9 Pieces Of Songs About Flashbacks


Songs About Flashbacks

Flashbacks are a signature side effect of trauma, dissolving your present and placing you firmly within a past situation you’re most likely trying to escape from.

But not all music about flashbacks summons the darkest parts of us. An overwhelming number of songs metaphorise the mind-altering occurance as the torture of moving on from a relationship whilst tormented by grief and regret.

We’ve collected some stand-out songs about flashbacks to showcase how different genres deal with the disastrous concept whilst affirming that seemingly insurmountable emotional struggles aren’t faced alone.

Songs About Flashbacks

1. Deante’ Hitchcock ft. Miguel & St. Beauty – Flashbacks

Deante’s Flashbacks is a lush R&B / hip-hop track threaded with an irresistibly smooth rhythm and a captivating, jazzy harmony.

Lustworthy bassline flourishes accent the track, its last verse unexpectedly transformed, giving a unique illusion of a brand new song having started.

Deante’s rapped verse is so profusely swarmed with verbose lyrical wordplay that it conjures a double-layered metaphor to the track; his rampant, tormented vocals clouding thickly upon the track, like the blind haze of a traumatic flashback which severs you from reality and plunges you into a pit of your spiralling, obsessive thoughts.

2. Chris Brown – Flashbacks

Chris Brown’s 2019 R&B track, Flashbacks, describes the emotional residue that litters your mind after a break up.

This clean-cut pop track illustrates the flashbacks of love which creep back and devour your mind whenever you least expect it, crafting a song for anyone trapped regretfully in the memory of the past;

“It’s all these flashbacks, make me wish I had you back, I ain’t tryna backtrack, I shouldn’t have put my all into that.”

3. Ministry – Flashback

Ministry’s 1988 industrial metal track, Flashback is a twisted predecessor to Chris Brown’s message; igniting deep regret over an old lover with brutal, searing rage.

This murderous anthem is inspirited by pure hatred for a cheating ex, every line carved with torturous plans aimed towards the other man and the ex-girlfriend.

Ministry’s death-hungry lyrics are buried amid torrents of harmonic distortion, bringing the blood-curdling agony of flashbacks to full bloom;

“I’m gonna break his legs off, I’m gonna rip his head off, and then s*** down his neck, and then I’ll laugh like a motherf***** … I’m gonna make her suffer, I’m gonna make her cry, I’m gonna watch her die, cause I hate her.. I’m gonna flashback.”

4. Celine Dion – It’s All Coming Back To Me Now

Celine Dion’s single It’s All Coming Back To Me Now is a flashback in itself; its lyrics guiltily reminiscing upon an ex, whilst convincing herself, “I’ve banished ever memory you and I had ever made.”

Her choruses demonstrate the tainted serenity of falling back into moments laden with pain and comfort, “But when you touch me like this, and you hold me like that, I just have to admit, that it’s all coming back to me.”

Celine hints at an abusive relationship, crafting a song that empowers anybody overshadowed by Stockholm syndrome and other flashback-like effects that follow an abusive relationship, “But you were history with the slamming of the door, and I made myself so strong again somehow, and I never wasted any of my time on you since then.”

5. Ram Di Dam – Flashbacks

Ram Di Dam’s Flashbacks harbours an irresistible indie rock / Brit pop sound, drawing glimmers of its inspiration from the iconic post-punk sound. This track is absolutely addictive and sonically optimistic despite the shadows that befall its subject matter.

It’s fresh sound is laced with a certain sense of nostalgia, a tiny flashback hidden within the very track, jolting you into the memory of eras when fresh new bands topped the charts rather than the plethora of US solo artists.

6. Zach Hood – Flasbacks

Zach Hood’s acoustic pop track, Flashbacks, carries a beautifully soothing ambience, backlighting his troubled lyrics with a sense of newly found peace, interlaced with melancholic reminiscence.

This song harbours a heartbreaking message of a grown son having flashbacks about his parents’ broken relationship, leaving him haunted by the deep-rooted feeling of distrust towards his father.

The narrator evocatively illustrates flashbacks of feeling proud of his father as a child, before he and his mom were abandoned after a growing stream of abuse, “I’ve been getting flashbacks, of hearing you fight behind the door, know you’ll never call back, I don’t even miss you anymore, ’cause I’ve been doing fine without you in my life.”

Zach crafts a song for anyone struck with resentment for a parent’s unforgivable actions, uplifted by a calm undertone encouraging us to let go of paralysing trauma.

7. After School – Flashback

K-Pop sensations After School craft their dance track Flashback around missing a boy and being driven crazy by the dreamy thought of him anxiously pervading every second of your life.

They hint at hurt feelings and history between the couple, putting a bubbly pop twist on flashbacks laced with Stockholm syndrome. After School’s track is addictively colourful and strangely optimistic for a track impassioned purely by guilt.

8. Uppermost – Flashback

This pop hit by Uppermost is striped with the vibrant influence of pixel music, with an ambience of a retro video game soundtracks brought full-blast into the modern age, and layered with a soft hint of early-2010s dubstep.

Featuring as the backing music to an abundance of Minecraft playthroughs on YouTube, amongst a plethora of other internet cameos, this is another track that’s a flashback in itself; this time to the earlier days of bright and creative internet content.

9. Calvin Harris – Flashback

Reaching #2 on the UK Dance charts, this 2009 Calvin Harris hit is a plush anthem bearing sparse yet telling lyrics detailing the dissociation of being caught in a flashback, appearing as real as true, material reality;

“This is like a flashback, this is like a dream, this is like all the things you can fit inside a memory.”

Calvin Harris weaves many hypnotic elements into his hit, layering padded synths with trance-like arpeggios and rhythms to create a subtly mind altering effect within Flashback’s harmony.

Its cyclicality captures the pure nature of flashbacks; an endless occurrence doomed to repeat itself for better or for worse. Calvin cleverly crafts his lyrics with a sense of vagueness, letting you place your own memories firmly at the heart of the song.

Street’s Favorite Internet Trends of 2022


This year, it feels like the revolving door of internet trends has been coming and going faster than Julia Fox could say “Uncuht Jamz”—each with a lifespan shorter than the Miu Miu mini–skirt that took over our feeds and convinced us all that this scrap of low–waisted khaki was enough to cover up the shame of reverting to Y2K trends. 2022 online trends had us acting like Patrick Bateman taking ourselves on solo–dates in the name of self–care as if we aren’t just antisocial, lonely suckers too lazy to make a Hinge profile. Anyways, YOU GET THE POINT! These internet moments come and go and we can’t help but buy into them—because what else is going to fill the endless void in our minds reminding us that we’re like Chicken Little screaming that the world is ending and climate change is imminent? Without further ado, here are Street’s favorite internet trends of 2022. 

–Natalia Castillo, Style editor

Julia Fox

Can a person be a trend? If that person is Julia Fox, it turns out the answer is yes. She proclaimed herself “Josh Safdie’s muse when he wrote ‘‘Uncuht Jamz,’” described her upcoming book as “so far a masterpiece” (she didn’t want to give too much away), and pioneered the iconic eye makeup look that launched a thousand twink Halloween costumes. Fox is a self–aware second coming of the celebrities of old, but instead of rocking “Stop Being Poor” t–shirts (yes, I know the original was “Stop Being Desperate”), she’s managed to stay remarkably unproblematic, from her ethical TikTok discourse to coordinating photoshoots with the paparazzi. In an interview with Highsnobiety, she says “I can get a photo taken that’ll get reblogged a bunch of times, and this designer’s going to get their first write–up in Vogue. Stuff like that gives me fuel because it’s like, ‘I can do good with this.’” A true queen of the people, methinks.

–Walden Green, Print editor

Ditching Fast Fashion Trends

Remember the swirly dress from House of Sunny? Or the Prada re–edition bag? Yeah, so do we… unfortunately. Along with so many other micro trends, these items were seared into the mind of anyone who consumed TikTok content in the past year. It often feels like the platform has accelerated trends to the point where they no longer exist, supplanting the traditional seasons of fashion houses and runway shows with short bursts of influencer promotion followed by near–immediate obsolescence. In a way, that’s a good thing—it means personal style has begun to reign supreme over following a preset list of what to wear to be ‘cool.’ Somehow nearly every decade is in style at the same time—from ’90s punk to ’70s disco to glittery Y2K—and as long as you like what you wear, others will come around too.

