Home Blog Page 1590

Artist Spotlight: Dasychira

Dasychira carries you through the deepest parts of the unconscious. The New York-based, South Africa-born experimental producer’s debut LP, xDream, melds haunting soundscapes, enchanting vocal snippets, and scribbly electronics that glide through the uncanny valley of childhood memories, across the cloudy intersection between dream and nightmare. In the true Freudian sense of the ‘unheimlich’, xDream feels familiar yet unfamiliar, deeply unsettling yet accessible, as it captures the way our childhood self appears distant and unreachable yet constantly present in our desire to reconnect with that original state of purity. Both through their visuals and music, Dasychira has a knack for repurposing cultural artifacts such as video games and cartoon characters to evoke the mind-numbing chaos of trying to reconcile with that divided self, like on ‘Mickey’, which creepily samples the classic Disney character saying “no such thing as monsters” before hitting us with a nightmarish assault on the senses, or ‘Skitty’, which takes the adorable feline Pokémon it’s named after and seemingly turns its harmless meowing into tortured screams, enveloped by Chinese artist Yikii’s bewitching lullaby-like vocals. But beyond subversive abrasiveness, there’s also a lot of beauty to be found on the record, from the elegant strings on ‘Swirl’ feat. Malibu to the entrancing melody that drifts atop the dynamic electronic textures on the title track. On xDream, Dasychira uses experimentation not just as a refreshing musical tool but as a vehicle for deep personal introspection. It’s a rewarding musical journey that’ll take you to some strange, mystical places.

We caught up with Dasychira for this edition of our Artist Spotlight series, where we showcase up-and-coming artists and give them a chance to talk a bit about their music.

What inspired you to start making music, and how do you think your style has evolved since then?

The symphonic fairytale Peter and the Wolf. It’s a rare example of a living, breathing piece of music that invites you to explore a world of characters in between a dream and a nightmare. I was captivated by how the narrative is woven with the instrumentation and paints a vivid picture in the imagination. Like when you read a book and imagine what the tea kettle looked like, or the scent of rotting tulips. My approach of writing music has evolved from telling stories with instruments alone, to fleshing out the journey by incorporating text and poetry. Conjuring a fully extra-sensory experience in the mind of the listener. 

How would you describe your sound? 

A ghoulishly scribbly, electronic mesh of memories and premonitions. The closest classification for me is scribblecore or keepsakecore. 

There are a lot of interesting visuals surrounding your music. How do they come about, and what role do they play in your work?

Working with visuals is a spontaneous process where I have to grab something I notice before it’s gone forever. Like writing down a dream before you forget it, when I hop into the abyss of internet subcultures like Snapchat ghost sightings and DNA cell music I immediately bookmark them to reference later. It’s like a collector’s mindset of creating a library of inspirations that all meld together to form a clearer image of the musical creature I have in my head. The movement of visuals creates a gravity that pulls this elusive musical essence into something relatable and interactive. 

Could you talk to us about the unseelie collective? How was it formed and what is it about?

unseelie started to take shape toward the end of 2017 when QUALIATIK and I returned from our tour of Northern America, feeling excited to start doing more, locally, in New York. Sentinel was coming up from Baltimore to do shows more frequently, and after organizing a night together we wanted to shine a light on music and art that felt almost too secret for how magical and original it was. Kodi Fabricant came up with the name unseelie in reference to mischievous woodland faeries, and we started out by inviting artists who shared this spirit of playful expression to showcase their work in a gentle forum. Ever since, our platform has evolved from live performances to digital releases – with the brilliant SA Mayer making contributions to the platform.

