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Sebas De Varona Opened a Portal to the Psychedelic Soul of the 70s with ‘Preachers’

The gospel in Sebas De Varona’s latest single, Preachers, opens a portal to the psychedelic soul of the 70s; it’s a doorway into the mind of a visionary artist you’ll never want to close. As an architect of melodies you instantly melt into and a lyricist that captures your mind as much as your soul, there are few artists of this generation as affecting as Sebas De Varona,

Thankfully, with the impending release of his new EP, Dynamics in the Fourth Dimension, you’ll have plenty more opportunities to trip with Varona’s dynamically electric vocal timbre that rests easy in the rooted-in-emotion synthesis of genres which illustrates the singer, songwriter, instrumentalist and producer’s expansive bedrock of influences. Primed to soak fans of Tame Impala and Pink Floyd alike in celestial euphony, the EP will easily be one of the most cultivated releases of the year.

After hearing the Hendrix-esque fret wizardry which blazes through a divine connection to the soul of blues in Preachers you’ll want to flock to the Floridian artist’s live performances like a moth to an arcane flame.

Preachers was officially released on May 15; stream the single on Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

7ELIX found a new depth in intimacy with his emo rap vignette,  ‘CALLMEWHENYOUGETBACK’

CALLMEWHENYOUGETBACK taken from 7ELIX’s seminal LP, emergency exit, pt.3: death of a memory, is the perfect introduction to the Asheville, NC-born artist’s music which is offered as a salve for the outcasted soul.

The songwriter, producer and audio engineer created the ultimate testament to his motivation to advocate for mental health and suicide awareness by orchestrating this confessionally evocative emo-rap vignette of vulnerability. By illustrating the power of candid expression and giving an outlet for jagged emotions that become scars if they’re harboured for too long, he gave a lesson in catharsis in CALLMEWHENYOUGETBACK.

The light production work on the intricately melodic track ensures that none of the visceral sincerity from the recording was stripped away. Painted in nocturnal light that depicts the intimacy of late-night thoughts cascading into vocalisation, CALLMEWHENYOUGETBACK captures 7ELIX at his most uninhibited as he attempts to hold onto a relationship that is precariously hanging in the balance despite his tight grip on the affections that bring warmth to the bittersweet release.

It’s a heart-wrenchingly authentic release which is a clear sign of even bigger things to come from 7ELIX. We can’t wait to hear what’s lingering in the prodigy’s timeline.

CALLMEWHENYOUGETBACK is available to stream on Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Behind the Metal Mask: Mindistry Talks “DOPPELGANGER’

Get ready to dive deep into the sonic abyss with Mindistry as they gear up to drop their electrifying sophomore LP, “DOPPELGANGER.” We sat down with the metal mastermind to talk about the raw inspirations behind the album, balancing hardcore influences, and the thrill of pushing boundaries in the industrial thrash scene. From the original Swedish version to the English translation, Mindistry reveals the emotional and cinematic journeys that fuel their music. With a nod to legendary bands and a fierce dedication to unique sound, this interview is a must-read for metalheads eager to understand the chaos and creativity behind “DOPPELGANGER.

Mindistry, welcome to A&R Factory, thanks for sitting down with us as you gear up for the release of your sophomore LP, DOPPELGANGER, can you tell us about the inspiration behind this album? 

Greetings warriors and thank you for having me! Well, DOPPELGANGER was the first-ever full album I wrote, and originally it was in Swedish. My native tongue. I always wanted to release and English version as well and here we are, months out. The first version is named “KATASTROFTANKAR” (catastrophizing) and was released in 2022.

This version contains the same songs in English and the subject matter of the songs remain the same. It’s about everything from fictional warfare in Gothenburg, Evil Dead 2 & some darker emotional songs as well.

There is no real main inspiration behind it, to be honest. It’s an album of original stories, emotional trauma lyrics and movie tributes.

How will you balance your influences and your unique style in the album?

