Postiljonen / Siv Jakobsen / Pandreas (Norwegian)

60/80 RMB

 

Line-up:
Postiljonen
Siv Jakobsen
Pandreas

Postiljonen
瑞典的电子流行乐总是有令人惊喜的新声音。神秘的新团Postiljonen去年才推出首支单曲〈How Will I Know / All That We Had Is Lost〉,梦幻的合成器、偶尔出现的口白和多层次的人声,让人想起年少时经历的美丽时光。新歌〈Supreme〉节奏轻快并具有绚丽的副歌,像柔软版的 M83歌曲。

POSTILJONEN 是支拥有斯堪地那维亚半岛双国背景的电子乐团
从中,能闻到斯德哥尔摩的大器,也能闻到卑尔根的秀气。

Siv Jakobsen:
\”With each passing listen, we find ourselves falling deeper and deeper with Siv Jakobsen.\” – Daytrotter
ollowing the release of her The Line of Best Fit & Spotify UK – supported singles How We Used To Love & Dark, Siv Jakobsen is set to release her 7-track EP The Lingering on May 26th, via The Nordic Mellow Records. The talented Norwegian wrote and recorded the EP whilst living in her old 6×7 “bed with a door” room in Brooklyn, NY.
Already favorited by XFM, Ja Ja Ja Music & Daytrotter, Siv is steadily making waves in the online music world. Having already been playlisted on Amazing Radio and on Spotify UK’ official folk-playlist Lost In The Woods, played sessions for Daytrotter & Sofar Sounds, supported Highasakite and with a summer set to grace the stages of The Alternative Escape at The Great Escape and renowned Slottsfjell-festival in Norway, 2015 is looking to be Siv’s biggest year yet.
\”Utilising oft-ignored music pillars like dynamics, silence and space, Jakobsen tears your ribcage open to pluck out your still-beating heart; you\’ll be left stunned and haunted, but somehow, Jakobsen makes you believe that everything will all be okay anyway. Her lo-fi guitars and trembling piano riffs melt into gorgeous vocals, and when congealed together, the music is ruthlessly emotive to the point it should come with a warning label.\”

Pandreas:
Pandreas’ late 2013 single “Rås” was a major step forward from the young Norwegian producer, one that placed him firmly within the country’s proud tradition of brilliant contemporary electronic music without detracting from his emerging voice. With “Rube,” the first cut from his upcoming Beluga EP (due April 1 via Sellout!), he’s taking another leap towards palpably ambitious, adventurous long-form disco that\’s unafraid to eschew easy brightness for a darker, more tempestuous atmosphere. Stretching over nearly nine minutes, “Rube” takes nearly half that time to fully develop before locking into a holding pattern, at which point Pandreas starts adding and swapping out components like an excited mechanic. The constantly shifting, ever-so-tense dynamic makes for an engaging listen: this is how you go long without wasting a second

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