Posts Tagged ‘Melina Duterte’

JAY SOM – ” Baybee “

Posted: February 23, 2017 in MUSIC
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Artist To Watch: Jay Som

“Jay Som has always been based around the comfort of solitude,” , The Oakland resident Melina Duterte has been making music for over 10 years — at 22 years old, essentially half her life and her project reflects self-taught and hard-earned experience, largely learned alone. “Being by myself and making music all the time… That’s where the art is. That’s where I’m the most creative, and that’s where my cathartic process for everything is. It’s what makes me feel 100%.”

As an artist, the natural course of progression tends to expand outward, but Duterte seems intent on doing everything on her own, at least for the foreseeable future. (“It’s not that I don’t ever want to collaborate with anyone. It’s just that, for now, I really like working by myself,” she says.) After putting out a steady stream of under-the-radar releases, and an admittedly hastily-assembled collection of demos and incoherent thoughts spontaneously uploaded to Bandcamp  It was reissued by Topshelf Records and then Polyvinyl Records, the latter of which signed her and are releasing what’s billed as her debut full-length.

That album, “Everybody Works”, bears the weight of the trial-and-error that came before it. Recorded entirely by herself in her bedroom last fall after returning from tour, “Everybody Works” is a sparkling testament to Duterte’s skill as both a songwriter and producer. Her self-imposed solitude invites a multiplicity of perspectives — you can sense that in both the variety of sounds explored on the album (no two songs sound alike) and in its lyrics, which focus on the emotional labour that we put into our relationships with others. Jay Som’s music is in constant conversation with itself, playing out imagined situations and precarious interpersonal give-and-takes with the pressure of reality looming behind.

“Baybee,” the album’s third single with a video directed by Charlotte Hornsby and Jesse Ruuttila), is a great example of the way in which Duterte maps out the inner workings of her mind to tangible results. “If I leave you alone when you don’t feel right, I know we’ll sink for sure/ I’ll play your game once more if you don’t feel right,” she sings in the chorus. It’s a song about giving up a part of your own happiness to placate someone you care about in order to preserve something that feels worth saving, and Jay Som presents that predicament in a sunny reverie.

That theme pops up repeatedly in Duterte’s writing, most effectively on “I Think You’re Alright” a devotional slow-burn that was released on a 7″ vinyl last year. On that song, she offers to act as someone’s support system to her own detriment .

 

Melina Duterte is a 22-year-old, who records her music as Jay Som. She has risen in the past year on the effort of 2015’s Turn Into, a self-released collection of impressively architected dream-pop, as well as the narcotic big-screen-beckoning torch-song “I Think You’re Alright.” But success only came after what Duterte calls a “dark period” of grueling overwork and perilous self-doubt. She funneled her emotions through Turn Into, though, and its title proved prophetic. It was eventually put out on tape via emo-oriented label Topshelf Records before indie stalwart Polyvinyl released it late last year.

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This past summer, a tour opening for kindred spirits Mitski and Japanese Breakfast marked Jay Som’s proper introduction to the music world at large. It was a soul-opening experience. “We’re all Asian-American women in indie music, which is mostly white-male dominated,” Duterte says. “For me, it felt like we had a mission.”

Looking into those crowds, Duterte saw seas of young women, and night after night, sitting at the merch table, she observed how fans of Mitski and Japanese Breakfast connected to the emotionality of their songs—how they would come up to the artists, sometimes crying, to say the music had helped them to cope with anxiety, or depression, or loss. “That showed me this is way beyond just singing and playing music,” Duterte says. “You are doing so much for this person who you don’t know. That was mind-blowing for me to see.” She recorded her new album, Everybody Works, while charged by the tour’s energy.

At times, Duterte’s low, hushed voice and precise arrangements make Everybody Works sound like an alternate-dimension Lorde record. Texturing her songs with keys, trumpet, and even accordion, Duterte collages her interests: vivid guitar rock, spectral 4AD dreamscapes, orchestral confessionals. Most beguilingly, the album is anchored by a wondrous pair of slinky funk jams, “One More Time, Please” and “BayBee.” “All of my songs are so different, but you know it’s me,” she says. “I just don’t like staying in one place at all.”

A bespoke pop sensibility shines, and her sharp lyrics make quotidian moments gleam. “The Bus Song” captures the free sense of anonymity that only cities allow. “I feel like everyone is very self-conscious of their image,” Duterte says. “But in the city you can have your own persona. No one is going to judge you.” As she curls the album’s opening lyric into a poetic phrasing—“I like the way your lipstick stains/The corner of my smile”—it has a subtle power. When I mention these lines, she succinctly says: “I’m not afraid to sing about women.”

