Porter Robinson’s “Look at the Sky” Official Lyric Video is Simply Beautiful [WATCH]


Porter Robinson‘s “Look at the Sky” has arrived with the sole purpose of inspiring hope.

Along with the release, we’re treated to an official lyric video in true Porter fashion, with beautiful visuals to match the divine vocals and overall production. The video focuses on surreal flower fields and a pristine sky, as simple text reveals the lyrics line by line.

Porter gives insight via press release:

I wrote this song at my lowest point emotionally, when I thought I couldn’t make music anymore, and I wasn’t sure if my existence would have any meaning if I couldn’t make music. In the lyrics, I’m sort of imagining what life would be like once I was on the other side of all that fear and anxiety and sadness. I’m happy to report that it’s amazing on the other side of all this, and I’m so glad I had hope and persisted.

With that in mind, listen and follow along with the lyrics here!

Porter Robinson – Look at the Sky (Official Lyric Video)

Stream/download: http://porter.fm/nurture

Lyrics

Is it fate?
If it’s not easy, it must not be
At that age
I cherished the flowers beneath my feet
But then something must have changed in me
I used to feel so light
Now I’ll try
I just want time

Wait again
I will be much better then
Holding on, I said
I will be much better then

Look at the sky, I’m still here
I’ll be alive next year
I can make something good, oh
Something good
Look at the sky, I’m still here
I’ll be alive next year
I can make something good, oh
Something good

Are you close?
Shouldn’t it come to you naturally?
And everyone knows (Oh)
You’re losing your gift and it’s plain to see
But then something must have changed in me
I don’t fear it anymore
Now I’m sure
I’m sure

Look at the sky, I’m still here
I’ll be alive next year
I can make something good, oh
Something good
Look at the sky, I’m still here
I’ll be alive next year
I can make something good, oh
Something good

Look at the sky, I’m still here
I’ll be alive next year
I can make something good, oh
Something good
Look at the sky, I’m still here
I’ll be alive next year
I can make something good, oh
Something good

Wait again
I will be much better then
And suddenly
I’ve restored your faith in me

Look at the sky

Look at the sky, I’m still here
I’ll be alive next year
I can make something good, oh
Something good
Look at the sky, I’m still here
I’ll be alive next year
I can make something good, oh
Something good

Look at the sky I’m still here
I’ll be alive next year
I can make something good
Something good
Look at the sky, I’m still here
I’ll be alive next year
I can make something good
Something good



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Listen to Porter Robinson’s Long-Awaited Nurture Cut, “Look At The Sky”

At long last, Porter Robinson has finally dropped the curtain on “Look At The Sky,” one of his most anticipated track releases in recent memory. The song will appear on his upcoming sophomore album, Nurture.





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Porter Robinson reopens ‘Nurture’ rollout with coveted Secret Sky finale, ‘Look At the Sky’ – Dancing Astronaut


No more rewatching the final minutes of Porter Robinson’s Secret Sky set.

24 hours shy of the one-year commemoration of Nurture‘s existence being publicly disclosed, Porter Robinson is picking up the rollout for his now-finalized sophomore album with its presently most sought-after opus. Initiated as the conclusion to his one-of-a-kind Secret Sky grand finale, “Look At the Sky” steps into center stage nearly nine months after its maiden voyage to sit beside “Get Your Wish,” “Something Comforting,” and “Mirror” on the soon-to-be realized Nurture tracklist. The album will formally land on April 23, Robinson announced in time with “Look At the Sky’s” release.

It wouldn’t be any stretch of the imagination to think that the tens of thousands of fans sitting in front of their computers collectively froze as Robinson slowly spelled out “one more song, it’s a new one” on the projector screen directly behind him as the curtains began to draw on his daylong virtual emprise. For a fourth consecutive time, Porter Robinson capitalizes on the use of his own handmade vocals through “Look At The Sky,” amplifying the one-man show chronicle behind Nurture, validating its deserved placement on Dancing Astronaut‘s most-anticipated IDs of 2021 through its optimistic lyricism, and matching the first-string production to the LP’s prior trinity of showpieces.

