While Away the Dog Days of Summer in pantology’s “Lost Summer,” the Hippest Hold and Intermission Music Going

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pantology, photo courtesy the artist

The strings in the beginning of pantology’s “Lost Summer” sound like an analog for the cool breeze vibe that permeats the rest of the track. Like a blend of new age meditation music, downtempo funk and library music. The low white noise, 808-esque clap sounds and Rhodes piano coupled with a Worrell-esque organ sound on top gives the song a sound like an ultra-hip late night jazz station willing to indulge the weirder end of the art form. There is a shimmer effect placed expertly throughout the song giving the whole song the vibe of an instructional video, that surreal energy of officialdom that weirdo artists have infiltrated to subversively insert content with a decidedly anti-corporate content. If Muzak had hired a cadre of songwriters from KPM Music to write intermission music it might sound a lot like this evocative and lush slice of über chillout zone and like a summer song you’d like to get lost within. Listen to “Lost Summer” on Soundcloud and follow pantology at the links provided.

soundcloud.com/pantology
pantology.bandcamp.com/releases
instagram.com/pantologymusic

“Venice” by Magdalena Bay Encourages Us To Calm Our Minds In Addressing the Global Challenges Rather Than Indulge in Non-Productive Angst

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Magdalena Bay, photo courtesy the artists

For a song about the world possibly ending, Magdalena Bay’s “Venice” is a dance pop song with texture and a great pairing of dire pronouncements and a spirit to enjoy life in spite of the urgency of the moment. Inspired in part by walking through Venice, California, perhaps Ghost Town, perhaps the boardwalk, the duo imbue the song with a duality that acknowledges the normal human impulse to seek out fun even in the face of the worst possibilities almost as a way of staying sane in tough times. It’s not quite whistling in the graveyard but given the predictions that human civilization as we know it might be done by around the middle of the century “Venice” is also a hopeful song that reminds us that panicking and focusing only on the drear won’t make tackling the most serious issues in our lives easier and having a kind of nonchalance means maybe you can focus and be more effective than you would be if you were losing your mind as some misplaced outward demonstration that you are taking the situation seriously. Magadalena Bay suggests its better to have a chill attitude, acknowledge the threat and do the best you can in saving everyone’s lives without losing your cool. Listen to “Venice” on Spotify and follow Magdalena Bay on Instagram.

soundcloud.com/magbae

“Opening Credits” by Superheart is a Nostalgic Pop Song That Suggests a Brighter Future

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Superheart, image courtesy the artists

“Opening Credits” begins with a pilot speaking over the airplane P.A. welcoming us on a journey to who knows where. But it doesn’t matter as the bright melody eases us into what sounds like the first part of a modern movie taking place in the late 80s but with a wistful and whimsical quality like a prequel to Joe Versus The Volcano or the sequel to Roxanne. Except with T’pau collaborating with Anne Dudley to make music for a romantic comedy where everything turns out beautifully yet without that movie being cheesy. The song’s melody transports you to a better place in your memory while also tapping into the nostalgia centers of your brain. All while paradoxically looking forward to better days ahead. Listen to Superheart’s “Opening Credits” on Soundcloud and explore more by the group at the link below.

soundcloud.com/superheartmusic

Repenter Send Up the Dubious Achievements of Influencer Culture on Sardonic Rock and Roll Song “So Sick”

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Repenter, image courtesy the artists

Nevermind the Frank Frazetta-esque artwork, Repenter’s “So Sick” isn’t a metal or industrial song. It’s a headlong, sardonic send-up of influencer culture and the way some people in pursuing trends or trying to stay ahead of them all but become a human meme. The opening line, “Make a face at your phone like you’re Zoolander” sets the tone but the lyrics seem to be coming from a place that isn’t just cutting and sarcastic but from the perspective from someone who is wondering why anyone would make themselves so overtly a product to be marketed and consumed when most of us already give too much of our lives to social media companies to monetize and sell off to other corporations in order to provide data for market research. It would be too obvious to mock people who do the thing they’re being encouraged, conditioned and reinforced in doing with dubious rewards the things people imagine they must to become the mythical celebrity influencer that many aspire to be. “I just want you to know I ain’t mad at ya, but I ain’t a fan of ya/You’re just so sick with yourself, you don’t need my help,” the song’s chorus makes the perspective more explicit. Holly Winter’s vocals, with a cadence reminiscent of Karen O and the introspective but tough-edged tonality of Martha Davis, paired with a short, sharp, gritty rock and roll song conveys an outsider’s critique of what seems like an inherently toxic cultural anomaly. Listen to “So Sick” at the Soundcloud link below.

