Jane Inc., Rose Mercie and DR. GABBA – Also Cool's Playlist Refresh

 

Jane Inc. by Shelby Fenlon

So it turns out, the sun does provide a lot of serotonin. All we needed to do was put on some headphones and take a lap around the neighborhood to some new tunes. This is the essence of our Playlist Refresh: a bi-weekly introduction to new music keeping us going.

Starting off with Jane Inc., who has just released her sophomore LP Faster Than I Can Take via Telephone Explosion Records. Entirely written and self-produced by the project’s brain Carlyn Bezic (Ice Cream, U.S. Girls), Faster Than I Can Take delights with experimental, multifaceted danceability. Embellished with “a Prince-like ability to shred harmonic guitar riffs over deep, danceable grooves, an eagerness to experiment with form, and lyricism that seamlessly links the personal and the political.” Faster Than I Can Take puts Bezic’s dynamism on full-display, with tracks like “Pummeled Into Sand” making room for a new tone of self-reflection from the artist. 

Ottawa/Hull: Don’t miss Jane Inc. with Akeem Oh and FIAMMA May 14th at Club SAW. 

Jane Inc. via Telephone Explosion Records

Next is “Immaterial Girl” from Marci, the rogue pop project of Marta Cikojevic from Montreal’s beloved soft-rock outfit TOPS. “Immaterial Girl” boasts Marci’s signature syrupy sincerity, which we can’t wait to hear in full on her self-titled debut, out August 5th on Arbutus Records

“Immaterial Girl” arrives with an accompanying music video, directed by one of Marci’s star-studded personnel Chloé Soldevila (Anemone). Let loose in Marci’s 80s dream world and watch the video below! 

All the way from Paris is French-Mexican post-punk girl-band Rose Mercie with “Sweet Place”. The track is off their latest offering ¿ KIERES AGUA ?, co-released on Celluloid Lunch and French label Jelodanti Records

The creation of ¿ KIERES AGUA ? began in 2019 when the band drew tarot cards on a beach in southern France. Following the guidance of their reading, Rose Mercie took the plunge and traveled to Mexico, where they completed an immersive artist residency to compose their second album in La Casa Del Bosque. 

On ¿ KIERES AGUA ?, Rose Mercie shares:  

“As we composed the songs for our new album, the image of a young, contemporary, yet ageless woman was conjured; a woman who left, who disappeared, got lost and then found more than ever before. We imagine this record as the journey of this woman, whom we will sometimes try to find, to guess through the clues, who seems to have gone very far from home, who no longer knows where her place is, who is changing and who is evolving. We grow stronger with her, we run, we laugh and we dance and then we sit in the sun, we let our skin warm, we realize that we are totally in the present, and that around us there are only girls, sisters, our friends, and that no one can ever lock us up.”

In need of chonky electronic beats? DR. GABBA has got you covered. The mysterious space doctor has taken over TikTok with his funky piano tunes and recent single “MAGIC RIDER”, which follows his Planet Piano EP.

DR. GABBA is an estranged doctor who invented groundbreaking devices in the new emerging school of MUSICAL MEDICINE. However, an argument about the future with fellow co-founder, HENRY J. KAIZER, led to the banishment of DR. GABBA from all future healthcare services in America.

In order to survive, DR. GABBA experimented on his own body and invented the ACID HEART, a musical medical device that keeps him alive using sonic frequencies. With this new invention and never-ending lifespan, DR. GABBA is now forced to spend the rest of his life creating music to fuel his ACID HEART and ultimately take on the whole KAIZER HEALTH CORPS.

After leaving Planet Piano, DR. GABBA and crew see a car floating around the moon known as the MAGIC RIDER. They decide to hop in and it takes them to the underground MOON CLUB for a night of dancing.  

Can’t get enough of this intergalactic music-maker? Check out his most recent track “GABBACOPTER”, released on Almost Good Dance Tapes Vol.2.

Almost Good Dance Tapes is a compilation album series created by a collection of producers and longtime friends with eclectic voices in the electronic music medium.  Ranging from techno, house, and breakcore to barely dance-able ambient and AGDT celebrates the homegrown nature of experimenting, creating, and sharing music with your friends and the world. Vol.2 is the second album in the series where the collective has really hit their stride. Expect basement-techno bangers, acid melters, light-hearted lo-fi, and much more!

You can listen along to our playlist on Spotify, and stay tuned for the next round of new music!


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Convulse, Groove and Exercise Your Demons with Gus Englehorn’s "Dungeon Master" (Secret City Records)

 

Gus Englehorn. Photo courtesy of Ariane Moisan

What’s the secret to fashioning tunes that veer from traditional genres? Watch cult classics with your guitar in hand. Having reified reveries from the eclectic fusion of Britpop and film, Gus Englehorn’s Dungeon Master gives organized existence to Dadaism’s deliberate irrationality.  

 

The album is the second to come from post-art rocker Englehorn and Estée Preda—the project’s drummer and Englehorn’s life partner. Its first single, "The Gate", was released late last year, within which a first-person narration of Hitchcock’s Rebecca is brought to life. The tune’s mélange of gasps inaugurates an eye into the surrealist content that exists throughout the remainder of the album. 

Disguised in what could be a nursery rhyme, the duo’s latest single “Run Rabbit Run” brims with playful alliterations and arcane matters. After a cacophonous fury of first-person narratives, the track slows down, allowing Englehorn’s vibrato to take center stage. The track’s accompanying video parades an endearing compilation of the twosome’s home videos—have a watch and take a ride with them down to Texas!

 

Expect bright strumming patterns resemblant of Blur’s Britpop years, vocal theatricality, and manic, oblique lyrics in the album’s surplus of nine tracks. Disguised in the most avant-garde of metaphors, a constellation of themes are canvassed in Dungeon Master: the lunacy of songwriting, a fictitious night spent on the Sunset Strip, and parasitism. 

 

For fans of Oasis, Daniel Johnston, Beck, David Lynch, and a counter to traditional artistic values, Englehorn’s sophomore Dungeon Master is for your ears. Gyrate, shuffle your feet and get lost in an idiosyncratic farrago of eccentricities as freakish as a demon themself.

CJ Sommerfeld for Also Cool Mag: First off, thanks for your time today with Also Cool and congrats on the new album! I'm interested in this transition from a professional snowboarding career to that of music – had you been making music or songwriting during your snowboarding years? What forces were responsible for this change in careers?

Gus Englehorn: Thanks for having me! I had been writing songs for years and years, pretty much the whole time I was snowboarding. I really thought it out when I was very young. I imagined a day when I would be too old to snowboard professionally, and I thought to myself that that would be a very sad day. But I also thought that if I could learn how to write songs, I could do that thereafter until the day I died. So I took songwriting very seriously the whole time I was snowboarding, and I spent all my free time trying to master the craft.

Also Cool: A few of the tracks on Dungeon Master, notably “The Gate” and “Exercise your Demons”, were inspired by different cult classics. Is film the main space where you draw songwriting inspiration from?

Gus Englehorn: Film certainly is a huge inspiration to me. I often sit with a guitar and watch movies; I’ll pause to play some guitar, and watch a little more, and then pause, and then play a little more. I guess it’s the storytelling that intrigues me,  and the way that great movies can suck you into their universe and give you a new perspective to write from. 

AC: The strumming patterns, instrumental motifs and simple vocals heard throughout Dungeon Master reminisce those revered in the alt-rock subgenre, Britpop. Which artists and albums did you draw artistic merit from when putting together Dungeon Master

GE: I love Britpop, and people don’t usually see that influence in the songs. But I love Blur AND Oasis! Especially Oasis. Some other big influences for the album were Roy Orbison, The Germs, The Pixies, Daniel Johnston, Beck, The Meat Puppets, Nirvana, Ennio Morricone, The Butthole Surfers and the song structures on Sgt Pepper’s.

AC: “Ups and Downs” puts forth a narration of the human condition. Can you tell us more about how this one came about, specifically what ‘evidence’ signifies in the verse: “Evidence is on the ground / evidence is all around / evidence is on the dot / evidence--it’s all we got”?

GE: I wanted the music to recreate the experience of writing songs: the burnouts along with the productive periods of mania right before you burn out, and the intoxicating triumphs and soul-crushing defeats. You’ll think a song is done and then the next day you will throw it away and start all over again. It’s an emotional rollercoaster, to say the least. The evidence is just all the little objects that go along with songwriting that are usually strewn about the place when I find myself writing – picks, empty tea cups, crumpled-up T-shirts, journals, books, cables.  These exist as the evidence that you’ve been working, but if you aren't getting anything done, then that's all there is…jJust the evidence. That’s one thing that is the hardest about writing songs, is that you aren’t guaranteed to get anywhere even if you work everyday for a year straight. But when something comes together, there’s nothing quite like it! 

AC: I would love to hear more about “Sunset Strip”. Is this tune a portrayal of a tripping and falling event you experienced, or is this West Hollywood mention a metaphor?

GE: To be perfectly honest, most of the songs are just plucked out of my imagination and don’t have a whole lot to do with myself – or anything else from reality, for that matter. This is one of those songs that I just dreamed up out of nowhere, seemingly. It tells the story of somebody's terrible night spent on the Sunset Strip: being kicked out of parties, bloody noses, falling downstairs, social anxiety, and almost being hit by a bus. I had never even been to the Sunset Strip when I wrote it.

