Music Genre

Amaya – Demons In The Dark (Spotify)

Categories: Audio, Pop, The Latest|Tags: , , , , , |

“Taken from Amaya's EP "No Way Back" this song is a representative example of her advanced singing capabilities. Cinematic sound touch full of mystery, with a supernatural approach that is worth exploring.”

-Nagamag.com

This is the third single from Amaya from her EP "No Way Back".

'Demons In The Dark' continues the thematic direction of AMAYA’s debut EP - underscored by dark undercurrents and a sense of urgency, without any clear resolution. Blending classical influences with modern pop but with a darker tone, this new single expresses a sense of hopelessness and trying to find one's way in the darkness.

https://www.instagram.com/officialamaya/

Born and raised in Hong Kong, Amaya began playing piano and violin at an early age. Throughout her early career, she advanced her musicology studies by exploring haunting classical compositions. Now based in London, this still inspires her dramatic, cinematic style of songwriting.

Blending orchestral elements with dark pop and electronic influences, Amaya continues to evolve her distinctive and unmistakable sound today.

https://www.facebook.com/OfficialAmaya/

Lion Child – Mixing Chemicals (Spotify)

Categories: Audio, The Latest, World Music|Tags: , , , , |

“Not always the debut work of musicians for a long time remain in the memory of us, the audience, but the self-titled album Lion Child once again proves the opposite. Swing, add to their playlists and enjoy.”

“Далеко не всегда дебютные работы музыкантов надолго остаются в памяти нас, слушателей, но одноимённый альбом Lion Child в очередной раз доказывает обратное. Качайте, добавляйте в свои плейлисты и наслаждайтесь.”

-Nagamag.com

This song is written in metaphor about a man denying his real heart and hiding behind his work and life to avoid the love of his life. Sometimes fear can dictate an unknown path and destiny is never found..

http://smarturl.it/lionchild

Three Thieves – Falling Down (Spotify)

Categories: Audio, Electronica, The Latest|Tags: , , |

“Selected piece in a Trip-Hop mood that can attract almost every listener. Also the singer's silvery voice add a sense of warmness in the cold days of loneliness. Do you see yourself falling down? Take a deep breath and find the hidden way to continue!”

-Nagamag.com

Falling Down ft. Aniah Alves is one of many singles for 2021 born out of the confines of the lockdown. Working remotely with Dutch vocalist Aniah Alves the track features lush pop vocals over heavy melancholic beats.

Three Thieves is a South Wales based production unit consisting of producer and songwriter Thomas Ismangil, featuring guest vocalists from around the world. The Three Thieves signature sound is known for its use of melodic pop vocals over beat based songs, with influences from classic era hip hop, house, drum and bass and garage.

http://www.threethieves.net
https://threethieves.bandcamp.com/releases

Fable – Orbiting (Spotify)

Categories: Audio, Pop, The Latest|Tags: , , , |

“Sit back and relax with Fable-Orbiting. Let the calm singer's voice clean your mind together with a slow beat and rich percussion atmosphere.”

-Nagamag.com

Fable kicks off her 2021 with brand new single ‘Orbiting’, out today via Naim Records. This latest offering, which premiered on Chris Hawkins’ BBC 6 Music show yesterday, continues the Brighton-based singer-songwriter’s much anticipated return and sets the tone for her forthcoming debut album, due later this year.

A hauntingly stark, yet hopeful track that blends elements of trip hop and neo soul, ‘Orbiting’ laments the outward disconnection and isolation of our modern society; Fable’s exquisite vocals sliding over a traipsing beat and eerily beautiful soundscape.

“Orbiting is quite literally and metaphorically, an observation of the earth from far away. It takes a great big step back and sees that everything is intertwined on this little marble hurtling through infinite space. In a world that's more connected than ever digitally, I can't help but feel we have been segregated in every other sense.

