
Lady On The Bike
Cinematic electro-pop duo Ringdown, featuring Danni Lee Parpan and Pulitzer and Grammy winner Caroline Shaw, release its debut album, Lady on the Bike, this spring. The album celebrates the feeling of possibility in myriad forms: the possibility of love; the possibility of creating connection and community in a world trying to pull those things apart; the possibility of making music in new ways.
Lady on the Bike is a mix of Shaw and Parpanâs pasts and presents, expressed in new ways. The duo was drawn to each other through mutual admiration of each otherâs work; Shaw has won a Pulitzer Prize and several Grammy Awards for her boundary-breaking compositions and collaborated with celebrated artists such as Nas and RosalĂa, and Parpan is a dynamic vocalist and folk-pop singer-songwriter who sings emotionally stirring lyrics and relishes in challenging how instruments are âsupposedâ to be played. Ringdown is a playground they can only access with each other, allowing them to create a style of pop music that explores the spaces between electronic and acoustic sounds and re-imagines traditional song structure.
Shaw explains, âIâve thought for years about making a solo record that is in a more electro-pop vein, but didnât have the courage. Danni Lee finally brought that out of me, and I wouldnât have taken this step if it werenât for her. Ringdown is where I experiment with so many things Iâve wanted to try. Iâve also learned that being in a band and making your own record is much harder than playing a Mozart sonata and I will absolutely die on that hill.â The songs on Lady on the Bike draw from subjects such as relationships (good and not-so-good), personal growth, political anger, and joy.
Parpan shares, âI hope this album helps people feel whatever they need to feel. That when they listen to âReckoning,â they will consider bravely sending it to someone they love. That when they listen to âTwo-Stepâ, they will feel like dancing. That when they listen to âRunâ, they will feel inspired to fight for their rights, especially over the next four years.â
Shaw adds, âThere are a few songs that feel like they were written to motivate an imagined heroine of a story to change her course and vanquish her enemiesâand maybe fall in love along the way. I hope someone listens and wonders what their world could look like with a little more love, gentleness, and embrace of our collective human messiness, imperfection, grit, radiance, and potential.â
The songs were collaboratively written and recorded by the duo, mostly in unconventional settings around the worldâat airports, Airbnbs, the Muziekgebouw concert hall, under a bridge in Amsterdamâand often using blankets to create makeshift sound booths and a Neumann TLM 102 mic that Shaw has carried with her for years. Ringdown invited New Body Electric members Leah Vautar and Aaron K. Peterson to perform on and help produce several songs, helping the band crystallize its distinct pop sound. The album also features SĆ Percussion on a new version of Ringdownâs previously released single âGhostâ.Â
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Lady On The Bike
Cinematic electro-pop duo Ringdown, featuring Danni Lee Parpan and Pulitzer and Grammy winner Caroline Shaw, release its debut album, Lady on the Bike, this spring. The album celebrates the feeling of possibility in myriad forms: the possibility of love; the possibility of creating connection and community in a world trying to pull those things apart; the possibility of making music in new ways.
Lady on the Bike is a mix of Shaw and Parpanâs pasts and presents, expressed in new ways. The duo was drawn to each other through mutual admiration of each otherâs work; Shaw has won a Pulitzer Prize and several Grammy Awards for her boundary-breaking compositions and collaborated with celebrated artists such as Nas and RosalĂa, and Parpan is a dynamic vocalist and folk-pop singer-songwriter who sings emotionally stirring lyrics and relishes in challenging how instruments are âsupposedâ to be played. Ringdown is a playground they can only access with each other, allowing them to create a style of pop music that explores the spaces between electronic and acoustic sounds and re-imagines traditional song structure.
Shaw explains, âIâve thought for years about making a solo record that is in a more electro-pop vein, but didnât have the courage. Danni Lee finally brought that out of me, and I wouldnât have taken this step if it werenât for her. Ringdown is where I experiment with so many things Iâve wanted to try. Iâve also learned that being in a band and making your own record is much harder than playing a Mozart sonata and I will absolutely die on that hill.â The songs on Lady on the Bike draw from subjects such as relationships (good and not-so-good), personal growth, political anger, and joy.