So since this album was originally written which feels like about 209 years ago now (actually about 4-5) I have levelled up musically quite a bit. The influences are strong and I have always been very upfront about that fact, and I still get to hear it often, haha.

It was purposefully written in the style of specific music to fill the void left behind by another band, “Raubtier”.

I wouldn’t say that I regret taking inspiration from them and “Rammstein”, but I might have done it a bit differently today, which I am with all the new songs I’m working on (due 2025). I hear it all the time that I sound like these two bands, but to me it does not sound THAT similar really.

Thrash fans are often very traditionalist in their tastes, how has your industrialised thrash sound gone down in those fan circles?

Yes, this statement is very true. From the response I’ve gotten so far, from thrash metal to extreme metal fans to pop metal fans it is mostly positive. On TikTok (yes, I have one) there was quite a big drama on some videos regarding the influences, and I found this very entertaining. One guy actually commented months later that he had changed his mind to loving Mindistry which is pretty cool.

You’re currently the only member of Mindistry, do you prefer the creative freedom of working as a lone entity?

Indeed currently it is a one-man army musically. However, there is a machine within Mindistry that consists of me and two others. Photographer, illustrator scheduler Chanel & the best propmaker in his apartment Michael. So we are a team even if I handle the musical parts. Without them Mindistry would not be here, so hail thee my lovely friends.

Did your producer influence the final sound of the LP? 

Yes, definitely! I was such a rookie when recording with Felix (producer), so he definitely influenced the sound but the songs were written by me. He added some flavour here and there, and also plays the amazing solo on “Nightmare”!

What do you hope listeners will take away from the lyrical themes in the album?

I wish they will be able to escape even for a few minutes, enjoy the riffs and melodies, or have fun debating which song I ripped off with themselves or friends. To give entertainment or some small escape would be awesome!

Listen to Mindistry on Spotify and follow their journey on all platforms via this link.

 

Interview by Amelia Vandergast

LuisG delivered a raw indie-rock shot of redemption with ‘Second Chances’

If you paired the pensive sting of The Verve with the euphonic consolation of Nada Surf’s most heart-wrenching hits and added the rugged heart-in-throat signature of Chris Cornell, you’d come incredibly close to what LuisG created for the title single of his debut LP, Second Chances.

The track finds a tender way of advocating for redemption. Though many of us operate as though we have only known wrong when it comes from the vindictiveness of others, Second Chances prises your mind open to the reality that we’re all leagues away from perfection. Through this vulnerable, confessionally powerful release, LuisG put his heart on the line; you can’t help but follow suit as you sink into the absolution of the melodies.

LuisG, with roots in indie rock, pop, emo, and folk, is increasingly renowned for filtering his powerful melodic style and evocative storytelling through a Southern Cali lens. Based in Las Cruces, NM, he has carved out a niche for himself in both online spaces and local circles. His journey, marked by reflective and personal songwriting, has seen a progression from his first single, Waves, in January 2022 to his debut EP, Somewhere to Call Home, later that year.

Second Chances is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Remmorii became the king of cross-over appeal in ‘Radio Silence’

Radio Silence by Remmorii epitomises genre fluidity, offering a flood of slick and smooth grooves that easily do the lyrical gravity justice. The melody master’s focus on flow over genre fit is enriched with tinges of Afrobeat flavours within a pop framework. This, combined with RnB hip-hop vocals that spill soul, grants the track substantial commercial crossover appeal.

Raised in Brampton and influenced by Hamilton, Remmorii, a Canadian alternative hip-hop artist, emphasises authenticity and melody in his music. With a name derived from the Latin “Memento Mori,” he reminds listeners of life’s fleeting nature, encouraging them to embrace every moment. His music, characterised by organic sounds, skilfully blends rich basses, crisp mid-tones, and smooth trebles, creating a polished edge that is distinctly his own.

In Radio Silence, Remmorii’s lyrics resonate with a soul ready to scream about an era plagued with alienating confusion. The track’s rhythmic intricacies and emotive delivery reflect his commitment to merging substance with irresistible appeal. If this single is any indication of what’s to come, Remmorii is poised to lead the future of the music industry with his unique voice and poetic lyricism.

