Music

Conrad Clifton, Motion Studies, OOFJ, SHORE

Palisades
Fri May 15 11:55pm Ages: family friendly
Conrad CliftonMotion StudiesOOFJSHORESoft Lit

About Conrad Clifton, Motion Studies, OOFJ, SHORE


"Motion Studies is fronted by former Tempo No Tempo inertia-man Tyler McCauley, who spent the time since TNT ended playing with Grooms and Teen Witch. He's left Grooms and is joined by ex-members of Grooms, Night Manager, and Magic Bullets for his Motion Studies project. Motion Studies say hello with a moody computer blues on "Hearts Will Beat", which sounds like auto-tune era Kanye getting "Love Lockdown" remixed by The Loyal Divide. The track starts in a claustrophobic space of opulent robo-balladry and slowly mutates into a pulsating anthem as the bass gains swing and intensity. "Kalimba" and "In White" illuminate brightness, that's aligned closer to the Junior Boys' territory (particularly that saxophone skronking on "Kalimba), but their shimmer rests in the brooding shadow of "Hearts Will Beat"." - Impose


LA-based electronic duo OOFJ are elated to release their sophomore album Acute Feast (April 21 on Ring The Alarm Records).

The brainchild of real-life couple Jenno Bjørnkjær and Katherine Mills-Rymer, the LA-based electronic duo OOFJ met in New York City while Bjørnkjær was working on music for Lars Von Trier's Melancholia. This chance encounter developed into both a romantic and sonic chemistry that would eventually lead to the couple collaborating on music that formed the foundations of OOFJ.

OOFJ have garnered international recognition for Acute Feast after releasing four singles since June. Their follow up to 2013's Disco To Die To is wildly diverse while remaining true to their distinctive brand of eerie dream-like electro-pop infused with intense orchestral soundscapes. The record opens with orchestral strings paired with thick, foreboding basslines behind Mills-Rymer's darkly romantic vocals on "You're Always Good", which ends in a rhythmic explosion featuring the frenetic jungle-esque percussion played by Trentemøller's Jacob Hoyer. "I Forgive You" guides the listener into a sweeping, hauntingly lush track of duplicity that feels like a restrained underwater heartbreak while "Snakehips" radiates a sensual nostalgic aura. "Cliffdive" and "Sailor" veer away from pop into much more ambient, minimal odes.

Equal parts glamorous and nightmarish, with a glittery seductive tone to it, Acute Feast hints at the otherworldly, almost hyper-real world that OOFJ don't just reside in, but have orchestrated.

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