The Funk Hunters, Defunk and Akylla Release “Warn Ya” via Westwood Recordings


Three of Canada’s premier talents in The Funk Hunters, Defunk, and Akylla are back with an explosive single called “Warn Ya” via Westwood Recordings.

There’s a lot to admire here in “Warn Ya” as the trio of artists each fully showcase their unique talents. After winning the CIMA award in 2019, 2020 was shaping up to be The Funk Hunters biggest to date. Defunk was coming off a collaboration with GriZ, performances at some of the biggest festivals around, and Akylla’s vocal prowess had nabbed her lofty collaborations with names ranging from Excision to NGHTMRE. While the pandemic may have halted their imminent progress and growth, with the imminent return of the music industry, this trio of artists are readier than ever to show their fans their evolution of sound.

“A few months before Covid hit we got to see Big Gigantic play this tune live at Red Rocks during their set at the last Rowdytown. We had played it in a few DJ sets ourselves earlier that year while we were still finishing the production on it, but experiencing it alongside 10,000 other people when Big G dropped it was pretty surreal and this song has been a special one for us ever since. I feel like we’ve been waiting to release it forever! So I’m super excited to have this finally come out and with Defunk & Akylla on the track too it actually makes this release 100% Canadian which is something we’re also really proud of.” – The Funk Hunters

“This song is about a magnetic love that can’t be broken or understood. We all have one of those (; The Funk Hunters embody peace, love, unity and most importantly…the Funk! I’m always honoured to be in their vortex.” – Akylla

Warn Ya is an epic, dark and mysterious journey that pulls the listener in with its long vocal builds and its stomping drops. It’s a song that fans have always asked about in my sets, and now its time has finally come. Defunk





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Stefflon Don joins Saweetie and Doja Cat on ‘Best Friend’ remix


Stefflon Don has joined forces with Saweetie and Doja Cat for a remix of ‘Best Friend’ – listen to it below.

Originally released in January, Saweetie’s ‘Best Friend’ marked her first song of 2021 and her first collaboration with Doja Cat.

“My UK fans are so important, I wanted to give them a special treat with my Best Friend Stefflon Don,” Saweetie said of the new remix. “I can’t wait for everything to open back up so I can perform this remix for my UK Icy Gang!”

Stefflon Don added: “Saweetie is always killing it with her music and I’m so excited to be working alongside her for this remix, bringing some of my DON vibes to one of the biggest tracks of the year.”

Listen to the ‘Best Friend’ remix below:

‘Best Friend’ is the latest cut from Saweetie’s upcoming debut album, ‘Pretty Bitch Music’. Release details for the record currently remain scarce.

It follows her collaboration in October with Jhené Aiko for another single titled ‘Back To The Streets’, which was co-produced with Timbaland.

The first single Saweetie dropped from the album was ‘Tap In’ in June, which went viral through the assistance of TikTok. The track made its way to the top of the Billboard charts and held the number one spot on the Top Triller US chart for two consecutive weeks.

She then enlisted the efforts of Post Malone, DaBaby and Jack Harlow for a remix of the track in August, with each member contributing extra verses to the song.

Meanwhile, Doja Cat has revealed that her new album is “all ready”.

The ‘Say So’ artist told Fat Joe during an Instagram Live in September that she would like to release the record now, but said: “You have to plan things accordingly and there’s a lot going on.”





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Chris Lake & Chris Lorenzo Return as Anti Up with “Sensational” Track [LISTEN]


Chris Lake and Chris Lorenzo are back at it with their first Anti Up single since 2019.

From the dynamic superduo that brought us “Pizza,” “Hey Pablo,” “Concentrate” and “Right Now” comes an eclectic hybrid of disco and breakbeat presented as “Sensational.” The production fulfills the release of a highly-anticipated ID and signals a forthcoming Anti Up LP.

Getting into the production, “Sensational” champions the sounds of early dance music with a groove so real you almost reach out and touch it. Lake and Lorenzo achieve an analog feel, quenching our dance thirsty souls with the kind of raw, throwback energy heard in the 80s/90s. The track drives home its title with full-bodied vocal chants that spell it out by name — and “Sensational” is here to stay.

With this release, Anti Up regenerate their movement and we’re beyond excited to hear where the project takes us next.

Listen to “Sensational” and let us know what you think!