–Emily White, Editor–in–Chief

Stay-at-home Girlfriends

I used to feel guilty on days where I didn’t leave my house. I saw myself as lazy, antisocial even. But not anymore—now, I’m a glamorous stay–at–home girlfriend. Whose girlfriend? Unclear, but that’s not the point. This new TikTok trend spurred from “Day in the Life” videos of childless women who live with and are financially supported by their partners, spending their time engaging in elaborate self–care and housekeeping. Overall, it’s a pretty unrealistic lifestyle, and might send an anti–independence message to an impressionable audience. However, it’s taught me a thing or two about how to incorporate alone time into my routine. Instead of seeing it as an act of avoidance, I view it as an act of self–care and a necessary break from reality. The stay–at–home girlfriend aesthetic is lovely—just practice it in small doses, please.

–Arielle Stanger, Assignments editor

Celebrity Private Chefs

This year, there’s more to your average TikTok cooking video. Step aside, Buzzfeed Kitchen; private chefs serving the most luxurious Hamptons elite are taking over the Internet. Meredith (aka Wishbone Kitchen) and Kara Fauerbach are two New York City–based chefs who document their experiences cooking for themselves and clients. These two food geniuses, plus other members of the TikTok private chef community, post food hauls, recipe videos, and a personal favorite, “A Day in My Life as a Private Chef” vlogs. This new group of content creators blurs the lines between work and play, expressing themselves through farm fresh produce and the occasional “eyeballing” of seasonings. 

Kate Ratner, Music editor

“Quiet” Videos

In this short–form genre on TikTok and Instagram, we have begun to see the moving textures of life’s most ethereal and eerie moments in a sea of “quiet” videos. From glimpses into the rushing calm of waves upon a moonlit beach, to low–light renderings of rain–drenched city streets, these videos’ depictions of everyday life moments—cast in darkness—communicate quieted feelings of longing, and yet respite. Richly paired with ambient, atmospheric, or emotive music, they ask the viewer to beg for liminality, to search for nothing. This genre has become all the more meaningful as Gen Z’s desire to wayfind and “get away” has increased with each passing day, made restless by the onslaught of technology and social media. These videos are devoid of the noise from pop culture, and over the course of the year, they’ve accomplished what an influencer can’t: compel viewers to become more in tune with themselves and their worlds. When Øneheart and reidenshi’s “snowfall” or Patrick Watson’s “Je te laisserai des mots” engulf the viewer in the nooks and crannies of our enchanting world moments, we begin to love and see the unusual artistry of the living images before us.

— Tyler Kliem, Design editor

Gentle-minions

There are many events that require a suit, collared shirt, or dress shoes. Weddings, graduations, fancy dinners, or fifteenth–round Wharton club interviews are prime examples. But movie theaters? Not so much, that is, at least until this year. 

If anyone watched Minions: The Rise of Gru this summer, chances are they were surrounded by teenagers dressed in formal attire (or perhaps were themselves dressed up). For any Gen Z Minions fans, the summer trend of #GentleMinions was as integral to the film’s experience as the film itself. Although the trend’s beginning has no precise origin, we can trace the TikTok users who began dressing up in dapper attire back to Minions’ main character and top villain: Gru. 

Minions: The Rise of Gru—a film comprised mainly of bathroom and fart jokes—is not exactly a cinematic masterpiece. However, the original film in the franchise, Despicable Me, is a hallmark for Gen Z, making this new addition to the franchise an “event movie” worthy of a lighthearted trend that’s silly and fun.

— Jacob Pollack, Film & TV editor

The Existential Foodie

Scrolling through instagram I come across a masterful pizza—never have I witnessed such a beauty. Red sauce crafted from fresh San Marzano tomatoes coats a fresh, pillowy white canvas, and clouds of mozzarella grace the bed of red. An immaculate crust is crisped to perfection—wait…what does the caption say? “Will this make me happy? No.” The stunning food photo paired with highly existential captions has become my new religion and I’ve been showing my commitment to the faith by solely curating my Instagram feed to show me these ridiculously perfect posts. Food does in fact make me think about how, say, if I have no idea what I want to eat for dinner then I’ll never be able to satiate my ever–increasing appetite for love and I will never settle down and be a lonely spinstress with 17 cats and exceptional knack for crocheting matching kitten hats. Alas, until I find a new therapist I will continue to self–medicate with my daily dose of foodie Instagram posts plated up with a healthy serving of existential dread. 

Natalia Castillo, Style editor

Solo Dates

In the hustle and bustle of everyday life, we tend to lose track of the simple pleasures: delving into a book on a park bench, sipping coffee and watching strangers, scowling like a tortured genius as you stare at a painting. This weekend, try taking yourself out to the museum, the bookstore, or the corner coffee shop. Everything is easier once you slow down and learn to enjoy your own company. I’m an expert: Before I leave the house, I like to sit in front of the mirror and gaze lovingly at my reflection. I have all the characteristics of a human being.

Irma Kiss Barath, Arts editor

The “It’s Corn!” Kid

With two words, seven–year–old Tariq won the hearts of millions of online fans: “It’s corn!”

In a now viral YouTube video featured on Julian Shapiro–Barnum’s internet show Recess Therapy this August, Tariq professed his love for the “big lump with knobs”—which he emphasizes does, in fact, have “the juice.”

The clip of the so–called “CEO of Corn” quickly caught fire. #CornKid has garnered over 475 million views on Tik Tok, while Tariq’s musings were even transformed into a remix that was stuck in the head of every teen and twenty–something on the app for months to follow. Mid-interview, Tariq asks Shapiro–Barnum to take a look at the cob that he’s currently munching on, saying “I can’t imagine a more beautiful thing.” And, you know what, neither can I.

Hannah Lonser, Features editor

Celebrity Podcasts

Like every other human being with a TikTok account, we are tired of seeing a middle–aged man, who reviews pizza and probably still lives with his mom, hang out on a weekly podcast with an underdeveloped Justin Bieber (baby era) and a TikTok influencer who parties at colleges on the weekends (I’m looking at you BFFs podcast hosts David Portnoy & CO). However, we cannot tell a lie—who doesn’t love to pipe some celebrity hot–goss into the eardrums in between classes. Just like our Monday morning runs to Pret, we love to complain and drag ’em through the mud but we wouldn’t know what to do without out our daily dose of celebrity podcasts.

— Natalia Castillo, Style editor 



Life Listens: New music from Mayday, Jungkook, Kelvin Tan and more


The American pop diva might have lost her bid to trademark the phrase “Queen of Christmas”, but who are we kidding? From now until Christmas, it is pretty much guaranteed that you will not be able to escape repeated playings of her ubiquitous 1994 holiday hit, All I Want For Christmas Is You.

Billboard brought back its Holiday 100 chart that tracks streaming, airplay and sales data of seasonal songs, and to no one’s surprise, Carey’s song went straight to No. 1.

It beat other festive favourites such as Brenda Lee’s Rockin’ Around The Christmas Tree (1958), Bobby Helms’ Jingle Bell Rock (1957) and Andy Williams’ It’s The Most Wonderful Time Of The Year (1963).

There is also a chance that it will reclaim the top spot on the mainstream pop charts, too. Right now, it is already at No. 25 on the Billboard singles charts, alongside contemporary tracks by the likes of Drake and Taylor Swift. – Eddino Abdul Hadi

Singapore Scene: Kelvin Tan – My Mother; My Soul and Off-Tangent Towards Mars – 30 Years Of All Broken Up And Dancing

Cassette Culture: November 2022 | Beats Per Minute


Cassette Culture is a monthly column dedicated to exploring the various artists that inhabit the expansive cassette market. Drawing from bands and labels around the world, this column will attempt to highlight some of the best artists and albums from this global community.


Mighty Theodore
Set Out in the Dark
(Icy Palms Records)

There’s been a lot of darkness in the life of DJ and producer Mighty Theodore, enough to fill volumes, and on his latest album, Set Out in the Dark, he translates those pervasive shadows into a collection of songs highlighting the need for perseverance as we traverse this darkened world. Featuring guest spots from Fly Anakin, Sean Born, J Scienide, Tesla’s Ghost, Brainorchestra, and a handful of others, the record draws inspiration from films like The Warriors and 80 Blocks from Tiffany’s – as well as the chaos surrounding the New York City blackouts in 1977 – to create a simmering brew of angst, anger, and frustration at countless lost opportunities and a desire to rise above the noise and violence that marked his youth.

