B.Miles is a revelation. Her ability to blend an obscure influence of mid 90s international pop with modern indie is remarkable. The sentiment rings true on her recent Emergency Contact. The single has been blessed with an equally nostalgic, brilliant music video.
Director Stephen Michael Simon gets it, and he captures the vibe impressive. Shout out to the entire Moon Crawl Records artist team. This one is special. Get into it.
The artist mejia has the video game on lock. Whether the videos are for imaginative performance videos or Hollywood worthy MTV era epics; the artist delivers. Their recent SEVEN feat. Hand Habits honors the tradition.
The storyline reflects a consistent theme among his work, as it cites the occult in the Tarot card sequence. Both with his music in within his aesthetic, mejia is searching for answers. Stylistically the song recalls an influence of Andrew Bird or Beirut, a new dynamic within his expressive canon. We can dig it. See for yourself.
Ride the intergalactic wave. That was our initial reaction to the new song and video from psych pop innovators Cereus Bright. It’s crazy catchy too, much like the energetic imaginative collage seen in the video.
This is our kind of brainwashing, whiplashing between multiple versions of our complicated experience. What’s most impactful is in how it emphasizes the breadth of existence. There are a lot of us, and too many are looking to make claim of the limelight. Paired with some classic 60s psych pop influence and adapted with an indie sensibility akin to Spoon, everything feels right. Get on and Ride.
Kacy Lee Anderson & The Waverly Pickers embrace the weird and the obscure in the video for their new single #croptopnroll. There’s an authenticity to this blend of Americana and psychedelic.
It cites the late 60s and early 70s impressively. As if Dolly Parton went tripping with Gram Parsons. In that way it also reminds us of King Gizzard side project The Murlocs. The video; well that’s a whole level up on eccentric. Here for a good time. Press Play.
