《Salvation》(救赎):令人耳目一新的柏林音乐
It’s been a while since I accidentally stumbled on music that I really love, as opposed to shoveling through heaps of press releases in search of a sign of life that makes me feel something more than “that’ll do.” (There’s a whole lot of“that’ll do” pop out there, unfortunately.)
But as a certain pop princess-turned-Queen of Pop once declared: Don’t you know I still believe?
While halfheartedly scrolling through my Twitter feed on the train ride into Manhattan after visiting my family for the weekend (which doubled as a very necessary 24-hour detox from the city), I saw a tweet of endorsement a singer named Madeline Juno and her song “Cliché” by the lovely Mel of Melismatic. (C’mon, OG ’00s pop bloggers!)
I hadn’t heard of Madeline before, but the cover art intrigued me — most likely because she looked like Sky Ferreira from afar. (A surefire way to win my attention, always.)
After skimming through social media, I determined this much: She’s 20. She’s German. She she sings “about life pretending I panic less and figure it out that way.” She released a follow-up record this past Friday called Salvation. She’s pretty. And her hair color is great. Sold.
It’s been a while since I accidentally stumbled on music that I really love, as opposed to shoveling through heaps of press releases in search of a sign of life that makes me feel something more than “that’ll do.” (There’s a whole lot of“that’ll do” pop out there, unfortunately.)
But as a certain pop princess-turned-Queen of Pop once declared: Don’t you know I still believe?
While halfheartedly scrolling through my Twitter feed on the train ride into Manhattan after visiting my family for the weekend (which doubled as a very necessary 24-hour detox from the city), I saw a tweet of endorsement a singer named Madeline Juno and her song “Cliché” by the lovely Mel of Melismatic. (C’mon, OG ’00s pop bloggers!)
I hadn’t heard of Madeline before, but the cover art intrigued me — most likely because she looked like Sky Ferreira from afar. (A surefire way to win my attention, always.)
After skimming through social media, I determined this much: She’s 20. She’s German. She she sings “about life pretending I panic less and figure it out that way.” She released a follow-up record this past Friday called Salvation. She’s pretty. And her hair color is great. Sold.