These tracks move with an assured direction, aided by a confidence that pours from Mighty Theodore, and it ultimately speaks on larger issues of generational trauma, redemption, and the need to endure and to create something to pass on to those who come after. Hip-hop has rarely felt this personal and vital, and so unanchored from any specific point in the genre’s history. Set Out in the Dark is a revelation of intimate associations and volatile musical experimentation, and it stands as a reflective triumph for an artist who yearns to provide a spark of hope for those whose struggles threaten to overwhelm them.


Snowpoint Lounge
感情 EP
(Lightsurf Tapes)

The music of Snowpoint Lounge exists in an eternally gauzy ether which houses all sorts of “-wave” subgenres. For their 感情 EP, there is a tendency to wander through the vaporous avenues of jazzwave and to find meaning in the act of breaking down and reassembling various musical aesthetics. These songs have no real definition, but that isn’t to their detriment. The music purposefully shields its meanings behind glossy instrumentation and ethereal rhythms, buoyed by jazz percussion and a need to obliterate musical convention. Elements of new age and ambient ripple just beneath its surface, adding to the overall haze of mysterious intent that the album sustains.

These songs rely upon individual impressions, as each one functions without concrete borders or melodic specificity, offering landscapes through which we can vent our internal emotional conflicts without needing to adhere to a certain musical history. And it’s in this vague sense of association that allows it to operate from a truly limitless perspective, as we imprint our own revelations and epiphanies to its moments of weightless design and possibility. It’s the kind of album that requires multiple listens and reveals subtle variations and shades of emotional vulnerability with each plunge into its complicated depths.


BAL
Seafoam
(Furious Hooves)

North Carolina alt-rock duo BAL – founded by Jack Foster and Jordan Powers of Far-Less, House of Fools, Sarah Shook & the Disarmers – take the crunchy guitars and driving rhythms of bands like Failure and Local H and imbue them with their own distinct aesthetic, a mixture of riotous rock and roll and sci-fi ideology. Their debut album, Seafoam, finds them exploring a grungy, raucous sound that recalls the roar of modern rock radio from 1993-1996. Crammed in between science fiction terminology and melodies that get stuck in your head for days, the band offers up some of the chunkiest riffs this side of a Mudhoney record. The guitars are saturated beyond belief, and the drums are capable of pulverizing granite, but the band still focuses in on the underlying foundation of this thumping noise.

As much as you’re going to be twisting your neck out of place to keep up with its pummeling movements, you’re just as likely to be reveling in its ability to evoke both the past and the present without wallowing in the successes of its influences. They work within a familiar sound, but Foster and Powers have found a way to make these churning sounds feel brand new and vital, reinvigorating these alternative atmospheres and providing suitable support for Seafoam to grow and evolve into a mantle bearer for 90’s-era hard rock.


Fan Fiordo
Plaisirs Caméléons
(Underwater Computing)

Argentinian producer Fan Fiordo has long held an affection for the MPC-11 “Akira” soundcard and for the ways in which it can channel and express the complexities of the Korg M1 synthesizer. In fact, his latest album, Plaisirs Camé​l​é​ons (or Chameleonic Pleasures), is built around these pieces of hardware and software, evoking an eclectic and 80’s-leaning sound that utilizes an array of spry chimes, dramatic percussion, ethereal choirs, and all manner of oscillating tones. Skirting the edges of ambient and vaporwave, these songs dip into those often-formless genres while also maintaining something resembling a complicated skeletal structure.

There’s also something slightly hypnagogic about these songs, as they feel like soundtracks to those moments just before you fall asleep, all vague impressions and fuzzy emotional associations. But even here, when our subconscious is vying for control, you can still detect a subtle direction orchestrated by Fiordo, melodies that repeat and branch out at all angles and lead us under the veil of sleep. Veering between a wash of minimal circuits and lusher tides of sound which feel cushioned within their individual landscapes, Plaisirs Caméléons is a byzantine detour through influence and inspiration, through pop and house music, and through the countless possibilities of modern electronic music.


Sean Trelford
Care Home Party
(Hidden Bay Records)

It’s hard to believe that recording began on Sean Trelford’s debut album, Care Home Party, when he was only 14 years old. The Cambridge musician suffered heartache and lockdown (as we all did to varying degrees) in 2020, and in those months, he began the work of writing and recording the songs that would form the basis of his first record. These tales of angst, ache, and frustration are all writ large in shades of lo-fi bedroom pop and indie rock, telling a story of how he endured and processed this period of pain in his life. Between lilting piano revelries and emotional outbursts, Trelford adopts a genre-spanning perspective, one that allows him to cobble together an aesthetic fitting his needs and which avoids laying allegiance to any specific musical lineage.

“Never Got Anywhere” drifts by in a hazy blur of DIY pop motions while “How was I Supposed to Know?” is a little more dissonant in its reveal, with noisy percussion colliding with fuzzed-up guitar and dramatic keys. “Our Last Goodbye” closes out the album with gentle piano lines and vocals that sound as though they recorded six feet underground – and that’s all before it erupts into a ragtime-adjacent gallop before once quietly drifting back away from Trelford’s grasp. Driven by an urgent need to express incredible heartache while also adjusting to the turbulence of a pandemic-marked world, Care Home Party is his way of offering some measure of understanding for all those shouldering the weight of their own troubles.


永遠的悲傷思考
會​議​總​理
(Illuminated Paths)

Listening to , the ambient and experimental new album from 永遠的悲傷思考 (roughly translated to “sad reflections on forever”), you get a sense of infinite horizons stretching out beyond our comprehension. There is a miraculous expanse here, one that feels both alien and familiar, a slowly churning smear of incandescent tones and droning rhythms. Each track is a world to explore and obsess over, its musicality subject to our own perspectives and headspace. There is a greater sense of dynamism to this album than some of its electronic peers, and that’s due to the inherent flexibility of its author, a figure cloaked in anonymity whose ability to turn these variables sounds into something grand and emotionally involving seems supernatural in its execution.

As ever with vaporwave and ambient collections, much of what you get out of it correlates to what you bring to its cavernous recesses. With each bent note and wavy contour, you find yourself drawn further into landscapes from which there seems to be no escape. There’s precious little information about the release, but I believe it functions as a score to a film – and when viewed from that angle, it reminds us of the power of aural and visual collaborations. These songs wander and mesmerize as they unfold, but they also evoke odd images of ruin and stillness and rebirth, ultimately sculpting a beautiful ode to the instability and adaptation of life.


Blue Chesterfield & Pavel Kielberger
Songs for the Fall
(Self-released)

Czech musicians Blue Chesterfield (aka David Jirka) and Pavel Kielberger got together back in the fall of 2021 to record a series of songs pairing ambient rhythms with fluctuating guitar lines, creating a 6-track album called Songs for the Fall. Synths and programmed drums also whirl around in the mix, providing a bit of structure to the wispish strums and plucks. Ghostly vocals occasionally appear, working their way between the sounds, establishing a noticeable momentum even when the tempo of the music slows to a crawl. Whether it’s a slow burn or something more uniquely tangled, Jirka and Kielberger manage to inject a necessary vitality in their work, resulting in a noise alternately weightless and intricate.

From the extended ambient opening of “Fig. 20” to the clacking percussion and ethereal voices layered throughout closer “At Them”, Songs for the Fall presents a wide-ranging viewpoint on the intersection of a handful of genres. Recalling the avant approach of Harold Budd and Brian Eno and infusing each track with a nervous energy, they allow their influences to direct their methods without becoming burdened by the histories of those same musical antecedents. Riding a parallel tangent from the typical ambient mechanisms, Jirka and Kielberger have fashioned a collection that speaks to their shared affection for ambient movements and lithe fretwork.


Joakim Blattmann
Stegla
(Dinzu Artefacts)

Earlier this year, Oslo sound-artist Joakim Blattmann took part in an audio installation at the Buskerud Kunstsenter in Drammen, Norway. The exhibit presented a series of sounds drawn from trees and the insects which call them home. These experimental aural passages, collected as Stegla, were controlled in real time through bioelectric signals from the trees and further amplified through surface transducers attached at various points on each one. For the official release, these recordings have been combined and treated with different electronics and tape machines to highlight the innate variations hidden within this arboreal soundscape. Comprised of two parts, this album works as a snapshot of nature in motion, of textural modulations driven by the introduction of synthetic mechanisms into a world of absolute organic processes.

It would be generous to characterize this as music, but it does develop its own cadence, its own manner of speaking that resolves through melodic echoes from the trees and its host of various segmented residents. There are moments when you feel as if you are immersed in a dripping forest of earthen rubbish and overcast skies. Blattmann has concocted an ingenious way to pull these sounds from nature, to give voice to things which have never been allowed to talk in their own distinct ways. The best way to experience it to let it wash over you, allowing it to fully engulf your senses. And through this album, you begin to see a vast undiscovered world of sound surrounding us and the ways in which we can interact with and perceive these unseen landscapes.