Aside from the obvious isolation the pandemic has brought us, I wanted to highlight the breaking down of our communities, the ever polarizing and distilling bubbles of opinion thanks to the algorithm, and our society’s alienation from any kind of humane purpose. It's very much open to interpretation but I hope it resonates on many levels, and leads with a message of love and unity,” Fable explains.

Having built up a reputation as one of the UK's most promising new artists, being lauded by the likes of The Guardian, Mixmag, Q and Rolling Stone, collaborating with Orbital and playing at Glastonbury, the tragic loss of a close friend and resultant burnout and depression led to Fable taking time out from her music career in 2016 to protect her mental health. Four years later, and now an ambassador for mental health charity My Black Dog, Fable is relaunching her sound to the world, with previous single ‘Thirsty’ unveiled in October. Newly-signed to Naim Records, the label wing of the award-winning premium audio brand, she has recorded a debut album of genre-fluid, searingly honest and darkly beautiful music that spans from urgent post punk to introspective electronica, whilst posing questions that are both timely and personal, yet timeless.

https://www.instagram.com/whoisfable/

ABOUT FABLE

What happens when a rising star suddenly cuts to black? Disappears from view not with the traditional, time-honoured arc of ascent and descent, but an instantaneous, seemingly-unexplained and voluntary vanishing?

The strange case of Fable is one such story. Holly Cosgrove was still in her teens when she started turning heads. Born and raised in the pretty Devon resort of Paignton, the daughter of a Glaswegian forklift truck driver, she moved to Brighton in her late teens, reinventing herself as the dark electro-rock entity Fable. An EP created in collaboration with Archive, the huge-in-Europe trip-hop/post-rock outfit, highlighted her powerful, portentous voice and immediately seized the attention. Her early live shows sealed the deal, wowing an intimate crowd at The Great Escape festival and supporting alt rock legends The Cult at their Manchester, Bristol and Brixton Academy shows. Holly was then headhunted by Paul Hartnoll of Orbital to guest on his 8.58 project, with whom she also appeared live, including a slot at Kendal Calling, and performed at Glastonbury in her own right.

Word was spreading fast, and critics were enraptured. The Guardian praised her “brooding cinematic electronica”. Q compared her to “Beth Orton swapping her six string for synthesisers while exploring her darker, more dangerous impulses”. Rolling Stone called her “independent, strong and mysterious”, and Mixmag was bowled over by her “ridiculous quality vocal”. Line Of Best Fit, Popjustice, Clash and CMU also heaped on the hallelujahs, and none other than Gary Numan was moved to rave “What a find”. The buzz around Fable was building to a rumble of breaking thunder. But, for reasons tainted with tragedy, the expected lightning-flash crescendo never came.

In early 2016 Holly lost a close friend, with whom she had previously been romantically involved, to suicide. “She was 23 when she’d had enough. I saw a frightened girl dangling above dangerous narratives, medicated up to the eyeballs, drowned by the internet’s toxicity and hung out to dry in underfunded institutions. I got very swept up in that relationship, trying to stabilise it. She went downhill, she was being sectioned every other month, and I was on the phone a lot trying to help her with that. She decided to cut ties with people who were trying to help her and keep her on a level. And she left.”

For Holly, life changed forever. “I remember that week being a real milestone that changed my perception of what's important.” One result of the aftermath of her friend's suicide was that Holly has become an ambassador for the mental health charity My Black Dog. “It's similar to The Samaritans, but the people you can call at the other end have been there, at the end of their tether. If she had had that,” Holly reflects, “a friendly stranger would have been so beneficial.”

As an artist, Fable's voice was stilled by the trauma. “When you sing, it's like a window to your soul. It's an instrument that shows all your emotions. And you can't hide anything in that. And when all that happened, I couldn't embody the thing that I wanted to embody, because I was so sad. I needed to leave it for a minute, before I ruined it for myself.”

