Categories
NEW MUSIC

pr1ncess – “dump him” (prod. crapface)

With “dump him”, pr1ncess revives the glamour of the 2000’s. The impact of the 2000s era in American culture was due to its fashion and its icons. Celebrities such as Paris Hilton, Britney Spears, and Christina Aguilera could walk down a red carpet, appear in a movie, or as stars in a music video with “dump him” blasting. They’d sport a small tank top, a bubblegum pink velvet sweatsuit, and a small canine companion in a purse as they swung their hair around at the flash of a dozen cameras.

“Dump him” sparkles as it begins with a voice that says, “I want you out of here by Thursday.” Pr1ncess then begins singing the song’s most addictive phrase “ D. U. M. P. H. I. M.” The song is about breaking up with a guy who is not good enough for you anymore. The lyrics say “ego so big that your head be hurting, now look at the tables how they be turning. You thought I was hurt b*tch now my skin is beaming, look how I’m thriving without you babe”. Focused on self-improvement and female empowerment – this minute long “electronica” song is a fun anthem to sing with your bestfriends driving down the freeway. As the music fades out pr1ncess maintains that same fun energy in the song, repeating for the final time “DUMP HIM!”.

Listen here:

pr1ncess · dump him (prod. crapface)
Categories
NEW MUSIC

angelus – “symposium” ( prod. @rioleyva, @thecxdy & @prodnash )

Angelus’ sound is magnetic. Its thematic futurism is characteristic of the popular music genre called “hyperpop”. Angelus’ utilization of distinctive rap elements in their interpretation of hyperpop further individualizes their sound amongst Soundcloud’s artistic sphere. With release “symposium”, self described as a “dancehall” track, angelus cements their sound and proves their craft is able to evolve and continuously improve. “Symposium’s” release is perfect for the year 3000 – something you would hear walking into a club where people have on rectangular chrome shades and outfits are made of geometric shapes. Its release encapsulates a rare musical reality, an exciting glimpse into the makers of tomorrow’s sound. In a short minute and forty-five seconds angelus delivers an exceptional song and an inimitable sensory experience.

The instrumental is produced by @rioleyva, @thecxdy & @prodnash. It notably features a low cyber bass, fast drums, and a background chime melody. Angelus begins to sing with a vocal effect that lends itself perfect to the robotic tune. The lyrics “I’m so drunk at the function I cant walk straight, too much money in my pocket like I robbed the bank” repeat in your brain due to their placement in the song’s sonic atmosphere.

The song’s appraisal is evident in the Soundcloud comments filled with phrases like “no like next level”, “singlehandedly saved summer 2020”, and “1 0 0, 1 0 0, 1 0 0”. I encourage you to be one of the first passengers aboard the spaceship: take a trip into the cyberspace created by Soundcloud’s rising artists.

angelus · symposium ( prod. @rioleyva, @thecxdy & @prodnash )
Categories
NEW MUSIC

Estephanyart – “THE TRUTH”

“The truth will set us free. The truth will guide us to the treetops.” Repeated throughout moody pop artist Estephanyart’s newest June single, “The Truth,” the lines hold the uncomplicated and straightforward message of the song: the singer’s realization that a person in their life is doing more to hold them back than lift them up. Since Estephanyart’s arrival to the musical scene in 2019, she’s drawn inspiration from rap, indie, punk-rock, reggaeton, and more, always orbiting around an edgy pop sound that continues to come through in this laid-back and mellow release.

While her last single, “Numb,” feels airy, like you’re perched among clouds, “The Truth” evolves into a more grounded work, with an artful simplicity that digs its heels into its crisp bass and matter-of-fact layered production. Estephanyart’s ability to draw on so many different inspirations and vibes is warranted by the choice to release all her art as singles, granting her creative freedom that transforms her music from head-bumping rap, to crooning indie anthems, to everything in between. In this swirling mix of genres, “The Truth” feels easygoing and feminine, instilling in its listeners a visual montage of aimless driving, expanses of cloudy sky flying past, and sticky lip gloss being applied in a topless car’s rear view mirror.

The production of the song lends itself to the mellow, dreamy vibe, beginning with a simple strumming melody in the beginning that holds throughout the 3:48 run time. What sandwiches this consistent tune into a trinity of sound is a contrast between high and feathery vocals, and a deep, succinct bass. With only these main layers to the song, “The Truth” is simplistic, yet satisfying with the emphasis of not only the low, middle, and high layers, but the intentional space that exists between.

Despite the pleasing continuity of this song’s mood making it the perfect soundtrack to a drive with the windows down, it’s the kind of music that accompanies you on a journey, instead of taking you on one. In the future, it’ll be exciting to keep an eye out for Estephanyart’s new projects, and whether or not they’ll expand into more complex melodic rides. For now however, “The Truth” gets our heads nodding and fingers tapping, simultaneously whetting and fulfilling our craving for dreamy, easy, trendy listening. 