Hamish Lang
Seasons
(Hush Hush Records)

During a particularly rough lockdown in Melbourne in 2021, sound artist Hamish Long was inspired to write the tracks which would become his latest album, Seasons. Living at home with his partner, who happens to be a florist, Long was constantly surrounded by various flowers and sought to create something that would similarly hum with its own life – something a bit less ambient than some of his earlier records. He wanted to tap into the vivid energies and vibrant hues of the plants that continually flooded his cloistered reality. Tapping into the amorphous shapes and angles of his previous releases, he imbues these tracks with their own evocative atmospheres, each a dynamic response and rebuttal to feelings of isolation and personal distancing.

It doesn’t completely break with his past work, but Seasons is a more fully developed realization of his ambient tendencies, packed with neo-classical impulses, IDM reactions, and subdued house soundscapes. There’s a radiance operating from within each song, unfolding into a sense of acceptance and understanding of the troubles Long is attempting to circumvent. From the loosely gathered piano tones in closer “Piano Sleep” to the gorgeous synths radiating from “Scarlett, he breaks down the basics of ambient music and plays around with momentum and stillness in ways that feel modern and innovative. Oddly gravitational and drawn out through vast regions of sound, these songs envelop their audience, reminding us that there are still many things left to discover in this inclusive blend of genres.


Gvantsa Narim
Gvantsa
(Cruel Nature Records)

Written and recorded in Tbilisi, Georgia between 2018-2022, Gvantsa Narim’s new album Gvantsa is an insightful look into the way she functions as an artist. Drawing inspiration from spirituality, esotericism, and Georgia polyphonic music, she crafts a droning brew of ambient repetition, lite-psych ramblings, and a bit of post-rock theatricality that adapts and shifts its perspective through a series of ghostly electronic experiments. Driven by dense emotions lurking just beneath its measured surface, the record allows Narim to explore a wide range of feeling while plumbing the depths of this seemingly bottomless rhythmic mixture. Steering away from resolutely darker territories, she embraces a lightness and an innate benevolence which so few artists investigate with any serious consideration.

From the gentle piano notes of opener “Gvantsa” to “Levitation”’s extended drones and the twinkling passages of “Shoretis Melody”, the album is in constant motion, never rushed or disoriented but moving froward at its own pace. The album’s cover is centered around a motif from Georgian avant-garde painter David Kakabadze, and the six tracks here similarly function as a means for unfiltered artistic interpretation – in this case, Narim’s otherworldly ability to transcend usual musical conventions and develop a sound that feels as if it’s feeding off of and responding directly to our own emotions. We come to know her a bit better through the glistening rhythms and wobbly melodies presented for our enjoyment, fostering an unseen bond with her as she slowly reveals details about herself via the experimental divinity of Gvantsa.


Fordmastiff
Counterfeit
(Municipal K7)

Brazilian musician Lucas Stamford (AKA Fordmastiff) wanted to explore the hidden worlds that temporarily revealed themselves during Rio de Janeiro’s iconic Carnival Parades celebration. And so, for this latest release, Counterfeit, he envisioned a soundtrack to a city haunted by shadowy figures and subterranean secrets, one where a magical realism usurped the drab hues of modern reality. “I’ve always felt the city has a kind of secret hidden reality in itself, as if beyond the visible, there was an invisible world striving to manifest through portals that become accessible between a certain part of the night and dawn, maybe around 3 to 6 am,” he explains. The songs here reflect his desire to uncover the bizarre life and movements of the city that only appear once a year.

Counterfeit takes on the form of a lo-fi crusade driven by Stamford’s need to reconcile the unseen with the material world around him. Elements of dance, ambient, and various other sub-genres of electronic music are broken down and reassembled into a cohesive perspective on how music shapes Rio and why this specific celebration briefly alters its mental and physical landscape. Synths swell and dissolve, opening the way for dizzying rhythms that occasionally include half-buried guitar lines and subaqueous vocals. The borders between what we can perceive and what we are subconsciously aware of are tenuous during this period.  “Carnival is a peculiar event where that separation is subverted,” he continues, “where normality can be suddenly disrupted, and the fantasy realm takes over the city symbolically.”


Golden Brown
Moonrise Orb Weaver
(Eiderdown Records)

Recording under the guise of Golden Brown, Colorado musician Stefan Beck conducts cosmic drone experiments that use off-kilter guitar lines, odd bits of percussion, and liquefied keys to tune into some higher plane of existence – actually, it’s quite earthen in its mannerisms but it’s one that most people have never observed before. On his latest collection, the 4-track Moonrise Orb Weaver, he balances kosmiche, drone-folk, and dense layers of psychedelic noise to curate an ode to Native Americans, specifically those of the Kaw, Kickapoo, and Osage nations. This is heard most clearly on “Hol-n-roc”, a track dedicated to Hole in the Rock in Baldwin City, Kansas, a natural geologic formation that currently sits on the ancestral lands of those peoples. There is even a bit of historical narration provided in the song to explain the story of this particular place.

The other tracks wind their way through various ambient landscapes littered with diverse percussive elements, field recordings, and Brown’s meticulous attention to detail. Rather than reveal everything all at once, he slowly allows these sounds to bloom and adapt to their surroundings, casting a hypnotic spell inviting you further into their vaguely swirling depths. It’s a gorgeous set of songs, and Brown expertly navigates both the narrative themes concerning indigenous communities and the droning soundscapes on which he lays out the echoes of his heart and mind. Once you become accustomed to his way of thinking and the way in which he assembles these sounds, the music takes on a far more personal outlook, one driven by internal conversations and the stark interplay of these minimal, yet meaningful, sonic layers.


Matt Evans
Soft Science
(Moon Glyph)

Brooklyn percussionist and composer Matt Evans enjoys creating miniature melodic opuses mixing jazz rhythms, electronic instabilities, and hazy ambient worldbuilding – all viewed and processed through an avant-garde lens. His work is far more dynamic and denser than typical ambient music, but you still get that same sense of musical opacity showcasing the genre’s innate transformational qualities. For his latest release, Soft Science, Evans has created a lively space where he’s able to revel in a sonic alchemy. Aided by guest spots from musicians Ka Baird and David Lackner, these songs explore aspects of sci-fi futurism through extraterrestrial synth strains and the clarity of cosmic ambience, calling to mind the atmosphere of some alien bar blasting Tom Waits while patrons stare into their rainbow-hued drinks.

Self-described as “Jambient Zone Poems”, these songs are frenetic and volatile in ways his earlier work never attempted, molding these percussion performance pieces to engulf an orchestra of Casio keyboards. But it’s not all forward momentum and galloping tempos; he pulls back at times to let a certain quiet fall over each track. This juxtaposition between the noisier elements of the music and these moments of calm help to keep Soft Science from ever feeling familiar or too keen to adhere to genre traditions, as gauzy and shapeless as they may be. This album examines the effects of a boundless creativity unbound by specific musical lineages and amplified through Evans’ own impressionistic perspectives and personal associations. Erratic, graceful, and beamed in from distant solar system, Soft Science is an intricate and intriguing glimpse into one man’s creative process and the emotional connections he makes with his own work.


KeepSleep
Thunderclouds
(No Problema Tapes)

The ambient work of Chinese musician KeepSleep possesses an innate tacticity, perfect for people craving those ASMR triggers. Burbling tones, aqueous melodies, and synths that stretch out for miles are all entangled together in a foggy collection of mostly instrumental passages designed to engage multiple senses and surround you in their omnipresent atmospheres. She was inspired to create her latest album, Thunderclouds, after watching Hideo Nakata’s Honogurai Mizu No Soko Kara, a psychological horror film that reveals the lengths a mother will go to in order to save her daughter from supernatural forces. The opening track, “Dizziness”, especially feels drawn from the watery depths of that movie’s headspace, incorporating dark textures, melancholy ambience, and liquified landscapes to evoke loss, sacrifice, and unnerving emotional instability.

Recorded in a 360-degree panorama, it often feels as though the music is pressing in on you from all directions, giving little room for escape or distance from its shadowy recesses. Occasionally, you’ll come across moments where unexpected sounds reveal themselves – specifically on “Mirror where she introduces bells, develops a slight percussive presence, and offers her own vocalizations in service to the track’s overall murky aesthetic. The album is well-titled as each song grows into a harbinger of things to come, even if the resolution of those events is left to our own imagination. Portentous but never without some small bit of lightness to balance out the weight of its movements, Thunderclouds is both a tactile workout for those wanting engagement on multiple sensory levels as well as an enveloping series of measured rhythmic disturbances just waiting for the right time to burst apart and swallow all in their path.


