Magical Thinking Shallou
Album info
Album-Release:
2020
HRA-Release:
27.03.2020
Album including Album cover
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- 1 Forget 02:38
- 2 Mutual Love 03:03
- 3 Silhouettes 03:59
- 4 Try 00:43
- 5 Lethologica 03:51
- 6 Technicolor Wave 03:25
- 7 Make Believe 02:54
- 8 Fading 04:44
- 9 Endless 03:47
- 10 Older 03:39
- 11 Good Together 03:57
- 12 Magical Thinking 02:00
Info for Magical Thinking
Nashville-based indie electronic artist Super Duper, who recently announced he’ll be directly supporting Shallou on select dates of his “Magical Thinking” Tour, has released his new double single, “Spiritual / All On You.” The bundle is out via Fader Label and features Jai Wolf-collaboratorMr Gabriel.
Super Duper gained mainstream notoriety when one of his first singles “Angela” garnered early support from Sirius XM Chill and entered Spotify’s Viral 50 charts. He’s since gone on to release an official remix of Kasbo‘s hit track “Over You” and several other originals which have been featured by Google, Playstation, ESPN, and more. In addition to major releases, he’s also toured and played alongside some of electronic music’s biggest names such as The Chainsmokers, Petit Biscuit, Kasbo, The Glitch Mob and Big Wild.
His new double single starts with the hazy and hypnotic down tempo single “Spiritual” featuring Mr Gabriel who has written songs for artists such as Dua Lipa and MAX, and is well-known for his collaboration with Jai Wolf, “Starlight.” His second offering is the more upbeat of the two. “All On You” is something to dance to and puts the artist’s production prowess on full display as he combines the use of piano, a howling vocal sample, and organic percussion.
After taking a brief hiatus from the limelight following the release of his debut studio album, Souls (2018), Shallou is ready to step back in front of his cult-esque fanbase to share his nature and love-based artistry this upcoming 2020 spring.
Shallou
Shallou
Over the last several years, Shallou has become one of the music industry's biggest and most organic success stories. The Washington, D.C.-hailing and Los Angeles-based artist known to friends and family as Joe Boston has built a reputation for lovely, genre-slippery electronic pop that hits hard even at its most tranquil moments—with a new label home and over 350 million streams, Shallou is only getting started.
Growing up in the nation's capital, Boston was heavily influenced at a young age by his father's eclectic music taste: "Every car ride we took, he'd play Talking Heads, Radiohead, Wilco—stuff that kids don't normally grow up listening to from their dads. The music really fascinated me, and it got me into wanting to learn how to make all these crazy sounds I was hearing." Inspired by these strange sounds, Boston began experimenting with his own music-making through Garageband, garnering further inspirations from the sonically multifarious world crafted by electronic pop artists like James Blake and the xx. "I felt like electronic music was the easiest way to get my ideas out there," he explains regarding his musical trajectory.
As Boston headed to New Orleans' Loyola University to study music, he also graduated to using Logic as his program of choice, turning out beats on his own in his dorm room with initial career aims to become a producer or engineer. "I was just wandering through college, making music for fun," he explains, but after his college roommate got wind of the unique sounds Boston was making, he encouraged him to pursue his solo productions more seriously, eventually taking on the mantle of his manager.
As Shallou, Boston started out by hitting the remix scene while quietly working on original material, dealing with the same feelings of doubt and uncertainty that so many of his peers have experienced starting out. "There were a lot of hard periods in which I didn't know what was going to happen with my music," he recalls, but all that changed when his bouncy, effervescent "Heights" was placed on a Spotify playlist in 2016, "The music just took off out of nowhere," he recalls, and the rest came together quickly from there—from building out a management team and touring the world via packed shows and raved-about festival appearances at Coachella, Lollapalooza, and Outside Lands, to his recent signing with Island. "Up until now, everything we've done has been by ourselves," he marvels while discussing his ascent.
What's next? Boston's hard at work on his next project — and he's already got a few heaters in the can, too. The single, the moody and expansive "Fading," features a vocal turn by Boston himself as well as contributions from electronic duo Bob Moses—an artistic partnership that took place during a recording in famed Los Angeles spot Westlake Studios after a chance encounter at Coachella earlier this year, "This was one of the bigger sessions I've done—most of the music I've made has been on my own," he explains. "We'd written these lyrics, and the vibe of the song felt like something I could sing. A lot of electronic artists are pretty much just producers, and I wanted to break out of that a little bit and show that I have something to offer beyond production."
Lyrically, Boston is digging deep on "Fading," exploring a timely topic that's both universal and personal: "When we wrote this song, I was disturbed by climate change, and I was trying to figure out a way to put that in my music in a way that didn't feel contrived. A lot of art addressing climate change doesn't really feel like it's doing anything about it, so I wanted to equate it within my own life and experiences." More generally, the single represents the outside-the-box thinking that's guiding his work on the new album.
"I'm trying to get out of my comfort zone and open up more to my audience," he explains. "I've been a bit mysterious to them, and I feel like I really want to put out something that feels like me—both musically, and as a human. I've always tried to do things unconventionally, and I want to combine all the influences from the music that I love, beyond electronic music." Overall, as Boston continues to grow he's also making sure not to lose the "whimsical sadness" that he describes his music as potently possessing.” The hopeful yet melancholic feeling of love is something I've tried to put all of my music, and it's something I keep aiming for," he states—and listeners are doubtlessly about to fall head over heels for what he's been cooking up.
This album contains no booklet.