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Magic Sword
Armand Hammer

Magic Sword is an ageless tale of good and evil told through an ever expanding graphic novel with each volume accompanied by an original, synth-heavy soundtrack as well as immersive live performances. With the three mediums intertwined from conception, together they create an epic experience for those bold enough to bear witness and come away with a deeper understanding of the ultimate hero’s journey. Armed with a musical and visual aesthetic that has its roots unabashedly buried deep in the golden era of ‘70s and ‘80s fantasy and sci-fi, Magic Sword’s followers are called to another plane of existence where the struggle between light and shadow becomes all too real. In this newest installment, The Keeper embarks on a righteous quest to navigate a corrupt world where the sword has been abducted by an evil most foul. Amid the conflict, he seeks to find himself and reclaim what is rightfully his ‘Badlands.’ Originally composed as a soundtrack to a feature film, ‘Badlands’ tells the story of loss and rediscovery of one’s self.

Armand Hammer

Armand Hammer

www.armandhammernyc.com

www.anniversarygroup.com/armand-hammer

Kaelin Ellis

Kaelin Ellis

Raised on a diet of homegrown Gospel, Madlib, J Dilla, Flying Lotus and various other influences, Lakeland, FL based multi-instrumentalist and producer Kaelin Ellis deftly straddles the labels of funk, hip hop, electronic music and space age jazz for a sound as fresh and exciting as the young producer himself. Already a Multi-Platinum musician with over ten years of experience, the genre-defying creator has already worked on music with Lupe Fiasco, Joyce Wrice, Virgil Abloh, Logic, Jazmine Sullivan and K-Pop superstars EXO to name a few. On top of the public releases, he has also worked on music behind the scenes with Monte Booker, BROCKHAMPTON, Channel Tres, Lido, Masego, Domo Genesis, Fana Hues, Mick Jenkins, Tkay Maizda,, Danny Brown, Noname, JID, Kaytranada and more that will hopefully see the light of day in the near future.

Malik Elijah

Malik Elijah

At the core of his music, Malik Elijah is a Hip-hop artist. Taking a step back reveals numerous layers of creative expressions that push the boundaries of the genre. Rather than ride the waves created by others, he pulls inspiration from his peers and predecessors to create his own current. Online, Malik’s music resonated with over 660K Spotify Listeners in 2023, catching the attention of platforms like Okayplayer and Lyrical Lemonade, alongside curators Annabelle Kline and Saving Connie. Offiline, with over 40 shows since 2022, including supporting acts like Freddie Gibbs, Earthgang, and Ben Reilly, and two DIY tours, Malik boasts a robust live performance resume. Stamped by nominations for best Hip-hop artist and best EP/Album at the 2023 Boston Music Awards, Malik has left an inedible mark in Massachusetts, his current base. Throughout all of his work, Malik Elijah has demonstrated time and time again that he is one of the most versatile artists in Hip-hop, and there isn’t a levee that can hold what is in store for Malik Elijah in 2024.

