Sunglaciers Release MGMT-Inspired Indie Pop Track "Draw Me In" (Mothland)

 
via Mothland

via Mothland

According to our recent Instagram polls and that one guy's TikTok, we've all been missing early 2010s indie-pop in a real way. MGMT, Phoenix, M83, and Passion Pit had held us with a vice grip for a while with their sparkly guitar riffs, upbeat vocals, and slightly dystopian lyrics.

Lucky for us, Sunglaciers (Mothland's latest signing) fill that nostalgic void with their latest single, "Draw Me In." The track is reminiscent of The Postal Service's "Such Great Heights" and embodies the band's self-blurring of dazzling indie-rock melodicism and icy post-punk experimentation genres. It's a departure from their earlier shoegaze sound and delves into MGMT-inspired pop.

Sunglaciers came together as a band in 2017 and are based in Calgary. The track was co-produced by Chad VanGaalen and mixed by acclaimed engineer Mark Lawson (Arcade Fire, Yves Jarvis, The Unicorns). It's also accompanied by a video directed by pluri-disciplinary artist Anthony Lucero.

"I went with the direction I did because the sound and spatial structure of the song was very fluid and encompassing. I found that when messing around with machine learning that flowers and daisies really fit the nature and energy of the song better than anything else could." -- Anthony Lucero

Watch "Draw Me In" below

Sunglaciers

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Malaika Astorga
is the co-founder of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media strategist currently based in Montreal.


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Bon Enfant Tempts the Revival of Disco Counterculture with Second Album “Diorama” (Duprince)

 
Daphné Brissette, Guillaume Chiasson, Étienne Côté, Mélissa Fortin and Alex Burger of Bon Enfant. Photo courtesy of Camille Gladu-Drouin

Daphné Brissette, Guillaume Chiasson, Étienne Côté, Mélissa Fortin and Alex Burger of Bon Enfant. Photo courtesy of Camille Gladu-Drouin

Close your eyes and imagine a cosmic collision of Andy Warhol’s “Exploding Plastic Inevitable” with a 1980s coming-of-age film – except auditory.

Hold onto your seat and pull on your go-go-boots, Bon Enfant’s second album Diorama is going to transport you through time. Released on Montréal’s own Duprince, the album dazzles thanks to the sophisticated yet swirling psychedelic troupe of Daphné Brissette, Guillaume Chiasson, Étienne Côté, Mélissa Fortin and Alex Burger. The spacey yet visceral album comes after two of its tracks “Ciel Bleu” and “Astronaute Amateur” were released as singles earlier this year.

Bright keyboard harmonies fuse with steady basslines and ABBA-esque vocals in Diorama’s 11 tracks— with tracks like “Cinéma”, we are even confronted with a brief brush of slide guitar. The album is a pot-pourri of ambiance and eclectic grooves; Bon Enfant has transformed disco into high art.

To the creatives desiring solid vocal harmonies and impressionistic arrangements: we have found an album to stimulate your imagination. Whether it be creativity or Québ discothèque culture, Diorama is sure to revive flames that have been lost. Also Cool recently caught up with Bon Enfant to discuss the social forces which directed their songwriting, moodboards, and simulated realities.

Album art via Duprince

Album art via Duprince

CJ Sommerfeld for Also Cool Mag: Hello there, thank you so much for taking the time to speak with Also Cool about Bon Enfant's new album! I am ecstatic about Diorama and would love to hear more about how it came to be.

I have read numerous genres attached to the band—retro pop, Québec pop, and pseudo glam rock are just a few. If you could create a new, original genre to label Bon Enfant's new album, what would it be?

Guillaume and Daphné of Bon Enfant: That’s a good question, because we don’t necessarily try to build a homogeneous aesthetic or genre throughout our albums. We instead embrace different directions for the arrangements depending on the song’s vibe. We love to blend different eras of music and incorporate anachronism in our songs. What creates a whole in our albums is our songwriting and our distinctive way of singing and playing instruments, instead of the genres or arrangements. So, maybe “post-chanson”, because usually, chanson française is a big deal in Québec – we often talk more about the words instead of the melodies. With Bon Enfant, we apprehend songwriting in a more English way in the sense of putting the melody first and words after. It may be the reason why we often sell albums outside Québec.

Also Cool: The band's first album only just came out in November 2019, did all the members know one another previously? Or did your relationships begin when the first album was coming to be? How did everyone in the band meet?

Bon Enfant: The project really started with us, Guillaume and Daphné. We wrote a couple of songs and then Étienne and Mélissa joined us – both were playing with Daphné’s other band Canaille. Alex was the one who we vaguely knew before the band and who we really discovered [through] doing shows together. But really, even if we knew each other a little bit before, the relationship grew while touring. Even when we listen to the first album now, we can hear we didn’t have the chemistry we have now. It’s probably what makes our new album so much better, in our opinion – the vibe in the studio was insane because of the friendship we developed.

AC: The sounds heard on Diorama undeniably allude to those from the 70s and 80s – what albums were the band's greatest influences?

BE: Oh, that’s a tough one! We listen to a lot of different music – for this album, we listened to a lot of Vangelis, Abba, Heart and T. rex. To name a few: Abba’s Arrival; Vangelis’ Spiral; The Kinks’ Lola Versus Powerman and the Moneygoround, Part One; Hawkwind’s In Search of Space, Jean-Pierre Ferland’s Jaune,  and Louise Forestier’s La douce emma.

AC: If you had to choose one era over the over—70s or 80s, according to the time's sounds and aesthetic, which would it be?

BE: We would probably choose the 70s for the music, but also because it was a very optimistic and creative period for Quebec’s artists. The 80s was a darker and cynical period here with the post-referendum years.

AC: If Diorama could be represented with different images and objects on a moodboard, what would the mood board be comprised of?

BE: There would be: 

  • a spaceship, the kind we can see in Jodorowsky’s Dune documentary, 

  • an apple tree with cider dripping from the leaves, with our producer Emmanuel filling his glass out of the tree, 

  • a magic wand, 

  • a disco ball, 

  • two Wall Street traders shaking hands after doing a great transaction, 

  • Gene Simmons’ tongue on a table, 

  • a room-size synthesizer, 

  • and a Marshall full stack.

