Current song you are listening to(or the Last song you listened to) - by Andarthiel
Sulphur on 16/4/2024 at 09:07
So Apple's algorithm picked up maybe that I've been surfing on serotonin and oxytocin (not substance-induced, nae worries) and sent me on my way through waves of foam-flecked sunlight.
So there's this number by Jack Antonoff featuring his wife dancing, and it's a love song, of course. But it grooves and sparkles while it affirms the magic in the smallest things. I mean you can't blame him when you see Margaret's smile. That's a vision that'll send you light years across the universe.
[video=youtube;kmpyfDF_pes]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kmpyfDF_pes[/video]
Next (and probably not coincidentally, produced by Jack Antonoff) was this thing by The 1975 from their last album (which is worth checking out!). Yes, Matty's still annoying, but this track hasn't so much zillennial cringewit, just reverb and the enveloping hug of guitar feedback, sax, and strings anchored by a gently driving beat. It's sad but gorgeous - and I like that each of those actually reinforce each other so much that it builds into a paean to loves moved on from, but not quite. It's the best track on the album for me.
[video=youtube;tGv7CUutzqU]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tGv7CUutzqU[/video]
And lastly, a release from Cindy Lee, who I suppose almost no one has heard of. I'll simply quote Pitchfork here, in a review which is thankfully free of snide pretentiousness.
Quote Posted by "Pitchfork"
You could look at
Diamond Jubilee's ramshackle outer appearance as a sort of declaration of allegiance to the underground, or you could see it as an aesthetic choice. If Flegel's songwriting often gives the sense that someone or something is missing, so too do their musical arrangements: additional percussion here, or a bigger bass sound there, to bring them out of the mist and closer to the material world. But if you listen in a certain way —like mentally focusing on some object in the periphery of your vision without actually moving your eyes to center it—a full orchestra might flicker to life for a second behind a keyboard's chintzy strings preset.
[video=youtube;YDjBXVBVCro]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YDjBXVBVCro[/video]
taffernicus on 22/4/2024 at 15:31
[video=youtube_share;qfZVu0alU0I]https://youtu.be/qfZVu0alU0I?si=P2E8st-YPNF2wxEd[/video]
[video=youtube_share;CUYboWbVe0A]https://youtu.be/CUYboWbVe0A?si=5abNOM9Ev7j5cRG-[/video]
I still don't know if this band falls under post grunge category or not. it's not possible to lump post grunge and grunge into one pot . When i hear post-grunge, layered vocal harmony and yarling singing technique immediately come top of mind
[video=youtube_share;U6zf3dW2t9Q]https://youtu.be/U6zf3dW2t9Q?si=EVLMNK77b5OR-gG1[/video]