El Perro Del Mar

El Perro Del Mar

Keep it close like a memory / notes by Oliver Craske ‘It’s not strange for me to write about these things. It’s always when I am really at the edge of feeling that I need to write.’ El Perro del Mar has always made music with passion and commitment, with an open heart and mind, and fierce independence. Now, with Big Anonymous, she goes places where few choose to venture in public: dialogues with the dead, musings on her own mortality, reflections on the inner darkness that she inherited. It’s gothic, crepuscular, moody – and magnificent. And in the end you might just find it uplifting. She does. El Perro del Mar is the alter ego of Sarah Assbring, the Swedish singer, multi-instrumentalist and composer who has been one of the most consistently intriguing pop artists of the 21st century. Named after a stray dog she once encountered on a Spanish beach, who lifted her spirits at a fragile moment, El Perro del Mar put out her first releases in 2005. Soon she was winning awards, being namechecked by David Bowie and touring internationally with the likes of Lykke Li, José González, Taken by Trees and TV on the Radio. But she was never part of a pack. Big Anonymous is El Perro’s eighth album, and it’s a tough job to sum up the musical path taken by this relentless shape-shifter in the years between then and now. It’s encompassed doo-wop redux, mystic ballads, electronic dance, loner’s laments, ecstatic love songs, film soundtracks, dance scores, global pop, political pop, existential pop and more. Every time you think you’ve put her in a box, this Schrödinger’s Dog eludes you. But it’s fair to say that introspection has been a consistent theme in her music, and that it’s always been balanced out by the resurrecting power of love and hope. This time she has really embraced the existential. Having lost too many family members over the years, Sarah came to realise that she was haunted by grief that wouldn’t go away. She felt guilt at being alive when others weren’t, and was dogged by a sense of her own mortality. And she wanted to move on from these preoccupying thoughts. Why do I come here? Why do I keep returning? It’s not you haunting me It’s my mind disturbing disturbing peace disturbing dreams Part of the problem, she came to see, lay in the secretive relationship we have with death in modern societies, especially in the West. We rarely acknowledge its looming presence, so we can’t even name our fear – hence the album title. ‘Particularly in Sweden, I think we have this really strong and strange relationship to death,’ she says. ‘It’s all very mystifying. You don’t talk about it. You don’t even go close to it when someone’s dying: you don’t see the body, you have the funeral and it’s far away from you, and I think that is a dangerous thing. In cultures where you have wailing mourners it gives you this preparation for your own passing, which is so important.’ In a way Big Anonymous can be seen as revisiting the themes of her second album, From the Valley to the Stars, whose sixteen songs explored love, death and heaven. But back then she took solace in the natural circularity of existence. ‘A last breath is taken, a first one is drawn,’ as she sang on the gorgeous secular hymn ‘Do Not Despair’. She returns to this territory now with fifteen years’ added experience of life – and death. If they are twin albums, Big Anonymous is the darker of the Gemini stars, Castor to its Pollux. The atmosphere is at times suffused with dread, the lyrics exploring communication blocks, crushed surburban dreams, time running out, the death drive. ‘I really wanted to go to the absolute edge of my own thoughts and fears,’ she explains. This is her way: in film she finds herself drawn to horror and true crime. ‘I love to be scared,’ she says. And we’ve seen her taste for the gothic before – in the video for ‘Dreamers Change the World’, she wielded a sword like she was Max von Sydow in The Virgin Spring. Although this album draws on her own experiences, it is not meant to be pure autobiography. The theme applies to all of us, and she takes on different voices and characters in the songs, to potent effect. In one song, she explores the realisation that we can inherit our gloomiest personality traits – what she memorably likens to a ‘Cold Dark Pond’. As she tells the father figure in that song, ‘You got the same dark in you as I,’ and the spine-shivering reply comes back: ‘I put it in you.’ But, like a good therapy session, this is about coming to terms with our darkest places. We dive into the depths precisely in order to resurface and taste the fresh air with renewed relish. Big Anonymous also features delicate melodies, atmospheric timbres and sublime arrangements. The words, as always with El Perro del Mar, are honed to precision. Ultimately there is an upbeat to the downbeat: when we accept that life is finite, we can live better, we can appreciate the too-brief days of wine and roses. The ten tracks originally arose out of a commission from Dramaten, Stockholm’s historic Royal Dramatic Theatre. El Perro del Mar was given a choreographer and two dancers from the Royal Opera and allowed a free hand to stage a performance concert, which was premiered in December 2019. The music was played live, to accompany the dancers. As well as Sarah, the musicians were Jacob Haage (her longtime partner and key musical collaborator) and Petter Granberg, both on synthesizers. The songs emerged from an organic collaboration between the trio and were reshaped by the process itself: watching the dancers in rehearsal fed back into the compositions. From the start she intended to make an album out of the songs too, but the creative process was novel for one of her releases. ‘We did this in the opposite kind of way from how you normally make a record: we wrote the songs for a live situation, we rehearsed and played them live, and then we had them in our bones,’ she says. They chose to team up with the Australian engineer Daniel Rejmer, who had been inspired by seeing the Dramaten show. Rejmer proposed that they record live in a large open space with natural reverb – ‘the way that Flood used to work back in the days,’ explains Sarah. So she rented a former torpedo factory with huge, high-vaulted rooms on the central Stockholm island of Skeppsholmen, which now houses the dance theatre MDT. She used the same musicians and instrumentation, with the addition of a cello, two violins, and the Swedish composer Shida Shahabi guesting on piano on ‘Cold Dark Pond’. The synths and drum machine were routed through guitar amps to create the live sound, and microphones were placed in adjacent rooms. The recording process, like that of the composition, was unusual for her. ‘I’m such a control freak,’ she admits. In the past she has sometimes racked up hundreds of takes of her vocals. Rejmer insisted on live takes. ‘While doing it I had this feeling of losing control and being on thin ice,’ she reflects, ‘and in the end it was exactly what I needed.’ The British electronic producer and composer Vessel (Seb Gainsborough) provided additional production. ‘It’s been a dream of mine to work with him,’ she says. Along the way the pandemic threw some spanners in the works, but the results are worth the wait, and now this remarkable album can stand alone, independent of its origin. And it’s not like she has been idle in the meantime. There was her 2020 album Free Land, the product of a residency at Stockholm’s Museum of Modern Art; she has co-written the upcoming album from Swedish artist Zhala; and she has been working lately on the scores for two upcoming films – Four Little Adults by Selma Vilhunen, and Filip Jan Rymsza’s Object Permanence. Indeed, cinema is increasingly important for her. She has taken the new album’s themes in a parallel direction in a short art/horror film that is soundtracked by excerpts from the songs. For this she worked with the stylist and art director Nicole Walker, a longtime collaborator, and the photographer Joseph Kadow. Sarah appears as three characters, seemingly drawn from her fever dreams, who navigate a series of scenes, by turns uncanny, nightmarish or contemplative. A woman stumbles along an empty metro platform, sits bleakly in a bare suburban home, tries to wash blood off her hands, her skin decaying. A black-suited figure, ambiguous, wanders through wintry woodland and a churchyard. Then there is a monstrous figure, who seems to embody all the fearful, untold, deathly nightmares that haunt this suite of songs. But at length the woman gazes on a dark Scottish loch, as the album’s upbeat closer ‘Kiss of Death’ plays, a song of acceptance. El Perro del Mar has learned from her grief and can live with it. I tell myself to not give in To keep it close like a memory.