Digital Moss Conjures a Vision of Future Urban Decay and the Creative Community That Will Come to Embrace it on “nosa sifu”

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Digital Moss, image courtesy of the artist

Digital Moss is the solo project of Evgenii of Russian synth/ambient trio I am waiting for you last summer. For the project’s latest single “nosa sifu” Evgenii makes maximum use of two voices on his modular synth for a rich and stirring sound reminiscent of Sinoia Caves’ work for the soundtrack to Beyond the Black Rainbow. It’s the kind of sound that suggests imagery and recalls the vibe and tone of avant-garde comics like material that would have been published in the magazine Garo in Japan and Italy’s L’Eternauta but perhaps more specifically this music seems to fit the comics and graphic novels that have come out of the Les Humanoïdes Associés (Humanoids in English) imprint. You know, the publisher of Métal Hurlant aka Heavy Metal. This song is so resonant with the style of Cathargo and The Saga of The Meta-Barons (and the work of Juan Giménez, Alejandro Jodorowsky and Moebius generally) that one hopes Digital Moss, Sinoia Caves too (maybe a collaboration) is tapped when someone finally makes a modern movie out of any of that. There is a strong sense of place in some far flung future of abundant urban decay as far as the eye can see upon which one might project one’s imagination and find a space to explore and express the products of that ferment as people have so often done in the past and present in forgotten and neglected parts of big cities around the world. Listen to “nosa sifu” on Soundcloud and follow Digital Moss at the links below.

soundcloud.com/digitalmoss
open.spotify.com/artist/56m25Ot58GnKosZoB220kB
youtube.com/channel/UCbK56gCyJzDVwaA0I_PDP7Q
digitalmoss.bandcamp.com

Jon Ives’ Cinematic Track “Between The Times” is the Soundtrack to the Denouement of a Chapter of Your Life

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Jon Ives, photo courtesy the artist

Jon Ives has said that “Between The Times” feels to him like the end credits of a movie or video game. And the way the song evolves and resolves feels like the conclusion of something for certain. Especially when the gently swirling synths come in, sweeping into the song like cool ocean breeze, clearing out the unresolved issues and bringing a clarity to the next section of the song that sounds more certain than the reflective tone of the first third of the song. The tonal pitch on the synth in the final third of the song used more sparingly earlier puts you in a frame of mind of concluding your current life’s adventure, to accepting closure of feelings you were processing maybe for years but which seem clear to you know and ready to put to rest. It is a song that welcomes you to where you’ve been wanting to end up but where your conscious mind was blocking you from accepting until now. Listen to “Between The Times” on Spotify and follow Jon Ives at the links below.

jonives.de
instagram.com/jon_ives_

The Intricate Guitar Work and Dynamic Swells of Feeling on Amberhill’s “Indecision” is the Perfect Embodiment of the Romance and Mixed Feelings of an Unrequited Love

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Amberhill, imagery courtesy the artist

“Indecision” by Amberhill begins, oddly enough, on a note of raw musical enthusiasm before falling back into a melancholic introspection. But throughout the intricate, math-y guitar work threads the song with the fragile emotions and nervous energy one would expect of a song about a love long desired but never fully acted upon—the sort of subject matter of many an emo song. The upswinging arpeggios and emotional exuberance and countermelodies, though, set “Indecision” beyond the purview of emo throwback. The musicianship is technically proficient but the performances heartfelt, the delicacy of feeling in the lyrics are informed by an emotional nuance that speaks to an understanding of the human heart that goes beyond the black and white feelings of adolescence. There is a care and a warmth to the romantic tones of the Joshua Lau’s singing and the rush and dissolution of mood evolve with the dynamism of the tides reflects the songwriter’s intimate familiarity with the ways one’s feelings evolve over time and the way strong feelings dilates your experiential time. The synth work in the song in particular enhances the whimsical, daydreaming quality of the sparkling guitar giving the track a sonic depth that isn’t always there with music written in a similar or adjacent style. “Indecision” is the lead track on the project’s forthcoming album Motion & Bloom but for now you can listen to the song on Spotify and follow Amberhill on the band’s Spotify artist account.