Anti Up – Sensational



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Vaccinated Express Lanes Planned for Texas’ Ubbi Dubbi Music Festival

Disco Donnie, the organizer of Texas electronic music festival Ubbi Dubbi, has announced that he is planning to implement express entry lanes at the event’s 2021 edition for those who have been vaccinated for COVID-19.





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Major Lazer continues release run with Guaynaa-supported, ‘Diplomatico’


Go big or go home, says Major Lazer‘s latest collaborative stunt. The latest release from the trio of Diplo, Walshy Fire, and Ape Drums taps Puerto Rican rapper Guaynaa for a reggaeton burner, following closely behind the dancehall outfit’s earlier 2021 original “Pra te Machucar” which, in a similar vein, united a heavy hitting ensemble including Ludmilla, ÀTTØØXXÁ, and Suku Ward.

Like its Diplo-referenced wordplay, “Diplomatico” exudes a playful character spearheaded by Guaynaa’s brazen verses. In its short span, the track delivers mischievous, yet sultry subtleties with its electronic-injected percussive patterns and sparing use of brass. Stream below.

Tags: diplomatico, guaynaa, Mad Decent, major lazer

Categories: Music






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Rage Against The Machine won’t play socially-distanced shows: “We’ll never be sellouts”


Rage Against The Machine will never consider socially-distanced gigs, the band’s bassist Tim Commerford has said.

Discussing Rage Against The Machine’s planned 2020 tour dates, all of which were postponed due to coronavirus, Commerford said that “musicians got kicked to the curb” during the pandemic.

“It’s stressful for me, just because I look at Rage and go, like, ‘Fuck, we rely on an audience,’” he told TooFab. “You go to Rage shows to see the audience as much as to see the band, and we need that. We’re one of those bands that need that.”

He continued: “We’ll never be one of these sellouts that’s gonna go play a drive-in show or play a venue that holds 100,000 people and there’s only 10,000 people there. That’s bullshit. Rage will never do that. It’s not a good show unless the audience is going off too. It’s gotta be a shared experience.”

Rage Against The Machine’s Tim Commerford CREDIT: Ollie Millington/Redferns

In March 2020 the band announced an initial postponement of what were due to be Rage’s first shows since 2011, and in May said that shows would not take place until 2021.

“Rage Against the Machine will commence our tour at such a time when we are confident it will be safe for our fans,” the band said on Instagram.

The band’s North American tour dates, with support from Run The Jewels, are currently still set to take place this June and run until August.

Earlier this week, meanwhile, Rage Against The Machine’s Tom Morello delivered the simplest of ripostes to a Twitter user who accused him of “white man privilege”.

“I’m not white,” the guitarist replied to a Twitter user who had criticised him for defending his friendship with Ted Nugent – despite his controversial right-wing views.





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Dimension Goes Track-By-Track To Review His Debut Album, “Organ,” Out Today


Dimension has had one of the biggest blow ups of any drum & bass artist in recent years, especially thanks to the massive, unexpected success of “Desire” with Sub Focus, released back in 2018. Since then, he’s released other chart toppers like “Devotion” feat. Cameron Hayes and the huge club stomper, “If You Want To.”

Now, three years after that first breakout release, Organ, the debut album from Dimension, is here.

Ahead of the release, we got in touch with Dimension’s team and asked if he could do a track-by-track review of the project — what we weren’t expecting was over 3300 words of insight, background, and analysis. But, all the same, we were overjoyed to have it and see the passion that Dimension holds for his own work.

Without further ado… Organ

Saviour

The birth of this record bizarrely came from a writing session that was initially intended for track 17, ’Sensory Division’. I had the fantastically talented Jem Cooke in the studio and together, we wrote what is now the vocal for ‘Saviour’. The vocal Jem and I wrote was great, however, it felt as though it was taking away from the minimalist vision I had for Sensory Division, so I pitched down Jem’s takes and reverse engineered a new song, writing all the new musical elements around the vocal. Due to the derogatory effect pitching vocals can have on the quality of audio, I wanted to re-record the vocal with a singer who’s vocal register sat perfectly in the key of the new track. I did some research and came across Sharlene Hector – she came into the studio and gave me goosebumps for two hours straight.