Faucet
Lament KSO
(Orb Tapes)

Richmond hardcore band Faucet operate within a world of distorted noise, punk rock freneticism, and volatile emotional volatility. It’s a glorious racket and one that deserves far more attention. Formed in 2018, the band shared their debut album, Bitter Insane Melting, in 2020, an unhinged brew of heavy punk and noise rock, and they were set to take their roar on the road before the pandemic stalled those plans. But from disappointment sprang inspiration, as the band took that time to begin working on their sophomore record, Lament KSO, and are now ready to unleash it upon the senses of their fans. Stitched together from group recordings and solo performances, is an artifact of how the band coped with and processed the frustrations, solitude, and distance that marked this period in their lives.

Building upon the ferocity and noisy eruptions of their debut, Lament KSO distills their brand of chaotic, punk-indebted hardcore machinations into its purest essence, aided by the howling voice of singer Laura Marina and the locked-in interplay of guitarist Landon Walker, bassist John Graham, and drummer Abdul Hakim Bilal. There’s no excess here, just a presentation of the brilliantly sinewy explosions the band has been refining since they first began performing. The guitars screech and shudder, serrated instruments being pulled apart while the music is pushed forward via pummeling percussive outbursts. Marina’s vocals barely hold it all together, but it’s this sense that it all might collapse completely which lends it such an urgency and demands that we pay attention to each and every one of its cathartic (and frankly, pissed off) revelations.


Pulse Emitter
Dusk
(Hausu Mountain)

Portland-based producer-synthesist Daryl Groetsch has a considerable back catalog of music, releasing around 80 albums over the last two decades. It can be daunting to approach, let alone explore with any sense of completeness, but when taken on their own, his albums are wholly immersive and imminently approachable. Comingling kosmiche, new age, and drone, he balances more austere electronic aesthetics with punchy synth rhythms, creating a sound as dynamic as it is intuitive. On his latest album, Dusk, he opts for something a bit more grandiose at times, more attuned to cosmic change and the ways in which various empyrean occurrences allow us to reflect on the significance of things on Earth. Alternately focused on widescreen experiences and those shrunk down to something a bit more internalized, Groetsch uses these songs as a vehicle for personal meditation as well as for expressions of much larger creative insights.

The use of droning tones, flexible synths, and warbling melodies all act as siren calls to draw us further into the album’s dense patchwork of noisy substructure. Taking cure from various terrestrial climes, tracks like “Snow Diamonds” and “Temple in the Mountains” use natural formations and seasons to act as sources of musical adaptation. Exploring the cycles of life, the music becomes a statement on renewal and the act of creation. As each track rushes forward in its performance before drifting back to some distance, you get a sense of the scale Groetsch is working to present. Dusk is a masterwork of synthetic reconstruction, a bridge between our ideas of organic origins and the artifice with which we so often surround ourselves. He leaves no doubt which is preferred, and which offers the greatest resource for sustained artistic expression.


Earth Speaks
at Garden of the Gods
(Home & Garden)

Recorded by Matthew Himes (under the moniker of Earth Speaks) at Garden of the Gods Wilderness in Shawnee National Forest, which is located in southern Illinois, at Garden of the Gods is a meditation tape filled with birdsong, the hum of unidentified insects, and the wind as it passes through the treetops above. There’s no grand concept to the tape, just a 30-minute visit to a place where the worries and struggles of life can be loosened for just a bit. It’s fascinating how these common sounds begin to take the shape of a structured rhythm in your head; it functions as a sort of melodic reassessment of the everyday noises we often take for granted. As each sound appears and retreats, the world it presents becomes more fully realized, resulting in a sonic landscape where this push for relaxation and internal readjustment allows us to focus on specific sounds while blocking all out the unnecessary things surrounding us.

And while Himes isn’t trying to reinvent the wheel here, this act of “musical conservation” as he describes it is nothing short of revelatory. By allowing the natural world to exist as it has for countless centuries and using this tape as a vehicle for its majesty, he’s accomplished a truly inspirational feat: he has created an aural artefact of significance for future generations – never mind the peace of mind it provides for those of us listening now. It becomes a call to forgo false ambitions and to concentrate on what truly makes you happy and content in your life. The simple things are often the most meaningful, and through this collection of natural sounds, we begin to realize that those things are much closer than we might have thought.


More Eaze
Strawberry Season
(Leaving Records)

Strawberry Season, the latest album from Austin musician More Eaze, is all about affirmation in the face of terrible circumstance. And while the last few years have been a low point in many of our lives, with the pandemic and other health concerns battling for attention among reports of war and the fragility of many social institutions, multi-instrumentalist Mari Maurice has is taking time to reflect upon the positives that can, with a little encouragement, be seen all around us. This record veers between ambient pop and experimental electronic aesthetics, culling what she feels is unnecessary and assembling the rest into a vivid and buoyant portrait of joy amidst personal hardship. These songs are strewn with circuital ephemera, stringed flourishes, and moments when the monotony real life intrudes upon our experience with the music – but even that is part of the album’s charm and relatability, offering the world as it is, complete with all the daily minutiae we engage with and process.

When the music starts to get slightly noisy, which can happen at times, there is always a restraint shown, a feeling that she doesn’t want the dissonance to significantly shape the tones on display. As its name suggest, Strawberry Season is all about the sweetness located all around us, suggesting a balance between the apprehension we all feel and something more optimistic is manageable, though we have to work at maintaining that equilibrium as the world continually sets obstacles in our path. We are offered a reprieve if only for a short time, a series of moments designed to help us adapt our thinking and to align our thoughts with brighter recollections and loving memories held close. We may not know when any sense of normalcy will return o our lives, but this record attempts to create a buffer between us and the harsher elements we face, driven by a rhythmic tenacity and electronic innovation that leaves your jaw on the floor and your heart on your sleeve.


Craig Salt Peters
Stuck in the Present Tense
(Lost Sound Tapes)

Sometimes things just don’t work out the way you plan. Just look at Seattle indie rock musician Craig Peters and his latest album, Stuck in the Present Tense, a collection of songs he wrote around eight years ago but which are only now coming together for release. Originally aided by guitarist Jacob Jaffe, bassist John Broback, and drummer-keyboardist Zach Burba, the band eventually fell apart as each person moved away and pursued other interests. But in the winter of 2021, they regrouped in Seattle and worked their way back through these songs, recording them at the Unknown in Anacortes. Relearning these songs felt like skimming through an old photo album, remembering the past but feeling as though you’ve likely grown past whatever you needed at that time. These songs speak to the past, to nostalgia and ache long since buried but still affecting the present in unpredictable ways.

And though they don’t quite have the emotional resonance they did when Peters first penned them, they still possess a complex perspective on memory, ambition, and dreams – looking at these themes as both sanctuary and devourers of time. From the raucous fretwork of opener “Forecast” to the measured grooves of the title track, this record ambles and stumbles and occasionally stomps as it finds ways to make familiar sounds feel refreshingly innovative and more than the end result of an amalgam of influences. Often recalling the jaunty indie-pop of bands affiliated with the Elephant 6 Collective, but with a more muscular foundation underpinning some tracks, Stuck in the Present Tense is an examination of existential drama as seen through the blur of ordinary experiences, and it’s this insight into everyday occurrences which makes it feel so uniquely attuned to Peters’ own emotional history.


Nakayama Munetoshi
Court
(Muzan Editions)

Composed entirely from modular synths, Buchla Easel, and a Yamaha DX7, the latest collection of minimal electronics from Japanese artist Nakayama Munetoshi feels skeletal, crystalline, occasionally kaleidoscopic. It’s also impossible to ignore once you’ve observed its hypnotic rhythms. Despite its relative austerity, it doesn’t feel slight or underweight; granted, the tones are measured and slide by without much in the way of precise direction, but Munetoshi infuses these sounds with an unexpected density and the clattering of interior clockwork. There are select moments when the tracks take on an aquatic appearance, with dripping, clicking instrumentation recall the slow ebb and flow of circular tidal movements. You lose all sense of time here, as the music blurs the boundaries between the world we’re hearing and the one in which we physically exist.