“New Angels” by Tess Posner is a Song of Resistance to the Despair in the Agony of the World Today

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Tess Posner, photo courtesy the artist

Tess Posner wrote “New Angels” as a response to her witnessing a man being killed but not covered by the local news. But the song is also inspired by what seems to be a never ending series of catastrophic events in the world of late including the 2018 Camp Fire in Northern California that devastated huge swaths of the forest and sent smoke into the air affecting the environment and living creates far beyond the borders of the state. Posner’s dynamic vocals range from the close and personal to the soaring and in her words we hear the ways in which despair can be instilled in us but also how we can resist giving in to that psychological paralysis that makes even worse consequences inevitable. Posner offers no shallow and pat answers or the insipid hopes and prayers pabulum. She evokes her own reaction to events and how she tries to transform despair into hope and action in spite of the pain and struggle hinting that maybe we all need to be the world’s new angels in the ways that we can in order to turn things around. Listen to “New Angels” on Soundcloud and follow Posner at the links provided.

sonicbids.com/band/tessposner
soundcloud.com/tessposnermusic
open.spotify.com/artist/6E0ipJwSn72SyGZUHAp2ht

Alicia Enstrom Invites Us to Step Out of Our Everyday Contexts to Look at Our True Selves on “Half Moon”

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Alicia Enstrom, photo courtesy the artist

Plucked violin and mysterious vocals that arrive with a brief melodic fanfare open Alicia Enstrom’s “Half Moon” letting us know we’re entering otherworldly territory. Enstrom’s compositional structure is unusual in that she dispenses with the verse chorus verse structure of a pop song entirely especially in the middle of the song where the sonic fog effervesces and her voice wanders through luminous white noise and abstract, melodic tones, enshrouded by rising, crystalline notes as though shedding the expectation of everyday, mundane reality and lifting off to her own psychological space and not defined by convention and she takes us, the listener, along on that journey and invites us on one of our own showing how its not so very difficult to step out of the contexts that have hemmed you in and shaped your psychology in ways maybe you don’t fully understand until you step away from the world you think you know for a moment and can see yourself for who you are. The song is part of Enstrom’s Monstrosity EP due out September 6, 2019. Listen to “Half Moon” and watch the video on YouTube and follow Alicia Enstrom on her Spotify account.

On “Dress to Kill” The Qualia Show How Our Most Existentially Disheveled and Unraveled Moments May Be Our Most Liberated and Real

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The Qualia, photo courtesy the artists

The Qualia really capture what it feels like to look good on the outside but falling apart on the inside on “Dress to Kill.” The first part of the song is cast in jangle-y guitar sounds and a borderline menacing cadence. But a little over halfway through the tone is more ethereal and melodic, the vocals more soaring as the subject of the song can’t contain the geyser of anxiety any longer, the pressure of keeping up appearances discarded completely. The touch of synth melody and echoing guitar is reminiscent of the simple but evocative way The The used to use similar elements to mix earnest instrumentals with the electronic. In the end the song addresses how maybe in our most exposed moments about which we should be most embarrassed might be the only times in life we’re fully free to be who we are even if others are repulsed by our reality and we end up isolated from “respectable” company. In the closing moments of the song it feels like The Qualia is saying it’s worth it for those moments of honesty and personal liberation from the manufactured constraints of hypocritical polite society. Listen to “Dress to Kill” on Soundcloud and follow The Qualia at the links below.

soundcloud.com/thequalia
open.spotify.com/artist/5J077J4BRkCAww4nEVPmti
youtube.com/thequaliany
thequalia.bandcamp.com
twitter.com/thequalia
facebook.com/thequalia
instagram.com/thequalia