LITTRELL has a new project coming out called Public Love. With the visual album they’re raising awareness about the cycle of violence. To promote the release they’ve just dropped a video for the song Cycle. Beautifully shot, the Hollywood level cinematography gets honored by convincing performances from its stars.
Lindsay Littrell herself is a revelation on camera. You can’t help but be drawn to her rare seductive traits. You feel kind of bad admiring her beneath this context. That’s the kind of internal discussion this art is meant to move within you. It’s crazy effective. The song is damn heavy too. We’re into it. Dig in.
We think the new video from roger weeks is brilliant. The illustrated narrative that follows the lyrical construct of the kid who made it works beautifully with the song. There are doses of the abstract and metaphorical. There are also some fitting direct references that help to mold his persona as an emerging star.
The style also bears some notable nostalgia in its cut and paste stop motion collage design. There are also some clever live shots worked into theater sequences. We love the community effort and how he got some help from some other artists we’ve featured, your friend juniper and fair hazel. Community, not commodity. It’s a really strong effort from this emerging gay troubadour. Enjoy it!
Dreamy lofi psych vibes hit different when used as the soundtrack to chronicle destructive weather incidents. That’s the angle Dusty Lucite took for their new single The Rate of Change of the Rate of Change.
It’s like the drugs known to this psych scene are needed to calm the anxieties our impending doom brings. Everyday it seems to be getting worse, and the changes needed to make it better seem ever fleeting. We appreciate that they used their platform in this manner. It is sad, isn’t it.
Now that’s a stage show. That’s how we felt when we dipped into the live performance from Never Knew You from 2ŁØT. The band takes its name from the 2nd law of Thermodynamics, and that scientific detail resonates with the technical brilliance seen in their video.
The electronic jam alternative R&B hybrid could bring something refreshing to the jam band scene. We were recently dragged to a Disco Biscuits show and though we didn’t vibe with the singers, our biggest take was that we would have paid the ticket price for the light and laser show alone. With 2ŁØT, we would have been feeling all of it.