The vocal felt so powerful that I wanted to keep the intro as subtle and complimentary as possible, so the listener would be completely dialed in with minimal distractions. When the main hook, ‘As I move’ first comes in, the music almost completely disappears to further enhance this. As the musical elements build in crescendo to the drop the intention was to create an enormous release of tension and emotion. From a mix point of view, I pushed the drop further than I usually would because I wanted the listener experience an enormous wall of energy.

Alive

‘Alive’ comes from particularly unusual origins. It is a combination of two ideas; a voice memo I recorded on a ski lift in Jasna, Slovakia and a sketch I drafted on a flight to Denver during the Worship North America tour. The basic influence of the record comes from listening to Chemical Brothers ‘No Geography’, where the main musical motif is a hook based around a chord sequence as apposed to a more traditional monophonic sequence. By pure coincidence, I realised these two ideas fused perfectly with one another, so I created a new project and merged both songs into one.

The track felt in a good place and the basic arrangement and melody felt solid. One day, Matt Wilson was in the studio and he suggested working with a new talent called ‘Poppy’. I remember he sent me an audio file on WhatsApp and I was blown away, so I immediately got in touch to book in a session. A couple of weeks later, Poppy Baskcomb was in the studio. I played her a rough instrumental of what at the time was called ‘Jasna + Chems Tune’, she liked it, so we sat down and wrote the full vocal of ‘Alive’ in a couple of hours. Poppy always used to make me laugh because her sense of humour is ‘The Office’ but her voice is that of an angel.

Danger

After I released ‘UK’, I really wanted to get GQ in the studio. Not only is his voice synonymous with UK rave culture, but it’s great fun creating ‘samples’ as it gives you the flexibility of controlling what the samples say as well as their tone and timbre. I remember telling Gary just to forget you’re in the studio and imagine you’re on stage at 3am on a Saturday night he was just unstoppable. Line after line of gold, I remember having this realisation as to how much of a privilege it was to have MCGQ in the studio. I sat on his vocal probably 3-4 years – I didn’t want to force it.

Eventually I created a skippy, 808 beat that felt right for the samples we created, but after playing out the record a couple of times, I wasn’t happy with how it was making me feel; I wanted to do the vocal justice. I ended up reworking the tune and the difference was huge – suddenly, I was really enjoying playing it in my sets and was getting a reaction. I really wanted something super club focused on the album and ‘Danger’ certainly ticked the box.

Devotion

The track was written in various parts across the world; LA, London, Bermuda and Miami and was the follow up to ‘Desire’. It was a crazy time in my life, Desire was exploding but personally, I’d just gone through a really bad break up, so this track gave real focus and positive energy. ‘Desire’ completely exceeded mine and Sub Focus’ expectations so I wanted this track to be a message to my fans; ‘regardless of commercial success, my music won’t change’.

This track really sums up the Dimension ‘sound’ for me, addictive melody, power, darkness and energy. I wrote the vocal with the outrageously talented Cameron Hayes, we referenced ‘Rui Da Silva – Touch Me In The Morning’ to achieve that classic dance floor authenticity. I co-wrote the vocal on Culture Shock’s ‘Renaissance’ using a similar technique.

Psycho

The track started life on a train in France travelling from Paris, heading West, four or five years ago. The original influence from the track comes from listening to ‘Ohio Players – Funky Worm’. I love the style and attitude of that Westcoast style lead. I’m a huge lover of hard, industrial soundscapes and combining those tones with classic 808 and 909 hits was a lot of fun. At 25 seconds in, when the track breaks down, I used the Juno 108 for the pulsing bass and the Arturia Minibrute for the pitch modulated arp & Westcoast lead, so at that precise moment the signal chain is 100% analogue. It gives this super warm, slightly out-of-tune mystique.

I knew the track needed more, a hook of some form. The tune was already pretty abrasive and I wanted a vocal to further push the agenda. I got in touch with Knytro who, in my opinion, is one of the most slept on rappers in the world. An outrageous talent, unbelievable attitude and delivery.

Remedy

‘Remedy’ was my personal challenge to try and create a real earworm. I’d been reading about the structure and cadence of vocals and what makes them addictive. Seb, my manager, enlightened me on something called the ‘rollercoaster’ technique which is a technique a lot of the most addictive hooks melodically imitate; start, incline, hit their peak and then slowly step down.