Estephanyart · THE TRUTH

Review by Connie Deng

Categories
EVENT WATCH

LINK & BUILD (w/ MASKED GORILLA)

LINK & BUILD is an amazing opportunity for rising Soundcloud artists to share their music live with MASKED GORILLA and livestream viewers on Twitch. The event takes place 08/13/2020 at 6-7:30pm (EST). Click the image for more information. You can even start sending your links in now on Twitter.
Categories
NEW MUSIC

HOOK-“STREET PEOPLE” [PROD. NEDARB & 2THOUSAN9]

“STREET PEOPLE”  begins with a soft laughing sound that appears periodically throughout the song. Hook comes in singing,“ I can’t tell who to trust no more, I love you but I think you need more. I know who I am, today I am not sure, everything around me feels so forced.” The song is quiet and soft like cotton candy. It feels like jumping rope with your friends. Its setting inside this particular ambiance paints it several colors with carefree emotion, but the lyrics illustrate a separate message.

The song invokes a distinguishable sadness that comes with self discovery and understanding where you fit amongst others. The chorus says, “the people down the street, think they need some help, the people down the street they don’t look too well”. Hook reflects on the people she sees around her, the lyrics alluding to how she speaks about the “street people” is similar to how she feels about herself. She sings, “I woke up today and it feel like yesterday” and “I can’t even explain how I feel, dont want no pressure, dont ask me whats the deal.” She navigates her outlook in a soft melody as if this reflection is playful, masking the serious undertones of her message.

2 mins 30 seconds into the song comes a breakdown into a faster and louder portion of the song. Someone comes over a cell phone and she says “ I’m in the studio freestyling” and proceeds to rap a fun carefree verse with her friend on the phone. She is full of laughter and light. Hook’s ability to discuss self-reflective conclusions seamlessly with a light instrumental is refreshing. Her unique style is something to pay attention to as it envelops the listener and transports them.

Listen Below:

HOOK · STREET PEOPLE [PROD. NEDARB & 2THOUSAN9]
Categories
NEW MUSIC

2morrownight – “Feelings Mutual” (feat. HIDDENHILLS)

A singing voice comes over the speaker and fades in to become louder. 2morrownight sings “falling in love got you kind of afraid, getting kinda late, let me know what you’re thinking. But tell me that your feelings are the same right now.” The song embodies the texture of an RnB love song to perfection. Its ambient feel combined with 2morrownight’s fluid vocals create a genuinely focused musical experience.

 “Tell me that your feelings are the same right now…” is the lyric beginning the chorus. The chorus is synthesized with a background falsetto. The song appears to be about a couple who argue and are unsure of each other’s feelings towards each other, hoping that ultimately, the feeling is mutual. HIDDENHILLS further elevates the song with his feature, “put your feelings to the side don’t you blame me”. He sings “ I know they say the feelings started fading…I know your friends said we’d never make it. I don’t know if its true but I know about you.” HIDDENHILLS summarizes the emotional plea to someone they love but are in conflict with. The two artists complement each other seamlessly.

2morrownight’s vocal abilities add to the ambient feel of the song, increasing its overall complexity and depth. The musical arrangement is complex with the instrumental being enriched by harmonies and repetitions. The drums at the finish of the song are reminiscent of a pounding heart , contrasting 2morrownight’s soft vocals, finishing the song in an almost angelic way. “Feelings Mutual” explains perfectly the type of situation many experience in relationships and its production creates a twisted smooth love spell atmosphere.

Listen here:

2MORROWNIGHT · Feelings Mutual (feat. HIDDENHILLS)
Categories
VIDEOS

Nascar Aloe – Heaven PT. 2

Nascar Aloe’s video for Heaven PT. 2 was released on August 6th 2020 on the DEATHPROOF INC. channel. The video was directed by Myagi and Collin Casino, shot and edited by. Collin A. The video utilizes the metaphor of a television screen as a skeleton frame, the body: Nascar Aloe’s complicated sentiments about an afterlife, his trials with love, and his ultimate perception of self. The video’s colorplay and thematic arrangement elucidate Nascar Aloe’s revelations on “Heaven PT.2”.

The video begins with a blue screen that glitches, revealing a figure laying on a mattress next to a television. The TV is the only source of light in the room along with a thin rectangular light standing on the floor. The video zooms into the television screen utilizing its glitchy quality to glitch the viewer into other scenes. Someone writing in a journal. A figure in a blue, dark hallway. Next, a yellow like sunlight holds warm a blonde, shaggy haired girl, holding a joint carefully in her hand. The fire of the joint is seen against different backdrops, and Nascar Aloe’s voice comes creeping in through the dark “I don’t wanna go to Heaven anymore”. He sits up from his place on the mattress, quiet in the orange red room. The video is devoid of time. The flashes between Nascar on the bed and different perspectives of the room signify a loss of concentration, a loss of care.

