Manon Guiol is the French-born and-based creative mastermind behind the solo recording project Monde Ray. Guiol can trace the origins of her music career to her childhood: she began with classical piano and basic music theory before gradually moving toward electronic composition and production. Largely self-taught, the French artist developed an initiative and personal approach to music earl on, shaped outside of any academic framework.
Guiol’s first recording project Manone saw her exploring darker electronic territory. She then joined dream pop./synth pop Tender Tones as a songwriter, keyboardist and vocalist. And as a member of Tender Tones, she played in several Parisian venues including Batofar, L’International, La Pointe Lafayette and Olympic Café.
In 2023, after spending several years in Paris, Guiol relocated south, driven by a desire for light space and renewal. This major life chance led to Monde Ray, a more intimate, introspective and cinematic project that sees Guiol blending elements of synth pop, dark wave, EBM, Brazilian music, exotica, 1970s Italian film scores and post punk, and shaped by 80s inspired textures, dreamlike atmospheres paired with her ethereal vocal. But above all, she is driven by a fascination with contrast and dissonance — with what unsettles, surprises and with what feels instantly and radically self evident.
Seemingly suspended in the murkiness between day and night, Monde Ray sees Guiol exploring the tension between softness and darkness, clarity and reverie with lyrics written and sung in French and EnglishThe overall result is material that feels hypnotic yet fragile.
The French artist’s recently released Monde Ray debut Attraction sees Guiol firmly establishing her unique sound and approach while drawing from Essaie Pas, Boy Harsher, Scratch Massive, Marie Davidson and Chromatics, while embracing a cinematic quality informed by the work of David Lynch and others. Anchored around glistening and shimmering Giorgio Moroder-like arpeggiated synths and a relentless motorik groove, Attraction‘s first single is a dance floor friendly bit of Italo disco that seemingly channels Lenses-era Soft Metals.
The French artist explains that “What If” captures the suspended moment of a decisive encounter — that vertiginous sense of “what if?/why not” before a leap of faith into the unknown. She goes on to say that the song specifically speaks to the vulnerability, unease and hope of new love.
Directed by Luís Brito, the accompanying video for “What If” features a woman in a burgundy suit expressively dancing in an empty Parisian bar, before she strips down to her underwear continues to dance and then leaves the bar — with backpack in tow.
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