The career which began with such stellar promise suddenly unbegan. Fable became Holly again, took herself out of Brighton, out of music, and submerged herself in regular jobs and anonymous normality. She watched quietly from the shadows while other female artists, from Christine And The Queens to Billie Eilish, rose to prominence by exploring gender-fluid identities and moody electronica. In the wake of the tragedy in her personal life, reconnecting with her artistic muse took time. “The whole thing was just so dramatically sad it forced me to take a break and do some digging in my soul garden. A few years later, my creativity came up with the flowers.”

At 24, still younger than half this year's hotly-hyped newcomers, Fable is pressing the un-pause button and ready to (re)launch. Newly-signed to Naim Records, the label wing of a prestigious high-end audiophile equipment company, she's been working with Jonas Persson, the Swedish producer whose CV includes collaborations with Justice, John-Paul Jones and post-punk legends Jah Wobble.She's justifiably proud of the new material. “It's the most truthful writing I've ever done. It's much more reflective of who I really am.”

The first fruit of Fable Mk II is lead single “Thirsty”, a melodramatic, Medusa-haired, dragon-breathed barnstormer which is already being hailed by those who have heard it as the most extraordinary thing she has released to date. “The song,” she says, “is about taking the beauty of life for granted and how over time we write things off as mundane because they’re a constant, like the sky’s always there, but actually it's a weird miracle that we even exist under it.” The stealthy, Portishead-inflected “Womb” is another standout track. “That song's about flux, cycles and change,” she explains, “moving on to the next thing out of necessity, the constant death and rebirth of your mind and your body, before we have time to analyse who we are, we’ve already changed.”

In a world of shrinking attention spans and incessant noise and chatter, Fable is defying the received logic that modern listeners can only handle music in tiny bites. “I’m going old school and releasing an album,” she proudly states. “I think people can concentrate for more than two minutes, even young people. I like pressing Play on an album, walking away, and getting on with something, while my ears are totally transported for 45 minutes.”

The versatility of the Cosgrove-Persson collaboration is demonstrated by “Unequal”, a minimal avant-R&B schaffel reminiscent of Janelle Monae meets Goldfrapp. “That's a bit of a wild card. The intention was to create this mechanical marching that quickens your heart rate, and then flood it with sharply-delivered lyrics about humanity being organised by algorithms, globalisation, and my own fears about powerful systems. The chorus is an attempt to remember the simplicity of life before the age of information.”

“The energetic party head in me,” she says, “wanted to write banger after banger”, but Holly worked to suppress that tendency in the interests of preserving unity of tone. That impulse, however, is expressed here in the thumping “5am”. But it isn't a simple hedonistic excursion. “'5am' is a bit of nervous neurosis. It's a frustrated song, it’s about having trouble sleeping, so the music needed to be driving and restless.” The turbulent “Swarm” began one grey-skied Welsh morning, listening to Radiohead and strumming the same two chords for an hour. “Then ‘Where do I end, where does the world begin?’ was scrawled in my notepad. It’s making a stab at a difficult subject. What is I? These are the things that go through your mind when you start self-isolation, before the pandemic’s even begun.”

These themes – the Generation Z worldview, wrestling with the question of what it even means to be alive when the seemingly limitless aspirations of your childhood have been betrayed by the reality of a data-dictated, ecologically-uncertain present – dominate the album. “It's harder to be human now,” Holly believes, “or more complicated than it has ever been. I’ve seen so many young people just spinning in information, feeling like they have all the knowledge but none of the power. I think I’m here to say 'Look, keep it simple, fuck all of this hype, delete your social media, empower your own experience, compare notes with your child self. What would they think? Being happy doesn’t make you ignorant to the world's problems. Love yourself and the everyday shit. It's all here.”

It's all here. Fable is rising above the horizon once again. This time, the stars are aligned.

Musetta // Atlantide (Video)

Categories: Electronica, Electronica Features, Features, The Latest, Video|Tags: , , , |

“Imagine the mysterious “Atlantide” sinking deeply in the sea through a short colourful dream. A special Electronic music piece by Musetta full of passion and fantasy.”