Stream the long-awaited “Look At the Sky” in its entirety below.

Featured image: Ashley Mercado

Tags: Nurture, Porter Robinson, secret sky

Categories: Music






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Jared Leto recalls how he nearly signed Billie Eilish and Finneas


Jared Leto has revealed that he contemplated signing up Billie Eilish and Finneas before their rise to fame.

Leto spoke about the opportunity during an interview with James Corden on The Late Late Show in the US yesterday (January 26).

  • READ MORE: Every single Billie Eilish song ranked in order of greatness

Recalling how he was introduced to the sibling superstars by the film producer Emma Ludbrook and the US agent Tom Windish, Leto explained that his first encounter with Eilish and Finneas took place some years ago prior to them being signed.

“They weren’t signed, and I thought that maybe I would try and sign them, they were so incredibly talented and just special people,” Leto said (you can watch him talk about Eilish and Finneas at the 6:08 mark below). “The music is one thing, but I think they’re just incredibly intelligent, really empathetic, just really good people, and I quite like them a lot.”

The Thirty Seconds To Mars frontman and actor also revealed that he invited Eilish and Finneas to perform at a small party at his home, which Leonardo DiCaprio attended.

“I said, ‘Hey, will you guys come and play a couple of songs?’ and they were, like, ‘Yeah, sure’. They showed up with a Guitar Center p.a. and played the most heartbreakingly beautiful music with, like, you know, it shouldn’t have sounded that good – it was impossible that it sounded that good,” he said.

“I remember Leo DiCaprio was there and a couple of other people and they were just, like: ‘How did you find these people and, like, who are they?’ Everyone was just jaws on the floor, 12 people max at my place in the hills. Yeah, just great people. I’m huge fans, too.”

Earlier this week, Eilish reflected on watching her upcoming documentary Billie Eilish: The World’s A Little Blurry – admitting that it was “pretty brutal” to look back on her life so far on tape.





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Watch the Dazzling Official Tomorrowland NYE Aftermovie

If you missed out on Tomorrowland‘s most recent festival spectacular, fear not. You can now relive the magic of the brand’s first-ever virtual New Year’s Eve event after they dropped its official aftermovie.





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Dancing Astronaut presents Supernovas 001: Dylan Matthew


Supernovas is a recurring Dancing Astronaut feature dedicated to vocalists in the dance space who, with their own idiosyncratic vocal signatures and unique lyrical perspectives, have played pivotal roles in bringing electronic records to life. Each installment in the monthly series spotlights one vocalist. The serial launches with Supernovas 001: Dylan Matthew.


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Featured image: Emma Paige

It started with a cold email.

“I got thrown in very randomly,” Dylan Matthew said of his initial stride into the dance scene. But he was the one doing the throwing.

Though he’d “never been in the electronic industry or done anything like it,” the early lack of direct experience within this sector didn’t dissuade the Southern Californian from composing and sending an email to Kayzo, a producer he didn’t even know at the time. Would Kayzo want “any vocal work?” That was precisely the question on Matthew’s mind—along with, presumably, would he respond?

“I was just throwing an email out, hoping for the best,” Matthew told Dancing Astronaut. “I found his email on SoundCloud—it might have actually been his manager’s—and I was just like ‘hey man, I’m a singer, here’s some of my music, let me know if you’d like to work on something.”

Many cold emails fall upon deaf ears, but Matthew’s was not one of them. “He responded and said ‘yeah sure, send us over some toplines,’ and I was like…I don’t know what a topline is,” Matthew recalled with a laugh.

Needless to say, he does now, and his catalog looks a lot different today than it did then, though this is no surprise. At present, Matthew is arguably one of the most immediately recognizable and sought-after voices in contemporary dance circles. And, at the rate he’s going, the same will not only be able to be said of the here and now, but of Matthew’s mark in electronic music years later down the line.

