Evil Tongues has developed a gritty cinematic sound with soaring anthemic melodies and raw personal lyrics. The Toronto-based pair, Jennifer Di and Mike Allain, bonded over their eclectic range of musical tastes and saw an opportunity to take to the stage, inspired by a shared love of the sounds that defined the ‘80s and the UK music scene.
From a young age, Jennifer has always been pretty focused on going after her dreams, which comes with a lot of sacrifices. Time with family, friends, relationships, location, and as much as she doesn’t regret any of the decisions that she’s made to get here, every now and then a little voice inside her head questions has this all really been worth it?
And if everything falls apart, will anyone be there to catch you? Or have you sacrificed too much? The song “Catch Me” was written about one of those conversations that she had with herself.
“Catch Me” was mixed by Juno award-winning engineer Kevin Dietz (The Glorious Sons, Billy Talent, Alexisonfire) in Toronto and mastered by Grammy award-winning Emily Lazar and Chris Allgood at The Lodge Mastering in NYC.
“I think it’s easy to feel like you’re the only person that questions what you’re doing with your life, or feels like you have no idea what you’re doing with your life,” says Jennifer. “I wanted listeners to know that they’re not alone, and we all go through periods of questioning if everything we’ve risked is really worth it in the long run.”
Musician and poet Yoyo Comay, also known as Sufferin Mall, is releasing Crushed, an album which follows a somewhat tortured romantic connection and finds the artist writing pop hooks for the first time.
Crushed features “Latency,” co-produced with Casey Moon, a song which explores the feeling of one’s nervous system being overloaded with infatuation. It’s a pop track of tension and release, exploring feeling out of sync and delayed gratification. Stop-start energy mirrors the feeling of desire.
Ryan Wayne is a Canadian singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist. He first came to recognition as a founding member and songwriter in the critically-acclaimed, award-winning band The Warped 45s (Pheromone Recordings).
“Wherever You Land” started as a hypothetical letter to the late great John Prine in the wake of his death in the early days of the pandemic. His new single brings forth the message that life is precious. None of us are exempt from the fates of illness, old age, or dying. There is beauty in the small things.
In early 2022, after several years away from touring and recording, Ryan suffered two strokes. As part of the healing process, Ryan was drawn back to the music world and began the final production and mixing on a series of self-produced songs with Malcolm Burn (Bob Dylan, Emmylou Harris, Patti Smith, Daniel Lanois) that will comprise the record, Crow Amongst the Sparrows (2023).ThankReplyShare
Music and (literal) movement have defined DJ Karaba’s entire life. Karaba was born in Grenoble, France and, at the age of seven, moved to Montreal. Her first love was dance, and she danced for some of pop music’s heaviest hitters such as Drake, Camila Cabello, and Selena Gomez, as well as appearing in numerous music videos and award shows. Eventually, she found her way to DJing and music production, a thought that had been bubbling up in the back of her mind for some time.
New single, “Mad Mess,” was a new approach to writing music for DJ Karaba because it was the first time she wrote while channeling her anger. She was stuck in a frustrating situation when she produced this song, and needed to release some feelings which led her to go with a darker sound and vibe.
The Délivrance EP represents 3 years of hard work and dedication. It is very much afro house, tinted with other sounds that have inspired DJ Karaba. Together with Stephen Ramsay of Young Galaxy, DJ Karaba co-produced the 5 track EP and collaborated with other artists such as Mopao Mumu and Afrikan Drums.
“I felt like I was learning another form of art and that’s always something that I really love to do,” explains DJ Karaba. “The project has literally shown me that sky’s the limit. I come from a dance and DJing background and here I am releasing my first EP. It is kinda surreal to me! I really hope this inspires a younger generation of female producers that it is possible.”
The best artists are ones that are able to render diverse and complex themes into a few incredible minutes of words, melody and rhythm. apollonio’s hope is to bring the same truth to his music, most recently through his cavernous new song “We Had A Time”. Big life experiences, particularly relationships, can be both incredibly difficult and wonderful at the same time; and complex to wrap your head around when it’s over.
Swallowed by OCD for the better part of a decade, it was in the solitude of the pandemic that Marc Apollonio discovered himself again. Years had disappeared into the mental disorder and his marriage broke up. It’s an existential experience that, for many, is akin to grief. Something major in one’s life is gone and will never be the same.