AC: A reverbed and roomy guitar breaks into heavy percussions in the track that wraps up Dungeon Master –  “The Flea”. The tune’s dramatic qualities provide a fitting outro to the album. I can’t help but interpret this one as a quarantine track, which makes me wonder if it is directed towards society; most notably in the line “I’ve been your flea for years”. Who is the ‘you’ in this tune’s direct address?

GE: While it was written during quarantine like the rest of the album, “The Flea” tells the tale of a parasitic romantic relationship. I wrote it about all the years Estée (my wife who plays drums in the band) supported me while I was transitioning from snowboarding into learning how to write songs, so I’m the flea. Stylistically, we were inspired by Roy Orbison’s “Pretty Woman” and “In Heaven” from Eraserhead by Peter Ivers and David Lynch. There is something that keeps me mashing up early rock and roll riffs with subversive little stories time and time again! Lots of fun to be had doing that, for some reason. 

AC: Thanks for your words and time, Gus! Aside from your upcoming album drop, do you have any other creative endeavours coming our way?

GE: I remain entirely obsessed with songwriting for the moment, and I’m hoping I can finish a third album before too long.


Dungeon Master

Releases April 29th, 2022 via Secret City Records

1. The Gate

2. Ups and Downs

3. Exercise Your Demons

4. Sunset Strip

5. Oh Well Unwell

6. Tarantula

7. Lips

8. Run Rabbit Run

9. Terrible Horse

10. The Flea

Produced by Gus Englehorn and Estée Preda

All songs written and composed by Gus Englehorn

Recorded and mixed by Alex Ouzilleau

Mastering by Marc Thériault at Le Lab Mastering

All tracks recorded at Le Magnétophone in Québec City, QC in 2020

Published by Secret City Publishing


Gus Englehorn

Instagram | Bandcamp | Spotify

YouTube | Apple Music | Twitter | TikTok | Facebook | Website

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


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Tame Werewolf Releases Italo Disco Inspired Track "5th Wave"

 

Blast off into the synth-wave world of Tame Werewolf, the electronic artist from Tehran, Iran blending J-Pop and Italo Disco.

Tame Werewolf's discography evokes 80s anime late-night aesthetics, the upbeat melodies of early Nintendo soundtracks, and granular sounds of old-school-style arcade games. He creates a unique retro electronic sound by incorporating space-synth, Italo-Disco, City Pop, vaporwave and Eurobeat influences.

Formed in 2018 by Keivan Hosseini, Tame Werewolf has since released two albums, and now his latest single, "5th Wave." Being raised as an only child, Keivan picked the keyboard as his best friend and began his exploration of music with early Persian pop, Jean-Michel Jarre, Giorgio Moroder and Koto.

He later took inspiration from Yellow Magic Orchestra and the 16-bit-age of Yuzo Koshiro, as well as the indie electro-pop of the 2010s, like M83, Hot Chip and Crystal Castles. The video game influences came in 2017 while playing “Streets of Rage,” sparking a deep dive into 80s inspired genres, eventually leading him to the Synth Wave world.

Tame Werewolf makes easy fans of those familiar with Tatsuro Yamashita, Khruangbin, and those chill-wave compilations on YouTube. We recommend starting with "Phasermania," "Lost in Lush Heavens," and "5th Wave."

Tame Werewolf

Instagram I Bandcamp

Malaika Astorga is the Co-Founder & Creative Director of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media strategist currently based in Montreal.


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Mitch Davis Ditches Hibernation on Sunny Debut LP "The Haunt" (Arbutus Records)

 

Mitch Davis by Richmond Lam

A trip around the sun has passed since we last touched base with Montreal multi-instrumentalist and do-it-yourself aficionado Mitch Davis.  In the meantime, Davis has tied a bow on his debut LP The Haunt and returned to the stage, in both in Montreal and at Austin, Texas’ SXSW music festival. Out April 29th, 2022 via Arbutus Records, The Haunt manifests a spectrum of mediations in both sound and spirit.

Realizing some compositions that predate Davis’ relocation to Montreal, The Haunt celebrates Davis stepping into his own with an entirely solo production: writing all the songs and playing all the instruments on the album, as well as recording much of the work on self-built equipment in his home studio. The result is a soulful and playful blend of jazz, funk and beaming pop; adorned with rhodes, clavinet, synth and drum machines. An album-long ode to themes of isolation and loneliness, as well as looking for love in the dawn of the COVID-19 pandemic.The Haunt achieves both breeziness and brevity for a class-act spring listening experience.

 

Speaking with Davis leading up to his album release, I asked him how the final product came to be, knowing that The Haunt has been years in the making. We started first by chatting about how Davis knows when a song is complete.

 

“It’s a feeling that comes over me once I’ve obsessed over a song. Eventually, I won’t have anything else to add or take away. When I don’t know what to do next [in production], I try to keep at it. I have a lot of friends who will move on to another song in the meantime, but more often I’m obsessively working on one song for like, a month straight, and never putting it down; never stopping, listening to it day and night. Once it starts to lose its novelty and sound like mush, I’ll take a break for usually one day or so.”

 

“Do you have any rituals that you do to get back on track when this happens?” I wonder.

 

“Hmm, I don’t know about rituals,” smiles Davis. “But, once I get sick of a song and I’ve heard it too many times, to the point where it sounds like nothing, I’ll adjust the pitch, up or down. It triggers something in part of my brain —hearing my song in a different key— and that helps me to look at it fresh again.”

With self-reliance being at the core of The Haunt, I wanted to know where Davis finds inspiration when working alone. Unsurprisingly, he is moved by other jacks of all trades.

“I’m inspired by people who, like me, play all the instruments, record themselves, things like that,” he brims. “Though I try to not have influences be a conscious thing and act on creativity in the moment, there are important, multifaceted soloists throughout music history that influence me, like Stevie Wonder, Todd Rudgren and Sly Stone.”

 

On the note of his debut being entirely self-directed, Davis then told me about the narrative structure of The Haunt.

 

“It’s funny, years ago I was trying to get myself to create an album and nothing was working. I imagined having a set of literal hats, or characters in my mind, to embody and portray the thoughts and ideas I was trying to put into music. Nowadays, I don’t have to do that as much and I’m able to just be me. That said, I do feel inspired by holding and interacting with different instruments. Even if there are just drums down on a track, or some scratch guitar. Or, I’ll play bass for 12 hours until I get it just perfect… and then I’m done being the ‘bass player’ forever, and can move on to being someone else.”

 

“Do you have a particular relationship with any of your instruments?”

 

“I have the closest relationship with the piano, one of my first instruments. I never used to be much of a bass player, but now I feel really connected to it. I do feel the most inspired by piano because it’s where I can most easily express chords and experiment.”

 

With the unveiling of The Haunt, Davis looks forward to sharing his music in a live context. To conclude our conversation, he told me about rediscovering the energy of playing with a band and the direction he plans on taking with the project.

 

“Playing with a band opens up the door to a lot of improvisation and extending my songs in a natural way, which is something I can’t do alone. There are really nice surprises that come with a live setting because everyone brings their own tastes to it. I’m looking forward to bringing these experiences into my writing process. I only just started caring about recording… Normally, when I’m writing , half of the inspiration will come from going to shows and connecting with people, like the other bands I play with, like Marci and Sorry Girls. [The Haunt] is a weird record because it was spent in isolation, but I’m grateful that it kept me busy and got me through the tough, curfew-ridden Montreal winter.”  

The Haunt is out on April 29th via Arbutus Records and can be pre-ordered on their website.

Poster by Amery Sandford

Montreal: Don’t miss Mitch Davis’ album-release show at Brasserie Beaubien on April 29th at 9PM with local supporters Night Lunch and Alicia Clara. Pre-sale tickets are available here.

Mitch Davis

Instagram | Twitter | Bandcamp

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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Magi Merlin, Milk Jennings, La Sécurité and Scarlet Rae - Also Cool's Playlist Refresh

 

Magi Merlin via Bonsound

Do you feel like a new chapter of your life has begun, but you don't quite have the soundtrack for it yet? Look no further than Also Cool's Playlist Refresh, a bi-weekly quickie roundup of all the new music we're listening to right now.

Starting off strong with Magi Merlin's fiery new track, "Pissed Black Girl" (released on Bonsound). The cathartic dance anthem follows "Free Grillz" and channels years of pent-up frustration, transforming the anger of dealing with fake progressives into something ecstatic and life-affirming. Magi subverts the tired trope of the 'angry Black woman' through her lyrics as a means to empower herself.

Stay tuned for her upcoming EP Gone Girl, which draws inspiration from 90s house, drum and bass, Motown and acid-flecked hip hop.

Next up, franco art-punk outfit La Sécurité join our friends at Mothland and have shared their first single, "Suspens." Their music is equal parts jumpy beats, efficient minimal hooks and scratchy melodic spouts ran through a ubiquitous insomniac filter; the result of excessive exposure to La Grande Métropole's neon lights.

La Sécurité via Mothland

"Suspens" is accompanied by an official music video filmed all in one shot with handheld camera work. Éliane (a contemporary dancer, singer and musician) expresses her desire through movement to step out in the dizzy and electric nightlife. Watch the video below.

