Pink Sky Eases Off a Spiral of Melancholia With a Gentle Mantra on “False Aralia”

Pink Sky, photo courtesy the artists

Animator Julie Seaward brings to Pink Sky’s single “False Aralia” a real embodiment of the deep sense of isolation and loss one hears in the song. And as with the ethereal, dreamlike music and almost childlike hopefulness in the lyrics we see a a young woman who spends time walking alone in the rain and staring into clouds, yearning and hoping for the kind of reconciliation that can feel out of reach when you feel like you’ve lost someone because of some actual or perceived transgression and your mood spins off into a spiral of desolation that feels melodramatic later but because of the strength of the bond you felt seems so significant can feel so overwhelming. But there isn’t anger here, just echoes of melancholia. In the chous of “I am here don’t feed the fear I am here don’t feed the fear” we hear the reassurance needed to avert the hypnotic narrative into personal darkness. Watch the video for “False Aralia” on YouTube and follow Michigan-based dream pop duo Pink Sky at the links below. Its new album Total Devotion released February 17, 2023.

pinkskymusic.com

Pink Sky on Facebook

Pink Sky on Instagram

“A Safe Warm Space at The End of The World” by Ambient Duo Pink Sky is the Sound of a Zen-like Acceptance of the Last Chapter of the Story of the Cosmos as We Know It

PinkSky1_sm
Pink Sky, photo courtesy the artists

“A Safe Warm Space at The End of The World” by Pink Sky sounds not like a mournful end of the world. It is not the dark, claustrophobic vision like William Hope Hodgson’s The Night Land, it is not the destructive end of an apocalypse. It is more like the closing chapter of a beloved story. It is a coming together of the strands of existence and meeting with your loved ones one last time before the world as you know it comes to its end or transitions into something else. During its more than thirteen minutes of hazy but bright drones, bubbling tones, oscillating melodies, shimmering high notes and other streams of sound mixing together, “A Safe Warm Space at The End of The World” feels like more an acceptance of the end rather than fear. There is a sense of trust in what comes next even if you can’t know what it will be or if your formal existence will be part of the next world. In the last story of Clifford D. Simak’s 1952 science fiction classic City wherein a sentient mutant observes the triumph of the ants over the earth and rather than seek to wipe them out he accepts their path and chooses to find his own fate in the rest of the universe. A bit of that benevolent resignation is in the essence of this song. There’s something to be said for reaching periods of denouement in your life, Pink Sky have just managed to articulate that in a soothing beautiful way with this track. Listen to the song on Soundcloud and follow Pink Sky at the links below where you can listen to the rest of the band’s new LP meditations.

pinkskymusic.com/epk
soundcloud.com/pinkskymusic/sets/meditations/s-hMtMe
pinksky.bandcamp.com