For fans of pop and beyond, Radio Silence is a must-listen. Keep Remmorii’s name on your radar; his ability to inspire and uplift through artistic expression is as rare as it is remarkable.

Radio Silence is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Journey into the Abyss: An Interview with Elias Caldwell on ‘The Ruination of Yggdrasil’

Immerse yourself in the dark, thought-provoking world of Elias Caldwell as he unveils the intricate layers of his latest album, The Ruination of Yggdrasil. In this exclusive interview, Caldwell discusses his transition from childhood influences and industrial roots to the haunting realm of ambient doom metal. Grappling with themes of nuclear desolation, existential angst, and the shattering of ancient myths, he provides a raw, unfiltered look at his creative process and philosophical musings. Dive deep into the abyss with Caldwell as he explores music as a conduit for reflection and resilience.

Elias Caldwell, welcome to A&R Factory! We’d love to dig into your album, The Ruination of Yggdrasil, what’s the concept of the LP? 

So, to touch on the concept behind ‘The Ruination of Yggdrasil’, first we need to touch on the concept of ‘Desolation of Sludge’. ‘TROY’ is more of a sequel in my mind. ‘Desolation of Sludge’ was about our inevitable nuclear armageddon and the lives of those affected by it, the survivors. Imagine living through an event like global nuclear war. Your death is not assured but your misery is assured. I think it’s safe to say many people would rather die immediately than have to pick up the pieces.

Thats where we pick up The Ruination of Yggdrasil in grappling with the existential questions that follow, the knowing of the poisoned well. Let’s take a look at what Yggdrasil represents in Norse mythology for a moment. We know it as “The Tree of Life”, which in and of itself is a metaphor for our ecosystem and our ability to use the land as a place to reproduce and continue on our species. Not just our own but every species. Although, in Norse mythology, it went much deeper. Yggdrasil to them was a far more metaphysical construct. You can think of it as the fabric that connects all the planes of existence from Midgard (Earth) to Valhalla to Nilheim the one constant, or the highway between these realms was Yggdrasil.

So, What does it mean for such a fundament, a vital underpinning of everything, to be ruined? The Ruination of Yggdrasil. Not only does it mean it is impossible to continue on our life cycle in any meaningful way but it also means a separation from our collective knowledge, tradition, connection to our ancestors, everything. Can you imagine a worse tragedy? Can you imagine living through this hellscape? Knowing it is all for nothing yet carrying on ever stronger.

How did ambient doom metal become a conduit of your creativity? 

So, onto how I got into making this kind of music in the first place. I have been playing music for 22 of my 32 years alive. My father gave me my first guitar, which I still have, when I was 10 years old. I grew up watching him play. He was always in bands or recording music while I grew up with him. The main band that comes to mind is Scar Tissue, they were heavily influential in the industrial music scene in the Bay Area in the ’90s. I have been making music and learning my craft slowly, playing in bands myself, but mainly working on my own music. I have always been a big metalhead even though that wasn’t the music I was making. I was introduced to the idea of Stoner Metal by a friend of mine, I had always thought of it in a different way, I guess. Hearing  Monolord’s ‘Empress Rising’ was a big spark of inspiration for me, that’s when I started work on ‘Desolation of Sludge’. That’s pretty much how I started work in this genre.

How do you want your listeners to feel when immersing themselves in the cinematic tour de force? 

How I want people to feel? I want people to look inwardly; self-reflection and mindfulness are key, I think. This music has been designed to subliminally lull you into a flow state. I listen to it in my headphones at work all the time. It helps me slip out of my conscious thoughts of practical things, like what am I going to eat for lunch and more into meditation on more abstract things like geopolitics and conservation. I like to ruminate on history, I think about the great losses of life and liberty and how the world we take for granted has not been this way for very long at all. It would be all too easy for our system to slip back into totalitarian despotism- just like the majority of history. I do not allow myself the luxury of self-pity. Think of all the senseless loss of life going back to time immemorial and even to this very day. We primitive creatures only respond to violence or the threat of violence and all our power struggles are just attempts to consolidate the monopoly on violence. I have it really good compared to the majority of humans who have lived. I refuse to become complacent in this comfortable existence, as it could all too easily return to the status quo of brutality.

