With „Paid Holiday“, Don’t Get Lemon has created a piece that, while sparkling and elegant, also conveys the heaviness of everyday life hidden behind the shiny facades of the suburbs. Where synths glitter and rhythms drive, a soundscape unfolds that seems like a dream, promising yet always just out of reach. The voice, which cuts…
Kategorie: Band
„Closer to You“ – Moon and Aries
Like a velvet curtain slowly drawing across an abandoned cinema screen, „Closer to You“ opens up spaces where tension and longing set the pace; embedded in hypnotic impulses, the track spreads out a retro-futuristic soundscape that seems both familiar and strange. Jordana Moon’s voice glides like oil over glass, sensual yet sharp-edged, while Tom Aries‘…
‘Oh See Me – The Siren’ – Velatine
Velatine’s ‘Oh See Me – The Siren’ combines darkwave, coldwave and gothic elements into a sombre yet elegant statement that links personal healing with social urgency. Loki Lockwood’s production creates a cool soundscape of booming bass, shimmering synths and deliberate, sparse rhythms, giving Holly Purnell’s voice the space to gradually mature from vulnerable whispers to…
‘Child’ – I WANT POETRY
With ‘Child’, I WANT POETRY make their boldest foray into expansive electro-pop, presenting a track that is both anthemic and intimate. Till Moritz Moll layers radiantly shimmering synths and precise keyboard textures, while Tine von Bergen delivers a vocal performance that combines vulnerability and self-assertion; small phrasing details transform simple lines into emotional touchstones. The…
FiloFX Records – 19th September: ‚Liquid Lunch‘ – Liquid 1NC
News: ‚Liquid Lunch‘ – Liquid 1NC With ‚Liquid Lunch‘, Liquid 1NC presents a feather-light yet profound electro-soul album that fuses jazz, funk, synthpop and electro into a fluid retro-futuristic groove. Jazzy chord structures create harmonic sophistication, while smooth funk rhythms give the track a light-hearted feel. Airy synth pad landscapes and atmospheric arpeggios give the…
“James” – Forgotten Garden
“James” portrays the slow decay of a relationship through omission. Rather than dwelling on a dramatic breakup, it traces a creeping erosion: idealistic self-deception and the way people keep going through the motions in the fog of everyday life until they lose themselves completely. The imagery distills passivity into ethics: truth should have been recognized,…
