Weyes Blood is the voice of her generation, Nickelback sound heinous – the week’s albums


Weyes Blood, And in the Darkness, Hearts Aglow ★★★★★

Natalie Mering, who goes by the name Weyes Blood, laments that “we have all become strangers, even to ourselves” on the opening track of her beautiful new album, And in the Darkness, Hearts Aglow – a woozy daydream from a hauntingly romantic balladeer whose music offers comfort to the loneliest souls.

At 34, with songs about solitude, the natural world, the power and fragility of women and how technology has shaped modern romance, Mering become a critical darling with a cult following. Sitting somewhere between Joan Baez’s 70s social justice-fuelled folk and Olivia Newton-John’s hyper-feminine 80s pop, Mering’s exquisite, timeless voice and hymnal harmonies hold a nostalgic appeal that unites the Spotify generation and their parents alike. She describes herself as a “nostalgic futurist”.

Mering grew up within a staunchly Pentecostal Christian family in Santa Monica and began making music as a teen – adopting the moniker Wise Blood in reference to Flannery O’Connor’s 1952 collection of stories. She may not have observed the strict morality of her God-fearing parents, both musicians, but her voice and compositions pay homage to the songs she heard in childhood: gospel and hymnal paeans.

Since then, Mering’s compositions have leaned into glorious baroque madrigals, tenderly layering melodies and harmonies as if she were adorning a human body with pearls, coats and scarves.

In the Darkness, Heart Aglow is Mering’s fifth album, and the second in a trilogy dedicated to the fallout from climate change (beginning with 2019 album Titanic Rising). Her lyrics pine for the natural world, with Mering believing that our collective destruction of forests, land and sources of water have fostered division and alienation. Titanic Rising was met with rave reviews, but this record – which spans steely indie-rock and strummed country ballads – might just be her magnum opus.

On the epic, multi-layered harmonies of Children of the Empire, she reimagines a Beach Boys/Shangri Las doo-wop fantasy that is gorgeous when it could have so easily become overwrought. The luscious orchestral compositions (tuba, sax, organ, multiple violins and cellos), riddled with brief interludes of manic keyboards, stormy strings and thundering piano chords, build empires and shatter them within minutes.

Titanic Rising addressed the transient beauty of nature, doomed to human sabotage. It troubles her still, and there is an existential fear and surrender within her lyrics, clear on the ambient beauty of God Turn Me Into a Flower, which puts Mering’s angelic voice under the spotlight.

The song examines how our desire to appear as the flawless creature we curate on social media fights a higher power. What if, in our imperfect present, we are exactly as God intended us? “You see the reflection/ And you want it more than the truth/ You yearn to be that dream you could never get to,” Mering sings. “Cause the person on the other side has always just been you/ Oh, God, turn me into a flower”. Like our planet, this album is a rare thing of wonder. Cat Woods



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Filharmonie Brno Receives Nomination For International Classical Music Awards – Brno Daily


Glass: Symphony No.12. Photo credit: Filharmonie Brno.

Brno, Nov 18 (BD) – On 15 November, the International Classical Music Awards, one of the most prestigious international competitions, announced the nominations for the best recordings of 2023, including the January release of Philip Glass’ Symphony No. 12, “Lodger,” which was recorded with Filharmonie Brno. The orchestra performed the piece at its Czech premiere last year, and will perform it for the first time in front of a New York audience next year at Carnegie Hall, as part of a major US tour, with the personal participation of Philip Glass.

Under the direction of Principal Conductor Dennis Russell Davies, the recording is dominated by multiple Grammy-winning singer Angélique Kidjo from Benin, and features one of today’s most acclaimed organists, Christian Schmitt. “I’m really excited about this, I remember once discussing with Philip the idea of composing a symphony. He had successful operas, a couple of orchestral works, and I was keen to get his music into concert halls and play it with a symphony orchestra,” said Davies, who has a long-standing friendship with Glass.

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Glass and Davies reworking the symphony in the summer of 2021. Photo credit: Filharmonie Brno.

He also used it in the recording of his Twelfth Symphony, which had its world premiere in 2019. Thanks to Davies, the score underwent many revisions and minor changes to the text. Dennis Russell Davies has worked extensively with Kidjo, including on the European premiere. 

“Angélique and Dennis really got the piece into shape during the many performances together as it went through numerous revisions on the way to its final form. I am grateful for their continued dedication in this way. Christian has brought his well-known experience to a prominent organ part, and Filharmonie Brno under Dennis’ direction sounds great,” Glass said.