On his dance resume now: collaborations with SLANDER, Seven Lions, Excision, Wooli, Tritonal, Kai Wachi…the list goes on, and merely by reading the names “SLANDER” and “Seven Lions,” the piano notes of “Love Is Gone – Acoustic” and the synths of “First Time” have already begun to play in readers’ minds. The singles would not be what they are if not for the lyrics that Matthew put on paper, or, of course, his vocals—ask any listener. At the time of this Supernovas feature, the singles account for a staggering 35,584,934 and 27,973,951 Spotify streams, respectively. Clearly, Matthew has come a long way from the cold email, sent when he had “zero collaborations” to his name.

“It was the very beginning of my career. I was still releasing Ed Sheeran-esque acoustic music,” Matthew said.

Kayzo went on to produce the first song that Matthew sent over, though it presently sits “somewhere deep in the vault,” according to the singer-songwriter. But that was just the beginning; Matthew’s name would go on to appear on two of Kayzo’s Black & White EP inclusions, “Avalanche” and “Horizon.”

The EP, released on November 18, 2016, was a prelude to another Matthew/Kayzo matchup, one for which SLANDER notably came along, “Without You” (September 2017).

“From there, it just kind of snowballed where I sung for Kayzo and then somebody else heard it and hit me up, and then somebody else heard another song I did and hit me up. It was just kind of like a chain reaction,” Matthew reflected when asked what’s kept him in the dance space since that fateful email.

The other facet of his not-so-newfound residency in electronic music? The type of songwriting that this genre embraces. “A lot of it is that I like writing this style of music. I really enjoy writing big, anthemic, crowd-singing songs. That’s just my style; I’ve always wanted to have people scream lyrics back at me, and I’ve never experienced it as much as I have in this dance-style music,” he said.

By his own admission, Matthew has “seen some success in this style of song.” “Some success” is a humble way of putting it. The Dancing Astronaut Supernova is widely recognized within the industry not only for his vocal talents, but also for his accomplished songwriting, such that calls for Matthew to write another “First Time” have become their own sort of refrain.

“For me, especially where I’ve been in the past little while, even people who want to collaborate and send me instrumentals and things like that, it’s like ‘something really like ‘First Time’ would be great, you know?’” Matthew said. But he doesn’t want to write another “First Time.” Though, for a while, he tried to.

“When you start to write music for other people and for what you think other people will like, it takes away the love and creativity of it. And so I had to stop trying to write another ‘First Time,’” Matthew said.

“I had to stop trying to write a song that I thought everybody else was going to love, that was going to do so well, because the thing about being an artist and songwriter is you don’t want a formula for songwriting. If you’re an artist who people love and respect and they want to hear what you have to say, then you have to say what you want to say, not what you think they want you to say, because that’s part of your artistry.”

His piece of advice to aspiring singer-songwriters: “don’t try to write music for other people.” He’s thoughtful as he adds, “write what you like and edit from there, but make sure that you’re not leaving out parts of yourself to try to fit in the mainstream style.”

It’s important to note that Matthew’s own “artistry”—to borrow his term—is not isolated to dance music. The self-taught singer stands behind “acoustic-style ballads…R&B music…ambient pop music,” but he’s intent on not being “put in a box.”

“I just think artists shouldn’t have to be stuck inside of ‘oh you make this style of music, you make this style of music.’ An artist is an artist in any standpoint,” Matthew said.

Kalopsia, Matthew’s most recent solo long-form, released on June 19, 2020, offers a fuller portrait of his art and creativity, both of which resist such “box”-constructing categorization with originality and personality.

Notably, Matthew produced half of Kalopsia and wrote all of it. He calls it “the most intensive project” that he’s worked on to date, and “Drown,” Kalopsia‘s opening tracklisting, “probably [his] favorite released song [of his] right now.”

“It’s very different, very long, ambient, and I’m proud of it,” he said of “Drown,” with which the below playlist, curated by Matthew himself, opens. The accompanying playlist, intended to spotlight 10 songs of Matthew’s own choosing, also includes Kalopsia‘s other three inclusions, “Don’t Forget,” “Fall,” and “Midnight in Tokyo.”

Though listeners can expect to hear Matthew make more noise in the dance space this year, they too can anticipate more solo releases from him:

“I didn’t release a lot of music last year. I released a lot of collaborations, but not a lot of solo music, so this year, I’m really focusing on getting my solo music out there and pushing my solo career out as far as I can. There will definitely be a lot of music coming out this year, including several songs that I’ve been holding on to for a time, because I was too scared to release my favorite music, but this year I’m doing it; that’s the plan for 2021.”