Daphné Brissette, Guillaume Chiasson, Étienne Côté, Mélissa Fortin and Alex Burger of Bon Enfant. Photo courtesy of Camille Gladu-Drouin

Daphné Brissette, Guillaume Chiasson, Étienne Côté, Mélissa Fortin and Alex Burger of Bon Enfant. Photo courtesy of Camille Gladu-Drouin

AC: Speaking of representations, how did the album's name Diorama come to be? I remember making dioramas in school when I was younger, and am so curious about what this word represents to Bon Enfant.

BE: The word came out when we wrote the lyrics of the eponymous song that talks about simulated reality. We figured out it would be a great album name as the creation happened in confinement. The two of us, Guillaume and Daphné, had to build ourselves a little world inside our apartment to inspire us. It seems also that we’re always looking at things through a glass, a screen or a window – everything reminded us of dioramas. 

AC: A certain magic emerges when music is accompanied with visuals. The video for “Ciel Bleu” reminisces on the aesthetic of the uncomplicated, predated-MTV-music video; the flashes of Olan Mills-esque portraits also contribute to this time-traveling effect.

Are there any other components of music videography from the past that you are hoping to be revived in Diorama's next videos?

BE: We want to explore other eras in our next videos, so bye bye 70s. We are thinking about doing a David Cronenberg-inspired music video with an uncanny vibe, and maybe bio-tech... we’ll see. (laughs)

AC: Living on the west coast of Canada, I have always been jealous of the animate music scene further east. I noticed that Bon Enfant's next tour is constrained to Québec, does the band have future plans of visiting other parts of Canada, notably Vancouver? We would love to have you here!

BE: We sure want to tour all of Canada, [we have] nothing planned farther west than Ontario but spread the word around and we might do the trip!


DIORAMA

Released on October 1st, 2021 via Duprince

a2816656212_10.jpeg
  1. Astronaute amateur

  2. Cinema

  3. Ciel bleu

  4. Porcelaine

  5. Pâte à biscuit

  6. Triangle

  7. L'amour à sens unique

  8. Chagrin d'amour

  9. Diorama

  10. Grandiose

  11. Vent doux

Produced by Emmanuel Éthier

All rights reserved Duprince, 2021

Two album release shows are also on the horizon, October 21 at the Fairmount Theatre in Montreal and October 23 at the Pantoum in Quebec City. We’ll see you there!


Bon Enfant

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CJ Sommerfeld (she/her) is a Vancouver-based freelance writer with a particular interest in the convergence of art and society. When she is not writing, you can find her experimenting with harmonic minor progressions on her keyboard.


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Danish Post-Punk Trio KONVOJ Release Debut Album "Basher"

 
KONVOJ - Basher (artwork).jpg

There's nothing I love more than a high-energy post-punk show. It's one of the few genres where I actually see people dance a bit, even if they're just subtlely bouncing up and down, trying not to spill their beer.

KONVOJ, the Danish post-punk trio, is the perfect band for this kind of setting. The word 'post-punk' is often thrown around in music writing, usually referring to the cold, angular guitars and monotone vocals found on the East Coast. KONVOJ breaks out of these stereotypes and abides by their own strict rules. Their vocals are joyful, their music still structured but less harsh than others in the genre, allowing space for elements of grunge, psych and garage rock to seep in.

For fans of IDLES, Parquet Courts, and shame, you’re sure to find a song for your daily Spotify rotation off of KONVOJ’s debut album “Basher.”

The trio met in high school in Gladsaxe over ten years ago. They're the kind of band you'd be pleasantly surprised by, playing at the local bar with your friends' band. The members have played together in different bands over the years, eventually forming KONVOJ as it exists today.

Upon creation, KONVOJ was based on the following dogmas:

  • The band should ONLY consist of the three.

  • It should be alive and dangerous.

  • No focus on the commercial for the sake of the commercial!

  • Everything had to be recorded in one-takes – mistakes / the rawness has a clear justification as an expression.

  • Don't go down the same path as everyone else.

  • The music needs to be liberating.

Six months after their first show, KONVOJ recorded their album "Basher" in two days, with one take for each song.

Listen to "Basher" below.


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Also Cool's FME Top Picks: Round One

 

Pierre Kwenders by Uproot Andy

If you haven’t already heard of Quebec’s FME (Festival de musique émergente), we’re thrilled to acquaint you. Founded in 2003, FME is an annual music festival held in the beautiful town of Rouyn-Noranda and exclusively highlights independent artists. Our team is grateful to be attending this year’s edition of FME, and leading up to the festival we will be rounding up our list of must-see (and hear!) acts from the 2021 lineup (which is top-tier all around, for the record). Take a peak at our first collection of FME Top Picks below, featuring Pierre Kwenders, Lido Pimienta, Pantayo and Crabe.

Pierre Kwenders by Fanny Viguier

Pierre Kwenders 

Pierre Kwenders is the stage-name of Congolese-Canadian singer-songwriter José Louis Modabi, who is somewhat of a living legend as a Juno-nominated and Polaris-longlisted after-hours king. After immigrating to Canada as a teenager, Kwenders attracted widespread attention for his guest appearance on Radio Radio’s 2012 album Havre de Grace and began releasing his own music shortly thereafter. The Montreal-based musician is celebrated for his music that “is a response to a world that so often asks people who fit comfortably in multiple boxes to pick only one.” Known for rapping and singing in multiple languages (English, French, Lingala and Tshiluba), Kwenders is also recognized for his percussive rhythms that command undeniable danceability. If you find yourself in Montreal, check out Kwenders’ after-hours Moonshine soirées, held every Saturday after the full moon in a location only disclosed via text message the day of the event. 

Pierre Kwenders will be performing at FME on September 2nd, 2021 at 7:00PM EST

Website | Instagram | Bandcamp | Spotify

Lido Pimienta by Daniela Murillo

Lido Pimienta 

Another trailblazer on our Top Picks list is Lido Pimienta, the Afro-Indigenous, Colombian-Canadian superstar who dazzles audiences with her artistry, while simultaneously confronting systemic toxicity that permeates society at large. With the 2016 Polaris-Prize win under her belt, Pimienta is known for her mesmerizing poetry, electronic soundscapes that embrace her Afro-Indigenous traditions, and a wholeheartedly punk stage-presence and outlook.  Now based in Toronto, Pimienta also works as a visual artist and curator who explores “the politics of gender, race, motherhood, identity and the construct of the Canadian landscape in the Latin American diaspora and vernacular.” To top it off, she has of the most eye-catching performance attire and visuals we have ever seen. 

