
An almost geometric, fractal sound. No wonder this album is named ‘tesselate’. Soft synths, layers upon layers, sounding like a 1000 layer crepe cake would taste, fragmenting and dissolving.

An almost geometric, fractal sound. No wonder this album is named ‘tesselate’. Soft synths, layers upon layers, sounding like a 1000 layer crepe cake would taste, fragmenting and dissolving.
A few days ago the music channel Majestic Casual on YouTube published a short note to its viewers explaining its radio silence.
Citing personal issues and a sense of non-purposefulness, the YouTuber asked viewers to answer a few questions, ‘what inspires you about majestic?’, ‘what connects you to this journey?’ and ‘what keeps bringing you back?’. In honor of the music channel that sucked me into the complex, layered world of electronic music, I think I could answer those questions in a few words.
YouTube is a fantastic place to find new music, and I think one of the primary reasons why is because the music itself is never separate from its identifying visuals, be it album covers, curated photos, art or even animations. Some of the most spectacular albums of the past few years have had equally memorable visuals, Jamie XX’s geometric dances to Flume’s deeply saturated bio-inspired visualizers.
Rory Seydel, creative director of LANDR, a music promotion platform, quotes ‘seeing will always be part of hearing’ in an argument that album art will always be critical for success. And just like how a great album cover would convince you to buy a record, images on YouTube work quite the same way; these little worlds flash in your recommended, drawing you in to new music like a moth to a flame.
In other streaming platforms, this connection is quite dilute, often lost in the overwhelming flood of recommended tracks. Majestic, along with its contemporaries such as TheSoundYouNeed and even better, Colors, weaponize visual material to catapult music to new audiences. Majestic uses a curated selection of photography and art from various platforms such as flickr and instagram, Colors uses extremely specific hues to create the atmosphere of their artists.
Though it has taken awhile for Majestic to find its stride in pairing the perfect image with a track, the channel’s most well-known promoted tracks are inextricably linked to their visual accompaniment. These range from a literal (but no less compelling) translation , such as Mura Masa’s Miss You or a translation of rhythm such as Mura Masa’s Move Me or even purely just a translation of feeling such as Tom Misch’s The Journey. Mura Masa and Tom Misch are some of the many artists that gained immense popularity through this incredibly intuitive combination of still image and music, the former a peek into a whole universe of experience the tracks explore.



Majestic created a brand for itself with white lower-case text centered upon the video frame. The ‘Est. 2011’ date stamping the branded logo on both track and image creates ownership over content despite its crowd-sourced origins. Other channels have have emulated this combination but often not as well, missing the consistency in quality of aural-visual pairing (including a specifically designed name, logo and font).
Even if the music is good, its the quality of the package that really pulls viewers in, elevating the channel’s content from flippant, passive listening to engaged and productive music exploration. There are so many channels now doing exactly what Majestic intended to do, branded white text on colorful images ubiquitous in my recommended. Yet only a few really do stand out.
So yes, what inspires me, connects me and keeps bringing me back to Majestic is that I’ve found much more than just music on this channel… and eventually the channel has persuaded me to much prefer YouTube over any other streaming platform.
In a landscape of information overload, I’ve formed attachments to these tracks that I would have never have found if not for Majestic’s unique delivery of content… a technique that is much more than just the characteristic of another YouTube promotion channel.
I’ve linked some of my current favorite tracks from the channel below.

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.

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.
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(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”.

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.
Ami

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

Listen:
A modern twist on 80’s disco electronica. Swinging sax, clappy beats and lyrics limited to ‘do that thang’.
About:
Australian duo made up of Andrew Stanley and Matthew Handley, better known for their collab ‘we no speak Americano’, though this might not entirely be a testament to their production skills. With a name from that one line in that one scene from pulp fiction, the pair of producers are one of many with obvious golden age syndrome.
Ami