Needless to say, we’ll be listening.

Featured image: Emma Paige

Tags: dylan matthew, interview, Supernovas, vocalists

Categories: Features






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Listen to Yonaka start “a new chapter” with new single ‘Seize The Power’


Yonaka have returned to action by releasing their new single ‘Seize The Power’ – you can hear the track below.

The song is the Brighton-based band’s first piece of new material since the release of their debut album ‘Don’t Wait ‘Til Tomorrow’ in May 2019.

Yonaka have released ‘Seize The Power’, which was self-produced by the four-piece and features spoken-word vocals from lead singer Theresa Jarvis, today (January 27).

“It’s been so long since we released new music and the time has finally come; this is a new chapter for us,” the band said about ‘Seize The Power’. “We want you to get lost in a feeling of strength and empowerment when listening to this song.”

While you can already hear Yonaka’s ‘Seize The Power’ in the above clip, the official video for the track will premiere on YouTube at 8pm tonight.

A live Q&A with the band will also take place in the video’s accompanying live chat at 7:30pm.

Last month Yonaka were among the acts who performed during the digital music festival Five4Five, which raised money for the Music Venue Trust’s #SaveOurVenues crisis fund.

Yonaka said they were “dead excited to be headlining this festival” in a statement at the time.

“It’s for a great cause for everyone to get involved in, saving the grassroots venues that we have all had a great time in. We all want to get sweaty and moshy again so do what you can to help and enjoy the show!”





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Your EDM Premiere: Colorblast – Let Me In Closer (Official Video)


French producer and singer Colorblast, whose previous aliases included Galleon and Ocean Drive, follows up the release of his vibrant new single with its official video. ‘Let Me In Closer’ dropped in the latter part of 2020 and has had over a million streams to date. It was written in conjunction with Nicholas Carel and with 90s influenced bass grooves and an immensely catchy vocal, we’re here for it.

The music video, which we’re premiering below, has a story of its own. Taking the artwork of duo Leo & Steph and carving out a dance routine by its troupe of dancers all in black, ‘Let Me In Closer’ comes into its own. It also features a mysterious lead character who provides contrast from the theme and credit goes to fellow Frenchman and comédien Arnaud Mizzon.

Whilst you can stream the track here, watch the full film below.

 

 

 



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The Ghost Ship Warehouse’s Master Tenant Pleads Guilty to 36 Counts of Manslaughter

The Master Tenant of the Ghost Ship warehouse in Oakland, where 36 people tragically died in a 2016 fire, has pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter charges.





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Kaskade returns to Monstercat with new progressive single, ‘Closer’ – Dancing Astronaut


Kaskade has released his third consecutive single on Monstercat titled “Closer,” continuing his partnership with the label and video game, Rocket League. The single follows the veteran DJ’s previously released tracks “Flip Reset,” featuring WILL K and “Solid Ground,” both having landed as special featured soundtracks on Rocket League in December 2020. Building anticipation for his forthcoming Monstercat EP arriving in March, the Grammy-nominated producer stated of the release,

“Working on ‘Closer’ felt like coming home for me. There’s a lot to be said for the comfort of warm chords, vibey vocals and build ups that bring us all back to our love of bass. I want ‘Closer’ to be equally at home on the dance floor, the living room or in your headphones on repeat.”

“Closer” boasts Kaskade’s dynamic production flair, emitting shades of ethereal atmospheres, progressive bass lines, infectious melodies, and signature angelic cadences. In partnership with Epic Games, “Closer” is available as a limited time Player Anthem in Rocket League. Participants can also access Kaskade’s in-game radio takeover of “Radio Yonder,” Fortnite’s in-vehicle radio station.

Hear “Closer” by Kaskade below.

Featured image: Nicholas Hunt/Getty Images

Tags: closer, Epic Games, house, kaskade, melodic, Monstercat, progressive house, progressive trance, rocket league, Single, tech-house, techno

Categories: Music






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