-Nagamag.com

With their new single “Atlantide” Musetta goes back to their trip-hop roots. Join them in this journey through the ancient ruins of a long lost civilization, Atlantis, guided by Matteo’s deep and dark textures and Marinella’s siren call.

http://instagram.com/musettamusic

Spawned in the armpit of Milan, Italy, Musetta burst onto the downtempo scene in 2008 with their debut album, “Mice to meet you!”, which combines Marinella Mastrosimone’s haunting lyrics with Matteo Curcio’s evocative atmospheres to generate a solid record chock full of technical masterpieces, inspired by early 20th century arts, film-noir and science fiction – a retro feel with a futuristic edge.

The remixes of ‘Peace and Melody’, soon followed by ‘Red Star’, ‘Nicotine’ and ‘Standing by my Side’, released on over 150 records by Morrison Recordings (Canada) and Armada Records (Holland), climbed the Beatport charts and got the endorsement of Pete Tong, Tiesto, John Digweed, Sasha, Armin van Bureen, Markus Schulz, Paul Oakenfold, Laurent Garnier and David Guetta.

Musetta’s tracks were synched on several TV series, such as “Better Call Saul”, “Elementary”, “House of Lies”, “Star-Crossed” and features (“Enough Said”, “The Past is a Foreign Land”).

http://facebook.com/musettamusic

Alewine – Hallucinations (Spotify)

Categories: Audio, The Latest, World Music|Tags: , , , |

“The broken rhythms of Trip-Hop, vocals that penetrate like water into all corners of our consciousness and the magical, trance-inducing name Hallucinations. An unforgettable journey to the worlds of Alewine.”

“Ломаные ритмы Trip-Hop, вокал, который проникает словно вода во все уголки нашего сознания и магическое, вводящее в состояние транса название Hallucinations. Незабываемое путешествие в миры Alewine.”

-Nagamag.com

Arkanna Interview on Nagamag

Categories: Electronica Features, Electronica Interviews, Features, Interviews, The Latest|Tags: , , , , , , , |

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Nagamag:
What are the genres that describe better your music style?

Arkanna:
At the moment, I would say electronica, trip-hop, downtempo, chill, sometimes with world elements.


Nagamag:
Few words about your musical background and career?

Arkanna:
I grew up in a musical family. With musicians on both my parents sides. I was brought up listening to Rock n Roll, Motown, Soul and everything in between. The UK charts were always on in my house growing up, hearing bands of the 80's like Bronski Beat, The Human League and The Cure. Also often, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and my Mums favourite, Rod Stewart.
When I was a teenager, I loved Pink Floyd, Bob Marley, The Doors, Nirvanna and lots of dance music like Beats international, The Source, Technotronic and 808 State.

I first picked up the guitar at age twenty one. At the time I started going clubbing and loved progressive house back then and all the chillout stuff around at that time. Before this I was more into drawing and painting as my creative outlet. A number of years later I started writing my own songs and played a few acoustic gigs. I was listening to bands like Morcheeba, Beth Orton, Faithless, Massive Attack,Lamb, Portishead, The Chemical Brothers, The Future Sound Of London, Bjork, PJ Harvey and Leftfield.

Soon I met my partner, who was an MC in a Drum n Bass band at the time, and as a DJ he introduced me to a lot of breakbeat, Techno, Hip Hop and DnB. He introduced me to my first production software and I was hooked.

I started to teach myself production developing my acoustic tracks into a more electronic sound. I put a few of my first productions online. In 2009 I was offered work with London based techno/breaks producers, Elite Force and Meat Katie, recording vocals for 'Fire's Still Burnin' on their Dustbowl EP, released on U&A Recordings.

While still working on my own productions, I was also writing and recording music as part of a collective called Timeshade. This brought about a release in 2010 in which my vocals featured on Bambook's track 'off the system' feat Arkanna, the vocals taken from one of the Timeshade songs.

