Posts Tagged ‘Emily Yacina’

Emily Yacina’s new song “Gleaming” is an upward rush of momentum. “Meet me here/ I’ll show you/ The same light/ I’m feeling,” she sings, her delivery breathless, words spilling out in an incantatory pulse. The track was originally supposed to be entirely instrumental, and it wasn’t until late in the process of making her new album, Remember The Silver, that Yacina stumbled on a melody that fit. The result feels like getting sucked up into space, a hermetic environment where only you and your object of affection exist.

“It’s inspired by throwing yourself into a situation and letting your heart determine your feelings,” Yacina explains. “Letting go and just enjoying someone — for a night or an experience.” In only 90 seconds, she captures that feeling of love without consequence, that glowing moment of rapture where next-steps don’t matter.

“Gleaming” is the lead single to Remember The Silver, the latest in a series of stellar releases from Yacina, whose voice you might recognize as the foil to many a (Sandy) Alex G song. She grew up in the same Philadelphia suburb as Alex Giannascoli, and it was during high school that she first started putting music online. Since then, she’s carved out a niche for gauzy and emotionally earnest songs. Her string of Bandcamp releases, including 2015’s Soft Stuffand 2017’sHeart Sky, are a treasure trove of wrenching melodies and delightfully off-kilter meditations on time and absence. Heart Sky is particularly great, made up of songs that Yacina wrote while isolated in Alaska for a couple of months during a summer. Her songs often operate at that kind of remove, like she’s trying so intimately to document a feeling that she ends up questioning whether that feeling even really exists at all.

Her new album is her most fully-realized project yet, recorded with Eric Littmann — who has also produced similarly introspective albums by Yohuna and Julie Byrne — and put together over the course of the last couple years as Yacina finished school, getting a degree in Environmental Studies, and settling down in New York City as an adult. Remember The Silver captures those first few tentative steps into adulthood, when suddenly who you are is defined entirely by what you make of it.

The video for new single “Gleaming” was directed by Caroline Pigou. “Getting to work with one of my dearest friends, Caroline Pigou, on this video makes it so special to me,” Yacina said. “I was so comfortable shooting because it was her and I, and I feel like that intimacy / confidence comes through like magic.

The album’s title is taken from a book about UFO abductions. The songs themselves play out sort of like a series of abductions in the form of relationships which take over your entire being. They explore what happens when all of a sudden a relationship is over, and you’re left figuring out how to fit into the world once again on your own. That search for definition drives the album, which sounds ecstatically sad in that exploration of the unknown.

http://

Released December 6th, 2019

Written & Recorded 2017 – 2019 in New York City
Written by Emily Yacina

EMILY YACINA – ” Loser “

Posted: November 27, 2015 in MUSIC
Tags: ,

http://

Philadelphia native Emily Yacina has been quietly self-releasing resplendent bedroom-pop since 2010. While relocating to Brooklyn earlier this year, the Alex G collaborator dazzled with Pull Through, a heartwarming 4-track EP that showcased her knack for uncomplicated, honest tunes.

Now, Emily Yacina promptly returns with “Loser”, the first leak from her upcoming EP, Soft Stuff. The track shimmers with vintage synths and distant guitar tones. Emily Yacina entrancingly chants the familiar narrative of post-break up stasis over a structure of plucked rhythms and rich, cool harmonies.

Back in January, songwriter Emily Yacina released Pull Through, four brief acoustic tracks embellished with whispers of electronic warbles. Like her frequent collaborator Alex G, Yacina appreciates lyrical brevity, verses that are ambiguous while still offering just enough details to create corporeal narratives.

“Loser”, off a new EP, draws Yacina’s ethereal textures to the forefront. Its opening synth notes so closely mirror the blissful pitch of her layered vocals that it is difficult to determine which is more organic. “Loser” is about Yacina’s yearning to recreate a sense of familiarity: “Can you do that again?/ Can you say what you said?/ When you were holding my hand/ Before you let go of it.” Her self-affirmed inability to look forward and subsequent unease appear in quick shifts to a lower vocal register, while the guitars and production blur in a flurry. The lullaby melody at the end of “Loser” may suggest otherwise, but Yacina finds little comfort here, murmuring “I know you’re right/ But I’m losing.”

Soft Stuff is out December 11th, available via Emily Yacina’s Bandcamp.

Emily Yacina Charms Us With “Loser”, Forecasts New EP