Glass’s Symphony No. 12 was given its Czech premiere by Filharmonie Brno with Kidjo and Schmitt at the Prague Spring Festival, and repeated at the opening of the Moravian Autumn Festival. “Next January we will take it to Leipzig and then mainly to Carnegie Hall. We will start our big American tour with it on 8 February at its New York premiere, in the personal presence of the composer,” said Marie Kučerová, director of Filharmonie Brno.


https://brnodaily.com/2022/11/18/culture/filharmonie-brno-receives-nomination-for-international-classical-music-awards/https://brnodaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/CD-Glass-Symfonie-c.-12-1024×683.jpghttps://brnodaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/CD-Glass-Symfonie-c.-12-150×100.jpgBing NiArt & CultureBrnoNewsBrno,Culture,NewsGlass: Symphony No.12. Photo credit: Filharmonie Brno.

Brno, Nov 18 (BD) – On 15 November, the International Classical Music Awards, one of the most prestigious international competitions, announced the nominations for the best recordings of 2023, including the January release of Philip Glass’ Symphony No. 12, ‘Lodger,’ which was recorded…





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Marty Stuart Spins a Wild Yarn About Being a ‘Country Star’ in New Song


marty-superlatives-newsong – Credit: Alysse Gafkjen*

Marty Stuart spins some fantastical stories where fiction and reality blur in the new song “Country Star,” recorded with his band the Fabulous Superlatives. It’s the first new single Stuart has released since putting out the trippy, surf-inspired album Way Out West in 2017.

A jangling country-rock tune with some lively lead guitar licks, “Country Star” hurtles along with considerable momentum and gives Stuart a chance to make some absurd boasts. “I was raised by alligators in the Pearl River swamp/started a-dancin’ on the boogie-woogie stump,” he sings at one point. The chorus winks at how funny it sounds: “Ain’t that strange? It’s a mystery,” he sings.

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There might be some truth hiding in “Country Star” as well. In the final verse, Stuart sings about falling for a woman who was “half wildcat” and who wore a diamond “she stole from Lester Flatt.” It’s unclear if the wildcat is meant to be Stuart’s wife, Country Music Hall of Fame member Connie Smith, but one of Stuart’s first jobs in music was as part of Flatt’s band.

“I’ve always loved songs like ‘Roll in My Sweet Baby’s Arms,’ ‘Long Journey Home,’ and ‘Salty Dog Blues,’” Stuart said in a release. “Those don’t really say much of anything but they feel good and they’re a perfect way to start any show. ‘Country Star’ qualifies as one of those songs.”

There’s no news of a full album to follow Way Out West just yet, but Stuart and the Fabulous Superlatives have numerous dates lined up through next year including Stagecoach in April. On Tuesday, Nov. 22, Stuart and the Fabulous Superlatives will be inducted into the Musicians Hall of Fame in Nashville.

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Abergavenny Symphony Orchestra to première new composition in autumn concert


Librettist and past president, David Fraser told the Chronicle, ‘This year marks the 150th anniversary of the birth of Ralph Vaughan Williams, so our next concert will include two of his works, the ever-popular Lark Ascending, with Gillian Bradley as violin soloist, and the wonderfully serene and other-worldly Fifth Symphony, written in the darkest days of World War II. Speaking of the new work, David stated, ‘Iestyn’s music is tremendous fun, and a tremendous challenge for us to play – he knows our strengths, and our weaknesses only too well and enjoys stretching our technique to the limits.



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K-pop group Omega X takes legal action against managing agency for alleged abuse and assault


KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 18 — K-pop group Omega X has lawyered up and is taking legal action against their former manager for alleged abuse and assault on the members.

Last month, a fan claimed on Twittter that she witnessed Omega X manager Kang Seong Hee assaulting the group after their concert in Los Angeles. Kang is also the CEO of Spire Entertainment.

As the incident started gaining attention, Spire Entertainment issued an apology and announced that Kang has resigned from her position.

However, more allegations have risen since then, portal Soompi reported.

Following that, the 11 members of Omega X held a press conference at the Seoul Bar Association in Seocho on Wednesday (November 16) where they were represented by legal representative Noh Jong Eon.

Noh revealed that the team is working on a lawsuit to terminate Omega X’s contract with Spire Entertainment. They are also planning to file a criminal complaint on the charges of assault, intimidation, indecent act by compulsion and attempted threat.

“We have plenty of evidence including photos, videos and voice recordings,” Noh said.

