JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Black History Month and the 82nd anniversary of the birth of The Temptations’ Dennis Edwards.
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Black History Month and the 82nd anniversary of the birth of The Temptations’ Dennis Edwards.
Alma Owren is a 19 year-old Norwegian-born, Los Angeles-based singer/songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, producer and actor, whose musical work is shaped by her synesthesia. Her music combines vivid soundscapes with powerful, emotion-driven storytelling rooted with vulnerable, relatable lyrics that will deeply resonate with listeners.
The Norwegian-born, Los Angeles-based artist’s debut EP Under the Surface will be released through AWAL. The EP’s first single “Outcast,” is a gorgeous folk pop tune that pairs an arrangement of strummed acoustic guitar, bursts of cinematic strings anchored by Owren’s gorgeous and emotive delivery.
The young artist explains that the song explores themes of isolation and identity through a cinematic soundscape.
Simply put, this young artist reveals a self-assuredness and emotional depth well beyond her relative young. I fully expect that she will have a big, bright future ahead of her.
Paris-based synth pop/synthwave duo La Punta Bianca — Francesca Diprima (vocals) and Phillipe Brown (vocals, synths, drum machines) made a name for themselves in the Parisian alternative and indie scenes with their debut EP, 2019’s Demian. The EP saw the duo firmly cementing their sound: Diprima and Brown’s dreamy melodies are paired with equally dreamy synth-based soundscapes.
Initially released on cassette tape, the EP was then pressed on vinyl twice. The EP’s success in the synthwave scene enabled the duo to tour across France and the European Union.
The Parisian duo’s highly-anticipated and long-awaited full-length debut, Disquiet is slated for a March 18, 2025 release through Detriti Records. The album, which continues a run of material rooted in absurdist romanticism and Lynchian strangeness, sees the pair drawing from Angelo Badalamenti, John Barry and Leonard Cohen with songs being sometimes dancey, sometimes melodramatic. Lyrics were written and are sung in French, Italian and English throughout. All of this is paired with carefully programmed synth and drum machine-driven arrangements.
Disquiet‘s first single “Extanimal,” is a dream-like song featuring twinkling synth arpeggios, Casio synthesizer-like beats as a lush yet atmospheric bed for Diprima and Brown’s eerily uncanny boy-girl harmonies. The result is a song that reminds me quite a bit of Young Narrator from the Breakers-era Pavo Pavo — but with a nouveau vague sensibility.
19th Annual Asian American Activity Center Lunar New York Celebration at Tangram Retail Mall, Flushing, NYC.
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates LCD Soundsystem frontman James Murphy’s 55th birthday.
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Black History Month — with James Brown in Zaire.
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Stone Temple Pilots’ bassist Robert DeLeo’s 59th birthday.
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Graham Nash’s 83rd birthday,
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates the 98th anniversary of Stan Getz’s birth.
São Paulo-born, Paris-based singer/songwriter Gabriella Lima relocated to Paris back in 2014. And since locating to The City of Light, Lima has been busy crafting material that pushes genre and cultural boundaries.
Lima’s 2021 full-length debut, the nine-song Bálsamo found the Brazilian-born, French-based artist writing material that drew from soul, pop, samba, chanson and several other styles. Back in 2022, I wrote about album closing track, “Samba de l’amour,” a breezy song featuring twinkling keys, fluttering synths, strummed acoustic guitar and gently swaying samba rhythms paired with Lima’s gorgeous vocal singing bittersweet lyrics in French and Brazilian Portuguese detailing love gained and quickly lost.
Lima’s latest single “Meu Lugar” is a Sade/Quiet Storm-like touch on samba and Bossa nova featuring an atmospheric yet percussive arrangement with strummed acoustic guitar that serves as a lush bed for the Brazilian-French artist’s achingly tender delivery.
She explains that the song’s lyrics talk about a deep emotional delivery and the transformation of an intense and true relationship.
Back in 1988, four Uppsala, Sweden-based teens decided to start a band after returning from a trip to West Berlin. Heavily inspired by the avant garde scene there, Big Fish‘s original lineup featured vocals, upright bass, samplers and scrap metal percussion. With the addition of a guitarist in 1990, the newly-minted quintet became part of an emerging local scene that would subsequently birth acts like Watain,Misery Loves Co., Lost Souls, Malaise and Defleshed.
Throughout the better part of the 1990s, the Swedish outfit recorded three studio albums, including 1996’s Micheal Blair-produced Andar i Halsen, which they supported with frequently touring across Scandinavia, playing over 500 shows.
The band broke up in 1997 after its members left Uppsala for work and studies. But their fanbase’s clamoring demand for hearing their material live resulted in the Swedish band playing a handful of reunion shows in 2016.
2022’s surprise fourth album, Kalla döda drömmar was released to critical praise and was supported by extensive touring across their native Sweden. The band spent the next year writing and recording material, including six planned singles which will appear on the band’s forthcoming fifth album, Frya liter stoft (Four liters of dust) slated for release in May.
Late last year, I wrote about “SNÖ (Snow),” a brutally forceful and thrashing ripper, anchored around down-tuned and rumbling bass, fuzzy power chords. thunderous syncopated drumming and rousingly anthemic and enormous hooks and choruses paired with urgent and punchily delivered vocals singing lyrics in Swedish that describe a return from a bleak, metaphorical winter of isolation — or perhaps intoxication — and discovering that nothing is left. But at its core, the song captures uneasy, brutal nature of our bleak, mad, mad, mad existence.
Album single “Vad blir kvar (What Will Remain) ” is a brooding yet folksy industrial hymn that evokes bleak, dark and harsh winters; trudging through snow, ice and slush to some equally harsh, soul-crushing industrial workplace to make widgets, ball bearings and ammunition; of recognizing that there are small moments of breathtaking beauty and humanity that can be a respite in a brutal world.
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Black History Month and the 77th anniversary of Rick James’ birth.
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Black History Month and Big Boi’s 50th birthday.