MUSIC

Lizzy Land Releases Debut EP, "intro music plays"

Land's new project, featuring the single "Messed Up," uses a soft, intimate synth-pop to explore anxiety and longing.

Lizzy Land's debut project plays anxiety off of lush synth-pop, turning her self-doubt into a meditation.

intro music plays, the new six-track EP from the Portland native, gives plenty of room for the cathartic release of anxiety, with a sound that's warm but slow in its embrace. The video for "Messed Up," one of the EP's first singles, imagines Land confronting a figure with a mirror for a face, reflecting her own angst back to her. intro music plays gives greater detail about that confrontation, allowing Land's vocals and writing to settle into the tranquil synths. The tracks yearn for connection as easily as they second-guess themselves, developing scaled-down character over the project's brief runtime.

"Messed Up" and "Losing My Head" both grapple with feeling lost, but the EP gains the most traction when Land turns her songs into tragically one-sided conversations. "Sweet Melodies" finds freeing joy in losing yourself in another person, where Land's desire becomes explicit rather than abstract, while "Call Me" plays with distance and the loneliness that comes when a friend leaves her life. The relationships on intro music plays focus on what voids love and happiness can fill, making the tracks about isolation and worrying that much clearer. "Bad Things," the closer, brings that juxtaposition to a head, a heavy and self-aware plea to a toxic lover.

Land runs head-on into the paralysis of anxiety and the fear of what sadness the future might bring, with clear eyes and a soft sound. It's a gentle approach, and she makes the most of it on intro music plays, an intimate and pensive pop debut that speaks of big things to come.


MUSIC

Mating Ritual Brings The Heat on 'Hot Content'

The band's newest release is worth putting on repeat.

Press Photo

Los Angeles' pop duo Mating Ritual dropped their third album, entitled Hot Content, just moments ago.

Up until 2014, the duo, siblings Ryan Lawhon and Taylor Lawhon, were known as Pacific Air. But when Taylor decided to return to school, Ryan formed a solo project called Mating Ritual and began working on his debut album, How You Gonna Stop It?. As the project proceeded, it became more and more of a collaborative effort between the brothers.

As soon as the first album dropped, the two went to work on another album called Light Myself On Fire. Before long, the two albums amassed more than 25 million streams and vast media support. The brothers hardly noticed because they were already working on still another album, Hot Content, a name borrowed from an Instagram joke gone meta.

Eleven tracks long, Hot Content blends elements of pop and shimmering electro-pop into infectious nuanced concoctions of bright sonic textures.

Hot Content

Entry points include "U.N.I," an electro-pop number flavored with dance-lite rhythmic energy. "Panic Attack" rides new wave sonic savors atop percussion, as tasty rasping vocals glide overhead.

"Falling Back" travels on a gleaming electro-pop melody full of swirling synths and a compact rhythm. Expanding coloration infuses the chorus with radiant vocals and velvety washes of harmonies. "The Name of Love" opens on glittering synths and a pulsing kick drum flowing into a polished electro-pop tune rife with dream-pop-laced textures.

"October Lover" may well be the best track on the album because of its surging harmonics and vibrant dynamics. Reminiscent of The Killers, only with more resonance and dreamier vocals, the song's energy is beguiling.

The last track on the album, "Game," rides low-slung flavors of electro-pop topped by wistful falsettos, injecting the lyrics with tight, impulsive timbres.

Follow Mating Ritual Instagram | Twitter | Facebook | Spotify


Randy Radic is a Left Coast author and writer. Author of numerous true crime books written under the pen-name of John Lee Brook. Former music contributor at Huff Post.


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