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Singer/songwriter Shenna shared new EP ‘Blue Memories’

Pop-artist Shenna’s bright singles have consistently glimmered and caught the eyes of many in the music industry. Color and fantasy are a part of Shenna’s identity as an artist. Blue Memories is the latest to continue this trend, this time bringing a gloomy, honest retrospective on her career.

Tracks from the EP have already received acclaim from a variety of publications. “Conversation” was premiered with Popdust and its video with Billboard. “I feel that people are so distracted by the media and technology that we are not having real face-to-face conversations anymore because of the many distractions around us,” she says to Billboard.

At the beginning of Shenna’s career, she found placements on a variety of shows with MTV, Oxygen, Netflix, and Fox. Past projects including her debut EP, Dream in Color, debut LP, Made of Gold and single “Magenta” have all attributed to her achievements. Through these releases, Shenna found a sweet spot in crafting colorful, vibrant tracks that blend identity and genre.

Now, “Blue Memories” reflects and preserves this momentum, recognizing the struggles it took to get to define herself. As a seasoned performer, Shenna understands what artists do to establish an identity. Being both Black and Syrian, Shenna was encouraged to go into different genres, craft a fake persona and ultimately not be herself.

“When I started, many people in the music industry wanted to sell a sexualized image of me and refined me to only slow R&B jams. Nothing is wrong with being sexy, but being put into that role wasn’t me and I felt forced into a box. Blue Memories is my process in expressing myself through my own voice, instead of those around me.”

“Blue Memories” speaks out against that influence and finds solace in her ability to be proud of her own identity and style, “For a lot of artists they will change their identities in order to get attention for their career rather than the music itself.”

Being both African-American and Syrian, Shenna possesses a multi-cultural style of music that blends all of her interests in one. The Arabic-inspired instruments and vocal runs used in “Blue Memories” were an accident that had felt natural to her. She chooses to make her identity a part of her music naturally, rather than exploit it.

The six songs of Blue Memories are all reflective of the different aspects of depression and the way society and social media perpetuate false selves that lead to low self-worth. Blue Memories offers another raw emotional side that comes from the success of the industry, now Shenna is hoping to change it and be self-assured in her future as an artist.

Follow Shenna online

Website | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | YouTube | SoundCloud I Spotify

Pop duo Peggy Sue shares a new music video and song ‘Motorcade’

London-based duo Peggy Sue, made up of Katy Young & Rosa Slade, are back with their new album Vices, which is set for release Feb 21st via French Exit. Today the band are sharing the first single & video from the record “Motorcade”.

Taking its queue from 90s garage rock, “Motorcade” is a blissed-out break-up anthem that rushes from tender to dismissive and back again.

“Motorcade is about recognizing the difference between what you need and what you want,” says Young “and asking for it as fast and loud as you like. I wrote it in the first wave of relief after a big break-up – it was probably the first moment that I was ready to be a bit mean and honest about it all. When we started arranging the song with the bandit just kept getting louder and faster and more powerful, now it’s this burst of energy that we’re terrified of playing live but always love every second of.”

The video for “Motorcade” was made with artist and friend Catherine Repko, with footage by Repko, Zora Kuettner and Katy Young.

It has taken Peggy Sue four years to work through all of their Vices. The London band’s upcoming fourth album, due February 21st is their first full-length release since 2014’s Choir Of Echoes. Its ten tracks are bittersweet tales of love and distraction, as simple as they are powerful, and irresistible in their combination of tender harmonies and stark, cautiously optimistic guitars. Vices borrows from the perfectly constructed pop songs of the 1960s, and the understated, noisy anthems of nineties bands like Blur and the Breeders, and it is a self-assured return to the very essence of Peggy Sue.

During their last headline tour, for Choir of Echoes, Peggy Sue was playing to the biggest crowds of their career. But for Katy Young and Rosa Slade, life intervened, as life often does, and they found themselves needing to take a break from the band they had been in since they were teenagers. “We needed to step back from it,” explains Young “and when we came back together, we realized that the way we’d been doing music wasn’t necessarily all that good for us, or for our friendship. We had to rethink how we did it, to make it that positive thing for us again.”

They looked back to their early days, as a duo, and stripped everything right back to its bare bones. So instead of the practice room, they started working on new songs in their living rooms – the first time they had written together that way since their debut album, Fossils and Other Phantoms. They quickly remembered that it suited them.

The pair also took inspiration from Deep Throat Choir, the 30-strong singing group, which both have performed as part of for the past four years. “It’s been such a powerful thing to be part of, to remember how exciting and joyful just singing together is, and to see how much strength you can take from one and other,” says Young.

Those days of sketching out songs on home recordings eventually led to the ten tracks of Vices. “We did little trips to Berlin to make some demos with our friend Ben,” explains Slade. “Previously, making a new album would have been a very planned out trip to a studio, and we’d do it in a number of weeks.” This time, it was more organic, more natural, and far less prescribed – though admittedly a little slower. Alongside Ben Gregory (Grip Tight) on bass, they recruited drummer Dan Blackett (Landshapes), and Euan Hinshelwood (Younghusband), and brought long-time collaborator Jimmy Robertson back on board to produce (Choir of Echoes, Peggy Sue Play the Songs of Scorpio Rising). They recorded in small bursts in studios around London, paying visits to Soup Studios and Press Play on days off from their day jobs, and putting the finishing touches onto songs on evenings and weekends at Hinshelwood’s Vacant TV, Robertson’s Bee and Smoke Studio and in Blackett’s north London flat.