Speaking of nightlife, Milk Jennings has released his third single, "Downtown" (produced by Sam Cohen). It's a classic romantic indie rock love song about sweeping your partner off their feet and dancing the night away — a cliche that Jennings portrays through a different lens.

Downtown by Milk Jennings

In Jennings’ own words:

"I wanted to be cliche with the romance here because in truth, the song is coming from the lens of someone feeling depressed and distant in their relationship, and longing for those sweet and simple moments of romance and intimacy - but not having the energy, or will to make them happen. "Downtown" is a fantasy land - a place far from reality, where you can dance the night away with your partner. The last words in the chorus are - "Lately I've been lost in my mind / So meet me Downtown tonight." It's romantic, sad, apologetic, and hopeful all in one."

Milk Jennings' full-length album Sleep Talker is out June 3rd via Telefono (Digital), ORG Music (Physical), and Modern Sky (China).

Last but not least, we have Scarlet Rae's "Built to Spill," named after the 90s indie post-modern rock group. Scarlet's take on the iconic name follows the languid, shoegaze sound set in place by her previous singles "Seems Like Forever" and "Incandescent Wonderland".

Scarlet Rae by Jason Renaud

The single is accompanied by a music video that brings her sombre lyrics to life, shot on the streets of New York City by Kristen Jan Wong and Jeremy Reynoso. Lofi handheld camera work follows Scarlet through the subway and bars of the city while droning guitar and heavy drums balance delicate vocals. "But I'm built to spill, falling on my knees like a little girl / whisper in my ear how much I'm not real, woke up in the basement think I'm happier here."

"Built to Spill" is off Scarlet's upcoming album, set to release sometime this year.

That's it for this first edition of Also Cool's Playlist Refresh. You can listen along to our playlist on Spotify, and stay tuned for the next round of new tunes.

Malaika Astorga is the Co-Founder & Creative Director of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media strategist currently based in Montreal.


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NO WAVES Revive Garage Rock at Bar L'Escogriffe (Jess X, Piss for Pumpkin, TVOD - Blue Skies Turn Black)

 

As we thaw out from our wintery pandemic slump, we're trying to remember how to have social lives while also asking ourselves, "Who the hell are all these people at the show who I've never seen before??" 

Pre-pandemic, it was easy to find "the scene" if you tried hard enough (and went to events consistently). But that natural flow of new faces was completely interrupted, and now many are left wondering where the scene is, and how to get invited. 

My FYP on Tiktok often features 19-year-olds asking how to get invited to Montreal's underground raves and DIY rock shows, and last summer NO WAVES answered that call. They threw a wildly successful outdoor show, which was heavily documented and shared all over social media. After that show, I heard from a younger neighbourhood friend that they would be the next cool band in town. Promoters supported the claim that they brought a crazy energetic crowd, so I knew I had to see them the next time they played.

NO WAVES played at Bar L'Escogriffe on Thursday, April 14th with Blue Skies Turn Black, and the lineup could easily have fit into any 2015 surfer punk garage rock-inspired playlist. Jess X embodies a punk Cherry Glazerr energy (the Haxel Princess era specifically), while Piss for Pumpkin was described to me as 'Bikini Kill but more metal.'

TVOD (Television Overdose) brought a pure punk energy, hanging from the ceiling, spraying water all over the crowd, and getting them hyped for the headliners. Everyone at the show (who looked like they had just stepped out of my queer alt TikTok algorithm) loved it, encouraging each other to mosh, eagerly looking around for their friends to join them in the pit.

NO WAVES DIY show last summer - via their Facebook page by CB43MEDIA

I was pleasantly surprised that NO WAVES began their set with a zero-tolerance for harassment speech, telling creeps to gtfo and anyone who felt unsafe to tell the band or someone nearby what was happening so that they could help. Their sound is easily comparable to Surf Curse's "Buds," Vundabar's "Gawk" era, The Garden's "The Life and Times of a Paperclip," and of course (perhaps the band's namesake) FIDLAR's "No Waves." It felt like the 2015 Burger Records universe of music that I grew up with but without the reputation of SA and harassment that the label and their artists attained. 

NO WAVES had charming stage banter, introducing one song as "a real song that we wrote when we were 15," another as "a song I always say I won't show my friends and then I do," and their cover of Surf Curse's "Freaks" as "that song you've probably heard on TikTok," which made me feel old but also warmed my heart.

After the show, the drummer Sam shared with me that he was so happy that people were having a great time and emphasized that it's essential for the bands on stage to make sure their audience is as safe as possible. 

I also caught a sweet moment of a girl interviewing one of the band member's dads about the show and other attendees. She said she was making a documentary about the band, even though they didn't know how she was yet.

Uma, a long-time friend of the band and local Montrealer, had this to say about the night, "I feel like I've grown up with NO WAVES, so watching them go from playing in their parent's basements to a show like this is wild. They get better and better each time. Being able to grow up with access to this scene is life-changing. It's really beautiful out here, the crowd, the people, the music, all of it."

If anything, the show gave me hope for the up-and-coming Montreal DIY scene. It's inspiring to see people excited to be at a show, especially in what seems to be a more accepting and safe environment. 

You can catch NO WAVES' tour kick-off at Turbo Haüs in Montreal with Bummer Camp and Last Waltzon on April 22nd.

NO WAVES DIY show last summer - via their Facebook page by CB43MEDIA

Malaika Astorga is the Co-Founder & Creative Director of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media strategist currently based in Montreal.


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Wet Leg's Self-Titled Debut is Satisfyingly Silly (Domino)

 

Wet Leg. Photo courtesy of Hollie Fernando

As with a vast majority of things in my life, I discovered Wet Leg, a UK post-punk duo, while scrolling through TikTok. It has indisputably been a long winter and a long couple of years, and I was searching for something that could provide a little excitement in my life – a pick me up, if you will.

After just one listen, I was immediately enamoured by the effortlessly-cool sardonicism of their debut single “Chaise Longue”. The track offers their witty perspective on graduating with a degree: “I went to school / and I got the big D”. Having graduated a couple of years ago, I realised I too had gone to school and got the big D. Ha. With the song on repeat, I got out of bed and danced all day long.

Amongst the idleness of the pandemic, the duo of Rhian Teasdale and Hester Chambers have seen an exponential rise to popularity. Having joined the roster at Domino Records in November 2020, the group released “Chaise Longue” in June 2021, and have soared to new heights amongst the Britpop scene ever since. Released on April 8, Wet Leg’s debut self-titled album is available to stream or purchase on CD, LP, or baby-pink cassette.

The 12-song record comes in with punchy post-punk sounds, and sonically fluctuating and repetitive vocals. It all starts with “Being in Love'', a song that compares the whirlwind feeling of loving someone to being punched in the gut, the inability to sleep at night, and self-medicating with another drink. Setting the tone for the album, this song immediately catches your attention. 


The first few songs are upbeat, hard-hitting and extremely catchy. They cause you to sing along on your first listen, with the lyrics remaining rampant in your head for the rest of the day. There is a range from heavier post-punk songs to more mellow indie Britpop songs sprinkled throughout the album. I was reminded of the mid to late 2010s indie era (think Alvvays) with some of the instrumentation and melodies in songs such as “I Don’t Wanna Go Out” and “Loving You”. 


The entire album keeps you engaged with catchy and repetitive choruses, alternating tempos, charmingly-cartoonish vocals and playful lyrics. The lyrics are riddled with raw British cynicism, sexual innuendos, pop culture references, and dry wit. Emanating across this record is the duo’s appetite for French disco and sheer curiosity throughout its production. There is an effortless energy about the songwriting, with a stylistically-silly element throughout the album. And yes, there is even a little bit of screaming. Excuse me, what


I must admit that I am a big fan of a guttural feminine scream. It fills a gap in the post-punk and especially the Britpop scenes, while giving permission to female lyricists and their listeners to engage in a feeling that is often only excusable for cis men. Imagine my delight upon the revelation of the duo’s longest and loudest scream on “Ur Mum”, a release both chilling and relieving to hear. Perhaps such a release is one we all secretly need — we can all have a guttural scream, as a treat.

Wet Leg. Photo courtesy of Hollie Fernando

Across this album, I am reminded that there is something so raw about the way that female songwriters narrate their experiences. There’s a poignant honesty to it, with the beautifully-heartbreaking way of storytelling that lyricists like Phoebe Bridgers, Mitski and Snail Mail weave into their music. It makes your heart ache and swell when you listen to their songs, making you feel heard for the seemingly-specific life experiences and thoughts that you’ve had. On Wet Leg, the duo works this magic with a very sarcastic, dry and honest feminine voice: “I just need a bubble bath / to take me on a higher path”.   


The album finishes with “Too Late Now”, a song that has a slow build and switches tempo completely halfway through. Listening to this song felt somewhat similar to a panic attack, and I mean that in the best way possible. It features a slow beginning that abruptly shifts into frantic speaking—not dissimilar to overthinking—before a loud chaotic finish complete with distorted feedback. This track marks the perfect finish to the album, and knowing that Wet Leg began releasing music in a time without live shows, it certainly gives us a taste of how this band will perform. The album feels complete.