Lido Pimienta will be performing at FME on September 2nd, 2021 at 7:00PM EST

Website | Instagram | Bandcamp | Spotify

Pantayo by Sarah Bodri

Pantayo 

Pantayo’s 2020 self-titled debut is constantly spinning for us. This Canadian queer quintet based in Toronto is made up of members of the Filipino diaspora. Formed in 2012, Pantayo combines of kulintang —an ancient form of Southeast-Asian instrumental percussion using gongs, drums and chimes— with elements of synth-pop, punk and R&B to create infectious rhythms as a basis for their ethereal soundscapes. Named as one of NOW Magazine’s Toronto Indie Musicians to Watch in 2018, their debut LP was shortlisted for the 2020 Polaris Music Prize. The group is perhaps the first ever act to fuse the rippling effect of a gong with pop sensibilities; a feat made clear by their name, which is Tagalog for “for us.” 

Pantayo will be performing at FME on September 2nd, 2021 at 7:00PM EST

Instagram | Bandcamp | Spotify

Photo credit: Crabe

Crabe

Self-described “présent-punk” duo Crabe are constantly pushing the envelope with their aggressive, experimental sound and work ethic. Known for their energetic, chaotic live performances and a career that spans over the last 15 years, the band has played over 250 shows and are a staple in Quebec’s experimental music roster. Their most recent release Sentients is described by Mothland as “a tribute to out-of-date sounds [due to] the band offloading their traditional rock n’ roll instruments to pursue new avenues of ‘crabisme.’” Possibly making the most noise between two people, Crabe are sure to wake us up from the quarantine haze with their industrial, thrashing expansion on punk’s skeleton.

Crabe will be performing at FME on September 3rd, 2021 at 10:00PM EST

Instagram | Bandcamp | Spotify

For more information on FME, to review the festival schedule and purchase tickets, please visit their website.


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Evan Wright Shares Mellow Indie Psychedelic Album Sound From Out the Window (Solitaire Recordings)

 
Evan Wright - Sound From Out The Window.jpg

I don't know about you, but I tend to have a soundtrack for each season, something to guide each mini-era of my life. The latest era has been defined by the way the sunlight filters through my windows in the afternoon, the cicadas chirping outside, and constant questioning of how the summer slipped away so fast. 

Evan Wright's latest album Sound From Out the Window (Solitaire Recordings) has been the perfect soundtrack for my end-of-summer-existentialism, with his twangy psychedelic melodies guiding the season's change. The New York-based musician's smooth vocals take us on a melancholic stroll through nostalgia, a pained longing for past times that can never come back, but one that doesn't wallow in self-pity. 

The album evokes warm and calming tones, bearing a likeness to the work of Andy Shauf, Kurt Vile, and early HOMESHAKE. Mellow guitars and gentle lyrics explore themes of friendships ending and relationships falling apart, yet leave the listener feeling comforted and almost uplifted by the coziness of Evan's sound.

Listen to Sound From Out the Window below

Evan Wright

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Malaika Astorga is the co-founder of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media strategist currently based in Montreal.


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Ellyn Woods Releases Indie Dream Pop EP All At Once (House of Youth)

 
Ellyn Woods - All At Once [Artwork].jpg

The heatwave has broken, and the cool, end-of-summer wind is slowly sweeping through the city. What better way to celebrate than to groove to some synthy dream pop tunes from Ellyn Woods?

Today Ellyn releases her indie-pop album All At Once on Montreal label House of Youth. This release follows her 2017 release Sound of Home, an EP inspired by her backpacking travels on the west coast of Canada. 

EllynWoods_press-pics_5 (1).jpg

While her Sound of Home combined Ellyn's soft, haunting vocals and acoustic guitar arrangements to create an intimate, hypnotic vibe, All At Once leans more towards a breezy, jazzy electronic sound reminiscent of 2010s indie pop. For fans of early Santigold and Little Dragon, Ellyn's latest album may just be your new favourite find.

Listen to Sound of Home below

Ellyn Woods

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Malaika Astorga is the co-founder of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media strategist currently based in Montreal.


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TikTok Queen Maryze Shares Hyper Pop Bop "FBP (Female Brad Pitt)" (Prod. Margo) Music Video

 

After a year of viral icicle reviews, connecting with queer community, and putting out nonstop bangers, Montreal TikTok queen Maryze has blessed us with yet another summer bop. "FBP (Female Brad Pitt)" is a glittery hyper pop anthem, expressing the pandemic malaise we've collectively been trying to overcome while simultaneously battling the sexist internet trolls who tried to take her down. The track was produced by Margo, another Also Cool friend and talented creator.

The FBP demo went viral earlier this year when Maryze posted a clip on TikTok and received hundreds of sexist and misogynistic comments from male "producers" saying how women can't write music and don't deserve equal pay. On the flip side, the queer community and women musicians celebrated the song as an iconic bop and demanded its release. A song first inspired by pandemic depression shopping sprees, chock-full of early aughts references, has become a defiant middle finger to the patriarchy.

Credit to Exposures by Tay

Credit to Exposures by Tay

If that wasn't enough to lift you out of your end-of-summer-sadness, the track is accompanied by a Y2K-themed music video. The video has a nostalgic pizza-party-with-your-best-friends-vibe while still encapsulating a very queer, bratty, and bedazzled energy. It features a ton of Also Cool pals, including co-founder Malaika Astorga, NGL Flounce, and Janette King, Matante Alex, and Margo, to name a few.

Watch the video below

Maryze

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Malaika Astorga is the co-founder of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media strategist currently based in Montreal.


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Le vaisseau d'or Release Ethereal Dreampop EP Desire Forever

 
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It's Friday, the summer heat is shimmering before you, and you're trying to ease your way into the day. Desire Forever drifts in with silky chords drift in to accompany your late-summer weekend adventures, and suddenly you're the main character of an indie film where nothing happens, but everything is beautiful.

