Tag: Agora Sci-Fi sloppy

New Audio: Agora Sci-Fi Shares a “120 Minutes” MTV-Inspired Lament on Capitalism

Nathania Rubin is an Illinois-based singer/songwriter, visual artist and animator, who most recently designed the music video for Advance Base’s “The Tooth Fairy.” Her work has been featured in both museums and film festivals both nationally and internationally, including Seattle International Film Festival, DOK Leipzig, Cannes Video Art Festival AVIFF, Boston Underground, Brooklyn Film Festival, Oxford Film Festival, Fest Ança, Animaze, Animafest Zagreb and many others.

Rubin is also the creative mastermind and frontperson behind the lo-fi pop project Agora Sci-Fi. Agora Sci-Fi conceptually is centered around a fictional character, simply named Z.

As the story goes, Z was recently released from prison for unclear crimes against society. Her wealthy family poisons her with memory-obliterating treats that block out crucial events and plot points of her own life and history. For fun, Z swims in the East River at night. (As a native New Yorker, I’d just have to say — “whatever floats your boat, kid.”)

Sonically Agora Sci-Fi draws from lo-fi, indie rock and pop in the vein of Rilo Kiley, Stef Chura and others.

Agora Sci-Fi’s debut EP, Finding It Hard to Explain Something So Obvious is slated for a June 6, 2025 release. The EP’s second single “sloppy” is a 120 Minutes-era MTV bit of indie rock anchored around rousingly anthemic hooks and Rubin’s dreamy delivery. But at its core, are deeply relatable lyrics for all of us, who have to maneuver capitalism, jobs we find unsatisfying, dull, underpaid or just under appreciated. Throughout, the song’s narrator expresses the slow-burn doldrums of working life — and the desire to never have to do that again. We all sell our time for money because — well, everyone wants money.

“Weaving in the fictional narrative in ‘sloppy’ allowed me to really ramp up the stakes of the song,” Rubin explains. “I was picturing a singular sane person, in a world with completely maddening and inhumane mandates. I imagined it as two separate songs in one, two personalities of the same person too, that kind of smash into each other at the end. Like many songs on the EP, it speaks to a desire to escape social confines, and the fracturing of self that happens when playing different roles in various areas of your life. The person who doesn’t conform, gets gaslit from inside and out, and labeled something like sloppy.”