In 2020 unseelie is:

ஃ celebrating the timeless collective library of imagination

ஃ celebrating the souls that sing and dance around the fire

ஃ celebrating what magic still remains in this world

What were some of the ideas that fuelled the creative process behind your latest project, xDream

xDream grew from the ghostly presence of a childhood memory lurking in the depths of my subconscious. This phantom was born when its fluid aura was suffocated by the external preconceptions of binaries around us. There was a time in all of our lives where we could see beyond our own skin and feel closer to the spirit that controls the mech body that determines all too much of our future. When you’re taught to morph your conscious understanding of what’s right and wrong, what’s real or not, what’s you or what isn’t based on how those who’ve lost touch with it view us, the essence of ambivalence in identity is compromised. I didn’t realize it back then, but I had exiled a big part of myself in the dark behind me, which was locked away and buried in a time capsule. xDream is the key that opens the lock, and once the memory banks come flooding out – all you can do is face the intensity of past-selves. I remember feeling so overwhelmed by this feeling on a flight from New York to Amsterdam I started to compose pieces of the title track mid-air over the atlantic, that was almost two years ago.

How would you say it’s different from your previous releases? 

It’s the most self-disarming record I’ve made, where instead of trying to construct an armor around the essence of something I wanted the essence itself to be the armor. I wanted to let my day to day life become a part of the music by taking the time to just live through the waves of personal transformation and digest what the message meant for myself. There’s a lot more sentimentality in each sound that can be traced back to a story or moment in time, for example the crackling vocals on Toon World are ripped from the audio of a glitchy FaceTime call with SA Mayer, the smashing metallic sounds on Retribution Bee are from these mechanical gates at a warehouse in Gowanus where we had our most ambitious UNSEELIE, the meow toward the end of Mickey is Bushwick’s cutest feline, Aubrey. 

What was the process behind the making of your music video for ‘xDream’?

After meeting Awe Ix at the Quantum Natives Grace Nexus show in New York we spoke about collaborating on a video that reinterpreted an existing world. I saw the video he made for Wa?ste that used 3D scans of Pokémon-esque characters that he found at a night market in Taipei. I had recently revisited a classic film from my childhood, Fern Gully, this Australian animated film that inverts the myth of humans and faeries with the fairies believing humans aren’t real, until one day a fairie discovers a lumberjack in the woods destroying a forest. Awe Ix was particularly interested in working with Disney’s technique of “recycled animation”, where they use frames of previous films and animate slightly different sequences over them. Awe Ix went over a huge portion of the movie, frame by frame, in his own style. This video was originally meant to be for a different song but since the process was so specific and tedious we extended the timeline to have it on xDream. It took around 2 years to complete but it couldn’t have turned out any better, there’s a lot of easter eggs hidden in the video too. 

What are your plans for the future?

To daisychain all the fragmented pieces of the psychic realm by creating more interactive work and bridge the connection between internal kin and otherkin. I have the vinyl for xDream coming out on the 24th, a music video coming up for Swirl we shot at El Matador beach in Malibu, a super cute toy, and some other surprise eggs. I’m excited to play in every context I find myself in and find new outlets of expression. A close friend once told me that every making leads to another making.  

Sound Selection 081: Hotel Mira Present ‘Better On Your Own’

KOKO Eyes So Wide

Entering with a stupendous production and catchy lyrics is KOKO with Eyes So Wide. This piece is an ear-catcher that will have you hooked from the get-go with its well-executed production. KOKO has managed to develop a song that spills into the mainstream while still keeping their beloved authenticity. Talking about the song the band stated “Eyes So Wide is a song about lust… it’s when you lust after someone from the moment you meet them and you want to lose all of your inhibitions with that person.”

Hotel Mira Better On Your Own

If you’re looking for refreshing energy to sprite up your weekend then Better On Your Own by Hotel Mira will be the perfect song for you. Better On Your Own delivers a wave of upbeat aura with its tuneful melody and dynamic production. The song examines the dichotomy of celebrating the empowerment of independence.

Claude VonStroke All My People In the House

Fan of Deep House music? Then you’ll know the legendary Claude VonStroke, the founder of Dirtybird. Previously, VonStroke has produced well-known tracks such as Who’s Afraid of Detroit and Make a Cake  — to name a few. Now back with a two-track EP All My People In The House, Claude VonStroke brings back the catchy melodies and club life atmospheres that will have you craving for more. All My People In The House is a superb piece of work by VonStroke that has the potential to become a club classic in no time.