He also claimed that the members were threatened by the agency following the Los Angeles assault incident.

Noh said the group has received a certification of contents from the agency, asking them to pay approximately US$230,000 (RM1.04 million) to US$300,000 (RM1.3 million) per person.

The law team is also planning to get compensation from the agency’s chairman, Hwang Seong Woo for aiding and abetting Kang.

In the press conference, group leader Jaehan gave his account about what happened between them and Kang.

“After practice was over, Kang called me and forced me to drink. Sexual harassment was also involved. She touched my face and hand. After drinking, she called me.

“She lashed out by saying that if we are going to continue to be idols, we have to crawl. She also said she would commit suicide, so the members received therapy.

“We only wanted to be respected as people who love music,” Jaehan said.

According to Jaehan, the reason the group endured the abuse was because it was their last opportunity as a K-pop group.

“For all of us, it was our second attempt, and we did not want to waste time. We thought we had to endure for the fans who waited for us. As the oldest member and leader, I was so scared that our dreams would collapse while looking at our exhausted members.

“We held back and endured, but we have reached the point that we cannot endure any longer,” he said.

The members claim to suffer from anxiety following the mental and emotional abuse carried out by Kang and Hwang.

According to group member Hangyeom, the repeated drunken calls had made him anxious which resulted in him having anxiety from everyday life noises including vibrations, alarm sounds and bass sound in music.

The group was also reported to have been forced to attend all the drinking gatherings. Kang allegedly threatened not to give them an album if they refuse to attend.

Omega X is a project group that debuted last year, made up of former K-pop idols.

They also recently launched their own Instagram account which is not controlled by Spire Entertainment.





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How TikTok is affecting how much music people listen to


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Are you listening to music more often?

People around the world are listening to more music compared to last year, according to a new study.

In 2022 listeners played their favourite singers for 20.1 hours a week, which is up from 18.4 hours in 2021.

This is the same as listening to an extra 34 three-minute songs every week!

Nearly two thirds (63%) said they listen to songs through video apps like TikTok where music is featured and plays an important role in videos.

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The report into how fans around the globe listen and engage with music today was carried out by the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI).

The survey took place in June and July 2022 across 22 countries with more than 44,000 respondents aged between 16 and 64 taking part.

It also found that people on average used six different ways to listen to their tunes and enjoy 8 or more different types of music. Nearly half (46%) of people who took part used streaming services.

Music fans also listen to a diverse range of music genres, with over 500 different styles identified by at least one respondent, including Brazilian Sertanejo, Disco-Polo from Poland and an Indonesian folk music called Dangdut.



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San Antonio-based singer-songwriter Garrett T. Capps & NASA Country’s People Are Beautiful is an uplifting cosmic ride


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Katelyn Earhart

Garrett T. Capps performs at Paper Tiger in 2021.

At this point in his burgeoning career, it might be easy for alt-country artist Garrett T. Capps to settle into being the “I Love San Antone” Guy.

After all, many folks’ introduction to the Alamo City-based singer-songwriter was through tunes that extol the virtues his hometown while channeling the infectious sounds of some of its finest musical exports, notably the late Doug Sahm.

Fortunately, the new album People Are Beautiful (Spaceflight Records) by Capps and his cosmically inclined band NASA Country is yet more proof that he’s not so easy to pigeonhole.

The eight-song release is the final installment of Capps’ Shadows Trilogy, in which he takes Texas’ cosmic cowboy mantel literally by layering elements of space rock and ambient music underneath the twang.

Written during the early days of the pandemic and recorded a few months after, there’s plenty of soul searching in the lyrics, which the kaleidoscopic musical approach helps amplify. Even on the more straight-ahead numbers, the wavery steel guitar and electronic treatments lend a shimmering ambiance, as if Brian Eno decided to move to Nashville instead of composing music for airports.

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Courtesy Image / Garrett T. Capps

It’s easy to see how the uncertainty of early 2020 was wearing on Capps when he was writing People Are Beautiful.

Credit Justin Boyd on modular synthesizer, Torin Metz on guitar lap steel and vocals, odie on bass and vocals, and Kory Cook on percussion for being able to add an experimental bent to the proceedings without losing sight of the songs’ honkytonk heart.

Only on the mid-album track “Time Will Tell” does the music fully turn away from its classic country roots into something approaching Krautrock — think Neu! — while the extended outro of “Time Will Tell” chugs along into Hawkwind territory.