Peggy Sue has always looked to the darkness as well as the light, often playing each side of the coin out in the same song. The album cover art, a photograph of a glass of orange juice by Joana Polonia, taps into that fundamental equivocation, which is such a big part of Vices. “It’s so bright and full of energy and light,” says Young, of the photograph. “That’s the simple energy we wanted for this album. But we also loved the ambiguity of it as something that could equally be a vice or a remedy.”

Vices was a working title initially, but it soon came to feel as if it suited the record in its entirety. “Lots of songs on the record are sort of messed-up love songs for things that feel good, but aren’t necessarily good for you – like getting staying out too late, or taking too much comfort from certain people,” Young explains. “That kind of interplay between the positive and the negative has always been in Peggy Sue songs, but it’s particularly true of this album. It’s about the things you do to lift you up when you’re down, or distract you when you’re sad, that can end up circling back.”

After four years, Peggy Sue have found themselves again. “I know, from looking at your mouth, how you’re going to sing something,” says Slade, addressing her bandmate; “I know what harmony to add. We’ve been singing in Deep Throat Choir, and it’s beautiful to be among those voices, but your voice is the voice that I know the best.”

“We’ve never had an album that bookmarks such an incredible period of time,” says Slade. “It’s a really powerful thing. It has seen us through very difficult times personally, and as a band.” That Vices has ended up sounding so positive and so celebratory is a testament to the power of the songs that emerged from those living rooms.

See Peggy Sue live:

15 Oct London: Village Underground w/ Rozi Plain

24 Mar Cambridge: Portland Arms‬

‪25 Mar Brighton: Green Door Store‬

‪26 Mar Bristol: Louisiana‬

‪27 Mar Cardiff: Clwb Ifor Bach‬

‪28 Mar Manchester: Kings Arms‬

‪29 Mar Leeds: Hyde Park Book Club‬

‪31 Mar Birmingham: Hare & Hounds‬

‪01 Apr Liverpool: Studio 2‬

‪02 Apr Glasgow: Hug & Pint‬

‪03 Apr Newcastle: Cluny‬

‪04 Apr  Coventry: The Tin‬

‪05 Apr Sheffield: Picture House Social‬

‪09 Apr London The Dome‬

Follow Peggy Sue online

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Music Producer Space Tyger shares new song ‘Dopamine’

Muscle Shoals-based indie-pop producer Kyle Bragwell, aka Space Tyger, premieres his latest single, Dopamine, via OpenEars Music who calls it “gorgeous and thought-provoking.” OpenEars draws comparisons to contemporaries such as Justin Vernon while bringing attention to the clear influence of Kyle’s hometown

Dopamine addresses the growing number of young people who grapple with their mental health and lean on substances, calling to mind St. Vincent’s Pills and Sleater-Kinney’s Can I Go On. OpenEars shares further,

MXDWN recently premiered the album’s title track, Bittersweet, and its accompanying video, calling it the “perfect lead-in” for the announcement of their new album and describing it as combining “several styles, from electronic to R&B and pop for a sound that can be described as ‘post-genre.'”  The record explores the experience of searching for relief from your pain by leaning on relationships, your work, and other distractions before eventually accepting you can only look internally for validation. The single’ Dopamine is out everywhere,’Bittersweet’ is out November 8th via Single Lock Records.

Follow Space Tyger Online 

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October 14, 2019 Indie-Pop Duo tiny deaths Share ‘Us’ The Latest Remix From The EP Magic (The Remixes)

Indie-Pop Duo tiny deaths Share ‘Us’ The Latest Remix From The EP Magic (The Remixes)

“Vocalist Claire de Lune makes glistening pop magic against Grant Cutler’s electro-beats”

Billboard

“tiny deaths hold unexpected elements in balance, making something unique.”

CLASH magazine

These are just two of the praises shared about the Los Angeles-based indie dream-pop duo tiny deaths. They share their new song ‘Us (Yabil Remix)’ from their Magic (The Remixes) EP, released on 4 October via Handwritten Records. The remix draws elements from various musical nominations, from blends of electronic arrangements to elegant vocals, resulting in a darker version of the original.

Aside from Billboard and Clash Magazine, the duo has been featured in The Guardian, The 405, Stereogum, Earmilk and PopMatters, to name a few. The duo’s styles differ considerably, Cutler from heavily experimental electronica and ambient music, de Lune from RnB, the result of these sounds, the Indie Pop band tiny deaths. Cutler’s bass and de Lune’s rich, soulful vocals fuse to create a sound reminiscent of 4AD projects, Grimes and Cocteau Twins.

Grant Cutler and Claire de Lune, better known as tiny death, have shared the stage with acts like Glass Animals, Matthew Dear, Sleigh Bells, Mr Little Jeans, How to Dress Well and will play three dates alongside Pale Honey later this month (see tour dates below). If Magic (The Remixes)  is any indication of their future, their fanbase can only continue to grow.

Tour Dates:

19 October –  Simple Things Festival (Bristol)

20 October –  SWN Festival, Cardiff (Wales)

25 October –  The Waiting Room (London)

27 October –  806qm, Darmstadt (opening for Pale Honey)

28 October –  Blue Shell, Köln (opening for Pale Honey)

30 October –  Urban Spree, Berlin (opening for Pale Honey)

 

 

 

Follow tiny deaths:

Website  – Facebook  –   Twitter   –  Soundcloud  –  Youtube  – Instagram  – Spotify