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Duterte lives on a residential street in a charming mustard-yellow and mint-green house, in a neighborhood that she says is full of DIY spaces: punk houses, warehouses, “opened abandoned places.” The tragic fire that killed 36 at Oakland’s Ghost Ship warehouse just a few weeks prior is still on the minds of all—one nearby cafe placed a memorial of amethyst and flower petals at its register—but a pluralistic sense of community has persevered. “I’m very, very proud to be a part of the Bay Area music scene right now,” Duterte says.

Like Turn Into, Duterte recorded and produced Everybody Works in her bedroom—but where her first collection bears the unvarnished edges of a home-recording, it’s astonishing to learn the sleek new record was made the same way. It’s patently 3D. In her room, black soundproofing foam covers each wall; Wild Nothing plays from her computer; a poster hangs for a sold out Chicago date of the Mitski tour. The room is strewn with six guitars, endless pedals, and a drum set that consumes most of its space. Outside, there’s a persistently out-of-tune piano. “I kind of like shitty pianos,” she notes.

 

Dream pop artist Jay Som in the vein of Girls and Smith Westerns with lo-fi drum sound and jangly melodies in-tact. Currently signed with Polyvinyl who are also home to Beach Slang, she’s going to release a full length album next year and should win over avid indie collectors, The Singer finds herself neatly positioned in the Rough Trade recommends section.

Though Jay Som (aka Melina Duterte) has returned to the bedroom where she recorded her debut collection, Turn Into, it’s clear that the Oakland musician has grown in the time since. “The Bus Song,” the first single off her next record “Everybody Works” , is confident and compelling without surrendering any of the atmospheric ambiguity of the previous “Turn Into” . But this boldness does not arrive immediately; instead, “The Bus Song” begins with whispering vocals and similarly delicate guitars. As the track progresses, Duterte grows more assured and piles on intricate layers of trumpet, twinkling piano, and crashing drums, to create a lush conclusion. “The Bus Song” displays Duterte’s ability to take one emotional concept—in this case, two friends sorting out their relationship—and stretch it into a vast network of sensations, conversations, and metaphors. Though her final plea (“Take time to figure it out/I’ll be the one who sticks around/And I just want you to need me/And I just want you to lead me”) soars away into the haze, her determination is unmistakeable.

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Last year was the most thrilling year of my life and I’m grateful for everyone who took time out of their day to listen to my music.
Finally, I am so excited to announce the release of my new album “Everybody Works” – releasing on “Polyvinyl Records March 10th.

The Jay Som band will hit the road with The Courtney’s this Spring for SXSW and a full U.S. and Canada tour

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I was first introduced to Jay Som this summer when she was on tour supporting Mitski and Japanese Breakfast. She opened to a small, but packed room and by the time she was mid-way through her set, she’d reached a level so captivating that you could hear the breath of the person behind you in between songs. At just 22 years old, she has a raw emotional vocabulary and has mastered the ebb and flow of successful indie rock that a lot of artists never quite get. I hope it rains a lot in 2017 so we can all just stay inside and cuddle to her 2016 album Turn Into. Or better yet, cuddle to anything she may have coming—her Polyvinyl debut LP is looming— in the upcoming year.

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What a solid record! Kind of like Liz Phair if she’d listened to more Shoegaze stuff. No bad cuts. Endearingly lo-fi but never cliche or trendy. Good songwriting too,  Warm and fuzzy vibes all over, Jay Som is as inviting as she is intimate with her music. Her San Franciscan alternative rock style is subtle, finding its strength in charming lo-fi sound and simple pleasures.

Melina Duterte performs under her moniker Jay Som back in July. At the time, she was out on tour with Mitski  and Japanese Breakfast, and she took the stage alone for a subdued set. When she passed through Seattle again in September, it was to open for Peter Bjorn and John, backed by a full band. Duterte’s quick ascent is a strong indication of both her talent and her growing importance to the West Coast music scene.

As Jay Som, her music covers almost every romantic notion imaginable, from sweet vignettes of a new relationship to heartbreak at the end of one. Her songs explore so much about human vulnerability that they might inspire you to spill a few secrets.

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All tracks composed, arranged, produced, and performed by Melina Duterte.