If you enjoyed that little bit of daydreaming, you'd love the Montreal shoegaze dream-pop outfit Le vaisseau d'or. They've just released their fifth EP Desire Forever, a three-track blend of the smooth and soft sides of early Spiritualized, Jesus & Mary Chain, Suicide, and Mazzy Star. The songs started as an improvised live session and were then mixed and elevated by Collin Hegma from The Brian Jonestown Massacre. 

Watch the ethereal visualizer filmed in Nunavik by Farid Kassouf below.

Le vaisseau d'or

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Malaika Astorga is the co-founder of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media strategist currently based in Montreal.


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PREMIERE: Helen Paradise Debuts Stripped-Back Version of "Glass of Anything"

 
Helen Paradise. Photo courtesy of Tess Roby

Helen Paradise. Photo courtesy of Tess Roby

Montreal trio Helen Paradise have hit a tender note with their single “Glass of Anything”. Pairing perfectly with the track’s emotive rawness is a stripped-back version recorded at Autoland – premiering today on Also Cool Mag.

“Glass of Anything” marks the second release of Helen Paradise, comprised of Sophie Ogilvie, Chris Steward and Markus Stahl. The group was born out of a mutual desire to start “exploring new textures and embracing the increasingly brooding moods emerging in their collaborative songwriting”. The group’s forthcoming EP, External World, melds these possibilities together, drawing from a range of influences including trip hop, prog rock, and avant-pop.

The track offers deep reflections on the innate human ability to communicate to close friends through body language. In describing her lyrical motivations, Ogilvie points to a kindhearted gesture of solidarity and its deeper significance:

“I wrote this song after an experience at a party, during which a close friend of mine noticed from across the room that I was visibly uncomfortable, and broke into the conversation I was in to offer me a drink. This was a kind of throwaway moment - I’m sure he thought nothing of it - but it solidified to me that even in moments of silence and loneliness, I am looked after and understood by the people who are close to me. ‘Glass of Anything’ describes these unspoken bonds between friends, and the exchanges that are shared through a knowing glance or a quiet retreat.”

This live session perfectly complements “Glass of Anything”’s warmth. Rich vocal tones against the delicate guitar accompaniment glow in the ambience, beckoning the listener to recall their own connections and muted exchanges. Take a listen, unwind, and tell your friends you love them.

Watch the exclusive performance of "Glass of Anything" live at Autoland below:

Shot by Nancy Pettinicchio

Engineered by Nigel Ward

Mixed by Chris Steward

Helen Paradise

Bandcamp | Website | Instagram

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Rebecca L. Judd (she/they) is the features editor of Also Cool Mag. She writes and creates out of her studio apartment in Ottawa, kept company by vivid dreams and a cuddly grey kitty named Dora.


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PREMIERE: Oddysseys Share Grungey New Track "Demeanor"

 
Demeanor Cover Art-min.jpg

Our favourite Chicago pals Oddysseys are back with their latest hot and heavy release, "Demeanor." Premiering today on the site, the track will be available on all streaming platforms on July 30th.

"Demeanor"'s gritty Nirvana-esque vocals paired with the shoegaze guitars pick up where their last release, "Moaner," left off. The track perfectly capture how we progress and regress due to the fear that stems from the options available to us as we forge our futures through their layers of cascading sound. Falling deeper into this sonic world, Oddysseys lives up to their name by exploring everything between the mysterious and the euphoric.

As well as being total grungey shoegaze rockstars, they're also very sweet friends and good people. The Odd Haus collective has been sending us their zines regularly, filled with excellent mutual aid resources, topics to reflect upon for social change, and a ton of delicious and easy recipes.

Listen to “Demeanor” below

Oddysseys

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Malaika Astorga is the co-founder of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media strategist currently based in Montreal.


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Wrocław’s Oxford Drama Makes Light of Modern Absurdity with “What’s the Deal With Time?”

 
Oxford Drama, shot by Nelly Valverde

Oxford Drama, shot by Nelly Valverde

If the weight of the world has got you feeling sideways, you’re not alone. This sentiment is the driving force behind What’s The Deal With Time?, the third album by Polish indie-poppers Oxford Drama. Inspired by the never-ending mazes of modern technology and society, the duo – consisting of Małgorzata Dryjanska and Marcin Mrówka – transforms crushing emotions and uncertainties into a musical experience that transcends the turmoil.

Highlights of the concept album include “Not My Friend,” which is described as a “therapy session” in a track – its depth is punctuated by silky struts of guitar and Dryjanska’s warm vocals. “This is the Internet” strikes a refreshing balance, poking fun at algorithmic dependencies without veering into condescension. Then there’s “San Junipero,” inspired by the Black Mirror episode of the same name – a haunting piano ballad that shines through the pointed commentary, speaking to the subject of romanticizing the past and blurring the lines of what’s real.

In Oxford Drama’s persistence through heavy realities with flecks of optimism and wit, the band uncovers worlds of possibility. There is so much to be said about navigating the “today,” and so much more to be dreamt about tomorrow. We caught up with Małgorzata to chat about What’s The Deal With Time?, and covered everything from Seinfeld to the winning life accomplishment that is taking out the trash.

Rebecca L. Judd for Also Cool: Hi there Oxford Drama – thank you for your time, and for sharing your art with us at Also Cool! What's The Deal With Time? is a stunning album, congratulations on the release. To start, I'd love to learn more about both of you – what kinds of musical backgrounds did you come from, and how did you find each other?

Małgorzata Dryjanska of Oxford Drama: Thank you so much! Marcin and I met almost 10 years ago during an English language competition, where kids from different high schools in Wrocław had to prepare a speech about youth. Both [of] us were the only ones that had musical themes in our presentations, [and] we felt that we might have a lot in common. We were right about that, but it took almost two years of Marcin persuading me into forming a band. Our iPods matched, we both loved Blur, and because Marcin knew I liked to sing, he wanted to try to make music with me. I finally agreed, [and] it was worth it!

Also Cool: What's The Deal With Time? is a concept album, exploring plenty of complicated subject matter such as the pressing weight of nostalgia and societal relationships with technology. What does making a statement on these topics mean to you, and what is it that convinced you to do so?

Oxford Drama: As both Marcin and I are on a mission to understand the world, and especially nowadays — to understand the modern world — we felt intrigued by the idea of writing a concept album as both the observers and the receivers, actively taking part in the modern mess. 