Aside from a couple of clunky moon-spoon rhyming schemes early in the album, Capps shows himself to be an adept lyricist, opening up about his own failings, fears and insecurities while looking for hope around the corner. “Stay cool, it’s gettin’ better / Just gotta hold it all together,” he urges the listener in “Gettin’ Better,” the album’s two-step ready opener.

In the title track, Capps’ rapid-fire vocals tick off a list of things that make people infuriating before flipping things around at the chorus in an apparent reminder that our incongruities are what make us human. “Our love is irrefutable / Cosmically inscrutable / Certain facts are immutable / But people are beautiful.”

It’s easy to see how the uncertainty of early 2020 was wearing on Capps when he was writing People Are Beautiful. While largely upbeat, the album doesn’t flinch from observing the darkness all around. Capps’ authentic and always-easy delivery also keeps it miles away from self-help book territory.

The world can be an ugly place, and sometimes we need a cosmic messenger to remind us not to let it get us down.

People Are Beautiful is available now on CD and vinyl or via digital download.

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Rebecca Saunders – Skin – 5:4


In 2018, when exploring the music of Rebecca Saunders in that year’s Lent Series, i made the following remark regarding recordings of her music:

The fact that i’ve explored Rebecca Saunders’ recorded output over four articles suggests that she’s well represented by recordings of her work. But almost half of her compositions haven’t yet been recorded, including such major works as chroma …, insideout …, murmurs, traces and the three concertos Still, Void and Alba. One hopes as her reputation continues to grow and consolidate that the recorded picture of Saunders’ output will become yet more complete.

Rebecca Saunders on record (Part 4)

In the last few years that situation has improved a bit, but it’s been given an unexpected boost by the latest release from the usually more mainstream-oriented UK label NMC. Skin features three works by Saunders composed during the last eight years: the percussion duo concerto void (2014), Skin (2016) for soprano and ensemble, and the string quartet Unbreathed (2017). i’ve written extensively about all three of these works previously, void and Skin also as part of the 2018 Lent Series (and also, more briefly, after Skin‘s first UK performance at HCMF 2016), and Unbreathed following its world première at the Wigmore Hall in January 2018. i therefore won’t go into detail about each piece again here, though it’s important to stress how fantastic it is to have three three such substantial works by Saunders together on a single disc, in what are all outstanding performances.

It makes some sense that it’s the HCMF performance of Skin, by Juliet Fraser and Klangforum Wien conducted by Bas Wiegers, included here, as the work requires the players to be dispersed throughout the space, which worked particularly well in Huddersfield’s St. Paul’s Hall. Saunders’ music is typified by many things, one of the most obvious being struggle, effort, the determination to grapple, wrangle, articulate, and perhaps clarify. Fraser’s personification of Molly Bloom’s monologue is absolutely dazzling here, a locus of potential tangibility in the midst of a vast network of loosely but tangibly connected satellites. i’m always struck afresh by how raw Saunders’ music always sounds, like frayed nerve endings, electrified and bristling. It’s the only music i know that sounds so surface-oriented – laid bare – without ever being remotely superficial. It’s an essential part of that other primary characteristic, music caught between light and shadow, sound and silence. This is the aspect that makes writing about her work so challenging and difficult, due to its continual stream of channelled, focus activity, in which notions of structure and section (if they’re even present) always take second place to that overarching act of critical engagement. In this respect Skin is perhaps the most elusive of the three works on this album, though perhaps that’s a symptom of its nervous, fretful, stammering energy. Nonetheless, Fraser’s final exhalation is a moment of absolute directness, despite its meaning being as ambiguous as all that preceded it: achievement? exultation? relief? despair? death? life?

i’m still minded to regard the world première, captured on the Donaueschinger Musiktage 2016 box set released by NEOS, as the more effective rendition of the piece, but there’s not a lot in it, and in any case it’s just wonderful that this superb performance from Huddersfield has been preserved with such stunning clarity.

Surely one of Saunders’ most beautiful works, void is treated here to a low-key but hypnotic performance by percussionists Christian Dierstein and Dirk Rothburst (for whom the work was written) with the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra conducted by Enno Poppe. On the one hand, it’s a less dramatic approach than the world première, but i wonder whether that speaks more directly to the work’s inherent nature. There are many occasions throughout void when one wonders to what extent, if any, the performers’ actions amount to anything of substance, whether any of the details actually matter. Initially there’s the impression of a kind of slow flexing, as if the music were waking up, testing out movement. In the midst of this a weird, streaky pulse appears, like a group of marching wraiths. Yet it soon becomes apparent that this flexing isn’t preparatory but is the focus, all the music’s energy being channelled back into itself in a never-ending cycle of starting and fading. Is it an equilibrium? Is this the sum total of all its actions being cancelled out? Is it, in fact, a void?