Would it be fair to say that you approach your music in quite a cerebral manner? 

  Do I approach my music in a cerebral way? Not while I am making it initially, later in a project’s life cycle I’ll get a bit headier with it but to start it is just raw emotion. I come home from work hot and sweaty, listening to metal all day, I turn on my amps and grab one of my stable of guitars and play really loudly. I record everything I play. I capture all my moments of improvisation. Once I have recorded a bunch of takes, I walk away. Only weeks later do I go back to an individual project (usually I’ll have recorded 20 or so of these sessions by this time). I’ll go back to listen and pick out which ones I like enough to try and edit down into a song. I work slowly I think but everyone tells me I go too fast; I’m working on that. I try to spend really short amounts of time working on any one piece, I like getting fresh perspectives on my tracks so I’ll listen to them on an assortment of speakers before I make too many changes.

What was the most gratifying part of creating the album? 

The most gratifying part of creating an album? I probably have the most fun actually playing the guitar and bass parts. I actually am starting to enjoy singing too, I used to dislike it. I like to leave my studio powered up on a Friday night so after a night of partying and gaming, drinking, smoking or whatever, I will come back into the studio nice and loose, grab a guitar and lay down a killer lead part without having to turn on a bunch of gear and queue up a project. Just have all that ready so when inspiration strikes, I can hit record.

What is the motivation behind your creative ambitions? 

My motivation? This is easy. The music. People have it all backwards in this industry. They look and see what people like, they say “Oh, I can make that sound then I can play shows with other people who sound like that maybe become a famous rockstar and get rich” I’m not interested in that whatsoever. I do not want any sort of undue attention to myself personally I don’t care if other people like the music even. I make music that I want to hear so that I can listen to it. I hear all these bands I love and I just think about mixing and mashing elements like a DJ. I don’t have turntables, I have guitars. Money does not factor in at all for me. When I hear that someone is an artist I immediately think, “Oh someone who has no money” and that is me, a starving artist. When a band does well and they make it big and get the record deals over and over the music goes to crap. All the rawness and emotion are gone leaving something sterile. I want my music to be a fertile ground for inspiration and emotion. If you feel something, anything, it was all worth it.

What’s next for Elias Caldwell?

What’s next? I am going to keep making more off-the-wall concept albums. I don’t know where I’m going thematically yet, but I’m recording some really heavy guitar parts this week so I think the next one is going to be even better.

Thanks so much for this opportunity for me to talk about my music, it’s kind of heavy doing all this in a vacuum.

Listen to ‘The Ruination of Yggdrasil’ on Spotify and follow the creative journey of Elias Caldwell on Facebook.

Interview by Amelia Vandergast

Softener became 21st century icons of indie grunge with their debut single, Brindle

The Fresno, California-based up-and-coming outfit, Softener, used grunge as a conduit for their intimate amenability in their alt-indie debut single, Brindle, which hit the airwaves on May 17.

The submissive lyricism revolves around a tender mantra of “I just wanna be your dog”; Iggy Pop may have popularised that desire, but Softener brought brand-new meaning to the iteration of intent by projecting a sweet declaration of surrender that you can’t help catching feelings for. The heartfelt vulnerability in the lyrics and vocal performance, paired with the grunge-infused instrumentation creates a consoling aural escape that you’ll always feel safe within the confines of.

Whatever they have in the pipeline for their sophomore release, we already have high hopes for; they set the bar high with the sludgy melodies that are sure to be music to the ears of any fans of Elliott Smith, Teenage Fanclub, Pavement, and Sparklehorse.