We're kind of old souls, in the sense that we don't really find ourselves understanding every aspect of technology. We want to get our music out there in the world, so by wanting that we have to be visible in our social media feed. But we don't want you to be bored or frustrated by constantly seeing our faces, so we're very careful about choosing what we want to post and how we want to post it. 

And that's only us as professional users of social media – privately, we're also not happy with loads of ads trying to get our attention, [or] how we're living in our own bubbles and not always seeing other perspectives. These are the subjects that are frequent in our conversations, so we thought we might want to take those themes and present them in the form of pop songs.

Oxford Drama, shot by Nelly Valverde

Oxford Drama, shot by Nelly Valverde

AC: I took a special liking to "Bachelor of Arts" – it struck a relatable and tender contrast between all the world's possibilities and an internal lack of direction. Could you elaborate on this track, its formulation and its intentions – particularly within the context of the rest of the album?

OD: The theme of "Bachelor of Arts" started more as a joke. We just started writing some songs within the subjects we wanted to elaborate on, already knowing it's a concept album, and I [was thinking] that I'm just one of many in the modern world feeling [like] “...I'm not a kid anymore, but I'm kind of lost as an adult. I get work done, but man, sometimes I just need a hug and some peace and quiet.” 

I think that feeling of being lost is so universal, but I wanted to sketch it in a way [where], by listening to the words, you can see the picture. You imagine that person, the protagonist, and it's so vivid that you can also guess the surroundings. We wanted to be free in the interpretation, because in a way the person from "Bachelor of Arts" might also be the one in [other tracks like] “This is The Internet”... we don't know that. 

But what I think most of the songs on What's The Deal With Time? have in common is the humour that I think keeps us sane. Just like in “Bachelor of Arts,” I sometimes think I should get a medal for taking out the trash, but I know it's not going to happen. But yeah, I sometimes deserve it (laughs).


AC: It's mentioned that your album is inspired by Seinfeld – the cheeky reference in the title definitely gives that away! Can you elaborate on Seinfeld as an influence? What are some other cultural influences behind What's The Deal With Time?

OD: I knew this day was bound to happen! The story is kind of strange. My parents introduced me to Seinfeld when I was a kid, and I remember watching their favourite episodes and remembering the funny lines … and basically being in love with every element, creating the atmosphere of New York in the 90s. 

And so [that nostalgia] was always in the back of my head – Seinfeld, my love for Saturday Night Live and movies with Chevy Chase. My favourite video is the one with [Chevy Chase] for Paul Simon's “You Can Call Me Al.” Humour for me helps in dealing with the modern world, but I also love lyrics that are about playing with words, and have some irony or sarcasm in them. David Byrne singing about peanut butter, or Ezra Koenig singing about a falafel shop just fascinate me. So on What's The Deal With Time? I didn't want to present such important topics deadly serious, I wanted to add some lightness to them by adding some absurdity. And that humour in everyday situations reminds me of how I remembered Seinfeld as a kid.

Most definitely Black Mirror's episode “San Junipero” influenced us to write [the] song of the same title. Both of us understood the plot differently but we both shared similar emotions which the episode evoked in us.

[Lastly], this might be controversial, [but] U2 also inspired us in a way. In the fall of 2018, we went to Berlin to see the guys from U2 live, and the time spent in this beautiful city inspired us in ways we couldn't even imagine. We talked a lot about the history of Europe, about how Berlin inspired U2's Achtung Baby and Zooropa, but also Bowie's Low and “Heroes.” Despite knowing all of the albums really well before, this mixture worked so well that our heads started creating a lot of ideas, and then What's The Deal With Time? happened. [That] Berlin era is just full of great ideas.

Oxford Drama, photo provided by the band

Oxford Drama, photo provided by the band

AC: What's The Deal With Time was released into the world a couple of months ago – how have you celebrated since then?

OD: We finally binge-watched Six Feet Under

We're extremely happy with the response [to the album], and as perfectionists, it's the first time after the release that we still wouldn't change a thing, really. There are some gigs planned for the summer that we're extremely excited about. And now we have the time to start working on the new record, because there are a lot of ideas that are waiting to be taken care of – hooray!



AC: Thank you so much for your time, Oxford Drama. What's The Deal With Time? will be on loop for me for many long summer nights to come. What can we next expect from you?

We're excited to play [that] new material, because it's so much fun. Also, I guess we're getting back to the studio – that is our living room – to make the next record, as some ideas are waiting [to come out] and we kind of don't know how to relax, so…


WHAT’S THE DEAL WITH TIME?

Released on March 26, 2021

  1. Not My Friend

  2. Too Busy

  3. Bachelor of Arts

  4. San Junipero

  5. This Is The Internet

  6. You Only See What You Like

  7. Offline

  8. Retromania

  9. Episode Couples


Music by Małgorzata Dryjanska and Marcin Mrówka

Lyrics by Małgorzata Dryjanska

Produced by Marcin Mrówka

Drum recordings (tracks 7, 9) produced by Jacek Maciołek

Mixed and mastered by Michał Kupicz

Cover design by Hanna Cieślak

Band photos by Nelly Valverde

All rights reserved Oxford Drama, 2021


What’s The Deal With Time? is now available to stream and purchase – take a listen here!

Oxford Drama

Bandcamp | Soundcloud | YouTube

Instagram | Facebook | Spotify | Apple Music

Rebecca L. Judd (she/they) is the features editor of Also Cool Mag. She writes and creates out of her studio apartment in Ottawa, kept company by vivid dreams and a cuddly grey kitty named Dora.

This interview was conducted over email, and has been condensed and edited for clarity.


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Holobody Releases Shimmering Experimental Pop Album "Phosphorus"

 
Holobody by Laura Donohue

Holobody by Laura Donohue

Fuelled by love, light, and an understanding that change is the only constant in life, Holobody has released his record Phosphorus, which has been eight years in the making. Released on his label Gusding, the project fulfills ideas dating back nearly a decade and brought to a head through Saturn's recent run in Capricorn.