Some songs such as “Vision” and “Carnival” stand out for their (relative) momentum and noisy structures. Set against the softer, more subdued ones like opener “Admission” and “Clock”, those tracks act as counterweights to produce a sonic equilibrium grounding the album in a wide variety of timbres and tempos. As each begins their work to stretch and billow and display a unique fluidity, we come to realize that Court is actually more defined that at first glance. It’s true that you could spend all day trying to disperse the gauzy atmospheres here in search of some concrete theme, but that continual pursuit of definition is what elevates these sounds above the usual flutter and airy nature of most ambient music in general. Munetoshi revels in vagaries, letting the music act as a transitory device for our own analyses, providing a solid foundation for the interpretive acts we perform as each song is experienced and processed.


Slowfoam & Neilll
kindly
(Lillerne Tapes)

There’s more lurking beneath the surface of kindly, the new collaborative album from Berlin musician Madelyn Byrd’s Slowfoam moniker and Los Angeles artist Tim Bomberg’s Neilll project, than you might realize upon first listen. They’ve created a version of ambient music that it far more dynamic than is usual, balancing tones that are warm and inviting with those that are prickly and keep their distance. There is a playfulness to the collection that highlights their innate musical affections, offering bright avant-garde rhythms that stand in contrast to more serrated noises welling up from the depths of their collective creativities. There are times when the sounds are as dense as granite, allowing little to no light to pass through its obfuscating perspectives, but then you have periods of lighter atmospheric disturbances, moments when the shadows retreat and give room for warped melodies to unravel into distorted reflections of experimental pop and ambient euphoria.

From the opening warbles and wobbles of “Cyberpoetics”, the record never sets specific expectations, nor does it explicitly state its intentions, opting to leave it all rather vague and mischievous. The wide-open areas and hissing echoes of “Playing with Sublimity” run counterpoint to the noir-ish clangor of “For the Tree Outside My Window (is that a saxophone?) – and it all works to further the disparate approaches that Byrd and Bomberg take to corral these often-uncharacterizable sounds. Plinking notes balance alongside the shake of spacey synths within a series of blurry ambient environments. With each progressive plunge into these crackly and heartfelt experiments, you become more aware of the complicated emotional framework they both tap into in their pursuit of a broader rhythmic, and arrhythmic, connection with their audience, and kindly becomes less a private conversation between two musician and more a roundtable where all perspectives are allowed to be expressed and explored.


Maharadja Sweets 
Whatever Dreamy Void
Oxtail Recordings

Brooklyn musician Richard Exelbert develops a mysterious presence by effortlessly divining a mixture of electronic experimentation, bedroom pop blurriness, and heart-on-sleeve folk ruminations which speaks to his influences as well as to the importance of reconfiguring those sounds and allowing them to have the freedom to wander under their own impulses. And Whatever Dreamy Void is a perfect example of how he manages to blend these different aesthetics without losing their rhythmic individuality. It’s nine tracks of lo-fi disintegration, and it’s a privilege to watch as he dismantles each while maintaining a series of cohesive atmospheres in which they can flourish. They make their way from ramshackle folk-pop confessions to ambient-leaning electronic experiments, creating a smeared landscape of musical hues and melodies built from stray thoughts and wondrous revelation.

There’s a sense of creative abandon here, as if Exelbert simply allowed his instincts to run wild and emerged with this collection that spoke to his own inspirations while also feeling completely unburdened by any specific musical histories. He roots around in some familiar sounds, but the execution possesses an off-kilter genius that marks it someone who finds purpose in the act of rearrangement and adaptation. It’s an apt title as well, as these songs often seem to be whirling around in some hazy formless space, ready to erupt at any moment but keeping their plans close to their hearts. There are times when it sounds as if we’re hearing them through some ghostly barrier, an incorporeal demarcation that separates their world from our own. It can be disorienting trying to parse out meaning and intent, but it also feels refreshing to not have everything spelled out in big bold sentiments. Whatever Dreamy Void is a testament to what can be conveyed without strict emotional alignments and driven by a desire to offer an impressionistic canvas for intimate observation rather than dwelling on blunt force realizations.


Andrew Oda
Back to the Body
(Mappa)

Back to the Body, the latest album from electroacoustic artist Andrew Oda, is all about processing trauma and the ways in which we move past it to find some sense of resolution and healing. Via a series of ambient soundscapes, he takes us through the stages in which we address and engage with feelings of hurt, anger, and acceptance – and in these wordless musical offerings, we’re given room to explore these emotions without fear of judgment or reprisal. Oda has said that these songs are about reaching a place “where true intimacy can happen…a place of forgiveness of self and other”, and it becomes evident quite early on that he has created a record which allows us to do just that. As easy as it is to become lost among the glistening synths, piano, strings, and guitar strewn about these tracks, you do get a sense that he keeps us on a path toward solace and comfort, and never wavers in his belief that light can always break apart the darkness.

Throughout the album, Oda presents moments when light washes over you, the first rays of a new day, the recognition of forward movement. The trauma we all deal with shapes us in ways we might not realize, and this is a central theme behind Back to the Body. Rather than allowing the scars and emotional devastation to define us going forward, the album suggests that we can turn the experience of confronting these wounds into a crucial part of our mental health recuperation. Dissonance does occur on occasion, such as on closer “i forgive you, i forgive me/trust that we are held(womb)”, but even then, it eventually shifts to a more spry, danceable shuffle. The overarching narrative built into these songs is presented without much context, giving us all ample space to approach and connect at our own pace, existing within this landscape of swelling rhythms and atypical melodies while we try to sort through our internal and external struggles.


Eugene the Oceanographer
The Maze
(Biloxata)

Under the alias of Eugene the Oceanographer, musician Matthew O’Toole has long been an advocate of cross-genre embellishment, finding different ways to connect discordant sounds in an attempt to reveal the common roots between these disparate musical lineages. Blending ambient, plunderphonics, cold wave, experimental, and punk, he’s developed an aesthetic as unusual as it is revelatory. On his latest release, The Maze, he turns his eye and ear toward the shared histories of Ireland and Ukraine, two seemingly unrelated countries, and focuses in on themes of occupation, revolution, and famine. From the opening bells and plinking synths of “You are Now Entering Free Derry” to the chaotic electronics of closer “Перм-36”, the album revels in its ability to lift elements from practically anywhere and to compile them in such a way as to reveal hidden nuance and relevance where none existed before.

Recorded in Kyiv, the album features guest appearances from Maja Nikolic, Gentils Floquets, and Cult Party, showing that O’Toole is just as happy to have collaborators as he is to concentrate on his own unique musical perspective. There’s an underlying tension to these songs, a feeling of unresolved hostility and hints that some things can’t be fixed, just remembered. Between grimy dancefloor arrythmia and lo-fi punk clangor, The Maze, never loses its own drive toward genre deconstruction and adaptation. Even with all of its shifting musical influences, the record never feels disjointed, only anxious to draw in more sound sand pull them apart at the seams. It’s eager to see what can be made from the detritus of noise and a desire to use these various sounds as connective tissue between two geographies so different in many ways and yet so similar in others. The end result is an album of contrasts and resemblance, an ode to human relationships and the ways in which he can destroy those personal networks and how we might also repair them.


How a Marine Biologist Remixed Whalesong


In 1971, in the journal Science, two scientists, Roger S. Payne and Scott McVay, published a paper titled “Songs of Humpback Whales.” They began by noting how “during the quiet age of sail, under conditions of exceptional calm and proximity, whalers were occasionally able to hear the sounds of whales transmitted faintly through a wooden hull.” In the modern era, we could listen in new ways: Payne and McVay worked with underwater recordings of humpback-whale vocalizations from a naval researcher who, as the story goes, was listening for Soviet submarines off Bermuda. They analyzed the recordings, and Payne’s own, and found structure and repetition in the sounds, documenting a sonic hierarchy: units, phrases, and themes, which combined into what they called song.

They chose the term advisedly, drawing, they said, on a 1963 book titled “Acoustic Behavior of Animals,” which identified a song as “a series of notes, generally of more than one type, uttered in succession and so related as to form a recognizable sequence or pattern in time.” And there was an intuitive sense in which the whales’ vocalizations sounded songlike. The previous year, Payne had published an album of whale recordings called “Songs of the Humpback Whale”; it sold more than a hundred thousand copies, and became a soundtrack for the conservation movement. Artists, including Kate Bush, Judy Collins, and the cast of “The Partridge Family,” integrated whalesong into their work; in 1970, the composer Alan Hovhaness combined whale and orchestra for a piece called “And God Created Great Whales.” In 2014, a group of ambient composers and artists released a compilation album called “POD TUNE.” Whales’ otherworldly emissions are now literally otherworldly: in 1977, NASA included whalesong recordings on records it attached to its Voyager spacecraft.

