[Listen] METRIC: Now or Never Now

Image result for metric

The first time I ever listened to a song by Canadian Indie-pop band, Metric, was in Edgar Wright’s Scott Pilgrim versus the World. A young Brie Larson appears on stage as the narrator screams ‘And then it was time…. for Toronto… to drown in the sweet sorrow of The Clash at Demonhead!’

Related image

Image result for scott pilgrim vs the world brie larson

In a sultry, already suggestive voice, Brie covers Metric’s Black Sheep single,  chanting several oh yeahs as the crowd goes wild with ex-superman jamming on the guitar. Eyes flash, hair is tossed and silent threats fill the room. Metric’s original song gives the film added layers of complexity, contrasting the overt sweetness of Brie’s character with darkness, as the track twists and turns in its sharp key changes.

Metric’s most well-known track also embodies this theme of oxymoron, obvious in the very title as it is in the the jarring switches from major to minor; help, I’m alive.

This is what makes Metric truly unique. Each track weaves optimism with cynicism, indie-pop edged with a distinct flavor of dystopian despair. This is often so subtle that listening lifts your feelings and hopes but leaves you wanting for resolution. With their latest full-length album coming out this year, the band has been slowly releasing upbeat, dreamy singles, each more synth-heavy than the last. Their use of synthesizers give their tracks that distance between listener and vocalist, with emotion only just graspable but yet so far away that its almost surreal.

Listen to the two new singles and watch out for the new album!

[Listen]: YUMI ZOUMA: In Camera

Image result for yumi zouma

Presenting OtO’s most mellow post yet, Yumi Zouma bring fresh grass, blue skies and the dream-pop world of New Zealand to their track, In Camera. Known for being Chet Faker’s and even Lorde’s opening act at a point in time, the band embraces its Oceanic influences in an incredibly atmospheric way; soft, layered vocals on a backdrop of cruising, plucky guitars that have you humming.  The beat gives you the feeling and image of those warm-toned, high saturated do-nothing days, lounging about in the sun.

Unabashedly huge Fleetwood Mac fans, the band’s retro inspiration in the track is subconsciously felt, tinged with the sensation of memory, as if you’d have heard the track before, but never quite caught the lyrics. The  production perhaps is responsible for this, the band primarily relies on virtual synthesizer emulators accompanied by light instrumentation.

The album, Willowbank, is named after a wildlife sanctuary in Christchurch, New Zealand. It’s hard to only talk about the music without connecting to the recent tragedy in Christchurch in the past week… if anything, this post is in remembrance of that peace the band members found in their hometown, and in hope that peace can be found once again.

Read more in their interview with WhattheSound here: http://www.whatthesound.com/interviews/yumi-zouma

 

And an extra track just because every time I listen to this band I fall in love just a little more. I’ve never heard a track so accurately represent a color in pure sound… powder blue.  

 

[Listen]: JAI WOLF: This Song Reminds Me of You

Image result for jai wolf

Jai Wolf Back again releasing singles of his 2019 album this week.  Electronic music can be tear-jerking: whoever said that synths, beats and melody had no humanity really need to listen to this track, pure composition needing no words to reveal a yearning heart.

Give Jai Wolf some love, his album will drop on April 5 and he’s on tour! Full album review and tour dates will follow shortly.

 

[Listen] LEON ELSE: The City Don’t Care

Image result for leon else

Disillusionment, isolation, cog-in-the-wheel existential crises, the overwhelming feeling of disenfranchisement and  desensitization… are only some of the dark, jaded emotions that were expressed often in the art and music scenes of the 80’s.

City populations grew so dramatically, that the lost individual, disconnected from reality, became a symbol of new life in 80’s American cities. ‘I am an island, lost in an ocean’ Leon Else sings, on a backdrop of a darkened synth landscape, a low pulsating rhythm that sets off the brightness of his echoing vocals. Else brings sharp production to his 80’s revival track, generating a bittersweet feeling for an era I’ve never lived through but can absolutely relate.

The loner, racing down an empty highway going somewhere but nowhere in particular (also visualized on the single’s album cover) is a renewed visual corollary, reminding me of Sam’s character in TRON: Legacy, before he found his virtual escape, or Knight Rider, and of course Ryan Gosling’s character in Drive.