Vanbur Through the Dark

Our final song of this Sound Selection is by Vanbur, the composer duo Jessica Jones and Tim Morrish. In their latest evolving composition, Through The Dark, which is part of their five-track EP Human, Vanbur delivers a profoundly touching experience with a gradually climbing tensity and dramatic production. There is a sense of fear and growth in this piece that overcomes something deep and frightful. Simply stunning.

Les Benjamins FW 2020/21

0

Les Benjamins, the luxury label founded by the Bunyamin Aydin in İstanbul, has revealed its new fall winter 2020 collection. In both detail and range, the collection signifies an undeniable progression within the Les Benjamins universe, magnifying Aydin’s vision of men’s and womenswear to envelop a diverse contemporary wardrobe and accessories collection with a luxurious hand.

PARIS, FRANCE – JANUARY 17: A model walks the runway during Les Benjamins Menswear Fall/Winter 2020-2021 show as part of Paris Fashion Week on January 17, 2020 in Paris, France. (Photo by Kristy Sparow/Getty Images)
PARIS, FRANCE – JANUARY 17: A model walks the runway during Les Benjamins Menswear Fall/Winter 2020-2021 show as part of Paris Fashion Week on January 17, 2020 in Paris, France. (Photo by Kristy Sparow/Getty Images)
PARIS, FRANCE – JANUARY 17: A model walks the runway during Les Benjamins Menswear Fall/Winter 2020-2021 show as part of Paris Fashion Week on January 17, 2020 in Paris, France. (Photo by Kristy Sparow/Getty Images)
PARIS, FRANCE – JANUARY 17: A model walks the runway during Les Benjamins Menswear Fall/Winter 2020-2021 show as part of Paris Fashion Week on January 17, 2020 in Paris, France. (Photo by Kristy Sparow/Getty Images)
PARIS, FRANCE – JANUARY 17: A model walks the runway during Les Benjamins Menswear Fall/Winter 2020-2021 show as part of Paris Fashion Week on January 17, 2020 in Paris, France. (Photo by Kristy Sparow/Getty Images)
PARIS, FRANCE – JANUARY 17: A model walks the runway during Les Benjamins Menswear Fall/Winter 2020-2021 show as part of Paris Fashion Week on January 17, 2020 in Paris, France. (Photo by Kristy Sparow/Getty Images)
PARIS, FRANCE – JANUARY 17: A model walks the runway during Les Benjamins Menswear Fall/Winter 2020-2021 show as part of Paris Fashion Week on January 17, 2020 in Paris, France. (Photo by Kristy Sparow/Getty Images)
PARIS, FRANCE – JANUARY 17: A model walks the runway during Les Benjamins Menswear Fall/Winter 2020-2021 show as part of Paris Fashion Week on January 17, 2020 in Paris, France. (Photo by Kristy Sparow/Getty Images)
PARIS, FRANCE – JANUARY 17: A model walks the runway during Les Benjamins Menswear Fall/Winter 2020-2021 show as part of Paris Fashion Week on January 17, 2020 in Paris, France. (Photo by Kristy Sparow/Getty Images)
PARIS, FRANCE – JANUARY 17: A model walks the runway during Les Benjamins Menswear Fall/Winter 2020-2021 show as part of Paris Fashion Week on January 17, 2020 in Paris, France. (Photo by Kristy Sparow/Getty Images)
PARIS, FRANCE – JANUARY 17: A model walks the runway during Les Benjamins Menswear Fall/Winter 2020-2021 show as part of Paris Fashion Week on January 17, 2020 in Paris, France. (Photo by Kristy Sparow/Getty Images)

Influences of art and the environment within fashion

“Fashion is not something that exists in dresses only. Fashion is in the sky, in the street, fashion has to do with ideas, the way we live, what is happening” – Coco Chanel.

Some think of fashion as art, just like a painting or a sculpture, whereas others think fashion is simply an industry that is aimed at earning money. Whatever your opinion, we think it’s fair to say that when it comes to fashion, designers draw ideas, materials and patterns from other artistic crafts, as well as the environment.

