“All My Life” is the Soulfully Evocative Debut Trip-Hop Single From the Collaborative Project of boerd and Boko Yout

boerd, photo courtesy the artist

Listening to “All My Life,” the lead single from the soulfully evocative debut collaborative EP Griot by Swedish producers and songwriters boerd and Boko Yout (out as of January 12, 2024 via boerd’s Blunda imprint) and its dusky atmospheric tones and textural downtempo rhythms you hear the kind of thing that might have happened had Tricky and Massive Attack worked together after the release of Mezzanine. It’s a song with themes of self-involvement and escapism and how in pursuing something that feels meaningful with your life’s work you can stay emotionally stunted by having to grind in performative fashion. As an artist that means you might lose yourself trying to please people through asserting your self importance in chasing perceived creative breakthroughs in trying to continually prove yourself. But in the song’s lyrics we hear the words of the narrator’s mother, and as it turns out that of Boko Youth aka Paul Adamah himself, advice to stay grounded and thus connected to your authentic self rather than one processed and filtered through fickle and shifting expectations. The spectral, lingering organ melody just below the accented percussion and expertly executed flourishes of vinyl scratching definitely hits that mode the founders of trip-hop hit that expresses so well a reflective mood conducive to releasing the angst of modern life. It’s a sound that helped to humanize electronic music and with the vocals here it’s a vibe that hits deep. With this collaboration that classic sound gets a subtle production and aesthetic update that feels fresh. Listen to “All My Life” on Spotify and follow boerd at the links below.

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AFAR Lures You Into a Brooding, Downtempo Journey Into Slow Burn Emotional Catharsis on “Lulled and Fake”

AFAR, photo courtesy the artists

There is a sultry darkness to AFAR’s single “Lulled and Fake.” The distorted, electronic bass pulses along with a brooding menace while electric bass traces the outlines of a melody that runs through the song as a compliment to the dynamic and rich vocals like one of the more dub-inspired tracks by 90s downtempo groups that crafted songs using something of a production songwriting palette and a seamless mix of electronic and electric instruments like Massive Attack and Portishead. Except that on “Lulled and Fake,” AFAR is especially reminiscent of Curve in the vocals and the way Curve could sustain a slow burn intensity without having to resort to a blowout denouement to leave a lasting impression Listen to “Lulled and Fake” on Soundcloud where you can also follow the band’s further exploits.