The initial vocal idea came from a session I had with RAYE a couple of years ago – she’s now one of the biggest song writers in the UK. I have to say, she is still is one the most impressive artists I’ve ever worked with. I played her an instrumental once, she stood up and immediately wrote three wildly different – equally as good – songs to the same backing track. It felt like I was watching the film ‘Amadeus’. Fast forward a couple of years and I’d written the rough instrumental to ‘Remedy’ and was looking for some vocal spark.

I dragged in some ad libs from the old RAYE session and – bang – it worked perfectly with the melody. I remember being so excited that I was sending videos to Seb at one in the morning. I knew the vocal was the one but the lyrical content was just gibberish, plus, I needed a verse, so I phoned Sam Harper – a singer/songwriter who I love working with – and we wrote the track together.

I’d always wanted to work the TS Graye, she is an undeniable talent who, I’m certain, will be a future star. Since 2012, I’d recorded all of my vocals through a Rode K2 microphone through various pre’s but in this instant, it was not the best match for TS Graye’s nuanced voice. I needed something warming so I borrowed a vintage Neumann U67 (with an eye watering price tag of about £12,000) and the difference was night and day. It transformed the track and made the vocal sit beautifully, giving it the warm, youthful attitude it needed. It was a real lesson to me that occasionally, the right microphone really makes a huge difference.

UK Border Patrol

I started working on ‘UK Border Patrol’ on Christmas Day a couple of years back – cheery – I know. Most of the musical elements including the Eastern string sounds, particularly in the first two minutes or so are all recorded directly from the M1 Korg. I’m big a DJ Shadow fan and his records definitely inspired this track, particularly the drums, plus, I wanted to have something that showed a different, more refined side to my production.

I decided early on never to involve ‘Dimension’ in current affairs or politics, my job as an artist is simply to create an escapist dream, to tell a story. With that said, however, I wanted to contextualise the famous ‘Your names not down, you’re not coming in’ sample in a new light that reflects the ideology of modern day Britain. I just want people to think, that’s all.

Organ

I wanted to create a track for DJs – a tune that mixed really well with other records but held up musically on its own right. I kept trying to write a vocal for this tune, but really struggled to come up with anything that I liked. In the end, Seb convinced me to put in the album as an instrumental.

I used a lot of theologically inspired sound palettes in this track; choirs, organs, harps – I wanted to try and create a sense of grandeur, something beyond the realm of man. I felt these aesthetics would be an ecclesiastical backdrop for what is a very direct, driving melodic rhythm. It’s always fun playing with hooks or melodies that register in more mid-range frequencies, it adds a certain girth or thickness to the mix. A lot of the pads and FX in this track are recorded on my modular set up.

Altar

I love use of language as medium for emotional perception. Isn’t it funny how when we hear French we conjure up feelings of, ‘sex or romance’, yet when we hear German we think, ‘utilitarian, efficiency’. It can be such a powerful tool in music and wanted to further investigate the power of linguistics.

I have somewhat of an interest with Soviet Russia – it’s unexpectedly shaped my life in a couple of ways. I wanted the musical backdrop of hard, techno, soviet soundscapes combined with the vocal frustrations of darkness and the renegade attitude of modern Russian sonic youth.

The song was to be unforgiving, unrelenting and evoke feelings of submissiveness to power. One of my favourite bits on the album is how ‘Altar’ is super brutal, combined with the unexpected very major, happy chords in the second breakdown. It felt, to me, that it created a twisted, unsettling notion, an audio aesthetic of treachery, an iron first, a smile before an act of violence.

Love To Give

This track started in 2018. I had just purchased my Juno 108 the day before on eBay and was in such a rush to get home that I managed to pick up a speeding ticket on the way home. This horribly offset the money I was hoping to save on postage. James Culture Shock and I recorded a series of chords through it and it sounded so good – so good, in fact, that in its inception, the track had an indulgent two minute intro.

As often can be the case, the project lied dormant for over two years. We decided to get into the studio again and whilst working on ‘Don’t Sleep’, hit a dead end. Suddenly we remembered our old project and opened it up, bounced out some stems and drew in the main synth lead – the rest followed.

Working with James is always an eye opener. He is a master of his craft and achieves amazing results through some pretty unusual methods. It was a pleasure writing this track with him and I’m really proud of the songwriting. It’s worth mentioning that I was already a big Billy Lockett fan, so it was a real honour to be able to get him into the studio. He writes and sings with so much positivity and is ridiculously talented.