Later, I collaborated with producers from Nomad Records based in Italy, on a three track EP. It was never officially finished due to some problems within the label at the time. You can listen to 'Love is Timeless', on soundcloud, which is one of the tracks from that EP.

Finally by 2017 I felt happy enough with my own music production to begin independently releasing my music, the first of which was 'All This Time'.

My latest release 'Wonder Cloud' has been supported on BBC music Introducing in Scotland and recently remixed by the very talented Side Liner.


Nagamag:
Do you remember your first connection of love to music that was the right impact to be a music artist now?

Arkanna:
I have always loved music as far back as I can remeber. I was always singing when I was a child. I was given my first keyboard when I was 10 and remember writing lyrics to the songs I made up on it. The Casio SA-1, I thought it was so cool lol. I actually found one a few years ago in a charity shop. I had to buy it haha.
Music for me is about my connection to the unknown mystery, the all or whatever you want to call it or see it as. It is my healer, my passion and a tool for self- reflection and discovery.


Nagamag:
What are your plans for the near future?

Arkanna:
I am currently finishing my EP and plan to develope and release a lot of the music I have written over the past few years, as well as all my current material. I'm also collaborating on a track for another artists forthcoming album, more details on that in the very near future.


Nagamag:
Most artists have a favorite song from a different music genre than the one they are producing music for... Which is yours?

Arkanna:
Ane Brun "All My Tears"


Nagamag:
Of Course Nagamag would love to listen also which track from a similar artist you admire?

Arkanna:
Massive Attack "Teardrop"

Discover & Listen to Arkanna

Arkanna on Spotify

Arkanna's Signature Track

Arkanna on Social Media

On the Horizon – Koresma x edapollo (Video)

Categories: Electronica, The Latest, Video|Tags: , , , |

“How often do you think that life is a stream of endless impulses, headed by her Majesty through music. ‘On the Horizon’ invites you to immerse yourself in your sonic vibrations.”

“Как часто вы задумываетесь о том, что жизнь – это поток бесконечных импульсов, во главе которых её величество музыка. ‘On the Horizon’ предлагает вам погрузиться с головой в свои звуковые вибрации.”

-Nagamag.com

On the Horizon’ is the second track from Koresma & edapollo’s new EP. The tune contrasts the first single by delving into a pool of downtempo bliss. ‘On the Horizion’ features detailed guitar layering, ear candy synths, fresh vocal cuts, and a blend of textures arranged around the pulsating and hypnotic rhythms.

Naturally all this external influence came as a strong motivator to create some positive music that reflects on the past events as well as how our actions can impact the future of our environment. To push this further, both producers will be splitting the Bandcamp revenue for the first month of sales between two charities supporting fire relief in Australia and California. The charities are:

www.wwf.org.au/contact-us
www.calfund.org/wildfire-relief-fund/

Noé Solange – Bound (Spotify)

Categories: Audio, Electronica, The Latest|Tags: , , , , |

“-Noé Solange- with her new song -Bound- , the opener of her new same titled album, invite us to her ethereal vocal style through minimal assets of beats and harmonies, which are the right one into this laid back trip hop. Giving the right space to enjoy the dreamy places the vocal atmosphere engages here. ”

-Nagamag.com

The track explores the topic of toxic infatuation, contemplation and freedom. The chorus depicts escaping someone’s toxic nature, through words such as “ice melting thin, which you let me sink into” and “warmth coming in, when I float up without you”.

The rhythmic backdrop of sinister synths and shards of silvery electronics with Noé Solange’s serene tones depict a search for light amidst the darkness.

https://noesolange.bandcamp.com/

Noé Solange is a London based producer, singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist that delves into the realm of downtempo electronica. From her Dutch/Indonesian heritage and being raised around the world, Noé pulls cultural threads from her upbringing that she blends with electronic elements and harmonic vocals to create a rich tapestry of sounds.

https://www.instagram.com/noe_solange/

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