Phosphorus opens up the world of Holobody for us, and it feels as if we're being transported through a world of shimmering crystal light, surrounded by flora and reflections of past lives, moving towards a higher self. The album has a light-hearted psychedelic electronic tone, reminiscent of early 2010s indie pop. Soft and gentle melodies carrying beautiful narratives serve as an ode to the archetypal muse, the lightbringer, morning star, recognized variously as Prometheus, Venus, and Lucifer.

Holobody (Luke Loseth) navigates through this iridescent juggernaut by transforming his songs into breathing ecosystems, drawing on pop, electronic, and folk traditions as inspiration.

You can support Holobody by checking out his website, and listening to Phosphorus on Bandcamp.

Malaika Astorga is the co-founder of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media strategist currently based in Montreal.


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Good Grim's "Roommates" is the Perfect Dreamy Shoegaze Track for Your Summer

 
Good Grim by alcauter.photo styled by Ty Davis

Good Grim by alcauter.photo styled by Ty Davis

There's something about hazy summer weather that makes me want to listen to slow-burning dream pop. Maybe it's the feeling on the evenings stretching on forever (goodbye Quebec curfew) or the way that the sunset seems to last for hours... But either way, I've found myself wanting more and more synthy shoegaze-y dream pop, and Good Grim's “Roommates” is the perfect antidote.

Good Grim is the art-rock solo project led by Utah-based musician Trevor Free. Known for his previous project, Sister Adolescent, Free has crafted a style rooted in hazy synths combined with post-rock crescendos. While still rooted in reverberated and lush instrumentals, Good Grim finds a darker atmosphere drawing influences from art-rock acts while still maintaining that dreamlike quality to his sound.

"My influences are mostly ambient and jazz," says Free. "I listen to a lot of the modal John Coltrane and find a lot of enjoyment in just about everything Harold Budd (particularly, The Serpent [In Quicksilver]) has done. I also find some inspiration in post-rock artists like Godspeed! You Black Emperor and hip-hop and jazz artists like Freddie Gibbs and BADBADNOTGOOD."

"Roommates" is Good Grim's second single release in preparation for their first upcoming LP 'Enchantment,' with the slow-burning ballad, "Fear of God," being the first to release in March.

Listen to "Roommates" below

Good Grim

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Malaika Astorga is the co-founder of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and communications specialist currently based in Montreal.


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Montreal's SpiceKiks Releases Glittery Lofi Single "All I see is visuals"

 
Press photo via SpiceKiks

Press photo via SpiceKiks

Have you ever wondered what Clairo would sound like as a lofi hyper pop artist? Introducing SpiceKiks, the Montreal artist intertwining her glittery digital sound with her love for acoustic melodies and melancholy.

Today SpiceKiks releases her single “All I see is visuals” today off of her upcoming EP The Moon's Own Daughter this summer. The project is a collaboration with Nimbus2k, and came out of their friendship during quarantine. The album ranges from a sparkly electronic sound to a more laid-back singer-songwriter vibe, all while expressing the artist's emotional vulnerability.

Keep an eye out for all of Spicekiks' beautiful new tunes, and in the meantime, listen to “All I see is visuals” below.

SpiceKiks

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Hot Girl Summer Begins with Magi Merlin's "To The Beach"

 
Magi Merlin by Lawrence Fafard

Magi Merlin by Lawrence Fafard

At this point, you probably already know how much we love Magi Merlin and her incredible artistry. She's quickly become Montreal's up-and-coming musical sweetheart and is set to take on the rest of the music industry very soon. We covered her EP Drug Music earlier this year, as well as her surrealist music video for Mock Meat.

So why am I gushing about Magi again? Well, she's just released “To The Beach,” the first song off of her upcoming EP, which is part of a larger series of releases entitled Weather Music. But don't let the summery title deceive you; this honey-smooth track is yet another peek into the singer's healing process, focusing on the relationship that she has with her father, someone she chose to remove from her life due to a difficult past.

Described as "neo-soul" and "alternative R&B," Magi is paving her way with yet another evolution to her sound. I caught up with her to chat about the track and Hot Magi Summer 2021.

To The Beach artwork via Magi Merlin

To The Beach artwork via Magi Merlin

Malaika for Also Cool: It seems like with each season, you continue to transform yourself as an artist. Can you tell us about the meaning behind the visuals for the song? 

Magi Merlin: Yes! It honestly comes as a surprise to me. I want to depict metamorphosis and change with each release. It's all active, genuine change. I feel like with every release I become more confident in my work and myself. 

When it comes to the visuals, the concept is to depict power through vulnerability. Removing layers of clothing is a metaphor for taking down protective walls and finding strength in that vulnerability. It was interesting to strip down to nearly nothing in front of an entire crew, a testament to me actively practicing what I am preaching (hehe). 

Also Cool: There's a reoccurring theme throughout your music of growing out of relationships that no longer serve you. Has this been a conscious choice, or is it a natural part of your healing process to turn complicated feelings into your art?

Magi: Turning difficult situations in my life into music has definitely become a part of my healing process. It's funny; when I'm in the middle of dealing with a tough situation, I usually find I'm too emotional to write about it. I've noticed that once I've cleared the initial brunt of my emotions and can look at the situation clearly, I can turn it into something tangible. I know that I am nearing a stage of healing when I am clear-headed enough to write about painful or difficult situations. 

AC: Tell us about your collaborators on the song and the video. Who are they, and how did you start working together?

Magi: Funkywhat produced the song (along with pretty much every other song I have out right now)! I met him through Instagram three years ago (of course) and have been working with him regularly ever since. 

Mailis Roy-Lessard directed the music video. It was my first time working with her and the rest of the team, and it was fantastic! I loved being on set and being guided by Mailis. It was such a cool experience that I'm still hyped about.

AC: I'm personally really interested to know what kind of music you're listening to right now.

Magi: I've been listening to a lot of Wizkid and Burnaboy lately. They've been on repeat for the past few weeks! I think it's the change in weather; warm weather calls for Afrobeat.

AC: Will Summer 2021 be a hot Magi summer? Are you playing any shows? Will we be blessed with more music? 

Magi: Omg, hahaha, HOT MAGI SUMMERRRRR! I hope so! I've got an EP coming out this summer that I am insanely excited about. It's some of my favourite work so far, and I can't wait to share it with you. 

I'm also set to play la Grosse Lamterne in August. After playing Santa Teresa fest, I'm SOOOOO excited to play more live shows! Hot girl summer has commenced.