Domino

I wrote this song with Matt Wilson, who quite literally would not stop laying down takes until it was perfect. I think he had to stop as he was singing himself hoarse. Personally, I love to write vocals that have hidden meanings or are open to interpretation, but on this occasion I wanted to write a song that carried a very clear personal message. I’d like to think it translates to the listener – it really came from the heart. I think Matt’s boyish vocals and powerful delivery really does it justice. The other unusual thing about this track is that it’s a 4×4 beat but at a very slow tempo of 92 bpm which creates this really driving, pounding beat. The bass in the intro is all Moog Model D, probably my favourite synth.

Offender

‘Offender’ started off as a remix for The Prodigy’s ‘Light Up The Sky’ but was actually rejected. I was playing it as a dub in my sets for a while but after the tragic passing of Keith Flint it didn’t feel appropriate anymore. I ended up reworking the track completely – I love music that evokes very clear emotions or paints a very clear pictures in ones head. I’ve always wanted to create a proper acid trance inspired D&B track – that genre has so many great industrial sonic references. ‘Offender’ is of course a homage to ‘Public Domain – Operation Blade’ and the famous opening scene of the first Blade film – I thought, ‘How fun would it be if I could try and recreate that crazy, dark, chaotic rave feel in 2021?’.

Originally I was struggling to get the drop right, it just wasn’t sitting happily on a breakbeat. It was only until I put the 4×4 kick underneath the acid line did things really come together. I remember thinking, ‘What on earth have I made?!’. I was unsure of how the track would go down because it was so outside of the box, but it’s been one of the biggest tunes in my set. I purchased a 303 specifically for this track and used it extensively.

Lord’s Prayer

I can confidently say this was the hardest song to finish on the album. I went through so many different iterations of this song, heard it so many times that I began to lose all forms of subjectivity. I recorded Liam Bailey 3-4 years ago and was just blown away by his level of talent. Having toured with him before, I knew Liam is such an amazing force of energy. Also, sessions with him are fast because he’s so good. I think Liam did an amazing job of delivering and writing the vocal, I love the message – the tainted optimism of man – and you can really hear he means what he’s singing.

I needed a second ear so my good friend Jono from Ekko & Sidetrack came to the studio in the final few weeks before the album deadline and gave me some really good advice. He touched on the fact that the drums were too ‘up-front’ and he correctly suggested that it would benefit the album to have something more rolling and lead by breaks. The strings underneath Liam’s vocal in the breakdowns (0:22) is Massive VST run through a guitar amp and rerecorded with a mic, that’s why it’s hard to decipher exactly what instrument it is. There are also no vocal samples in this song, everything was recorded in my studio. Gina Kushka sang the vocal hook on the drop, not only does she have an incredible voice, but she’s a really talented painter.

Plus Minus

I wrote ‘Plus Minus’ three days before delivery day and I have to say it’s probably one of my favourites. I really wanted an exercise in simplicity. I love experimenting with the minimal/maximal approach to dance music – trying to get the most groove and energy out of the most few elements. The drop is a kick, snare, a hat, one pulsing held bassline and a two note square wave melody.

This track also highlights my love of house and techno and the unusual arrangement, long breakdown and build-up was inspired by Ludwig Göransson film-scoring work. At track 14 on the album, I found the track palette cleansing as it’s so stripped back. It felt ‘fun’ having the track start simply on an open square wave without any fancy tricks or processing – in that sense – the track is a little bit of a statement.

Hatred

I saw Metallica at Reading Festival and James Hetfield, the lead singer, opened up the performance with, ‘Good evening Reading Festival! Are you ready to rock?! Do you feel alive?!’ – I thought, fuck, that is just such a good line.

Although I appreciate drum and bass which is influenced by rock, it’s not particularly an aesthetic I gravitate towards – so I wanted to put a different spin on spoken word. I’m really into Louisahhh (particularly her Shadow Work EP and tunes with Maelstrom). ‘Hatred’ was really inspired by her work.

Working with E11e, the spoken word vocalist, was an interesting journey – she actually used to be the office manager where MTA Records were based – that’s how we were put in touch. She did an amazing job recreating my vision. The intro is all analogue, even most of the drums, which is why it all sounds a bit ‘off’ and whacky. I really enjoy how unapologetic this track is.