American artist, director and producer, Andy Warhol, was a leading figure in the visual art movement known as pop art, and he once said that “fashion is more art than art is”.

In the past, designers and artists have worked together closely – think Yves Saint Laurent using the bold abstractions of painter Piet Mondrian to create a beautiful collection of A-line dresses. It’s true that these two mediums share a close relationship.

Getting the designs spot on

Chief Product Officer at Radley, Jackie Hay, demonstrates how brands are continually striving to create products that their target audience are going to love, while try to be practical at the same time. After the company announced their debut shoe collection, she was asked what the inspiration was behind each style of footwear.

Jackie Hay: “As it’s our first collection, we wanted to create a capsule that not only transcends seasons, but complements customers’ lifestyles and, of course, their Radley handbags.

Ultimately, the collection is inspired by our customers’ spirit and substance. We admire their busy lives and set out to design a collection suited for every aspect; whether that’s when they’re at work, out dancing with their friends or walking their dogs in the countryside.”

Fashion and its impact on the environment

When it comes to fashion and the environment, we have seen a real move towards sustainability in recent years. Charity shops have become a lot more popular, as have clothes swapping parties.

Sadly, if you continuously purchase clothing in a bid to stay relevant in the style stakes, you could be damaging the environment without even realising it. Thankfully today there’s a lot more awareness on the impact of buying clothing that are made cheaply and intended for short-term use.

According to the Environmental Audit Committee Chair Mary Creagh MP, our desire for new clothes comes with a significant social and environmental price tag. Water use, chemical and plastic pollution and carbon emissions are all contributing to destroying our environment. If the UK continues to buy and throw away clothes at the rate we currently are, these items will account for more than a quarter of our total impact on climate change by 2050.

Because of this, many members of parliament have reached out to some of the UK’s top fashion bosses, asking them to consider what they could do to reduce the environmental harm.

Many brands are already striving to do their bit. Some clothing companies are choosing to make items out of organic cotton or recycled polyester or plant a tree every time an item is purchased from the store. Others are also encouraging their customers to drop off any unwanted items into the shop, so that they can be recycled.

According to the Waste and Resources Action Programme (Wrap) UK households shockingly sent 300,000 tonnes of clothing to landfill in 2016. This is why it’s so exciting to hear about fantastic initiatives such as Project 333, which encourages individuals to wear just 33 items for 3 months to get back the joy they were missing while worrying about what to wear.

Both art and the environment will continue to have an impact on fashion – but now more than ever, designers will be considering their use of materials, distribution, wear and disposal of clothes.

 

Albums Out Today: Halsey, Mac Miller, Pinegrove, Algiers, Alice Boman

0

In this segment, we showcase the most notable albums out each week. Here are the albums out on January 17th, 2019:

Image result for halsey manicHalsey, Manic: American alt-pop singer Halsey has come out with her third studio album, Manic, out now via Capitol Records. The follow-up to 2017’s Hopeless Fountain Kingdom features guest appearances from the likes of Alanis Morissette, Dominic Fike, and Suga of BTS and includes the singles ‘Without Me’, ‘Graveyard’, ‘Clementine’, and ‘Finally // Beautiful Stranger’. Explaining the themes of the album for a Rolling Stone cover story, she said that the album samples “hip-hop, rock, country, fucking everything — because it’s so manic. It’s soooooo manic. It’s literally just, like, whatever the fuck I felt like making; there was no reason I couldn’t make it.” She has also suggested that the album is her most personal yet, saying in an Instagram livestream, “I feel like you guys have really given me the chance this year to express myself more and be myself in a way that I don’t know if I’ve really felt like I have been able to since my first album.”

Image result for mac miller circlesMac Miller, Circles: This is a posthumous album from the late rapper Mac Miller, who passed away in September 2018. Miller had started working on the follow-up to Swimming with producer Jon Brion, who took the task of completing the album after the rapper’s death. It was announced just earlier this month, followed by the release of the moving single ‘Good News’. “This is a complicated process that has no right answer. We simply know that it was important to Malcolm for the world to hear it,” the rapper’s family wrote in a statement. “We hope you take the time to listen. The look on his face when everyone was listening said it all.”

