia is an impressive accomplishment, which points to an even more impressive potential.

Tags: wish queen, grace sullivan
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BlackPlastic.co.uk is an alternative music blog focused on sharing the best electronic music.



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