Desire

Nick Sub Focus and I got into the studio together and just had a lot of fun. We were playing on his modular set up, he was showing me his new Make Noise Morphagene module and we made a pad, put it through Paul Stretch and that was the first element which stuck. We made some rough parts, a vague arrangement and decided to reconvene in a week or so. I was so desperate to work with Nick that I wrote three separate drops and sent them to Nick. One of the three tracks incorporated the bass and lead combination which you hear on the record now, so to my surprise, Nick suggested that’s the one we should work on, so we met up again and worked on it together.

The vocal, again, came from a session I recorded with RAYE – at the start it was just a mishmash of ad libs but we pieced them together and made a coherent melody out of them. We asked Kudu Blue to come in and revocal the track together; Nick, Clementine and myself wrote the vocal. It was extremely organic and an absolute pleasure to be a part of.

This track really exploded well beyond anyone’s expectations. As an artist, when a track finds so much commercial success it’s an amazing yet odd feeling, it’s almost as if you lose control, the record just runs away from you and does its own thing.

Sensory Division

I had 26 vocal sessions for ‘Sensory Division’. Men, woman, Grammy winners – the lot. This might sound over the top for how simple vocal ended up on the track, but due to the songs arrangement, the track was incredible hard to crack. I wanted something simple, haunting and addictive but no matter how hard I tried I couldn’t nail it. I wrote and wrote but had no luck, I was getting frustrated and was considering leaving it as an instrumental. Finally, the exceptionally Clementine Douglas came into the studio and we nailed it. She really understood what I was trying to achieve. I just fell in love with the chords and desperately wanted to do them justice.

One of my favourite parts of the track is the operatic vocal I recorded with Katey Brookes at the beginning of the second breakdown, it’s something really unusual which you don’t hear much of in drum & bass and I think it’s a poetic point of difference. I also love how the verse comes in so late into the track, almost as homage to the progressive house tunes it is influenced by. 28 seconds into the track there is an egg shaker which I recorded in a basement studio in Estonia through a Russian microphone made by a company called Soyuz. Their microphones are produced with old automatic Kalashnikov equipment.



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Dirtybird’s Claude VonStroke Drops New Sample Pack, Announces Music Production Contest

Music producers can now glimpse into the weird and wonderful musical mind of Claude VonStrokeDirtybird‘s papa bird, who has been pushing the envelope of house music for years with his unique approach to production.





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Xavi’s debut album ‘To The Endless Searing Skies’ is a must-listen of 2021 [Q&A] – Dancing Astronaut Xavi’s debut album ‘To The Endless Searing Skies’ is a must-listen of 2021 [Q&A]


“I feel that this album is stronger than anything I’ve ever made, and that it truly represents all of what I have to offer” — Xavi.

When an artist expresses a sentiment of this nature, you should listen. On March 5, the date of To The Endless Searing Skies’ release via Ophelia Records, that’s precisely what we at Dancing Astronaut are doing. And after digesting To The Endless Searing Skies in its 10-track entirety, it’s apparent that the LP—Xavi’s first—is a powerful record of personal reckoning. From top to bottom, the album—which deals quite powerfully in metaphor—lyrically and vocally confronts “thoughts and experiences” that Xavi has had, he told Dancing Astronaut.

While Xavi has constructed his career to date on the dynamic distillation and subsequent marriage of elements extracted from synthpop, electro-pop, indie, future bass, and mid-tempo and melodic dubstep, he’s also founded it on artistic authenticity. Creative wrestling, a pledge to develop sound that he enjoyed, a little serendipity, the support of a label that has stood behind him since he made his Ophelia debut on Advent Volume 2, and his own innate experimental and exploratory electronic acumen have culminated in a rich, vibrant project that boldly bespeaks Xavi’s presence in the dance space.

Dancing Astronaut connected with Xavi ahead of To The Endless Searing Skies’ arrival to look back on the production choices and personal perspective that yield an LP that can equivocally be declared a must-listen of 2021. Find both the full Q&A and album below.


You’ve expressed your feeling that this album “is stronger than anything” you’ve “ever made.” What specifically about the LP inspired this sentiment, and how does To The Endless Searing Skies differ from the music that you’ve made in the past?

