Jules Davidson traced lyrical intimacy through luminous beats in Sparks Can Fly – Extended Mix
JULES DAVIDSON extended her run of soul-sanctifying EDM with the release of her latest single, Sparks Can Fly – Extended Mix. The London-based singer-songwriter turned producer poured transcendence into the sonics to deliver a hypnotically hedonistic slice of melodic catharsis. It proves how deep the call runs for those drawn to the twilight zones of consciousness where strobing synths replace streetlamps and rhythm becomes your tether to the present. This isn’t EDM for the sake of a dopamine spike. It is a metaphysical sanctuary carved out through oscillating instrumental textures and softly euphoric vocal lines which drift above the luminously layered production. Davidson, who previously made her name as a poignant acoustic storyteller, has taken a leap from heartfelt indie into electronica without missing a beat. The production was polished at Area 18 Studios, where the basslines were pulsed with dancefloor vitality, and alchemy was injected into the atmosphere, for anyone who craves spiritual weight behind their synths. While Sparks Can Fly rings with traces of 80s synth-pop nostalgia in the vein of The Human League, there’s an unmistakable contemporary nuance that echoes the emotive gravity of acts like London Grammar and Royksopp. Jules Davidson’s shift in direction doesn’t dilute her […] The post Jules Davidson traced lyrical intimacy through luminous beats in Sparks Can Fly – Extended Mix appeared first on A&R Factory.
                                JULES DAVIDSON extended her run of soul-sanctifying EDM with the release of her latest single, Sparks Can Fly – Extended Mix. The London-based singer-songwriter turned producer poured transcendence into the sonics to deliver a hypnotically hedonistic slice of melodic catharsis. It proves how deep the call runs for those drawn to the twilight zones of consciousness where strobing synths replace streetlamps and rhythm becomes your tether to the present. This isn’t EDM for the sake of a dopamine spike. It is a metaphysical sanctuary carved out through oscillating instrumental textures and softly euphoric vocal lines which drift above the luminously layered production. Davidson, who previously made her name as a poignant acoustic storyteller, has taken a leap from heartfelt indie into electronica without missing a beat. The production was polished at Area 18 Studios, where the basslines were pulsed with dancefloor vitality, and alchemy was injected into the atmosphere, for anyone who craves spiritual weight behind their synths. While Sparks Can Fly rings with traces of 80s synth-pop nostalgia in the vein of The Human League, there’s an unmistakable contemporary nuance that echoes the emotive gravity of acts like London Grammar and Royksopp. Jules Davidson’s shift in direction doesn’t dilute her […]
The post Jules Davidson traced lyrical intimacy through luminous beats in Sparks Can Fly – Extended Mix appeared first on A&R Factory.
                                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                            