Wet Leg has given us a coming-of-age—or, rather, coming into adulthood—album that is deeply engaging to someone in their twenties. The album represents that feeling of being unsure of yourself and navigating the world without the slightest idea of what’s going on. That being said, with this album having been produced during the pandemic, it feels simultaneously personal in a remarkably collective sense — exposing Teasdale and Chambers’ truths, which are not unlike our own, as we all attempt to ease slowly out of this past chapter of history.

Altogether, Wet Leg provides a sense of rebirth, a liberatory thawing alongside the melting snow. It captures the energy of waking up after a raging sickness and the chaos that ensues. It’s frantic with fluctuating energy, layered with silliness, and cathartic in its completion. This album will certainly be at the top of my playlists in the months to come; I highly recommend sitting in the sun, listening to this album and defrosting. It’s chaise longue season, baby.


Wet Leg

Released April 8th, 2022 via Domino Recording Company

1. Being In Love

2. Chaise Longue

3. Angelica

4. I Don't Wanna Go Out

5. Wet Dream

6. Convincing

7. Loving You

8. Ur Mum

9. Oh No

10. Piece Of Shit

11. Supermarket

12. Too Late Now

Vocals, guitar, and writing by Rhian Teasdale

Guitar, vocals, and writing by Hester Chambers

Bass and writing by Michael Champion

Drums and additional vocals by Henry Holmes

Synths and programming by Dan Carey

Synths and programming by Jon McMullen

Production by Dan Carey

Production and engineering by Jon McMullen

Production, engineering, and writing by Joshua Omead Mobaraki

Engineering by Alexis Smith

Mixing by Alan Moulder

Mastering by Matt Coulton

Photography by Julian Hanson

Graphic design by Matthew Cooper


Wet Leg

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Maia Allan-Riley is based out of Ottawa and works in social media. Dabbling in various creative endeavours, she spends her spare time doing photography and videography, journaling, drawing, and making jewellery.


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Yves Tumor Embodies Rock and Roll Energy at Club Soda

 

I knew that the Yves Tumor show at Club Soda would be a good one based on the conversations I heard while standing in line waiting to get in.

People were overjoyed to be running into each other for the first time in three years, and everyone was dressed in a way that made me feel like I was in the right place. Most notably, two friends were showing each other their bags of crystals, excitedly explaining each one in relation to the other person's astrological sign.

Yves Tumor by Jordan Hemingway

The show was one of Yves’ 47 international tour dates for 2022, and certainly did not disappoint. From the lighting to the generous amount of smoke from the fog machine and even the immaculate styling, Yves Tumor and his band embodied a classic rock and roll energy. There was crowd surfing, fans trying to rip the bass away from the band, and lyrics being screamed back for nearly every song.

You can catch Yves Tumor on tour by checking out tickets here and watch the 90s MTV-inspired promotional video below. Special thanks to Carter from Biz 3 for the press pass.

Malaika Astorga is the Co-Founder & Creative Director of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media strategist currently based in Montreal.


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Isabella Lovestory, Magi Merlin, and Mitch Davis Reignite Montreal's Music Scene (POP Montreal / Bar Le Ritz)

 

via Isabella Lovestory on Twitter

If there's one thing I know for sure, it's that Montreal is coming back to life. The streets may still be full of half-defrosted garbage, but the music scene is in full swing. I was feeling pretty discouraged about going out (as I'm sure many of us are), but the POP Montreal show at Bar Le Ritz last night reminded me why I love this city and seriously gave me hope for what's to come.

Mitch Davis by Richmond Lam

The show began with Mitch Davis, who brought a smooth and jazzy energy to the stage, having just returned from playing SXSW. By the end of their set, the venue was almost full, with friends slowly recognizing each other and reuniting after a long winter. (It's really hard to see who anyone is in the dark when everyone's wearing a mask — I had more than one "OMG, HI! I didn't know you were here!" moment.)

Magi Merlin by Feng Jiang

Magi Merlin was up next, having also just returned from playing in the States. From the beginning of her set, it was clear that something had shifted since the last time I saw her play. Magi has stepped into herself as an artist, bringing fiery confidence and maturity to her performance. Alongside her songs from her last release, "Drug Music," she shared some new music that embodies a heated punk-rock energy. Magi's band heightened this energy, amplifying her ability to transform her anger about racism, sexism, and fake friends into a mesmerizing performance.

Isabella Lovestory was the night's headliner and brought the pulse of the room to another level. It was my first time seeing her live, and it's safe to say that I'm obsessed. As a Mexican-Canadian, I've found the complete lack of any Spanish music genres and Latinx people in the music scene completely unacceptable, which is why I was excited to see Isabella gaining so much support. Her music intersects pop and reggaeton, making for a high-intensity performance. It's perfectly bitchy, and a great addition to any perreo playlist. If you're into La Goony Chonga, Ivy Queen, or La Materialista, you'll love Isabella Lovestory.

I was standing outside with some friends after the show, and someone said that this is the kind of show we'll look back on in five years with disbelief that all of these artists were on one bill for $13. I look forward to a Montreal music scene as diverse, high-energy, and community-oriented as this show was, and I expect nothing less from the promoters booking right now. The talent is here, and I think we've all had enough of all-white guy lineups.

Malaika Astorga is the Co-Founder & Creative Director of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media strategist currently based in Montreal.


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Crystal Eyes Release Soaring Indie Track "Don't Turn Around" (Bobo Integral Records)

 

Crystal Eyes. Photo courtesy of the band

Perfect for the pastel wistfulness of spring’s earliest days, Calgary-based psych-rockers Crystal Eyes offer you one simple message – “Don’t Turn Around”. This single marks the second to be released from the band’s upcoming album The Sweetness Restored, out on April 22 via Bobo Integral Records.

Gravelly and nostalgic, “Don’t Turn Around” soars with intensity, toying with notions of surrender overtop of a textural indie haze. The track warmly complements the guiding narrative of leading single “Wishes”, guaranteeing a sense of longing for what’s to come.

In the days following “Don’t Turn Around”’s release, vocalist and guitarist Erin Jenkins sat down with Also Cool to deconstruct her plethora of personal touches to the creative process, along with the stacked lineup of Canadian musicians who helped to craft its sonic depth.

Rebecca Judd for Also Cool Mag: This single packs a heavy thematic punch, and the upcoming record promises to as well – described as a "feel-good self-help record for the age of existential dread". Tell us more about the darker themes to "Don't Turn Around", and which external forces inspired this direction from Crystal Eyes.

Erin Jenkins of Crystal Eyes: My songwriting mostly comes from a subconscious place – so I guess this is inspired by whatever anxieties are secretly lurking down there *laughs*. I don't really set out to write songs about anything specific; I try to stay open to the possibility of what the song could be, and then analyze what it means later.

The songs on this record are equally inspired by external influences – the people I'm playing with, music I'm listening to, or music I've loved, aesthetics I'm trying to interpret as a melody or a rhythm. It's a very collaborative process that everyone contributes to. When I listen to “Don't Turn Around”, I think it's definitely about memories, the weight of years added up, how we measure our worth by what we build and the years by what they take. There is pain in caring too much, but there is beauty too.

Also Cool: "Don't Turn Around" marches forward with grungy vocals and a steady beat, harkening back to the indie rock grit of the 2000s. Which artists and projects influenced the makings of this single?

Crystal Eyes: To be honest, I wasn't necessarily thinking about early 2000s music when we were working on this, but I totally hear it now that it's been pointed out. It makes a lot of sense because I love music from that era – I grew up on it!

For “Don't Turn Around”, I was mostly thinking about stuff like Echo and the Bunnymen, The Chameleons and New Order – post-punk rock that is super pop, but still really organic-feeling.

Crystal Eyes. Photo courtesy of Walter E. Neuman

AC: Contrasting the depths of this track is the music video, featuring breezy vintage footage of parasailors on a beach. How did you put this video together? Was there any intentionality in choosing this footage to complement the sound?

CE: This is some old family footage I discovered one Christmas. I love home movies. I thought the footage really reflected the music, it just felt right. There's kind of a vulnerability in the video and a sense of it being a memory that seemed to work.

I took a stab at a first edit of the video, and then Joleen (Crystal Eyes’ synth player) came in and really sharpened it up and tightened the narrative because we really didn't have much footage to work with!

AC: This record marks your latest release since "Radical Softness" in 2019. How has the band evolved since then, and what more is to be expected from The Sweetness Restored?

CE: I'd say the band has evolved a lot since then, because I've collaborated with so many different people over the years. The recording process for The Sweetness Restored was really amazing. We went to Montreal and recorded at Breakglass Studios – this was shortly before the pandemic.

My friend Andrew Woods produced and engineered the record, and his spirit and vision brought everything together. There was just such an air of creativity and generosity – and silliness. Andrew got the idea to add a string quartet (we were thinking big), so he brought in Eve Parker Finley and Zou Zou Robidoux to add string arrangements to a number of the songs.

Basia Bulat was also a big part of the process, lending her wisdom – especially for the vocals. She sat in the studio while I was recording vocals and would run in between takes to shout suggestions – “try it like this!”. Monty Munroe played bass and just killed it, and is, like, the hardest working person ever. We also got to use some amazing instruments like a Therevox and a Hammond C3 with Leslie Speakers.