i’ve noted before about the way the halting demeanour of the music becomes mysteriously continuous, and that’s again the case here, no doubt partly due to the behavioural similarities that permeate the primary ideas in the piece. All of which makes void‘s denouement all the more unsettlingly strange: first pitches become extended – a new element in this soundworld – then almost everything dissolves, leading to a hard-to-grasp final few minutes melding vestiges of that ghostly pulse with gorgeous, faint traces of shimmer. What’s been achieved? Are we anywhere different from where we began? Are such questions null and void?

Similar questions of negation and ‘anti-substance’ proliferate in Unbreathed, performed in this recording by the work’s dedicatees, Quatuor Diotima. After the 2018 première i pessimistically remarked that “While i’ve no doubt the piece will be widely-heard, the UK’s track record of supreme indifference suggests it’ll be a long time before we hear it again here.” Sure enough, i’ve never encountered it since (here or abroad), so this is a welcome return to a piece that really blew me away four years ago. In contrast to void, but similar to Skin, there’s a constant sense in Unbreathed that each and every action doesn’t just matter but is absolutely vital. The quartet contends around a single pitch, peppering it with swoops, slides, glistenings and tremolos, always – despite, again here, regular halting – giving the impression of a desperate tussling attempt.

As in 2018, one of the most fascinating things about the piece is the way the players meld together in the long first section, four bows wielded by a single musical voice, passing through varying forms of pulse, arriving at a point of furious intensity where, typically for Saunders, they crash to a halt, continuing faint and wiry. The latter portion of the piece finds the players separated, by which point that sense of struggle has more or less evaporated. It’s highly intriguing to hear what was such overt activity earlier now turned private, the quartet’s aims perhaps individualised, though the coda is a spell-binding coming together, as if the quartet were attempting to sing a slip-sliding song.

Three baffling, brilliant, beautiful compositions by one of new music’s most fearlessly, effortlessly radical composers. Few albums can be described as essential, but this is absolutely one of them. Released tomorrow by NMC, Skin is available on CD and download.




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Alan Jackson breaks silence with new picture after bizarre rumors country music icon, 64, passed away amid health battle


COUNTRY singer Alan Jackson has broken his silence after a bizarre rumor spread indicating that he passed away amidst his ongoing health battle.

Jackson, 64, shared a photo from one of his music videos on his social media platforms in the midst of the viral death hoax.

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Jackson shared this photo on his Instagram and Facebook profilesCredit: Instagram/@officialalanjackson

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Jackson most recently appeared at the 2022 Country Music AwardsCredit: Reuters

Jackson, who has been responsible for a number of country music hits including “It’s Five O’Clock Somewhere,” is the latest celebrity to be hit with a death hoax by website FNEWS2.

The main page of the site featured a framed picture of Alan with “RIP” written next to it.

The title reads: “6 minutes ago/with a heavy heart as we report the sad news of 64-year-old singer Alan Jackson.”

The site has previously circulated false reports of the deaths of stars like Bruce Willis, Denzel Washington, and Dolly Parton.

Jackson revealed his Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease diagnosis in September 2021.

The degenerative nerve condition, which he was diagnosed with over ten years ago, affects Jackson’s balance and ability to walk.

“I have this neuropathy and neurological disease,” Jackson said on TODAY when he revealed his health diagnosis.

“It’s genetic that I inherited from my daddy … There’s no cure for it, but it’s been affecting me for years. And it’s getting more and more obvious. And I know I’m stumbling around on stage.

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“And now I’m having a little trouble balancing, even in front of the microphone, and so I just feel very uncomfortable.”

Just last week, Jackson appeared at the 2022 Country Music Association Awards, where he received the Willie Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award.

In his acceptance speech at the Nashville awards ceremony, Jackson said that “Country music has been real good to me and I fell in love with it when I was a young man.”

“I really love the instruments, the steel guitars and the fiddles and things like that that gave it such a unique character to me and made it its own,” he continued.

“And I love the lyrics and the songs and the artists and the melodies and the harmonies. It’s just a real American music to me.”

Jackson has not publicly addressed the hoax.

The U.S. Sun has reached out for comment.





