LOVESPIRALS 4TH FULL-LENGTH ALBUM 'FUTURE PAST' DUE OUT SOON!
Lovespirals are in the final stages of producing their 4th full-length album,
Future Past.
The 11 songs comprising this new collection include some of the band’s
most ambitious work to date. Band founder, Ryan Lum, has achieved what
he feels is truly a big-studio sound in his private home studio. His
attention to detail in sound design is born of a true love of the
craft, and he’s been perfecting these skills since his first indie
release, Idylls, back in 1992. Lum has updated his musical equipment
and recording system quite extensively since Lovespirals’ 2007 album,
Long Way From Home.
This might be most noticeable to the listener in the range of guitar
and keyboard sounds used on this album. In addition to the Rhodes piano
and Hammond organ featured in the past, Lum has enhanced his vintage
keyboard palette with analogue synth and string machine sounds. And
guitar tones too have been pushed into new future retro sonics,
utilizing both vintage and modern boutique guitars, tube amplifiers,
and effects pedals.
Band vocalist, Anji Bee, who began collaborating with Lum in
the early 2000’s, has also worked hard to improve upon her sound and
performances. Armed with a new microphone, cabling, and preamp, she has
pushed her voice to new heights, exploring diverse vocal territory.
From deep, sultry rhythm and blues soulfulness to bright, ethereal
breathiness — and all points in-between — from a single voice to a
3-part harmony; Bee is the vocal equivalent of a one-man band. And
lyrically, Bee has dug deep to unearth some of her most revealing and
intimate lyrics yet. Though her song topics have always touched upon
more than personal relationships, the abundance of such fare in the
past has led critics to label Lovespirals as purveyors of “love songs.”
Bee feels confident that will not be the case this time. Interestingly,
the two songs most obviously tied to romance are not ballads, but
upbeat numbers; “Feel So Good” is soulful funk with a distinctly retro
feel, while “Love” is an atmospheric drum ‘n’ bass song, reminiscent of
the duo’s earliest work together.
Not that this new album is wholly composed of electronica
vibes; on the contrary. Lovespirals have achieved a fine balance
between their various influences, including moody classic-rock ala Pink
Floyd or Fleetwood Mac; groovy late-period Motown soul & funk;
bittersweet electropop in the vein of Air or Zero 7 — with a sprinkling
of sensual slow-burning blues, and a dash of the soaring ethereality
that the band has long been known for. Somehow Lum and Bee are able to
take such disparate elements and combine them into an easily
identifiable sound that can only be described as “Lovespirals.” Though
it’s hard to label their music for today’s highly genre-defined
culture, Lovespirals are not concerned. The joy of independent music is
that it is not bogged down by marketing research and sales strategies;
it exists because of the creator’s love of music. And
Future Past is certainly a labor of love for Lovespirals.
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