Past Crystal Eyes member Kenny Murdoch played drums, and current members Jordan Tettensor played lead guitar and Joleen Toner on synth. There's even a choir on one track (Hermitess and her Witch Choir on “No Heaven”). Mark Lawson mixed the record. We threw him probably 1,000 tracks to work with, and he was somehow able to wrangle it into a cohesive, really beautiful sound.

The album covers a lot of ground - genres, moods, etc., but I think it flows really well together. It's definitely something where I hope people can listen to the album as a whole.

AC: Thanks for your time – we're super excited for The Sweetness Restored to be released in all its glory! Aside from dropping this record, what else is in store for Crystal Eyes for the rest of the year?

CE: We have a couple upcoming festival shows at Big Winter Classic in Calgary and Winterruption in Edmonton. We're looking forward to playing a lot more shows and getting back to touring.

We're also writing a lot of new songs, and I anticipate we'll be starting plans to record more again soon. It's been a weird time to be a band, I'm just trying to be patient with myself and everyone else and do the things we want to do, not things we feel like we have to do. No need to force the universe.

Stream “Don’t Turn Around” below!


Crystal Eyes

Website | Instagram | Bandcamp

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Rebecca Judd is the features editor of Also Cool Mag.


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Premiere: dybbuk Brings Early 2000s Club Culture to Life with Debut Album on Causal Chain

 

Unruhe cover art by Bruno Lauzon Tanzi in collaboration with Sora Park

Causal Chain, the electronic music label run by syncopated groove and hypnotic bassline master, laced (Saudade, audio bambino), is back with a deep and heavy debut release from dybbuk.

Based in Bruges, Belgium, dybbuk is a DJ and producer schooled in the traditions of bass music and club culture. Infused with elements of ambient, dubstep and techno, his soundscapes paint a nostalgic picture of the early 2000s and its diverse electronic music scene. His love for old school sci-fi and video games is reflected in his productions. dybbuk’s music is a unique realm filled with deep bass, spacious pads and hard hitting percussions.

Rhythmic fragments slither and dance among shimmering textures and disembodied voices, altering restlessly. dybbuk’s debut EP on Causal Chain, Unruhe, presents five introspective cuts with enormous club potential.

LITHE
Effortless shifting between bouncy club and half-time elegance before returning to an ambient origin.

UNRUHE
Intricate basslines are housed within a tense spectral atmosphere true to its name.

ROGUE SOULS
Hard, morphing bass tones accompany a floating melody through an industrial soundscape.

CO-OP
Decayed percussion and dubbed out pads swirl in subdued harmony.

CHOOSE LIFE
Gated vocals emerge above unique percussive forms.

Unruhe releases on March 18, 2022.

Listen to a preview of Unruhe below:

Music by dybbuk
Mastered by SIM
Cover art by Bruno Lauzon Tanzi in collaboration with Sora Park
Words by Holden Carroll

dybbuk

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Morning Silk Talks NYC's Indie Pop Scene, "Skin," and Starting Their Own Studio

 

Lately, we've been spending our free time daydreaming about summer and curating soundtracks for our forthcoming main character moments. NYC-based alt indie-pop group Morning Silk fit the bill perfectly, with soft vocals and upbeat synthy instrumentals. 

Morning Silk's sound evokes the 2017-era indie pop/rock scene à la Clairo, Rex Orange County, & Her's. We chatted with the band about their experience with the scene in NYC, musical inspiration, and how they went from architecture school to indie pop.

Malaika for Also Cool: Hi! Nice to e-meet you. I'm curious what led you to music while in school for architecture. Do you think anything you learned in school affected your taste in music and aesthetics?

Frank Corr for Morning Silk: Hi! I never had much recording equipment growing up, but I was listening to a lot of bands that used DIY recording methods. Those bands helped me finish school, but then I thought, why can't I do what they did? So I began collecting some small recording gear with internship money I made. 

I was around a lot of painters, and used to be in painting myself. We were always tightly intertwined with listening to new music or just going to gallery shows/events where there was already some sort of music scene. A lot of punk bands played in Providence, so we were drawn to the idea of playing live and performing before we even had anything recorded.

Also Cool: What has your experience been like with the music scene in NYC? It seems like things have started to (slowly) open up again, and I'm interested to hear what you're looking forward to. 

Morning Silk: We are pretty new to the New York scene. I feel like I didn't really connect with a lot of music here or musicians until recently. Matt was saying that there are so many sub-scenes going on that you discover through playing shows here and whatnot. I recently started producing for a few artists, and now I finally feel like I've found my place in the city. We are finishing up our first record, so we are so hyped to play it for people! We just started playing shows with our friends and some of the artists I produce for, so we have created a little place for ourselves.

AC: How did you start your own studio? What was that process like, and what inspired it?

MS: Rob, Matt, and I would use this place called "The Tap Room" in Providence to rehearse/write and record. It wasn't really a studio at all, so we would have to lug Rob's drums from our apartment and set them up and break them down every single rehearsal. It was really exhausting, so we always dreamed of a place where we could leave things set up so we could record whatever we had on our minds right away. 

I started collecting some higher-end gear with a friend who was already in New York and just stored it with them. We would go to New York on weekends and record at a little practice space in Dan Bro. As Matt was saying, we eventually got tired of that, and Rob had found a new space. It was like a living room with a kitchen, but we could see a control room where the sink was, so we decided to try to make this the dream studio. 

We didn't have a lot of experience recording, but I was trained as an Architect, and Rob was an excellent builder, so we figured we would just figure it out as we go. Eventually, we partnered up with an audio engineer and made the space what it is today! It's very special, and we are so lucky we can record in our own self-funded/built space.  

AC: You've quoted MGMT as musical inspiration, but I'm curious if there are any local artists or friends who have helped inspire/influence your music as well.

MS: Matt was saying ever since we all started recording music, we mainly just listen to each other's demos now. Hearing what Rob and Matt are making is one of the most surprising and interesting things to hear. 

Same thing with our friends doing other things, like I am always inspired by whatever Sur Back is doing production-wise or what Richie Quake or Middle Part are working on. We are always working on each other's music now too. I guess that is a really nice way to learn/inspire each other. If I'm working a lot with a particular artist, it might bleed a little bit into the songwriting. For instance, my friend Michael is really into French House, so I might pick up a few jumping bass lines from that style here and there. 

Also, our friends Anna and Kristos are always putting us onto new things happening. In the end, I always run my ideas by Caroline (Sur Back) just to make sure I'm not making something completely insane or silly, haha. I am probably leaving out a lot of other people, but those are just some artists and producers, to name a few that we have been around as of lately.

AC: What can we look forward to from Morning Silk in 2022?

MS: I've been doing a lot of production for other people lately, so I am really looking forward to finishing and releasing our self-titled debut album. I've already started writing and recording the next album, so we plan to put out more than a few projects this year! Working on other people's projects has taught me to move faster and be more open to collaboration. We hope to make an EP this year between the two records I started recording, which will be a whole different vibe.  

Watch “Skin” by Morning Silk below

Morning Silk

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Malaika Astorga is the Co-Founder & Creative Director of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media strategist currently based in Montreal.


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Milk Jennings Shares Sombre New Track "Raincoat" Feat. Sam Cohen, Announces Debut Album (Telefono, ORG Music, Modern Sky)

 

Raincoat cover art via Milk Jennings

The gloomy feeling of stepping outside into freezing rain, hurrying home from the metro because the coat you brought isn't warm enough... These are the emotions summoned by Milk Jennings' (member of Chinese American Bear) latest single, "Raincoat," featuring Sam Cohen.

This is the second single from Seattle-based artist Milk Jennings, who worked with producer Sam Cohen on the release. It's a sombre yet dynamic and bold effort from Jennings, touching on the darker side of life. The song is loosely about self-paranoia and empowerment, and it gets under your skin. It features crisp, soulful instrumentals and backup vocals by Cohen and flute by acclaimed flutist/saxophonist Cochemea Gastelum (Beck, St. Vincent, David Byrne).

Still from Raincoat

"Raincoat" is laced with melancholy using lyrics that Jennings attests are still shrouded in mystery to himself - making each listen uniquely engaging as the wobbly wisps of narrative continue to morph and change.

Jennings is also announcing his debut album titled 'Sleep Talker', out June 3rd via Telefono (Digital), ORG Music (Physical), and Modern Sky (China). Pre-orders for vinyl will be available here.

Watch "Raincoat" featuring Sam Cohen below

Milk Jennings

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Malaika Astorga is the Co-Founder & Creative Director of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media strategist currently based in Montreal.


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Von Shares Spicy Feminist Pop Track "Tiny Boy"

 

Photo Credit: Photo by Adam Burack @phlegmtop, Edit by Serena Rubin @ipadadult

Today we're celebrating all of the shes theys and gays. It's technically international women's day, but we want to extend it to all of our nonbinary & gender-fluid friends as well. (In case you don't know, this project is run by a core team of all femme and nonbinary also cools, and is very queer and very proud.)

We thought it would be appropriate to share "Tiny Boy," a spicy feminist bop by Von that recently went viral on TikTok. Von is a musician, co-founder, and host of BLOODY MARY KOs & KINK, the first underground NYC fetish party to merge live boxing with talents from sex workers, femme creatives, DJs and performers. Oh, and she's also the first artist to use her own orgasm wave patterns in pop music.