Parpan shares, âI hope this album helps people feel whatever they need to feel. That when they listen to âReckoning,â they will consider bravely sending it to someone they love. That when they listen to âTwo-Stepâ, they will feel like dancing. That when they listen to âRunâ, they will feel inspired to fight for their rights, especially over the next four years.â
Shaw adds, âThere are a few songs that feel like they were written to motivate an imagined heroine of a story to change her course and vanquish her enemiesâand maybe fall in love along the way. I hope someone listens and wonders what their world could look like with a little more love, gentleness, and embrace of our collective human messiness, imperfection, grit, radiance, and potential.â
The songs were collaboratively written and recorded by the duo, mostly in unconventional settings around the worldâat airports, Airbnbs, the Muziekgebouw concert hall, under a bridge in Amsterdamâand often using blankets to create makeshift sound booths and a Neumann TLM 102 mic that Shaw has carried with her for years. Ringdown invited New Body Electric members Leah Vautar and Aaron K. Peterson to perform on and help produce several songs, helping the band crystallize its distinct pop sound. The album also features SĆ Percussion on a new version of Ringdownâs previously released single âGhostâ.Â
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Cinematic electro-pop duo Ringdown, featuring Danni Lee Parpan and Pulitzer and Grammy winner Caroline Shaw, release its debut album, Lady on the Bike, this spring. The album celebrates the feeling of possibility in myriad forms: the possibility of love; the possibility of creating connection and community in a world trying to pull those things apart; the possibility of making music in new ways.
Lady on the Bike is a mix of Shaw and Parpanâs pasts and presents, expressed in new ways. The duo was drawn to each other through mutual admiration of each otherâs work; Shaw has won a Pulitzer Prize and several Grammy Awards for her boundary-breaking compositions and collaborated with celebrated artists such as Nas and RosalĂa, and Parpan is a dynamic vocalist and folk-pop singer-songwriter who sings emotionally stirring lyrics and relishes in challenging how instruments are âsupposedâ to be played. Ringdown is a playground they can only access with each other, allowing them to create a style of pop music that explores the spaces between electronic and acoustic sounds and re-imagines traditional song structure.
Shaw explains, âIâve thought for years about making a solo record that is in a more electro-pop vein, but didnât have the courage. Danni Lee finally brought that out of me, and I wouldnât have taken this step if it werenât for her. Ringdown is where I experiment with so many things Iâve wanted to try. Iâve also learned that being in a band and making your own record is much harder than playing a Mozart sonata and I will absolutely die on that hill.â The songs on Lady on the Bike draw from subjects such as relationships (good and not-so-good), personal growth, political anger, and joy.
Parpan shares, âI hope this album helps people feel whatever they need to feel. That when they listen to âReckoning,â they will consider bravely sending it to someone they love. That when they listen to âTwo-Stepâ, they will feel like dancing. That when they listen to âRunâ, they will feel inspired to fight for their rights, especially over the next four years.â
Shaw adds, âThere are a few songs that feel like they were written to motivate an imagined heroine of a story to change her course and vanquish her enemiesâand maybe fall in love along the way. I hope someone listens and wonders what their world could look like with a little more love, gentleness, and embrace of our collective human messiness, imperfection, grit, radiance, and potential.â
The songs were collaboratively written and recorded by the duo, mostly in unconventional settings around the worldâat airports, Airbnbs, the Muziekgebouw concert hall, under a bridge in Amsterdamâand often using blankets to create makeshift sound booths and a Neumann TLM 102 mic that Shaw has carried with her for years. Ringdown invited New Body Electric members Leah Vautar and Aaron K. Peterson to perform on and help produce several songs, helping the band crystallize its distinct pop sound. The album also features SĆ Percussion on a new version of Ringdownâs previously released single âGhostâ.Â