Sara Niksic, a biologist and musician from Croatia, is a recent participant in the genre. In 2019, she self-released an album of electronic music titled “Canticum Megapterae – Song of the Humpback Whale.” (Humpback whales belong to the genus Megaptera.) The album contains a track she produced, alongside songs by seven other artists, and combines psychedelic trance and ambient tones—the building blocks of a genre called psybient—with whalesong. Niksic’s record evokes nineteen-nineties classics such as “The Orb’s Adventures Beyond the Ultraworld”; its synthesized clicks, sweeps, and throbs would sound good in the chill-out room at a rave. But the whales add another dimension. Integrated into the tracks, the vocalizations sound at times soothing or playful, and occasionally experimental—sound for sound’s sake. Listening, you wonder about the minds behind them.

Earlier this year, Niksic released “Canticum Megapterae II – The Evolution,” a remix album on which a new group of electronic musicians interprets the track she made for the first volume. The new album, she told me, connects to her own research, which focusses on how whale songs shift from year to year. “Basically, whales remix each other’s songs,” she said. “So I thought this concept of remixes in our music would be perfect to communicate this research about the evolution of whalesong.”

Niksic was born in Split, Croatia, on the country’s coast, across the Adriatic Sea from Italy. She could see the water from her window, and learned to swim before she could walk. “I was always curious about the ocean and all the creatures living down there,” she told me. “The more I learned about animal behavior, the more I got interested in marine mammals, because there is social learning, vocal communication, and culture.” She earned a bachelor’s degree in biology and a master’s degree in marine biology at the University of Zagreb, and went on to work with groups that study whales and dolphins in Australia, New Zealand, and elsewhere; eventually she returned to Split to work at the Mediterranean Institute for Life Sciences, as part of a team called ARTScience, finding ways to creatively communicate the institute’s research.

Humpback whales seem to produce sound largely with their vocal folds. Songs typically range in length from ten minutes to half an hour. All humpbacks make vocalizations, but only males sing; the songs are most commonly thought to act as mating displays, possibly like the bowers constructed by male bowerbirds or the dances performed by male peacock jumping spiders. Maybe, among humpbacks, “the best singer gets the ladies,” Niksic told me. Songs evolve over time, and differ across populations. This slow evolution can be occasionally interrupted by a kind of revolution, in which one population completely adopts the songs of another in a period of just a couple of years or less. “It’s like a new hit song,” Niksic said—a wide and rapid spread of creative content that’s “unparalleled in the animal kingdom, excepting humans.” She went on, “There’s so many similarities between their culture and ours.”

Niksic started working at music festivals after graduate school. When she wasn’t in the field, she was bartending and building stages. She grew curious about producing her own electronic music. As a kid, she’d studied piano and music theory, but she didn’t know how to use software and synthesizers. After spending some time in 2016 helping to map the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, she took courses on electronic-music production. “Most of the time, I was dealing with sound, whether through bioacoustics or music festivals,” she recalled. “So then I thought, I want to try to combine these two things.”

At first, Niksic planned to produce the entire album herself. This proved too ambitious a goal, so she enlisted musicians she’d met on the festival circuit, sending them a high-quality, twenty-minute whalesong recording that she’d analyzed for her master’s thesis. (Her adviser had gathered the recording in the Caribbean.) When Niksic put “Canticum Megapterae” online, under the stage name Inner Child, it quickly earned recognition from both music and science communities. Readers of the Web site psybient.org—a “daily source of chillout, psychill, psybient, ambient, psydub, dub, psystep, downtempo, world, ethnic, idm, meditative and other mind expanding music and events”—voted it compilation of the year. She won an Innovation Award from the University of St. Andrews, in Scotland, spoke at the World Marine Mammal Science Conference, in Barcelona, and appeared at the Boom Festival, in Portugal. Her own track, “Theme 7,” built a downtempo pattern around a long excerpt from the whale recording. Weaving around the snares, kicks, and low, grinding bass line, the whale sounds mournful, almost plaintive, and never strays far from the center of attention.

I asked Niksic if she thinks about what a whale might be thinking when she listens to or composes with whalesong. “That’s a tricky one,” she said. “Who knows what the whale might be thinking? I’m focussing on sound. Their songs are really so musical. And the frequency range they use is crazy. And the richness of the sounds—it’s so intense. And it’s immersive—when I listen to it, I kind of transport into the ocean.”

For the new remix album, Niksic sent “Theme 7” to different artists. One was particularly determined to accurately represent the whale songs. “He didn’t want any whales to think, What the hell is? What the hell did he do with our song?” Niksic said. Perhaps making an electronic whalesong album would be a kind of interspecies cultural appropriation. She was thrilled when Electrypnose, one of her favorite musicians, remixed her track; when she played the remix for the first time, it was “just the most magical night ever,” Niksic said. She was lying on her terrace by the sea, listening to the song, when dolphins swam near. “I’m not kidding you—I think they heard it,” she said. “They were hanging there for the entire night. I didn’t go to sleep. There was a full moon. I was staring at the sky, listening to dolphins breathing, and to this remix, and whales. So even, like, dolphins loved it, not only humans.”

Making the albums has increased Niksic’s own curiosity about whalesong. “I started thinking of more and more questions,” she told me. “I probably wouldn’t think of all of them if I were only doing research.” Are there more innovative or creative whales, just as there are more innovative or creative humans? Are some whales eager to introduce changes into the songs they learn, whereas others happily stick with the originals? (“In our own culture, some artists are pioneers of new musical genres, and then others follow them,” she noted.) Do whales collaborate creatively? Does age play a role in innovation?

Whale songs have become a familiar part of our own culture. But there’s still much that’s mysterious about them, including what drives change and imitation, and how various features influence potential mates and competitors. “There’s a whole other world below the waves that we don’t know anything about,” Niksic said. “There are other cultures that are much more ancient than our human culture. Whales were here long before humans, and they were singing long before we came. I think they are way more developed than us in some ways.” The music on her albums teaches us, among other things, just how much we have to learn. 

Watch the horror-inspired video for Bury Tomorrow’s new…


Following the release of last month’s Abandon Us, Bury Tomorrow
have just shared another single from their upcoming album The Seventh Sun.

This one goes by the very metal name of Boltcutter, with guitarist
Kristan Dawson enthusing that, “From the second we put the finishing touches to
Boltcutter, we knew it had to be a single. Whilst it is a fundamental Bury
Tomorrow track, being both loud and heavy, it also emphasises the new era of
our band.

“Specifically, it highlights influences we haven’t necessarily
channelled through Bury Tomorrow before, and it’s a pleasure to continue to
expand the possibilities of our music. It began its existence through Tom
crafting the foundations, with an ambient and electronic soundscape, before the
rest of the band provided their usual expertise.”

Of the Matt Sears-directed video, Kristan adds: “Continuing the
visual narrative with Matt was an absolute joy, and thanks to his knowledge of
horror and unique filmmaking skills, Boltcutter delivers the perfect sequel.
It’s another video with a visceral and confronting nature, and we feel it
perfectly represents the song and its themes.”

Check it out:

Andy Clockwise on Five Artists Who Inspired His Upcoming Four-Volume Album


Andy Clockwise on Five Artists Who Inspired His Upcoming Four-Volume Album

Sydney via Los Angeles musician Andy Clockwise is preparing to release the first volume in his four-part album suite, War Stories. Clockwise wrote, produced, and played all of the instruments on the 36-track release, which is expected in 2023.

So far we’ve heard the singles ‘The Big Think’ and ‘Gonna Get It (Just What We Deserve)’, with Clockwise’s next single, ‘The Lucky Ones’ feat. Rosa Pullman, due on Friday, 2nd December. Here, Andy Clockwise names five artists and personalities who influenced his recent singles and the forthcoming four-volume record.

Andy Clockwise – ‘The Big Think’

Malcolm McLaren

Andy Clockwise: ‘Madame Butterfly’ – this song and its video is everything I would ever want to make. Not only was Malcolm McLaren a supposed bastard who ripped off the Sex Pistols and Vivienne Westwood, but he also released almost anthropological albums that explained what cool stuff was going on in New York City and in true imperialist English fashion, put them out under his own name.

This is a gem though, a song that mixes opera with LinnDrum and Beat Street style R&B to explain the opera itself and show the world haute couture. Video is in my top five.