Inspired by the political agendas of Peaches to Pussy Riot, Von dedicates her time to making art that dismantles stereotypes about sex work, sexist agendas in entertainment and aversion to sex-positive dialogues. She places pulsing percussion and sawtooth baselines under glittery synth riffs and genre-bending vocal treatments to make music that defines sexual confidence as what you always wished your misogynistic aunt read it as: powerful.

With artists like Pussy Riot, UNIIQU3, Pauli Cakes, DJ_Dave (who we interviewed a while ago - read it here) & more on the bills, Von and BLOODY MARY KOs & KINK are shaking up the industry. In 2020 Von music directed the first NYFW show to ever feature Pornhub stars on the runway & is on a mission to make art that dismantles shaming stereotypes.

To all the non-cis males of the world, we celebrate you and encourage you to dance out your frustrations to "Tiny Boy." Watch it below.

Von

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Malaika Astorga is the Co-Founder & Creative Director of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media strategist currently based in Montreal.


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Maryze Shares Queer Nightclub Inspired New Single "Experiments" from Debut Album

 

Still from “Experiments”

We could all do with a little queer club fantasy right about now. We're dreaming of that first night back on the dance floor, colourful lights and smoke machines flickering between you and that cute person across the room... If you're feeling what we're feeling, Maryze's latest "Experiments" is the perfect 2000s-pop-inspired track to get you in the mood.

For those unfamiliar, Maryze (she/they) is our local alt-pop queen, finding fans among those of Caroline Polachek, Charli XCX, Britney Spears, or Nelly Furtado. Inspired by her Celtic roots, years of studying jazz, and a healthy obsession with emo as a teenager, Maryze's music transcends genre while still providing one hook after the other.

Photo by Taylor Priede

"Experiments" is a dark and sexy 2000s club banger produced by Jeshway and inspired by Timbaland beats and ominous but fun tracks like Nelly Furtado's “Maneater”. Thematically, it focuses on sexuality, taboos, and shame, exploring vulnerability in intimacy and how sometimes letting go of control allows us to truly be in control. Dancey and grindable, "Experiments" shows Maryze's playful side, featuring breathy R&B vocals and spoken studio session snippets à la Britney Spears. The release has also become popular on TikTok, inspiring a glam transition trend. Check it out here!

The equally iconic and sexy music video lands us in a mysterious, sensual and surreal universe, oscillating between intimate close-ups and dramatic wide shots, soft blur and sharp focus. Maryze joins forces with another local legend, Ariana Molly, to create a beautiful queer nightclub-inspired alternate reality. It's a nod to the early 2000s, where pop icons were unapologetically sexy and powerful, with the feeling of strength and sensual divinity oozing from its pores. The sound and visuals for "Experiments" are a clear step up and beautiful evolution of Maryze's creative career, ushering us into the alt queen's new era.

"Experiments" is from Maryze's upcoming debut album 8, which is available for pre-order now. Keep an eye out for more witchy releases coming very soon!

Watch "Experiments" below

Maryze

TikTok | Website | Facebook | Twitter

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Malaika Astorga is the Co-Founder & Creative Director of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media strategist currently based in Montreal.


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OUT TODAY: We Are Time Celebrates Anniversary with Sophomore Release "Chandra Mixtape Vol. 2"

 

Collage cover art by Marin Blanc
Band photos by Kate Young and Heather Rappard

Artist-focused initiative and independent label We Are Time is marking its anniversary with its sophomore release Chandra Mixtape Vol. 2. The brainchild of New York’s mutant disco trailblazer Chandra Oppenheim, and everyone’s favourite Vancouver-based musician and journalist Jesse Locke, We Are Time spotlights the magic of intergenerational collaboration in contemporary music. With this new compilation, We Are Time aptly celebrates its birthday on Bandcamp Friday with a nine-track goldmine of teamwork, remixes and rarities from its roster.

The digital sampler and limited-edition cassette brings together the project’s extended family for a signature melange of eclectic sounds and experimentations. Beginning with the swelling glow of MISZCZYK and Marker Starling’s “The Leaves” and culminating in the glacial vibrations of “Not Exactly Right” from Oppenheim’s trip-hop act GNDN, Chandra Mixtape Vol. 2 unites artists across a spectrum of genres to present a boundless listening experience.

Listen to We Are Time’s Chandra Mixtape Vol. 2 below!

We Are Time

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Carl Schilde Channels Lost California Sound on EUROPOP (Fun In The Church)

 

Carl Schilde. Photo courtesy of Colin Medley

For each of us, life seems to lead to experiences unexpected; it can shift us from one location or another, however much that may or may not be “part of the plan”. EUROPOP, the debut solo project from Toronto-based, Berlin-born Carl Schilde, is a subversion of the cumulative expectation of “making it” as we’ve been conditioned to think. Rather than focusing on the prospect and ruminating on what could’ve been, its tone seems to bask in the fantasy poolside in the Laurel Canyon heat, already at terms with what is.

The album was recorded following a relocation to Los Angeles, California, which eventually culminated in what Schilde describes as a “disappointing experience”. It’s also a love letter to the lost records and projects of the 70s, such as overlooked post-Pet Sounds projects by The Beach Boys and the sounds of country and folk demos.

“I had a bit of a music burnout and moved to Toronto to be with my wife. I took a year to work at a brewery and not focus on music, just to have that distance,” says Schilde. “I was feeling out of time and out of place myself, so I projected that into the music by sounding like some demo from ’78 that never got heard.”

Carl Schilde. Photo courtesy of Colin Medley

EUROPOP’s mood is dream-like, woozy and thick with atmosphere, featuring deep baritone vocals by Schilde recorded in their Toronto basement. In tone and sound, the record could be compared to contemporary artists such as the late Leonard Cohen, or sonically similar to Timber Timbre’s 2014 release Hot Dreams, which was also reminiscent of heyday 60s/70s Hollywood and the spaghetti Western soundtracks of the time by Italian composers. 

The album kicks off with “Top 40”, the lead single from the album. Croons from a steel lap guitar wax and wane against a constellation of synthesizer notes in the background mix. Schilde’s lyrics seem to speak to an unnamed friend, ruminating on success and its ethereal nature:“We heard your record did well in Germany / And what’s worked there must surely work here / Let’s see if it melts in the California heat / Like a candy in a wrapper / or an apple out of reach” .


‘“It’s definitely about disappointment and dealing with that in an ironic way,” says Schilde. “It’s an elevated version of myself and it makes fun of that ego, of wanting to be successful.”

During our interview, Schilde and I discussed his curiosity for “pop music trickery”, referencing the later releases by Brian Wilson and The Beach Boys, as well as Italian soft rock records. The album’s second track, curiously titled “John Stamos”, is a deep-cut Beach Boys reference, as the Full House actor is actually a current touring member of the reformed Beach Boys.  “I’m a big Beach Boys and 70s music fan. Their sound fascinates me; [it’s] rooted in 50s doo-wop harmonies.”

EUROPOP is Schilde’s first time singing lead on a project and producing their own vocals. They remark the greatest challenge they had during the recording process was adapting their production style to fit their own vocal range. 

“The process of recording was very intertwined with the writing. You find your zone where a limited voice [range] does work and try to capture spontaneous moments. Everything I have [in my home studio] is set up for spontaneous workflow.”

Carl Schilde. Photo courtesy of Colin Medley

Schilde is the primary producer of the record, with some assistance from bandmates on backing instruments, and supporting vocals from Schilde’s partner that harmonize with his own. 

“Roadworn'' is a great example of Schilde’s ability to layer sounds and stack textures: phased filtered guitar tones harmonize through a cloud of static and feedback. See also “Landline” parts one and two; the latter is an instrumental highlight of the album, featuring well-stacked vocals like one long exhalation that relieves the weight from your shoulders. 

“Even two-part harmonies, like Simon and Garfunkel, there’s definitely a magic there,” says Schilde, “I think it can change meaning to the lyrics if there’s another harmony.”


The album does eventually reach cruising altitude in the latter half by the track “Phase”, which brings some welcome grand piano chords and more aggressive drums into the mix before eventually dissipating before the ephemeral ballad track, “The Master Tape”.

Schilde is well aware of the irony of the album’s title, considering the project grew from an experience in and was produced in North America. “It's definitely an ironic title. People talk about how ‘Europop is euro-trash’ … as if to say it's not real music. The record doesn’t sound like a Eurodance record [from the 70s].

Schilde also remarked how audiences and communities perceive musically differently in Europe compared to North Americans. “There’s a different sensibility,” says Schilde. “Living in North America now, I realized the only kind of music I can make is Europop, in a way. 

“I’ll always be myself […] even if it doesn’t sound like that.”


