Tag: The Knitting Factory at Baker Falls

New Video: Brainstory Shares a Woozy 70s-Inspired Visual for “XFaded,” an Ode To Getting Fucked Up

Brainstory‘s Leon Michels-produced sophomore album Sounds Good was released last month through renowned purveyors of soul, Big Crown Records

The album features the previously released:

  • Gift of Life,” a lush, old-school, Quiet Storm-like, show-topping ballad built around a shimmering and vibey arrangement featuring fluttering, ethereal flute paired with Kevin Martin’s emotive, falsetto croon and some incredibly catch hooks. While the song see the band pulling from classic soul, psych soul and dub in a way that sounds like it could been released sometime between 1968-1974, “Gift of Life,” manages to feel remarkably modern. 
  • Listen,” a classic, two-step inducing groove-driven song with shimmering analog synths, an overdrive-fueled guitar solo paired with some dreamy falsetto melodies and harmonies that sounds — to me, at least — as though it could have been been a Mandrill or Isley Brothers B side. The song sees the band’s Kevin Martin encouraging the listener to spend some time enjoying the present moment, because life’s all too short and remarkably fleeting 
  • Peach Optimo,” a slow-burning and summery bit of psych soul anchored around a strutting and wobbling bass line, glistening keys, some funky drum rhythm patterns and an expressive guitar solo paired with some retro-futuristic synths. Seemingly channelling JOVM mainstays Mildlife and L’Eclair, sees the trio diving into the banality and simple pleasures of teenaged suburban life — full of the nostalgia of cul-de-sac hangs and bullshit sessions with the homies.

And Sounds Good‘s fifth and latest single “XFaded,” a strutting, hook-driven and funky psych soul jam anchored around an arrangement featuring skittering boom bap, a sinuous bass line and squiggling bursts of guitar. According to the trio, the song’s sound was partially inspired by what theft thought a modern day George Clinton/Parliament funk jam would sound like — and by small town life, where getting fucked up is an unofficial/official pastime because there isn’t much else to really do. The slick Leon Michels production paired with the band’s razor sharp yet seemingly effortless performance ironically contrasts the notion of getting sloppy and fucked up but reveals the easy-going chemistry between the trio and producer. 

Directed and animated by J. Bonne, the animated video for “XFaded” is visually indebted to The BeatlesYellow Submarine, Fat Albert and Scooby Doo and follows the trio getting absolutely fucked up at a house party to wildly different results, including passing out with lit joint and drool rolling out of the corner of your mouth and almost starting a fire, desperately needing the wall to hold you up, but somehow failing and throwing up — or even hooking up with that pretty young thing that caught your eye. The video captures the wooziness of getting sloppily fucked up in a way that feels familiar to anyone who’s ever been sloppily fucked up at a party or in public.