My dad’s mate

Andy: Growing up in the late 80s and 90s, my dad had this mate who had gold-capped teeth and wore a chain, dressed immaculately like Gordon Gekko in Wall Street, and carried a mobile car phone that was the size of the Harbour Bridge. He played me Dire Straits for the first time.

This charmer seemed to have the most sophisticated but complicated and sleazy life going around in the suburbs of Sydney and everything including the simple nature of those times influenced these songs.

Lijadu Sisters

Andy: Two Nigerian sisters from the 70s who made incredible records singing together out of that whole Nigerian funky but deep thing. The Lijadu Sisters sound so beautiful together and the song ‘Come on Home’ is about pleading for someone to come home. How can you go wrong with that?

Mark Knopfler

Andy: Mark Knopfler’s Local Hero is a soundtrack for a revered 80s film about a corporate takeover in Scotland. It’s the first CD cover I ever remember. It’s mostly ambient synth music, a couple of Celtic guitar pieces, some cheesy stuff, and then some bangers with Gerry Rafferty. Some of it is skippable, but when I started the album I could not stop listening.

A supergroup I made up consisting of Chic, late-’80s Dylan, The Clash and The Cure

Andy: Combine Empire Burlesque-era Dylan lyrics (‘Tight Connection To My Heart’), with The Cure guitars and melody (‘In Between Days’), the vitriol of Joe Strummer (‘This is Radio Clash’) and the unending timeless dancing of Chic (‘Thinking Of You’).

Further Reading

The Cure To Release Expanded Version Of ‘Wish’ For 30th Anniversary

Sex Pistols’ Steve Jones Admits He Prefers Steely Dan To Punk Rock

“Hand Signed” Copies of Bob Dylan’s New Book Revealed to be Auto-Forgeries

The post Andy Clockwise on Five Artists Who Inspired His Upcoming Four-Volume Album appeared first on Music Feeds.



10 You Can’t Miss Today {2022}


Missing out on Black Friday deals is a thing of the past. Not only do deals last a couple of days after Friday, but they continue (and get better) the following Monday. Cyber Monday deals range from 10-80% off gear and accessories. Don’t miss out today. Here are 10 of our favorite Cyber Monday music deals.

1. Shure SM57 Dynamic Instrument Microphone

Now thru December 4 shop Guitar Center for Cyber Monday deals. Take advantage of 30% off gear. Guitar Center notes that most Cyber Monday deals ship for free! While you shop early, be sure to consider buying microphones for the new year. Save 10% on a Shure SM57 mic. It’s the ultimate instrument microphone for percussion — it isolates drums and reduces background noise for clean audio and rich vocal pickup. A drummer gave it a 5-star rating and wrote, “We were very glad, especially with comments after the gig such as, “the drums sounded very professional.” I highly recommend these to anybody because not only are they great for live gigs, but also when recording. We just finished recording our demo and can’t believe how well the drums sound.” Get it for under $90 today.

2. Victrola Retro Record Player

Vinyl lovers, rejoice. Here’s a perfect retro-style record player you’re bound to fall in love with. Seriously, if your vinyl collection is your pride and joy you have to have a record player that’s worth showing off as well. It features a 3-speed turntable and also works as a radio and Bluetooth speaker. You can also use a USB to play music from non-Bluetooth devices. Choose from 4 different colors. This record player is normally $150 but is on sale for $108.88.

3. Roland V-Drums TD-1DMK Drum Set

This Roland V-Drum Set is normally $700 but is on sale for $549.99. I bought this set recently, and wow that’s a steal. You still have to buy a kick pedal and a throne, so what you save on Cyber Monday can go towards more gear to complete the set. And of course, you can bet you’ll find a pedal and throne on sale, too. This kit is great for beginners, especially adults. With 15 preset drum kits and a built-in metronome, you’re bound for improvement. No delayed hits and true-to-life drumming will make practice fun. Great for a realistic drumming experience, it doesn’t get better than Roland.

4. Apple AirPods Pro with MagSafe Charging Case (1st Generation)

These Airpods are worth checking out. If you’re looking for a pair of affordable quality earphones, this is where to start. The AirPods Pro offers noise cancellation, and transparency mode, and is sweat and water-resistant. These are perfect for everyday use and working out. Enjoy more than 24 hours of total listening time. Get them for under $160 for a limited time.

5. Topvision Portable Bluetooth Speaker

Topvision projectors and speakers get lots of love from music and movie enthusiasts, especially this portable Bluetooth speaker. The speaker is 100% waterproof, making it a great speaker for outdoor fun (camping, beach days, and more). Charging and pairing it to your devices is simple. With a Bluetooth 5.0 connection, you’ll have it paired to devices within 50 feet in no time. As for charging, it uses a USB-C port, so ditch the batteries. It offers 12 hours of total playtime and has terrific 360-degree sound. It’s under $22 this week.

6. Vekkia Sheet Music Stand with Carrying Bag

A stand for your sheet music is a must, especially if you’re a beginner learning how to read music. They’re also great to keep around in music studios for songwriting and students. Save over $6 on this stand that’s adjustable from 32 to 56 inches. It’ll last a long time, thanks to anti-rust technology. It also comes with a carrying bag to keep it safe as you travel to and from home, school, or band practice. It’s super easy to assemble and one fan said it’s a great pick for outdoor gigs. Get it today for $33.59.

7. Evans RealFeel Practice Pad 6 in.

Consider this 6-inch practice pad for practice on the go. Some may prefer the 12-inch pad, but if you’re looking for a practice pad under $20, this is the best bang for the buck. The Evans RealFeel practice pad has a great rebound. It’s truly a great gift for drummers of all levels. Perfecting wrist and finger control here will make all the difference when it’s time to get on the kit.

8. Ernie Ball Earthwood Medium Light Phosphor Bronze Acoustic Guitar Strings 4 pack

Ernie Ball is everything and more when it comes to quality guitar strings. They’re loved by some of your heroes and you’ll soon see why. These strings are warm and have excellent projection. So, dig up that guitar from the storage and put some new strings on it. Grab a 4-pack today for $21.99.

9. All-New Echo Dot (5th Gen, 2022 release) | Smart speaker with Alexa | Charcoal

If you’re looking for a quality audio experience via smart speaker, you can’t go wrong with Amazon’s Echo Dot. You can use Alexa for lots of help, but nothing beats asking your new smart speaker to play music as you clean, cook, or lounge in bed. Clear vocals and a deep bass throughout the house are a simple pleasure for all music lovers. Get it for $24.99.

10. Shure SE215-CL Sound Isolating Earphones – Clear

It may be tempting to drop an entire paycheck on a pair of custom IEMs, but before you do that, consider an affordable pair of isolating earphones. Shure has a pair on sale for under $100 today. You’ll be able to enjoy your music and tune out ambient noise. Guitarists and drummers love them, plus, you can also wear them while you work out or run errands.

**All products are independently chosen by American Songwriter editors. Purchases you make through our links may earn us a commission.



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Syd Hartha teams up with Kiyo on R&B-tinged single ‘3:15’


Filipino singer-songwriter Syd Hartha has shared an R&B-tinged single ‘3:15’ featuring rapper Kiyo.

The new track dropped on major streaming platforms via Sony Music Philippines on Friday (November 25). It will be included in an upcoming EP by Hartha, which will be produced by Brian Lotho. Featuring Hartha’s signature soft vocals alongside soulful acoustic guitar lines and laid-back percussion, ‘3:15’ follows last October’s ‘kung nag-aatibili’, which saw Hartha returning to her stripped-down folk-pop roots.

Meanwhile, the visual for the track, produced by Sony Music and production house Lunchbox Presents, sees both artists singing separately in retro-styled and intimate household settings while reflecting the song’s lovelorn mood.

Watch the music video below.

According to a press release, the track was inspired by the reflective moods stirred in early hours of the morning. The track’s Filipino lyrics touch on being in the perpetual embrace of a significant other.

Syd Hartha’s latest single arrives nearly a month after she teamed up with former Munimuni frontman Toneejay for the latter’s new single ‘Bawat Piyesa (Secret Verse version)’. They reimagined the Munimuni fan-favourite as an ambient track, assisted by Ang Bandang Shirley singer-songwriter and producer Ean Aguila.

Meanwhile, Kiyo shared his latest single ‘Harana sa Sarili’ earlier this month, a song taken from his upcoming debut album.

The 20-year-old rapper had said the forthcoming album will contain 15 tracks including collaborations with fellow musicians YZKK, Shortone, Space Moses, and more.





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