EUROPOP

Released on February 4th, 2022 via Fun In The Church

1. Top 40

2. John Stamos

3. Roadworn

4. Soft Dads

5. Landline Pt. I

6. Landline Pt. II

7. Phase

8. The Master Tape

9. Blue Rinse

10. Credits

All tracks written, arranged and produced by Carl Schilde

Vocals, guitars, pianos, synthesizers, bass, percussion & drum machines by Carl Schilde

Additional vocals by Laura Gladwell

Drums by James Yates

Recorded and mixed by Carl Schilde at home in Toronto, Canada

Drums recorded by James Yates at Majetone HQ in Newhaven, UK

Mastered by Dave Cooley at Elysian Masters in Los Angeles, USA

Vinyl cut by Sidney Claire Meyer at Emil Berliner Studios in Berlin, Germany

Artwork design by Sebastian Schäfer

Illustrations by Judith Holzer

Super 8 footage by Carl Schilde


Carl Schilde

Website | Instagram | Bandcamp

Facebook | Spotify | Apple Music

Gabriel Lunn is a writer, multimedia journalist, and pop music enthusiast based out of Victoria, BC. When he isn’t trying to decipher the human condition, he can usually be found going for long runs or collecting vinyl records he really doesn’t need.


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In The Pines Invites You to Manoeuvre Young Love and Pandemic Melancholy with "Impossible Daze" (Soul Step Records)

 

Michael Shular, Charlie Horn, Pat Zopff and Alex Dungan of In The Pines. Photo courtesy of the band

The raw feels of In The PinesImpossible Daze will transport you to the Golden Age of Radio, when live bands were broadcasted over the air. Don’t expect the sterile, radio-ready music that replaced many of those old gems; instead, anticipate a constellation of lyrical authenticity, plaintive progressions and intermittent phonographic imperfections. 

With this album, ITP veers from the psych-y Laurel Canyon feels heard on Slow Blink to explore a trad-folk sound further consistent with the narrative around the band’s name. While having turned the reverb down a notch, their new 11-track album remains true to the band’s familiar bare-boned and blurred ambient sound. Tape cassette, lo-fi qualities and innocent nostalgia are the names of the game for this quartet, hauling its listeners through what could very well be an Americana music history class. 

On Impossible Daze, ITP invites you to manoeuvre love alongside the four of ‘em. The album opens with “Bird Song”, a tune about moving on from an unfathomable reality. Maintaining the same direct-address-POV, “Indifferent” enters head strong. A bluesy guitar riff leads the way, reminding the listener that ITP had begun as a blues band. “Avoid Myself” is for pensive days, as is the track that follows, “In My Dreams”. This one haunts me, beginning with vocals reminiscent of Elliott Smith – but don’t be fooled, this soft tenor whisper soon gets washed away with an intricate cacophony of dream folk guitar progressions and an oppositional outro. 

Egg shakers will welcome “Well I’ll Be” to the stage, followed by a tune which showcases the band’s first lap steel guitar appearance, “Brother”. A melancholic “I Don’t Mind” follows, and a starry organ melody seamlessly closes the door to this one. The grainiest track of the bunch, “Jeez Louise”, sports hazy acoustics and atmospheric vocals, while the lyrically spacious and sonically calming “Runnin’ 2 U” wraps up the record. This one reads poetically and leaves the listener pensive: “Can you tell grey from yellow? / Do you hear my hello / My hello / My hello / What will you do when no one comes for you?” 

If you're looking for a myriad of what-you-see-is-what-you-get lyrics melted into a complexity of dreamy Americana textures, this album is for you.

In The Pines. Photo courtesy of the band

CJ Sommerfeld for Also Cool Mag: Congrats on the new album, and thanks for your time today.

Before we chat about Impossible Daze, I have to know – does the band’s name relate to the classic folk tune of the same name? If so, what was it about this song that made the troupe name your band after it?

Michael Shular for In The Pines: Thanks for having us! We get this question all the time, and yes, there is a relation to the Lead Belly tune. There is, however, nothing about that song that made us name the band after it, other than the fact that it's a classic blues tune, and we wanted to be a blues band at the time.

Also Cool: Do you have a preference: Lead Belly’s version or Nirvana’s?

Michael Shular: Lead Belly for sure.

AC: A notable transition from 60s psychedelia to Americana is heard between your earlier albums and Impossible Daze. What forces were responsible for this leap?

MS: I think really it comes down to a combination of wanting to do something new and the influence of what we all were listening to or inspired by at the time. We had just finished this sort of progressive psychedelic record that took entirely too long, and we kind of entered a weird stand-still where we were like, “what do we do now?” From there, we went on our way and started writing as we usually do, and a couple of really cool tunes hit the table. We liked where it was going, so we rolled with it.

AC: Rolling with it definitely worked! Were there any prominent Americana / folk albums from which the band drew inspiration when putting together Impossible Daze?

MS: I wanna say John Prine’s self-titled record? I mean, it’s just so good – I remember listening to “Pretty Good” over and over and over again. He's the man. Around the time we were writing the record, we were also listening to a lot of Neil Young, Michael Hurley, Dr. Dog, & Rose City Band.

AC: This is the first In The Pines album in which we don’t hear sax – was this concurrent with the band’s change in sound, or were there other reasons for this instrumental change?

MS: There were other reasons, mostly just wanting to move on and write stuff we never have before.  

AC: The sax seems to have been replaced by lap steel guitar in one of your tracks. Was this for the sake of remaining true to the Americana direction in which the band was headed? Or did the idea to create a folkier album occur after having first incorporated lap steel guitar?

MS: Our guitarist Charlie Horn had the idea for the part in “Brother” for a while; we just didn't know anyone who could play! We ended up meeting this guy Jeff Jackson through our engineer on the record; he came to the studio, laid down the part in a couple of takes and up and left *laughs*. It was very fast, but when we heard it on the track it was like a loose end on the record had just been tied.

AC: I love the theme of manoeuvring love heard throughout Impossible Daze. Was this lyrical content taken from the band member’s specific experiences, or was it used simply for its relatable qualities? It’s a component we frequently hear in folk music.

MS: *laughs* I think we all were kind of going through it at the time, you know? We were in lockdown, and everyone—including us—was going through it physically and mentally. All the songs and all of the lyrics you hear on the record are very true, very real feelings, from each one of us.

Manoeuvring the vast landscape that is love and heartbreak definitely has relatable qualities, and it’s because whoever it was that was writing that song at that specific moment in time, they were going through it too! And you can feel that kind of thing when you listen to it. You know it when you do, because it hits that soft spot somewhere in you, because you’ve been there before too. Real human experience and taking it as it is and not what we think of it to be, letting it all go like a leaf in the autumn breeze. That's what most of these songs are about.

AC: Lastly, how is everyone feeling with the folksy route the band has taken? Do you think it’ll remain in future albums, or do you think In the Pines will revert to their earlier psychedelic sounds?

We all enjoy playing these songs and writing songs in that sort of style, it’s a large part of what we all are inspired by. So, yes, I do think there will always be hints of folk and Americana-sounding stuff on future records, but it’ll always be something new.

I say it’s a large part of our inspiration, but it is really only a fraction. I see no boundaries when it comes to writing music in this group. No idea gets turned down, and everything is given an equal amount of consideration. I can guarantee you that our next record will sound like nothing we’ve done before.  It’s very important I believe, as an artist or any creative person, to go outside of your comfort zone. Comfort is like the killer of creativity! And you are responsible for developing your craft. I don’t want to be bound by any genre, because what’s the fun in that? 

Thanks again CJ for having me for this interview, it was a blast!

AC: Thank you again for your time! It would be rad if ITP made their way to the Pacific Northwest in the near future…


Impossible Daze

Released January 28th, 2022 via Soul Step Records

1. Bird Song

2. Indifferent

3. Sweet Darlin

4. Avoid Myself

5. In My Dreams

6. Well I'll Be

7. Brother

8. I Don't Mind

9. Sylvan Island

10. Jeez Louise

11. Runnin 2 U

Recorded, mixed, and mastered by Patrick Stolley with the assistance of Ion Harris at Future Apple Tree Studio in Rock Island, IL. All music written and performed by In The Pines.


In The Pines

Website | Instagram | Bandcamp

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


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Helsinki's Treemer Serves Up Growling Post-Punk with "Paper Cuts / Eyewitness" (Soft Monsters)

 

Sam Shingler, Joakim Schonert, Marko Haikonen, Mia Keurulainen, and Tommi Lehtonen of Treemer. Photo courtesy of the band

Forged across ever-evolving decades and soundscapes, the work of Helsinki-based indie quintet Treemer has come to a snarling head. Their latest double A-side, “Paper Cuts / Eyewitness”, is now out via Soft Monster. Punctuated by sinister guitars and boisterous percussion, these expressive garage-rock tracks showcase two perspectives of conflict: that of the wounded, rising from abuse with something to say, and that of the ordinary human uncovering darkness within themself.

Following the release of “Paper Cuts / Eyewitness”, we caught up with Treemer’s Mia Keurulainen to peel back the histories that have constructed this latest project: the band’s plethora of sonic references, their creative methods and approaches, and the lasting friendships that have facilitated their vulnerability.

Rebecca L. Judd for Also Cool Mag: Hello there Treemer, thank you for speaking with Also Cool! I'm curious to know more about the formation of the group, and how it's evolved since Chickenpotpie and The Pansies. Tell us more about your origin story, and the ebbs and flows along the way.

Mia Keurulainen for Treemer: Thank you, Also Cool! It all began in the early 1990s with four small-town-guys (Marko, Tommi, Sam and Joakim). They found mutual interest in mostly Brit-based pop and rock music, digging such bands as The Cure, Ride, Slowdive and early U2. They put up a band of their own and called it Chickenpotpie (a word picked up from a Thrasher Magazine comic strip, BUT also a dish served at Twin Peaks’ Double R Diner – this TV series has had a major impact on our identities and on our music, by the way.)

