
Safe
SafeĀ is precisely what fans would want from their band: their core shoegaze/dream-pop sound elevated with a new self-confidence, a tight, masterly control of hooks, and broader touch points such as Pavement and Sonic Youth. In short: their ethereal elements feel more alluring than ever; the visceral moments are more selective and dynamic but hit just as hard; and their songs are simply a leap in sophistication beyond āMadraā.
Its first single, āEntertainerā, encapsulates their growth. Julieās vocal glides like a conversation with an imaginary friend, while every touch - her slacker rock cadence, distorted stabs of guitars, foreboding synth flourishes and drums which flow from spacious to savage - embeds itself in your mind and refuses to let go.
āThe song is about entertaining other peopleās idea of who you should be,ā explains Julie. āI'm only learning now that I just need to shut out the noise and do what makes me feel comfortable.ā
In fact, the entire EP rotates around similar introspective conflicts: being a people pleaser but standing up for yourself; realising that success brings a fresh wave of unexpected challenges, adapting to their new lives in an often overwhelming London. But musically it shows that NewDad should have no fears as whatever they can imagine they can thrillingly bring to life.
Itās a trait present as the title track erupts into a fierce denouement. Itās there as Fiachraās personal favourite, āPuzzleā, lurches into a seasick grunge waltz with lyrics inspired by Norman Mailerās āThe Executionerās Songā. And itās especially there with the affecting string arrangement on āBe Kindā - something that Sean affirms that they wouldāve have previously recreated using synths. Julie: āIt was a thrill. Weāre some random kids from Galway with no music education, and the most incredible musicians came in and played what we asked them to, and weāre really grateful for that.ā
Original: $28.00
-70%$28.00
$8.40Safe
SafeĀ is precisely what fans would want from their band: their core shoegaze/dream-pop sound elevated with a new self-confidence, a tight, masterly control of hooks, and broader touch points such as Pavement and Sonic Youth. In short: their ethereal elements feel more alluring than ever; the visceral moments are more selective and dynamic but hit just as hard; and their songs are simply a leap in sophistication beyond āMadraā.
Its first single, āEntertainerā, encapsulates their growth. Julieās vocal glides like a conversation with an imaginary friend, while every touch - her slacker rock cadence, distorted stabs of guitars, foreboding synth flourishes and drums which flow from spacious to savage - embeds itself in your mind and refuses to let go.
āThe song is about entertaining other peopleās idea of who you should be,ā explains Julie. āI'm only learning now that I just need to shut out the noise and do what makes me feel comfortable.ā
In fact, the entire EP rotates around similar introspective conflicts: being a people pleaser but standing up for yourself; realising that success brings a fresh wave of unexpected challenges, adapting to their new lives in an often overwhelming London. But musically it shows that NewDad should have no fears as whatever they can imagine they can thrillingly bring to life.
Itās a trait present as the title track erupts into a fierce denouement. Itās there as Fiachraās personal favourite, āPuzzleā, lurches into a seasick grunge waltz with lyrics inspired by Norman Mailerās āThe Executionerās Songā. And itās especially there with the affecting string arrangement on āBe Kindā - something that Sean affirms that they wouldāve have previously recreated using synths. Julie: āIt was a thrill. Weāre some random kids from Galway with no music education, and the most incredible musicians came in and played what we asked them to, and weāre really grateful for that.ā
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Description
SafeĀ is precisely what fans would want from their band: their core shoegaze/dream-pop sound elevated with a new self-confidence, a tight, masterly control of hooks, and broader touch points such as Pavement and Sonic Youth. In short: their ethereal elements feel more alluring than ever; the visceral moments are more selective and dynamic but hit just as hard; and their songs are simply a leap in sophistication beyond āMadraā.
Its first single, āEntertainerā, encapsulates their growth. Julieās vocal glides like a conversation with an imaginary friend, while every touch - her slacker rock cadence, distorted stabs of guitars, foreboding synth flourishes and drums which flow from spacious to savage - embeds itself in your mind and refuses to let go.
āThe song is about entertaining other peopleās idea of who you should be,ā explains Julie. āI'm only learning now that I just need to shut out the noise and do what makes me feel comfortable.ā
In fact, the entire EP rotates around similar introspective conflicts: being a people pleaser but standing up for yourself; realising that success brings a fresh wave of unexpected challenges, adapting to their new lives in an often overwhelming London. But musically it shows that NewDad should have no fears as whatever they can imagine they can thrillingly bring to life.
Itās a trait present as the title track erupts into a fierce denouement. Itās there as Fiachraās personal favourite, āPuzzleā, lurches into a seasick grunge waltz with lyrics inspired by Norman Mailerās āThe Executionerās Songā. And itās especially there with the affecting string arrangement on āBe Kindā - something that Sean affirms that they wouldāve have previously recreated using synths. Julie: āIt was a thrill. Weāre some random kids from Galway with no music education, and the most incredible musicians came in and played what we asked them to, and weāre really grateful for that.ā











