MUSIC

Máni Orrason Vows Eternal Love on "Privilege of Time"

The indie pop singer embraces new wave roots in his latest infectious single.

Máni Orrason - Privilege of Time

via youtube.com

Indie pop gem Máni Orrason's newest single is a fitting addition to his already impressive catalogue.

Shockingly, this talented Icelandic artist has managed to fly relatively under the radar since the release of his debut album, 2015's Repeating Patterns. But with the release of the latest single off his upcoming EP, Orrason seems poised to change that.

The recently released track, "Privilege of Time," is a sparkly and fun confession of delusional love. Glistening with new wave synths and simple, heartfelt lyrics, the upbeat and emotionally wrought song is infectious. It's almost impossible not to hear at least a little bit of Robert Smith when Orrason quavers lyrics like, "Why does summer come when I want to cry? / Runnin' around just to feel alive / If I could understand... / Now I'm thinkin' about seeing you again / Thinkin' out loud, tryin' to pretend / That me and my boyfriend, our love will never end." The speaker is so in love with a man who, for one reason or another, is inaccessible (perhaps due to a long distance relationship).

That doesn't stop him from pretending that they are together, though—so thoroughly that he may have actually tricked himself into believing that they are still happily together. Perhaps that is what "The Privilege of Time" refers to. By spending so much time apart from someone, missing them like crazy and thinking about them constantly, you can delude yourself to the point of blurring reality. Or perhaps Orrason is simply singing about the fact that he and his boyfriend will come out of this trial stronger from the time they've put into it, even while apart. Either way, it is a wonderfully layered song that is just as enjoyable on the surface as an upbeat and sparkly indie pop love song as it is when deconstructed into something deeper.

If you enjoy "The Privilege of Time," be sure to check out the rest of Orrason's musical offerings, keep an ear out for his upcoming EP, and check him out on tour in Europe until the end of the month.


Dustin DiPaulo is a writer and musician from Rochester, New York. He received his MFA in Creative Writing from Florida Atlantic University and can most likely be found at a local concert, dive bar, or comedy club (if he's not getting lost somewhere in the woods).


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MUSIC

New Yoke Lore Video is as Twisted as the Song Is Sweet

"Chin Up" is a pleasantly wistful bit of indie folk, while the video manages to be both somberly wintery and soaked in violence.

Yoke Lore

Practitioners of a certain kind of indie folk — ambient with a driving beat —are many.

But few do it better than Yoke Lore, who just released his latest single, "Chin Up."

Yoke Lore is the nom de guerre of Adrian Galvin, whose previous projects include Yellerkin and Walk the Moon. "Chin Up" is a single off Meditations, an EP to be released May 31.

But where "Chin Up" evokes winsome damsels in yellow dresses spinning dreamily in blooming meadows, its video is violent and grim, set in a landscape of snow and stunted pines and one giant moose. The narrative's thread is intentionally muddled, featuring a nighttime struggle between two men, their flailing, parka-clad limbs lit by the lurid red of several flairs embedded in the snow. Later, Galvin's bloodied, unconscious body is pulled on a sled by another man. And every once in a while, Galvin is lit with the same shade of red as the flairs, and stares at the camera as he mouthes the song's lyrics with wide, haunted, staring eyes. Its powerful imagery that adds an unexpected layer to an otherwise seemingly hopeful song.

Yoke Lore - "Chin Up" (Official Music Video)www.youtube.com

To support his EP, Galvin is launching a European tour, which starts April 3 in Dublin, Ireland and ends on June 22 at Dover, Delaware's Firefly Music Festival. Go to www.yokelore.com for detailed tour dates, information on his EP and more striking music videos.


Matt Fink lives and works in Brooklyn. Go to organgrind.com for more of his work.


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