Chickenpotpie fell apart, but the music didn’t stop there. I joined in and brought along my own influences. These were a bit different from what the guys thought of as acceptable, such as Depeche Mode and The The. Soon after, The Pansies (featuring me, Sam, Tommi and Marko) was formed. Quite accidentally, we happened to hit the Britpop wave as it rolled over the continents, with bands like Blur and Suede on the front cover. We got a record deal, made four albums and between 1995–2000 toured Finland, Northern Europe and even Japan.

To nearly make it – I think that was what really wore The Pansies off. On the other hand, band members started to marry and have children. It was only natural to let that phase go, in mutual understanding. And still, the music continued to flow. Sam, Joakim and Tommi started Montevideo and, in my interpretation, moved from an indie sound to take on a more Coldplay-kind of approach. I made a solo album under the artist name Mia Darling in 2007, paying homage to my early female singer-songwriter idols such as Suzanne Vega, Juliana Hatfield and Polly Jean Harvey.

In 2019, Marko came out of the closet with some new songs he’d been working on. It was an honour, and the timing was perfect for me to start composing vocal melodies and lyrics to his songs. It didn’t take us long to ask our dear old friends to join us, and so Treemer was born. What took us long, however, was to come up with a name for the band that suited everyone (laughs). The first song Treemer released was “The Great Void”, followed by the Meeting EP. So far, we’ve released a total of 12 songs.

Also Cool: Your music pulls from many directions, with these songs lying somewhere on the fringes of shoegaze and hard rock. Which musical influences have inspired the band, particularly on this release? Did your time apart have any impact on the formation of Treemer's present sound?

Treemer: Yeah, the roots grow deep. From Bowie, Beatles, Neil Young and Pink Floyd to this day.

It’s funny that you mentioned hard rock. It seems that in Finland, every other kid goes through that heavy metal / hard rock period in early puberty. I, for example, was a huge Def Leppard fan at 13. Then there was the hip-hop phase: Salt’n’Pepa, Public Enemy and Run-DMC. At the same time, the likes of Midnight Oil, Sinéad O’Connor and Tracy Chapman also awoke me to socially significant matters through their music. Tommi, Joakim and Sam even had a hip-hop trio at some point… what was is called, Groovy Sound Crew?

As a child, most of us took classical music lessons. I played the piano for 6 years, so surely the music of, for example, Sibelius, Satie and Khachaturian play at least an unconscious role in my personal take on making music.

The 1990s was a melting pot of sound and genres, and we welcomed them all! It seems to me, one wasn’t perhaps as dedicated to a certain musical style as young people today are? Or maybe this is just me getting old. There was grunge, obviously. Then there was shoegaze, trip-hop, Britpop, dub, electro, R&B…echoes from the 60s psychedelia and soul could be heard in the sounds of, say, Primal Scream, The Charlatans and Stereolab. The USA hit back with the cool of Beck and Sonic Youth, the inwards-turned art school pop of R.E.M. and Radiohead, and the NY garage-pop of The Strokes. Meanwhile in Scandinavia, an Icelandic woman called Björk was doing her own thing, Denmark gave us a progressive gem called MEW, Sweden had a new sweetheart with The Cardigans and drama in the form of Kent, and Norway an endless list of talented, folk-ish (and dare I say nerdy!) singer-songwriters coming up.

Treemer’s latest release, “Paper Cuts / Eyewitness” does definitely recline on the garage-rock end of our influence scale. Pixies, Hüsker Dü and even Pavement come to mind. I personally am a fan of Mac DeMarco and, somehow, some of the more recent Treemer material makes me feel connected to his music. A good kind of couldn’t-care-less-attitude is present.

AC: On one-half of your double A-side is "Paper Cuts", a distorted post-punk rebellion against abuse and mistreatment. Can you unpack the inner workings of this evocative single?

Treemer: Evocative – that’s nice, thank you! When I first heard Marko’s demo (in early 2020) I immediately thought it very different from the earlier Treemer stuff. It had speed and rage. At that moment, I was personally going through a rough patch in life, so the lyrics turned out to be more straight-forward and personal than usual.

The song took many forms (fast/slow, minimal/profuse, rough/polished) before finding its final shape during the recording sessions last summer. I love the crazy instrumental in-between part, very punk-art-garage-what-have-you-pop. It was just improvised on the spot, and for the first time ever I got to play my mini-saxophone on the record!

AC: "Eyewitness" takes a more aggressive stance, cautioning an ill-fated spectator against consequences. Coupled with this sinister song is an intriguing video that you produced, where viewers observe the witness' frightened journey and—ironically—assume a similar role. From your perspective, what is the story being told here? Who is this eyewitness, and what is their fate?

Treemer: Marko’s Eyewitness demo on the other hand sounded just, I don’t know, secretive somehow. The word “eyewitness” started to ring in my head, and I was thinking of old Hitchcock movies and other classical thriller scenes where someone (usually a child) is peeking through a key hole and seeing something terrible… Judicial terms such as “prosecutor” and “witness” came to mind, and I started to build up a story around those words without a distinct plot or design. It was more about the atmosphere. Joakim’s bass lines play a significant role here – a growling synth-bass line of the A-part turns into a progressive passage come along the verse.

The idea for the music video came to me in a dream. Originally, in the dream, there was an androgynous skateboarder in brightly-coloured hair and clothes rolling around the streets of what looked like Venice Beach in LA. They were being chased by us Treemer members, lurking behind corners wearing black sunglasses. Visually and stylistically, the dream reminded me of the Smashing Pumpkins’ “1979” music video or Larry Clark’s Kids.

Instead of sunny LA, the music video shooting took place in Helsinki on a windy, rainy August day. I asked my friend, the young and talented dancer Kaisla, to star in the video and I’m happy she agreed. Together, we immediately understood that the “eyewitness” is escaping nothing but something in themself. To witness something unattractive or gloomy in ourselves is hardly light or fun, so it can easily become a fight-or-flight situation. The video has a happy ending though, as the eyewitness makes peace.

AC: Despite the dark connotations to "Paper Cuts / Eyewitness", they were recorded over a session you folks describe as "summer camp", complete with camaraderie and laughter. I'm interested in the sense of liberation that you found in writing these particular songs during this breezy experience. What does it mean for you all to use your music as a form of empowerment?

Treemer: At least one of us is usually tired or on a bad mood when we arrive at the rehearsal room, but I don’t think anyone has ever left it feeling that way!

Empowerment, freedom to do whatever, self-expression – definitely vital elements to keep the Treemer machine going. And I point out that it is the doing and being there together, in the moment, that matters. Whatever happens next—recordings, releases, gigs—is a bonus. This is not to say that we weren’t disappointed or frustrated when, for example, our gigs in Finland and Germany got cancelled in 2020 due to COVID. For me, Treemer represents a creative and safe environment to test and work on my own artistic ideas whilst being inspired and wowed by those of the others.

Also Cool: Thanks again for your time, Mia! Let's end this on a high: what are your biggest dreams for 2022? What's next up for the band?

Treemer: Thank you! Hopefully we get to play some gigs! There are still 4 songs “under construction” from those last summer recording sessions. So there will be at least an EP at some point. Maybe even a vinyl version, who knows. We are also working on some completely new material. The main thing is to stay healthy and have fun though.

My personal dream is to play a gig at an open-air summer festival somewhere (probably not happening in 2022 though). I can picture it – it’s late in the evening, bright lights split the sky, there’s love and confetti in the air.

Stream “Paper Cuts / Eyewitness” below!


Treemer

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Spotify | Apple Music | Twitter | YouTube

Rebecca Judd is the features editor of Also Cool Mag.


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Tuff Bear Shares Indie Disco Track "Talk to You" (feat. bb sway) via Acrophase Records

 

via Hive Mind

Have you been craving some indie-disco, perfectly wobbly serotonin-inducing tunes? Introducing Tuff Bear, a Bristol, UK-based artist who has just released his latest track, "Talk to You," featuring bb sway.

Tuff Bear is an easy fix for anyone who's a fan of Mild High Club, 2016- era Jerry Paper, Soft Hair, and Drugdealer. "Talk to You" is the first glimpse of his first EP, Tuff Bear's Picnic, which will be out later this spring via Acrophase Records.

Throughout the pandemic, Vernon developed his sound and aesthetic drawing on 70s disco, 90s dance, and contemporary indie-pop. He started on this first instalment of the Tuff Bear project in April of 2020 before signing to Acrophase Records and began piecing together the collection with label-mate PWNT. 

Speaking about the project and this first single, Vernon says:

"Essentially, Tuff Bear's Picnic is a project centred on themes of self-reflection and optimism in the face of anxiety. I felt compelled to draw on the mixed bag of emotional states that we were subjected to for months upon months, while also investigating and romanticizing memories of pre-COVID normality. 

“During a period in which we were all robbed of our sense of togetherness, I took comfort in nostalgic disco/pop music of the 70s and 80s, where concepts such as this often take centre stage as a means to encourage unity through dance."

Listen to "Talk to You" below

Tuff Bear

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Malaika Astorga is the Co-Founder & Creative Director of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and marketing strategist currently based in Montreal.


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