Perhaps this is why 80’s music and culture seems to resonate so much with millennials  who are experiencing the same feeling of disconnection with reality, under the influence of social media, polarizing politics and mundane jobs.

Image result for knight rider

Image result for drive ryan gosling

[Listen] VÖK: Night & Day

Vök © Sigga Ella

Dream-pop electronica band from Iceland, Vök create a dreamy world inspired by their bleak, but incredibly beautiful home country. Little sunlight, miles of snow, falling glaciers and terrifyingly cold, but crystal clear water are just some of the images their music seems to inspire. Often compared to the XX, the band takes aspects of the famous coolness and distance in the XX’s oeuvre and adds pulsing synths and heightened vocals to create an immense feeling of power, reminding me more often of BANKS and CHVRCHES.

The band has never played outside of Europe, yet their sound is growing to have a universal appeal. Give it a listen.

[Listen] W.H. LUNG: Simpatico People

Image result for wh lung

Hailing from Manchester, UK, W.H. Lung present this 10 minute odyssey of strumming guitars, bursts of synths, breathy singing and crystal clear production. Naming influences such as Prince and Julia Holter, the Synthpop trio also meld  post-punk into the mammoth track. Their sound distinctly feels like it has been grown in a time-machine, intricately collaging waves of different influences in a track that swells and recoils, excites and eases.

[Listen] MANILA KILLA: 1993

Image result for manila killa 1993

(Is there anything more retro-inspired than Manila Killa’s new set for his 2019 solo tour? Seeing all of the very highlights of 2018 electronic music production turn away from house and tropical beats to synths… a new zeitgeist. Who knows. )

Manila Killa, along with artists such as Hotel Garuda and Jai Wolf, represent a new generation of electronic artists that draw inspiration from cross-cultural experiences and the timelessness of the previous three decades of music. Manila Killa has produced such a wide range of tracks, from tropical house, now to the Daft Punk inspired titular track to his EP, 1993.

Nostalgia, starry skies and dreaming is in, summer-vibes, letting loose and sunshine are out. Encapsulating the feeling of the track himself, “a moment that you’ll most likely never live again, but always remember as being beautiful”.

[Listen] SUPERCAAN: The Bull

(free download) 

This band has only one song on their Bandcamp. Just one. Yet they’re charting on Hype for the past two days because no other band’s sound has come so close to sounding like a 21st century version of The Cure. That sultry, dark, deep voice over dying snyths and guitar, with that sense of spaciness between the two… where the texture of the voice identifies much more than each beat of synth from a MS20 riff.

(This thing is a MS20)Korg MS-20.jpg

[Listen] JAI WOLF: Your Way

Image result for jai wolf the cure to loneliness

Jai Wolf will be releasing a much anticipated album on April 5th, and of course the man behind the most atmospheric and emotionally driven electronic music has turned to retrowave. With music videos of astronauts in space, vivid imagery of electric blue and neon orange, his music reflects a introspective exploration of escapism and losing control.

Day Wave, featured on this track, has also explored similar themes with his airy indie, a fitting great favorite of music channels such as Majestic Casual on YouTube. The combination is an guitar-strummed modern take on just regular old beaty-synth, a unique sound that gets me very excited about the upcoming album.

Get hyped, Jai Wolf’s single just released released yesterday, with more to come on him and his work on this blog.

The posters above were designed by Mishko, a graphic artist who also did Jai Wolf’s entire promo package for the upcoming album. His work is the very embodiment of the spirit of synthwave, and we will probably unavoidably see more of him as his style so strongly resonates with the theme.

Official video just came out: Introspective, soulful ending with a bang and a flash.

https://mishko.co/portfolio

Ami

[Listen] TOUCH SENSITIVE: Pizza Guy

Image result for touch sensitive pizza guy

Touch Sensitive delivers pizza just the way I like it, no fuss and no lyrics, just a riding wave of synth and beats. Also known as one of the members of Australian electro-pop act Van She, Michael Di Francesco pays a tribute to mindless yet soulful driving in a great car… at dusk, across bars, parties and concerts (insert Flume cameo, see YouTube video linked below). The song embodies the feeling of outrunning yourself, for no particular reason but freedom. And simplicity, just like pizza.

Ami