Nascar Aloe sings “getting high until they find me on the floor, I felt your love and I can’t help but want some more,” as he molds his famous hair spikes onto his head, recorded on a camcorder by a girl who looks at him admiringly. A flashing light gives the effect of thunder, and it is used as a scene switches to Nascar Aloe lying in a dim blue hallway and he sings “I don’t want to go to Heaven anymore”. The image of fire reappears in the cigarette he holds, his eyes closed, scenes flashing between the room, the girl, the hallway, as if the memories are colliding and collapsing. “I wish I knew what you want me to say, a void in my chest cus im so far away, baby its torture im counting the days.” 

Nascar Aloe sings, “ when i wept, it made me realize that i changed and I aint myself”, drums come over the previously solemn track and the clips switch faster, the television glitch shifting quickly. Nascar Aloe appears on the mattress, wavering around in anger. He appears in the frame of a window or door, caught in the rectangular shape, the video makes sense of him being trapped inside the television screen. He yells “NO MORE. I don’t want to go to Heaven anymore. They denied me and they’d probably close the door.” The video ends with a glitch effect and a blue screen. As if it were concluding perfectly the beginning to the video. Symbolizing the entrapment of the artist not only in a physical and motion space, but an internal one as well. 

The music video for Nascar Aloe’s “Heaven PT.2” is in perfect harmony with the artist’s musical intention. A song Aloe called “ the end of my love life” on Soundcloud. The video is a long awaited visual imagining for a song adored by many since its release a year ago.

Watch here:

Categories
NEW MUSIC

Xanubis – “DOWN !”

Xanubis’ first release in months comes in the form of a sweet love song with “DOWN !”. The beginning guitar melody compliments the song’s atmosphere, created through Xanubis’ singing of “I don’t wanna keep you down, I don’t wanna be your cage, girl you know I’m not afraid, if we go our separate ways.” In the lyrics, Xanubis examines his struggle with internal demons. More towards the middle of the song, the flow switches up, and Xanubis’ voice is more intense as he considers how his conflicts have affected his relationship: “tell you I love you but then I get violent, there’s no excuse for behavior like violence.” Despite his turmoil with himself and the person in the story, he appreciates the person he writes the song about saying “I know you’re precious you’re more than a diamond”. In this song, we get the idea that Xanubis sees this person improving herself and moving on from him. “DOWN!” concludes with the realization that they have to go separate ways. Xanubis highlights this in the final repetition of “I don’t wanna keep you down, I don’t wanna be your cage”.

Listen Below:

☆XANUBIS☆ · DOWN !
Categories
SPOTLIGHTS

Xanubis

Xanubis is an artist who stands out among many due to his unique creative methodology, worldly perspectives, and musical craftsmanship. Last Friday I called him at 4pm for the interview we had scheduled, not anticipating the journey he was about to take me on. The wind rustled through the speaker as he answered the call and said “can you hear me alright?”. We spent the next half hour talking about him, his upbringing, and the careful way he tackles various themes in his art. He paints the picture of his career and lifetime for me vividly, how could he not? After all, that’s what a true artist does best.

Malik hails from the Tenderloin neighborhood of San Francisco, California. His interest in music began due to his childhood involvement with the church, where he would play drums and sing. In middle school, Malik got involved with an after school poetry program, where he began to write about the problems he faced. Navigating his life through poetry helped to foment his love for music which he cites as a constant in his life then and now. Malik got more serious about making music his sophomore year of highschool, where he coined the name Xanubis.

Xanubis is a name with a unique story. Malik mentions explicitly that the name is not meant to promote drug use, instead it is a tale of an encounter he had with infamous benzodiazepine, Xanax, which led him to meet an impactful moment of self-realization. When he was 15 years old, his heart stopped after taking Xanax and he ended up in the ICU. Malik recalls this moment in which he “met the afterlife” by honoring his life and experiences in his music – importantly through an artist name that will always remind him of his purpose. “Xanubis” is a combination of the words “Xanax” and “Anubis” – the Egyptian God of embalming and the afterlife. Malik explains that embalming is the “art of mummification and preserving the body after the body has died” similarly, he feels his purpose in the art he creates is to preserve his soul and life on this plane long after he has died. The story which led to the creation of this name is a tragic one for a young person to experience, but the way he transmuted that fearful moment into embers for his creative work is testament to the high caliber of artist that Xanubis is.

In highschool, he began making music using Garageband on his mom’s laptop and recording using his playstation headset. He made it a personal goal to write at least one song a day. He would write wherever he was, even during class. Even though some days he would write more than one song, he always held himself to at least write one song. He would record at home in his bathroom while everyone was asleep. Eventually, his friend introduced him to a recording studio center in the San Francisco public library. When he would get out of school, he would go straight there and record whatever it is he had written the night before. He recounts meeting a lot of cool people at that spot – the Bay community becoming integral to his artistic journey.