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Intradisciplinary musician and USC Thornton graduate Rohan Chander is in your mind’s eye – Annenberg Media


I knew Rohan Chander was thoughtful before I was able to witness his chronic, mid-conversation philosophical spirals. This personality trait is spelled out by each and every track on his latest release, “Bakudi Scream,” a careful balance between high-level audio storytelling and blended hyper pop-chip tune instrumentals that draw from video games, fantasy and guilt.

“I harbor a lot of guilt,” the composer said via Zoom. “Around the choices I’ve made professionally and personally and whether it matters to [my parents] that there’s things that have mattered to me, that don’t matter to them…Things I believe are really important that everybody should think about.”

Chander’s family is always present in his music the same way they are always present in his life, but their forms morph into fantastical musical abstractions regarding relationships and love.

Chander, a first-generation Indian American raised in Rhode Island was given piano lessons from a young age, but didn’t develop a true interest in music until he found himself in the grips of pubescence. When his family acquired a mini-Mac computer, Chander’s older brother was the first devoted to the GarageBand application.

The composer admiringly ascribes most of his core musical identity to his older brother’s similar musical disposition and love of hip hop. “He would make a bunch of old school boom- bap-type hip hop, and was really big on J Dilla,” Chander recalled. He would sit at his older brother’s feet and mimic the styles he heard. Slowly, Black music such as soul and jazz, “started to seep into [his] musical language.” Older brother didn’t pursue music, but his one-time hobby set Chander off on the trajectory of his life—to the chagrin of his parents.

He thinks that maybe there was some kind of artistry a couple generations back…but he isn’t sure. For now, he is it.

Chander describes his parents’ relationship to him making “musician/composer/performer” his full-time career as a culture clash. Even before that career was a possibility—back in high school—they were not fans, hoping that he would become a doctor or lawyer. Their confusion and passive disapproval have only driven him to a pure-heartedly contrarian lifestyle guided by music. He recalls months of running on solely power naps so that he could write music during the school week. The experience forced Chander to put everything into music.

“I was just working hard because I had to prove to them that I could,” he said. “I felt like I could prove to them that I can do it, but also to myself, that I was not fucking up in the way that they thought that I was.”

His parents warmed up to the idea when he began chasing his MFA degree in music from USC’s Thornton School of Music following his undergraduate studies in classical music at NYU. He knows they mean well, but Chander still questions himself. He mythologizes this inner turmoil into his work.

Whatever escape that music couldn’t provide, the young Chander found in stories. He spotlights anime and video games as the intersection of his loves. He names longform story based RPGs such as “The Legend of Zelda” and “Naruto” specifically. “Bakudi Scream” features a number of samples from and sequences inspired by both. The album’s introduction features a robotic voice asking a series of invasive questions that act like security questions protecting your mortal identity. You have selected your avatar and are about to enter the audiophonic universe that Chander has sculpted.

The span of his imagination thinly veils a meticulous sense of logic behind an operatic album. By deceiving the ears of those accustomed to relating certain responses to video game-style music, Chander inserts himself into your mind’s eye. There’s a story in “Bakudi Scream,” if you’re willing to find it.

The main character, “The Architect Prince,” acts as a second body that listeners can use to ask how they’ve become themselves.

“In my case, this idea of self-synthesis is really still tethered to an image of whiteness that has its own damaging colonial archive,” Chander said. “In whose image am I trying to create myself? And whose image is the architect Prince trying to create? What is this exosuit that you’ve built? What is this mechanism, this engine you’ve created?”

This conflict grounds the story, which brings “The Architect Prince” into contact with a hacker and character named “HINDOO WARRIOR.”

Chander’s live performance brings even further energy to this concept, embodying the storyline physically. Disguising himself behind a light-up mask, Chander’s frenetic movements turn him into an overexposed human laser. So long as those central questions clearly exist, however, Chander doesn’t mind if the journey itself can seem abstract. The journey continues with the sequel record he’s creating, building on the same universe, but around the execution of the architect prince. “The whole record is confronting questions I’ve had recently in relation to death,” the composer said. “How death and…the considerations about identity can kind of actually go hand-in-hand.”

The album will be completed alongside commission-based work and his podcast, “Critic, Critic,” a place that brings artists of color together to discuss the overlooked nuances of their music stemming from their identities—something Chandler believes is missing from music journalism. “I just felt—honestly—white people don’t get it, you know? It’s really good when you are talking to other people of color and you can really bond over and discuss things in a different way.”

Chander’s deeply contemplative perspective leads him forward as much as it drags him back. Evolutions are inevitable and he’s aware, but the 2022 version of his innermost self can be found on Spotify under, “Bakudi Scream.”



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