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Story by: Chris Stewart
Director of Photography: Ben Pier
Starring: Halle Gaines
First AD: Max Delatorre
Second AD: Colin Martin
Prop Stylist: Ashley Leahy
Editor: Travis Wood
Directed by: Chris Stewart and Ben Pier
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Featuring: Anderson .Paak
Directors: M. Corey Whitted & Nick Walker
Director Of Photography: Harley Astorga
Creative Director: Ben “Lambo” Lambert
Colorist: Brandon Chavez
Editor: Harley Astorga
Sound Mixed By: My Best Friend Jacob
Produced By: Object & Animal
Good things often come in pairs, but stronger punches hit in three’s, touching base with Deafheaven who originally established in San Francisco back in 2010. The group has since gone on to rise in both popularity and member numbers as the first two-piece shoegaze group eventually poured into a five-man display of foreboding beauty.
Their third record to date, New Bermuda is a graceful display of melodic metal that courses over rugged waters to clarity. Peace of mind comes through the five-tracks that span a total of 46-minutes. Deafheaven is well known for their ability to stretch these long-winded adventures onto a record while simultaneously building both tension and falling action. With New Bermuda, the theme of water surrounds the record almost as if it was a lost island at sea.
Somehow even when the record is at its most noisy, there is still a layer of gloss that hits among the sound with excellent producing and musician craftsmanship. Deafheaven is made up of George Clarke on vocals, Kerry McCoy and Shiv Mehra on guitars, Daniel Tracy on the percussion, and Stephen Clark on the bass which works Jack Shirley in as the producer to tie the entire construction together. First balancing the opening track “Brought to the Water” as a formal introduction set in a thunderstorm of earshot ability. Paired with this unrelenting chord structure, Deafheaven quickly forms under pressure of the instruments coming unanimously to crush and rebuild.
They are excellent in their methods to transition between the harsh and rapid movements to the more graceful works that better display their attention to detail. With the frankly gorgeous chords that reign through the midpoint of the track, “Brought to the Water” is a perfect example of how adaptable and deeply layered the sound from Deafheaven can be. It combines their ability to blend both the allure and the grotesqueness of metal. Where the boat becomes rocked on New Bermuda comes from their raging following track, “Luna” that flies overboard in a frenzy.
“There is no ocean for me, there is no glamour. Only the mirage of water ascending from the asphalt,” describes Clarke in a writing style that tells a more abstract story through imagery than frontal description. Using the idea of water, there is a dissonance within the narrator that follows a common theme of isolation in New Bermuda’s sound. Told better through the vocals that work to form behind the backing of the instrumentals, this droning pain seems to continue as endless waves crash against Deafheaven.
As the sea seems to practically freeze over through New Bermuda, every step toward damnation comes in the form of a quarantined description from Clarke. Between the music, the lyrics, or the way that Deafheaven conducts themselves through sound, every piece of power comes at price through a refined madness.
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Written By: LaDiamondBlue + GBlue
Produced By: ANTDAWG
Engineered By: CruiseMixedIt
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Coming off of one of the most replayed records in a personal stash of deep cuts, Blood Orange established dominance with 2018’s Negro Swan, a passionate display of inner beauty that sparked a newfound embrace for love-making music. As Devonté Hynes’ harmonies began to spread their wings, his next step would be a closely watched and hopeful successor to one of the strongest releases of 2018.
Now moving forward with his feature 2019 release Angel’s Pulse, the sheer sentimental emotion that rushes over the listener through the 32-minute feature-length movie without the image both graces and breaks the audience. The first opening track “I Wanna C U” is a joyful push with one step in front of the other as Devonté Hynes flexes his muscular vocal cords over a joyous and triumphant return to sound. From producing, writing, and performance; Devonté Hynes is essentially a monument that stands on the shoulders of marble pillars.
Acting more as a blessing underneath a musical backing, Blood Orange moves through the crowd of sound like a holy child. Untouchable by sheer transitions and key changes, but with the recruitment of Toro y Moi on the track “Dark & Handsome,” the two have a chemistry that seems made in heaven. Their voices move together as two pieces of a similar coin that ultimately shines without ever pushing stress on the listener, with sporadic 808s that are perfectly scattered to bring a layer of welcome surprise to the record.
Angel’s Pulse is the balancing act of continuing an already superb sound and introducing new factors to the performance without completely rearranging the original idea. Blood Orange manages to dodge these laser beams with pinpoint precision, creating a magnificent display of musical athleticism. Even when moving into a track like “Gold Teeth” which is an instrumental remix of “Rinky Dink II/We’re Gonna Rumble” by Project Pat who is actually featured on the track.
Blood Orange creates a Three 6 Mafia reunion on “Gold Teeth” where both Project Pat and Gangsta Boo enter the frame to complete verses over the soulful strings of Blood Orange’s love child. It is a sudden twist from the often peaceful renditions from Blood Orange, but a flawless addition that adds variety to an already unique record.
As the final moments wrap under this silk curtain call, Blood Orange once again strikes a glorious vein with his newest musical venture. Angel’s Pulse strikes not as a quick viper, but as a slithering python snake that wraps itself around the listener, constricting them until they are covered in a sheath of warm, but forgiving sound.