Image result for pinegrove marigoldPinegrove, Marigold: Indie rock outfit Pinegrove return with their fourth album and their first for Rough Trade Records, titled Marigold. The album follows the 2018 album Skylight, which arrived following a one-year hiatus the band took after frontman Evan Stephens Halls addressed an accusation of sexual harassment. The album features 11 songs and was recorded at Amperland, Halls and multi-instrumentalist Nick Levine’s home-turned-studio in upstate New York. A press release describes the record as “an urgent, multivalent meditation—and an expanded take on the blend of alt-country, indie rock and cerebral humanism that’s inspired the band’s ardent fan community.”

Image result for algiers there is no yearAlgiers, There is No Year: Algiers have released their third studio album titled There is No Year via Matador. The follow-up to 2017’s acclaimed, versatile The Underside of Power features the previously released single ‘Dispossession’, of which the band’s Ryan Mahan said: “The specter of dispossession is haunting us all. Everywhere the imperial world represses the ghoulish histories that sustain our pasts, presents and futures. Franklin’s lyrics throughout ‘Dispossession’ and on our new record, There is No Year, like a neo-Southern Gothic novel with an anti-oppression undercurrent, testify to this modern horror, and chronicle the various ways we all—through living and longing—endure and resist its persistent attacks.”

Image result for alice boman dream onAlice Boman, Dream On: This is the long-awaited debut album from Swedish singer-songwriter Alice Boman, out now via Play it Again Sam. Boman worked with frequent collaborator Fabian Prynn as well as producer Patrik Berger, known for his work with forward-thinking pop acts like Robyn and Charli XCX. “This album is a new way of exploring intimacy for me. It can be scary to create with other people but you have to let that other person in and not hold back,” Boman explained. “A lot of the songs spring from a feeling of sadness, something being lost or broken or just not turning out the way you wanted it to. It’s a way to express yourself, making you feel a bit lighter because heartbreak and disappointment are things that make you stronger.

Other albums out today: …And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead, X: The Godless Void And Other Stories; Anti-Flag, 20/20 Vision; Bombay Bicycle Club, Everything Else Has Gone Wrong; Of Montreal, UR FUN; Bill Fay, Countless Branches.

Manchester Film Festival Announces Opening and Closing Films

Manchester Film Festival will open up with Traumfabrik, a sweet romance set in 1961 Berlin that follows a young studio extra’s enthusiastic efforts to rejoin the French girl he loves, having been separated by the construction of the Berlin Wall.

Traumfabrik is part of MANIFF2020’s German film showcase named Das Kino. The showcase will present five UK premieres of independent German cinema.

Manchester Film Festival 2020 will close with a preview screening of documentary Billie, a documentary about the life of the iconic jazz singer Billie Holiday.

The festival will commence on the 7th of March and conclude on the 15th of March.

Son Little Releases ‘neve give up’

0

Son Little, , the moniker of Los Angeles-based musician Aaron Earl Livingston, has released his latest single neve give up. The song came out before the release of Son Little’s upcoming album aloha, which is due to be released on the 31st of January.

EU Tour Dates:
Fri. March 27 – Brighton, UK @ Patterns
Sat. March 28 – London, UK @ Oslo
Mon. March 30 – Paris, FR @ La Maroquinerie
Tue. March 31 – Antwerp, BE @ Kavka VZW
Wed. April 1 – Amsterdam, NL @ Paradiso Noord
Thu. April 2 – Rotterdam, NL @ Bird
Sat. April 4 – Hamburg, DE @ Bahnhof Pauli
Sun. April 5 – Berlin, DE @ Privatclub
Mon. April 6 – Cologne, DE @ Blue Shell
Tue. April 7 – Zurich, CH @ Exil
Thu. April 9 – Zaragoza, ES @ Rock & Blues Café
Fri. April 10 – Barcelona, ES @ La Nau

Hellessy PF20, New York Personalities

Hellessy, the label which was founded by Sylvie Millstein, presented its pre Fall collection for 2020 named New York Personalities. The collection featured Nicky Hilton, Erin Walsh, Tatianna Hambro, Kerry Pieri and Chrissy Rutherford — to name a few. With this collection, the label brings it back to its home New York, the place where the pieces are hand crafted and produced.