Watch To The Beach below


Magi Merlin

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Malaika Astorga is the co-founder of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and communications specialist currently based in Montreal.


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L'Impératrice Explore the Cause and Cure For Heartbreak On Dazzling Return "Tako Tsubo"

 

L’Impératrice, by Gabrielle Riouah

Paris’ grooviest export L’Impératrice are back in full-force with the release of their latest record, Tako Tsubo. The band has kept us (patiently!) on the edge of our seats for a full-length project since their 2019 debut Matahari; building anticipation touring around the world with their bubbling basslines, hypnotic melodies and irresistible danceability.

After three years of internal growth, the band’s return has proven to be worth the wait. Indeed, L’Impératrice’s latest venture is a shimmering think-piece on life’s ever-perplexing phenomenon of broken-heart syndrome, which derived the name Tako Tsubo (meaning “octopus trap” in Japanese).

In thirteen impeccably mastered tracks (graced with the touch of the legendary Neal Pogue, who has worked with the likes of Outkast, Stevie Wonder and Tyler the Creator), L’Impératrice tackles this affliction and it’s many symptoms, from euphoria to emotional burnout and ennui. Impressively, this album offers both a diagnosis and a cure, with full-bodied funk, twinkling vintage accents and a playfulness that dissolves the bitterness of heartbreak’s ache. Read our conversation with L’Impératrice below to get a glimpse into the world of Tako Tsubo, which the band has announced they will take on tour in 2022!

Tako Tsubo (2021) album cover by Ugo Bienvenu

Zoë Argiropulos-Hunter for Also Cool: Hello L'Impératrice! Thank you so much taking the time to chat with me. Congratulations on the release of Tako Tsubo! To start, let's talk about your evolution as a group since your last release, Matahari. What elements of your creative process have solidified or changed over the last three years, and how have these developments in your dynamic influenced this record? 

L’Impératrice: We’ve spent most of our time touring in France and abroad over the last three years, which has really impacted our dynamic as a band. First of all, we’ve grown closer to each other; we really grew up as a family. We also got to connect with new cultures and audiences; new waves of receiving our music, and it was very enriching. This time touring made us want to produce music in a different way, without making any compromises… Something more sincere and more close to what we feel we really are.

Also Cool: When comparing your two albums, you could say that Tako Tsubo comes across as more critical than Matahari, which emotionally taps into the lightness of a new romance. What led to the band deciding to tackle the phenomenon of heartbreak in its many forms, and was that enhanced by creating during the pandemic? 

L’Impératrice: The album was 90% recorded when the COVID-19 hit, so the pandemic didn’t influence it in a huge way. But, we did write “Submarine” from scratch during lockdown; a love breakup song. 

Nothing was really planned while we wrote the album, and we discovered after recording everything that all the songs were about marginality in various forms. The idea of being alienated from society; different from the others, and accepting it, or having a hard time accepting it, in some cases. The album’s title Tako Tsubo, or “broken heart syndrome,” represents this breach in the system, this sudden rupture in the course of things when an emotion is suddenly too intense to be handled. The album really is all about intense emotions. 

AC: At the same time, it seems as though Tako Tsubo looks at defying, and also rejecting, societal expectations. How did you incorporate this concept into the sound and feel of your album?  

L: The concept can be felt in the lyrics of the songs of course, but also in the sound and the production. Most of the songs have a lot of breaks, brutal key changes and sudden rhythm changes. We always wanted to surprise the listeners and even our own ears, but still keep a coherence in the sound. The idea was that one can never know where the song will go. We made no compromise for this record, so it might sound weird and unusual, but it’s really faithful to what we wanted to express.

L’Impératrice, by Gabrielle Riouah

AC: Speaking of sound, can you tell me more about the production journey of this album and what it was like working with your right hand Renaud Létang along with the legendary Neal Pogue

L: Renaud really pushed us to bring the songs somewhere else and to create all these breaks within the songs. He’s always focusing on emotions and groove, which are crucial in this record. 

Neal was the key person in this new sound we wanted to create. Besides being a living legend, he’s got this very Californian vibe that we’re fascinated with. He’s got this knowledge of low-end production down to a science, which French producers just don’t have. He really brought this physical intensity to the album. You can feel the bass-lines in your belly! 

AC: Branching off of that, this album is accompanied by so many amazing visual projects. Satire has played such a big part in illustrating the messages from this album, in the videos for "Peur de filles" and "Fou" especially. How did these hilarious scenes come to life to enhance the lyrical content of their soundtracks? 

L: It’s a new field we really wanted to explore with this album, using lyrics and also imagery. We’re really inspired by Michael Franks and his ironic song lyrics. We’ve never appeared in our own videos before, so we decided that it could be funny in a “self-mocking” way to try it out. We can’t appear seriously in a clip lip-syncing and wind in our hair, in a cabriolet… It’s just not the way we are! And that’s not the image we want to show.

AC: I’m also curious to know more about the album cover! What is the story behind the artwork created by Ugo Bienvenu

L: Ugo is a true genius and we were so excited to have him draw the cover. It’s the first time that an artist has made us an album cover from scratch — we’re so proud! We told him everything about the Tako Tsubo concept and he went further; exploring the myth of the moires, these three divinities holding the strings of humans’ lives, and how this pair of scissors can, in one move, change the course of things... 

AC: To end things off, what are your plans for the future and how do you plan to present Tako Tsubo live once it's possible to tour once again? 

L: Now that the album is out, we’re doing everything we can to promote it. We’re doing a lot of live sessions from our studio in Paris, meeting our fans every Wednesday night on an Instagram live to talk about one song a week, where we play it and then we show old demos, talk about the writing process, and have some guests that worked on the song with us. We are of course more than ready for the next tour… One thing is for sure: 2022 will be a huge touring year full of live music and love! 

L’Impératrice, by Gabrielle Riouah

L’Impératrice

Website | Instagram | Spotify

Zoë Argiropulos-Hunter (she/her) is the co-founder and managing editor of Also Cool Mag. Aside from the mag, she is a music promoter & booker, and a radio host & DJ.


