[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] MAGDALENA BAY: Money Lover

magdalena bay

Listen:

Magdalena Bay has been releasing track after track drawing inspiration from various shades of electro-pop, each single a little window into the past. This song is deceptively innocent, riding on the sweet sounds of saxophone doused in sparkly waves of synth just as Mica Tenenbaum soulfully sings about how she doesn’t care about your daddy’s yacht.

Get used to frequent posts about Magdalena Bay, a 50 km long bay along the western coast of the Mexican state of Baja California Sur, known for sun, sand and Californian Grey Whale migration. You get the picture.

Ami

[Listen] YOLANDA BE COOL: Dance and Chant

yolanda be cool

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

[Read] SYNTHWAVE: Spring 2019

(I won’t apologize for pixelation. It adds to the effect)

Unfortunately, as a college student I tend to organize my dabbling in music by semester, and this semester is a love story with the growing (re-growing?) genre of 80’s inspired Synthwave/Vaporwave/Retrowave. Heavy, punctuated beats, rising synths, cowbells, snazzy guitar riffs and neon has flooded my daily listening, closely followed by my aesthetic inclinations.

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To introduce the series of posts to come in the next few months, nothing can summarize the tone better than my current room decoration. Described by a close friend as ‘looks like you’re doing drugs but without drugs’, the wall is filled with retro-inspired imagery; vintage anachronistic collage, the ever-fascinating spaceship-esque wedge of the Lamborghini Countach, the iconic rising neon sun and a fitting neon-filled dry cleaning shop (and palm leaves? the colors looked good).

I must have spent hours scouring the web (sources will follow) to find images that really resonate with my current music obsession, along with the feeling of freedom and spirit that defined the decade of plenty; a time without inhibition, a time of innovation and a time that had complete and utter faith that would be a magical, technologically-spirited future. Though the music and the art of the 80s described this future emphatically, it doesn’t seem to have ever been truly realized, a distinction between past and present that is becoming all the more distinct as we approach 2020. This music, this aesthetic, fills a void of hopelessness and disillusionment so aptly, I can’t believe it has taken so long to escape the depths of the internet and become mainstream.

The posts will explore the following (a growing list)

  • Finding music using car videos
  • Nostalgia: how does music make me I nostalgic for a time I’ve never lived in?
  • The best artists in the business dipping their toes (or diving head first) into the genre: look forward to lengthy and exhaustive playlists to satisfy your craving the luxury of 80’s nostalgic freedom.
    • Miami Nights ’84
    • FM-84
    • The Midnight
    • Parcels
    • Patawawa
    • Flight Facilities
    • St. Lucia
    • Saint Motel
    • Touch Sensitive
    • Roosevelt
    • (The infamous) Breakbot
    • Roisto
    • Magdalena Bay
    • Christine and the Queens
    • M83
    • FEHM
    • Tom Misch
  • Glimmers of 80s pop in today’s mainstream music
  • YouTube treasure trove: 80s re-works of modern pop songs
  • Footloose: the new versus the old
  • Drive (Ryan Gosling)
  • Stranger Things (Haven’t watched this, but I’ve heard the music)
  • Discovering oldnew music: YouTube vs Spotify vs Soundcloud

Somebody’s Child seems to have grown quite a following; the indie-pop (ish, you’ll find out I’m not very good with genres) artist has infused his primarily alternative track with the most electric synth progression I’ve heard in a while, building into an electronic haze of pain and angst towards the end. A good introduction to the kind of tracks I may be posting more than any, though perhaps not as pure.

That’s about it.

Ami