Talk Show Present Latest Single ‘Banshee’

0

Talk Show, a London 4-piece band, have released their newest single Banshee, just today. The single comes before the release of their upcoming debut EP These People.

Harrison Swann, the lead vocalist and guitarist, talked about the song saying; “At its core, Banshee is a frustrated lovelorn tale. We didn’t want Banshee to feel depressing or hopeless, more heartfelt and ardent. I wanted the lyrics and song to progress through a relationship which brings no resolution, nor closure for the protagonist. Focused on melodic guitar lines and the rhythm section supporting the lead vocal, it helped us to create an uplifting track with a melancholic undertone.”

Artist Spotlight: Guest Singer

“When the music fades, all that we’re left with is limbo days,” says singer-songwriter Jake Cope, frontman of the Doncaster-based trio Guest Singer, who are set to release their latest EP Limbo Days on February 14th via Heist or Hit. Comprised of Cope as well as France Lahmar on bass and Paul Burdett on guitar, the band have just come out with a fresh new single, ‘Think Face’, a jaunty, propulsive synth-pop tune about the complicated process of songwriting that’s most reminiscent of Alex Cameron’s blend of bright synths and dry humour. As evidenced in their previously released single ‘FOMO’, however, Guest Singer also evoke the very real anxieties haunting our everyday social and digital realities, as Cope isn’t afraid to be vulnerable in both his lyrics and his delivery: “I’m so fucking lonely,” he croons on the chorus of the anthemic ‘FOMO’, before lamenting “Running out of content/ And your life looks better than mine” against a dark, infectious bassline. It’s a perfect taste of the type of poignant, insightful commentary on social media that permeates their upcoming EP, expressed through the lens of an artist who must constantly go through a process of self-representation online, but also reflecting wider sentiments prevalent throughout society.

We caught up with Jake Cope of Guest Singer for this edition of our Artist Spotlight series, where we showcase up-and-coming artists and give them a chance to talk a bit about their music.

When did you start making music and what are some of your key inspirations?

I started quite early. I’ve always been drawn to lyrics and themes. Like a great lyric overrides everything for me. One line, delivered in the right way can move me more than a piece of music sometimes. So I’ve always been focused on getting the words right and the rest will follow.

Your SoundCloud bio reads #imirrelevant – could you talk about the origins of that?

That was the tagline for our first EP (‘I’m Irrelevant Now’). It also expresses the anxieties that are more apparent in life now. The lust to not be forgotten.

Your new EP deals in large part with social media – what’s your take on the current state of online communication?

It can be wonderful. It can be amazing, and connect so many people, but it can also intensify aspects of people’s lives that they think is missing and constantly remind them of it.

We know the negatives and we are all aware and we all participate. It’s also a huge contribution to reality being at stake. Only time will tell.

What’s your approach to tackling these themes in your music?

So I’ve been going through a period of starting out with the song title first and I’ve found it’s been good in having a focus. Songwriting is stressful at the best of times, so that’s eased it a little for now.

Could you talk about the process of recording ‘Limbo Days’? How was it different from what you’ve previously done?

So the first EP was written in the studio with a producer called Matt Peel. This one was done at both mine and France’s (Lahmar, bassist) home. We thought it would be exciting and interesting to do the opposite in what usually happens, in that you usually start making music at home then aim for studio releases. It was a conscious decision because of the subject of the EP, that it needed to be recorded and produced at home.

How was it like working with producer Matt Peel?

It was a great experience. It was great to have the chance to write in the studio and just be as free as possible. Having Matt’s knowledge and the amazing gear he has was like being let into a synth wonderland and being allowed to stay.

What are your plans for the future?

We’ve always had a mentality of ‘what’s next?’. So we will just keep going until someone pulls us to the sideline and says ‘come one, give it a rest now’. More music. More shows.