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Hélène Barbier Debuts Shimmery Post-Punk Single "La Peur"

 
Photo of Hélène Barbier by Antoine Wibaut

Photo of Hélène Barbier by Antoine Wibaut

Today one of my favourite Montreal musicians, Hélène Barbier, releases her video for La Peur, the first single off of her sophomore album Regulus. I encountered Hélène's unique sound shortly after moving to Montreal in 2015. After seeing her play a show in the basement of the Durocher lofts with Moss Lime, I was captivated by her upbeat vocals and shimmering, angular guitar. To me, Hélène Barbier's music is emblematic of the Montreal sound I've come to know and love, and so I was thrilled to be able to dive into her world once again with La Peur.

The track is beautifully off-kilter and is just a taste of what's to come with Regulus. The album explores Hélène's world filled with prickly cacti, dimly-lit tunnels and barren country roads. She delivers a bilingual heartening space pop, equal parts unnerving and comforting. 

Barbier enlists talented musicians for the album: Joe Chamandy, Thomas Molander (who we covered earlier this year), Samuel Gougoux, Diana Gerasimov, Ben Lalonde, et Olivier Demeaux. Regulus gets to the heart of the matter: a taunt to the predator of the given ecosystem.

La Peur — with a bleating groove and soliloquy chorus — innocently points out the freeness of letting go while unsolvable math problems work their way into the sediment of the bass and drum groove in the backbone of the song. The video, directed by Olivia Faye Lathuillière, explores the idea found at the heart of the lyrics of ​​living by your principles at the risk of not being understood.

Hélène Barbier seeds melodies that ferment in her head, pairing hummable lines with alien tunes conjured in someone else's psyche across time and space. She embraces imbalance through juxtaposition with La Peur and creates simmering anticipation for Regulus. The album will be released on June 18 via Michel records (digital and CD) and Celluloid Lunch (vinyl).


Watch La Peur below

Hélène Barbier

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Malaika Astorga is the co-founder of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and communications specialist currently based in Montreal.


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Indie-folk Singer l i l a Unveils Dreamy New EP "recollection"

 
via l i l a

via l i l a

Today, Quebec singer-songwriter l i l a unveils her EP recollection, ushering in the sweet feeling of springtime in the city. The EP is a breezy and melodic collection of indie-folk songs detailing the singer's personal experiences and introspection. 

l i l a by Kerry Samuels

l i l a by Kerry Samuels

According to the singer, "Each song is associated with a moment, a feeling, a specific memory that still seems so vivid. Recollection is nostalgia, sadness, friendship, winter, love, fear, life, death; it is the feeling that nothing comes and yet everything happens."

recollection is a follow-up to her album 2018 Quiet as Fire and is reminiscent of acts like Big Thief, Aldous Harding and Helena Deland. l i l a's gentle vocals and poetic lyrics feel like a much needed sigh of relief.

Listen to recollection below

l i l a

Spotify I Bandcamp I Facebook I Instagram

Malaika Astorga is the co-founder of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media specialist, currently based in Montreal.


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Simone Provencher's "Mesures" EP is a Captivating Exercise in Musical Trust

 

Mesures cover art, credit to Camille Bertini

 
 

Looking for something to spice up that spring cleaning playlist? We’ve got just the trick – Hull-based composer Simone Provencher has just released their debut EP Mesures, and its playful exploration of free jazz and electro-acoustic stands out.

Provencher, the guitarist of Quebec City’s post-punk outfit VICTIME, crafted the EP after their relocation to Gatineau. Their feelings of estrangement unleashed a passion within them to lay the foundations for this project. To enhance what the artist referred to as a “creative conversation”,  Provencher enlisted the percussive stylings of Olivier Fairfield (Fet Nat, Timber Timbre) and the woodwind improvisation of Elyze Venne-Deshaies.

 
 
Simon Provencher. Photo credit: Charlotte Savoie

Simone Provencher. Photo credit: Charlotte Savoie

 
 

Mesures exists as the outcome of musical trust between the trio, and challenges the listener to embrace new sensations. “Choix multiples” is fittingly named, a landscape of hypnotic patterns and colours. “Et quart,” the latest single from the EP, marries Venne-Deshaies’ curious clarinet with Provencher’s grating feedback, and leads to emotions previously uncharted. 


Mesures awakens the senses from winter’s frost and embraces impulse with open arms. Its confusion serves an intriguing purpose. This avant-garde EP moves the listener through daring acts of dissonance, and proves that Provencher is one to watch in Quebec’s experimental scene.

 
 
 
 

MESURES

Released via Michel Records on March 26, 2021

SP_EP_ART_Camille_Bertini_1440.jpg

1. Choix multiples

2. Mesures

3. Pesée

4. Toutes ces réponses

5. Et quart

6. Repus

Produced by Simone Provencher

Recorded by Simone Provencher, François Mackin and Olivier Fairfield

Mastered by Simon Labelle at DAÏMÔN, Hull


Side A

Clarinet and FX by Elyze Venne-Deshaies

Drums, percussions, and acoustic guitar by Olivier Fairfield

Electric guitar and synths by Simone Provencher

Side B

Clarinet and FX by Elyze Venne-Deshaies

Feedback by Simone Provencher

Album visuals by Camille Bertini

Mesures is now available to stream and purchase – take a listen here!


 
 

Simone Provencher

Bandcamp | Soundcloud

Spotify | Apple Music | YouTube

Rebecca Judd is the features editor of Also Cool Mag.


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Come Along on a Dreamy Adventure with Freck's New Track "222"

 
via frecks

via frecks

Wanna get lost in a shoegaze dream? freck's latest track, "222" is the perfect fix. It's a beautiful combination of sparkly guitar strumming, with Mazzy Star-esque vocals, that make us feel like summer is on the way. The track is a follow-up to the Portland-based artist's last single, "Alone Again," which we covered earlier this year.

The music video follows two best friends as they explore a forest, have a picnic, and share predictions of the future for each other. Alternating between shots of melting candles, Tarot cards, and the cloudy sky, freck's honey-smooth vocals bring us along on the adventure in a dreamlike state.

Water rushes around the girls, and sunlight filters through the trees, leaving us with a languid sense of nostalgia. For fans of Mazzy Star, Soccer Mommy, and all those who want to feel something slow and sweet, this one's for you.

Watch the video for 222 below.

frecks

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Malaika Astorga is the co-founder of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media specialist, currently based in Montreal.


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