Xavi: “I’ve never really been given the chance to release anything as large and interconnected as this before, and it’s really given me an opportunity to shine in areas I’m proud of and areas I’ve also never tackled before. No songs I’ve ever created have worked together as well as the songs of this project do, and I think that upon listening, it’s easy to see why I’d say that. Also, lyrics add a power to music that instrumentals cannot always carry. “

All 10 songs on To The Endless Searing Skies are written and sung by you. What motivated you to use your own vocals on the entirety of the project, and can you tell us a bit about your writing and vocal process as you crafted the album?

Xavi: “These vocals are extremely personal. Although many of them are quite metaphorical, they all represent thoughts and situations I’ve experienced; I don’t think it would be as personal to have someone else say (or sing, in this situation) my own thoughts—it would feel a bit disingenuous. 

As far as working with the vocals goes, I’ve never had to work with them before, and the process of learning how to work with them was pretty arduous (in fact, the song I easily spent the most time on as far as vocals go didn’t even make the final cut because of how rough it sounded). The writing process was interesting as well because not only have I never wrote before this, but I also had to take myself seriously enough to create lyrics that had true meaning. I’m quite goofy usually, so this was trying at first!”

What is the story behind the album’s title? The titles of the individual tracklistings are also very specific, how did you select them?

Xavi: “The album’s original title was actually From the Heart to The Soul To the Endless Searing Skies. This name is based on some of my personal experiences with death and losing loved ones and was born from my constant ponderings on the idea of where we go when we pass and what are we supposed to do in the meantime before we venture into the endless. The title of each track reflect the sentiments found in the lyrics or emotions contained in that song.  The lyrics would be written and sung before the track titles were decided, so I was able to use them as a representation of what’s found inside.”

In February, you tweeted that you never really felt you “had a true voice in music” until now. What changed, and how did you get there?

Xavi: “I’ve always experienced a large amount of imposter syndrome, to the point where I was always trying to push everything as far as I could just to prove myself to, well, myself. My music became my burden. I would constantly try to ‘one up’ each previous song I had created, to the point where I was basically losing my mind as I worked.  One day, something snapped, and I decided that my sanity wasn’t worth the constant attempts to impress my audience. I decided to just create something I truly enjoyed, beyond the technical aspects of production, something solid that might not be the next major step in being a technical wizard but would stand on its own legs without technicality.  This is around the time that I decided to do my own vocals, and it was when I realized that I had accidentally stumbled onto exactly what I wanted to make.”

Porter Robinson notably dropped your remix of Madeon’s La Lune at EDC 2016. What significance did this hold for your career at the time? 

Xavi: “One of my first major influences on my sound was Worlds, so that was a massive, huge deal to me. That being said, I usually take a very stoic approach to victory, so after the initial shock, it was basically me saying to myself ‘cool, that’s a great victory. Okay, let’s keep going and see what we can do next.’ 

I’ve never been one to rest on laurels from previous wins, so I just kept chugging along (of course, after the initial shock of that happening to me passed. Even if I’m stoic about these things, it doesn’t mean it wasn’t a huge deal to me still!)”

How did you get connected with Ophelia, and what lies ahead for you with Ophelia?

Xavi: “Funny story, that. They actually reached out to me at first, asking for a track to release on their Advent Volume 2 compilation.  I misread the email completely and sent them my in-progress EP, and they responded with ‘thank you, but we’re actually just looking for singles right now.’

In my infinite wisdom, I THOUGHT I responded to them saying okay, but I’d just created a draft instead; lucky me, because then about a week passed before they shot another email back telling me they wanted to release an EP. After another round of misunderstandings (I sent tracks for Advent, they thought I wanted to use those tracks to make the EP an album, and I did want to make an album, but not using those tracks, so I made four tracks within one month), the album was complete. 

As far as what lies ahead, I hope many things. I absolutely love Ophelia to death and could not have asked for a more understanding and amazing label to work with, and I am already beginning to work on my next possible project.”

Tags: Ophelia Records, to the endless searing skies, xavi

Categories: Features, Music






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NGHTMRE and KLAXX Join Forces on Wild New Single “Falling”

We have officially received our first NGHTMRE single of the year. The release, called “Falling,” comes in partnership with San Diego-based producer KLAXX and arrives on Gud Vibrations.





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