San Francisco and the Bay area is a place Malik describes as small, where “everyone knows everyone”. He explains that if you do something substantially and are passionate about it, the community will always show up to support you. He describes the music culture there as competitive, with a relatively small pool of artists. He compares the music scene in the Bay to the one in Los Angeles, which he believes can be disingenuous, “where people will like your music but not necessarily support it”. In the Bay, he chronicles that the competition makes people want to always be on top of eachother, making it slightly difficult for one person to rise, but says with the right amount of perseverance, it is possible to be one of those people who come out on top. He discusses his appreciation for the type of constructive criticism he receives from his community because there are a lot of creatives in the scene to help you along. In figuring out his unique sound in the Bay community, he chooses to be an artist over an entertainer – to focus on maintaining his discipline, creating his own sound, and writing music constantly. He wants to “ make it so that my life and the pain I’ve endured is not for nothing”. He emphasizes the importance of staying yourself in the artistic community because of the society that we live in saying that “ in America, getting a taste of victory in art takes a lot and you have to sell your soul to taste the sweetness, just to find out it’s not as sweet as you think”. Because of this, he must stay true to himself and his greater vision along his artistic path.

Malik breaks down his relationship to himself and the music he creates. He views his music as the “purest reflection” he has of himself. The music he makes are “his children”. In it, he speaks from his heart and a vulnerable place; “I make music for myself first because I need to”. He talks about specific times when people have reached out to him to tell him that his music has helped them through personal situations and finds it amazing, “that’s what music is for”. If it helps you skate better or sleep better, “that’s what music is for”. He lists the artists who have most influenced him “from the day I was born, till now, I’m older of course”. This list is extensive and crosses genres, knowing no boundaries, a reflection of his own approach to music. Xanubis’ influences are a recipe, a concoction: stirring in old-school Usher with Daft Punk, Foster the People with the Misfits and ACDC, Skrilliex and Kid Cudi, the Southern Miami soundcloud scene consisting of XXXTentacion, Ski Mask, Wifisfuneral, and his music-making friends in the Bay.  

Delving specifically into his songs, Xanubis delineates how he “views his life as if he’s in an anime”. He compartmentalizes his life into overarching themes which assist in writing music. One of the biggest themes he thinks about is death. Malik details how he spent a lot of time contemplating his existence, and what would happen after he died – fearing what was or was not on the other side.This fear of death inspired him to use his time wisely, and he doesn’t want to end up old and regret the life that he lived. Death is a recurring subject in his art, and in between his explanation of his afterlife theories he says “you have to remember to die”. To him, there is not enough time on earth to be consumed by negative feelings. He speaks a powerful message: “Make your music, make your money, find what fulfills you”. 

Through his music, Malik aims to hold time still. To be able to immortalize his experiences, his love, and himself. He interprets music like a historical archive, where people will return and look at these moments and know what was happening in society. Personally, Malik says, “ I don’t know what my legacy is gonna be, I don’t know how I’ll be remembered or what for ”. He aims to create something for not only himself but for others, he describes it as “a tree others can eat from long after I’m dead”. Another theme he tackles in his music is resilience. He believes giving up is so much easier than anything else. “Some days will be better than others, this is what you have to understand as an artist and as a person. At the end of the day, what everyone needs is peace.” 

Music for Malik as Xanubis has been a profound personal journey and a dream he works passionately at, every day to reach. “Say less, do more” he says, “eventually you will create momentum and the music alone will take over”. Xanubis is crafting a moment in time for himself and his art – embodying a vision of what music is in the hands of its maker.

Listen To His Music Here:

☆XANUBIS☆ · XANUBIS – SO ALONE (ft. Sad Boy KJ)
Categories
NEW MUSIC

Katana – “She belongs 2 the STREETS” (prod. Samuel Ivy)

“She belongs 2 the STREETS” is a song off Bay Area artist Katana’s most recent project SUMMERBLAK19. This song is definitely essential to any summer playlist. Her style is reminiscent of early Kehlani projects. Katana’s delivery of this track is masterful; her lyrical abilities and vocal skills unblemished. Spinning off the themes of female empowerment in recent music by popular artists like Meg the Stallion, Katana takes the meme of women “belonging to the streets” and sings about not caring what people think about how she lives her life. She sings,  “I can’t tell if we are something. I know better than be jumping out my bag and in conclusions.” She details that the person she writes the song about believes things said about her, but still wants her despite her reputation “you still care when you know I ain’t shit”. Katana ends the song repeating her catchy hook saying “I know that playing you is unfair, but you can do better than me”. 

Listen Below

Katana · She belongs 2 the STREETS (prod. by Samuel Ivy)