Chinese singer and songwriter Lexie Liu has released “The Happy Star,” her first full album in three years. In her new 12-track body of work, Lexie takes her iconic, lyrically grungy sound and pushes it to new levels as she takes a deep dive into the hyperpop genre. Throughout this album, Lexie incorporates multiple languages, from Chinese to English to Spanish, and experiments with different emotions and tempos to create something that is simultaneously elevated as much as it is eerie. “The Happy Star” is available now on all digital streaming platforms.
Inspired by the twenty-two Major Arcana from Tarot, each track represents one card from the deck, exploring themes of fate, creation, and the universe’s inherent, cyclical dispositions. While conceiving this album, Lexie plunged into her own spiritual journey to develop something uniquely her own in its sounds and meanings. Through a mystical lens, she seeks the innate beauty and potential of human nature; tapping into musings on our ambition, love, temptation, acceptance, and everything in between.
With its modern techno sound and sitar melodies, ‘FORTUNA’ is a perfect first track. Leading with an 90’s vibe, headlining the production without overworking the music too early on in the track list, this song is about finding our fortunes and feeds into the listener’s curiosity; baiting them into figuring out what the rest of this album has to offer. Closely following the build up in ‘FORTUNA’ is ‘dance dance’, a moody confession about finally being able to dance, free from any external inhibitions and influences. The trance-like haze put forth in ‘dance dance’ cuts short as we’re transported into the electro punk beat ‘3.14159’. Lexie calls out people and their unsolicited opinions, stating that they’ve “got glitter but they ain’t real diamonds.” Her catty lyrics are matched with an energetic, confident tone to round out this air of rebellious freedom that will have you throwing your fists in the air.
‘GANMA’ brings out the haughty, unbothered side out. With an almost chant-like delivery, Lexie’s bass driven rap in the beginning shifts to a lilting realization that since she can’t fall asleep anyways, there’s no point in sticking to routine. One of the more complex compositions in the album, ‘MAGICIAN’ is all about creation and the power to change that which is predestined. ‘DIABLO’ shows us this more sinister side of Lexie’s artistic expression. There’s an art to free-falling, one that Lexie is a master of.
Track 7 marks a turning point having finished her dance with the devil and reveling in chaotic freedom, ‘MIRA’ serves as Lexie’s rediscovery of self. It gathers elements from diverse cultures lyrically, from ‘Tao Te Ching’, ‘The Heart Sutra’ to The Bible. The intense bass line reflects the internal conflict of aggression and passivity, but the classical Chinese instrumentals and her lyrical, whispering vocals towards the end serve as a placid, personal acknowledgement to the answers she’s discovered. Lexie seems to have found peace in ‘Gaia’, by far the most serene track in this album. As the only track on this album that doesn’t stray from a constant, this track is mellow pacing and serves as a nice reprieve from the constant ebb and flow of Lexie’s music. ‘BAD DREAM’ is pure, raw vulnerability. It strips away the high production soundscape packed into the beginning of this album and instead opts for a simpler, soft R&B ballad.
Continuing in this R&B direction, Lexie picks the energy back up with the groovy, afrobeat inspired track ‘RRR’. She’s still pursuing that fortuitous future, but this time Lexie doesn’t mind having someone come along with her. As we near the end of the album, Lexie surprises us with a delicate story of innocent love. In ‘i wanna tell u’, her soft vocals and dream-like melodies wrap around us like a comforting blanket. “The Happy Star” goes full circle in its final track ‘Shanti’, bringing back the techo-infused, retro sounds from the first half of this album and combining it with the softer, uplifting tone of the latter. ‘Shanti’ provides the much needed, final breath of closure in this 12-track journey of an album.
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ABOUT LEXIE LIU
Lexie Liu is a Chinese singer and songwriter creating a new template for pop music stardom, with her tantalizing lyrics, awareness of youth and gen-z culture, and “her provocative sound [that] transcends language barriers,” (i-D Magazine). Thus far, she’s released multiple singles, 2 EPs, and has even been featured as Seraphine in the League of Legends pop sensation “K/DA”, joining the likes of Madison Beer, (G)-IDLE, Kim Petras, Twice, Jaira Burns, and more in this pantheon of artists-turned- champions. According to V Magazine, “Lexie Liu is poised to become the face of a generation of new Chinese artists breaking into the American mainstream with a uniquely cross-cultural sound.”