NOIA

NOIA

Structured to unfold like a dream, the debut album by NOIA combines an array of languages – Spanish, Catalan, Portuguese, English – and traditional sounds from her childhood in southwestern Europe to process her personal transformations over the past two years while living between NYC and Barcelona. Gisela Fullà-Silvestre formed the alias NOIA to create separation between her profession as a celebrated composer and mix engineer for film and TV, and her experimental pop productions. After graduating from Berklee in 2015, the Barcelona-bred artist relocated to Brooklyn and started writing music that channeled her early attachments to sound, which were formed osmotically as a child in the home of her activist parents. Shortly thereafter, she released her inaugural EP, Habits, which was a lush, romantic affair anchored by singles “Nostalgia Del Futuro” and “Itaca Tropical.” NOIA played shows across North America and Europe, and embedded herself deeply into NYC’s creative community. 2019 then saw the release of her second EP, Crisalida, a Catalan word for “cocoon,” that expanded on her international references to mine an increasingly leftfield palette. Dancehall and tropicalia radio fused with R&B and glitchy sound design to create an utterly placeless sonic world. 2023 is the year of NOIA’s debut album: gisela. Opening with entry-portal “anoche,” a traditional vidalita song is reinterpreted and set against field recordings of nighttime traffic in Brooklyn. As the song concludes, birds chirp and the listener sits upright in a world of swirling soundscapes, textures and floating melodies. The album then tumbles through a range of vignettes and emotions. Single “didn’t know,” featuring close friend Ela Minus, is an ode to Gisela’s dating misadventures in NYC. “reveal yourself” touches on pandemic-era romance and domestic magic. The feeling of being transformed by the embrace of a loved one while the world seems to be sinking around you. Song “eclipse de amor,” on which Gisela is joined by Buscabulla, unfolds over the course of a tropical night, to tragically end with a knife and bloodshed. The song is a romantic bolero duet – a tale of fiery love that consumes everyone involved. Other tracks explore themes of capitalist hustle culture, isolated companionship, friendship, optimism, struggling to find balance in work life and the eternal broken heart that immigrants have. Final song on the album, “estranha forma de vida,” sees Gisela grapple with her parents’ recent cancer diagnosis and the treatments they’re currently undergoing in Spain. The song draws down to a trickle of voice and guitar, bare and without reverb or effect. The dream ends with its protagonist naked and exposed, but alive to the light. gisela was written and recorded between her studio in Brooklyn and her family’s home in Barcelona. Field recordings were also central to the creation process. Everywhere Gisela went, so did a recording device – dinners with friends, weekends in the park, voicemails, city sounds, nature ambiences. The resulting body of work is deeply autobiographical, yet instantly recognizable. The context uniquely NOIA’s, but the stuff of life visits us all. gisela will be released March 31 on Cascine.

Athena Garza

Athena Garza

A Boise based musician/singer/songwriter with passionate, heavy lyricism drawing from an emotional past. Athena writes seductive, moody dream pop to make you feel vulnerable and uniquely romantic. Her album ‘Hallucinations’ is set to be released in 2023.