Stream the debut single from Softener on Spotify now.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Roots and Rock Collide in Ashley Wineland’s Explosive Anthem Crank It Up

Ashley Wineland

Country rock firebrand Ashley Wineland blazed like a red-hot roots-reverent inferno in her latest single, Crank It Up.

The rhythmically compulsive tour de force is enough to strip you of every atom of inhibition from the moment you hit play. It is nothing short of a feat of alchemy that the swampy serpentine bluegrass guitars kept hold of their authenticity within the high-octane anthem which demands to be heard loud – Wineland didn’t even need to ask.

Produced by the award-winning songwriter and producer, Marti Frederiksen, who has become an integral part of the legacies of Carrie Underwood, Ozzy Osbourne, Buck Cherry, Aerosmith, Sheryl Crow, and Eminem for his songwriting and production credits, Crank It Up is an indomitable earworm which will ensure that Wineland’s career is equally revered as the aforementioned artists.

The prodigal daughter of Arizona has Country running through her veins; allowing everything she turns her undeniable talent to become an authentically exhilarant impact on the senses. Her voice deserves to be regarded as an elemental force of nature in its own right. If it wasn’t so pure with soul, it would be unholy.

If you get a chance to see her on tour, don’t even think twice about buying tickets.

Crank It Up was officially released on May 24h; stream the single on Spotify.

Discover more about Amy Wineland via her official website.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

NYC’s Summer Fling put the soul in funk-rock with ‘Blissful Haze’

NYC’s Summer Fling broke their two-year spell of silence by conjuring an elemental force of feel-good furore in their single, Blissful Haze, which delivers exactly what it says on the titular tin.

Using high-energy funk-rock as the stylistic bedrock of the release and finding room to inject soul, blues, pop, and jazz, the seven-piece powerhouse ensured Blissful Haze transcends sound to visualise a state of mind you can enter simply by hitting play on the single which filters nostalgia through a modern indie pop lens.

Few vocalists could match the electrifying energy of the dynamic instrumental arrangement that layers shimmering organs over funk rhythms and hard-hitting horns, but Eddie Kam, an indomitable emissary of charisma, went supernova on the infectiously zealous soul.

With each member of Summer Fling a recently graduated jazz musician, you can rest assured that you’re in rhythmically safe hands as you get taken through the helter-skelter ride of rapture.

Blissful Haze was officially released on May 10th; stream the single on Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Interview with PH Mazza: Exploring the Darkly Baroque World of His Eponymous Debut Album

In this no-prisoners-held interview, PH Mazza discusses the unsettling elements and twisted cinematic grandeur that define his sound. Mazza shares insights into the influence of legendary artists like Elton John, David Bowie, and Lou Reed and candidly explores his intentions behind the album, his disdain for mainstream conformity, and his commitment to creating art that challenges and provokes. If you have always wanted to step inside the mind of a visionary, now is your chance.

PH Mazza, thanks for giving us the opportunity to sit down with you to discuss your darkly baroque eponymous debut album. We’d love to know what the interplay between jarringly unsettling elements and the cinematic opulence says about you as an artist. 

“Obscurely Baroque… Unsettling elements and cinematic opulence… I like it.

Hello A&R Factory team and readers. It’s a pleasure to be here and be part of what will be my first interview.

Not that I believe I’ll be called for many others in my life haha but it’s a price I pay.

What are the emotional and philosophical themes which underpin the release?

Not to be a suck-up. Some might call it art-sabotage or call me arrogant, but none of this went through a convoluted intellectual filter neither was it meticulously planned, yet it came naturally.

I felt and lived all of this, but didn’t disguise or reduce anything to be socially/artistically accepted. This is an album made for, when lining it up with other things I like, I can say: Yeah

Which artists have been essential to your inspiration? 

I can never distance myself from the influence that Elton John’s piano style and his way of creating harmonies have had on my life as a whole. He was my first and still is my greatest music hero, especially the early albums, citing the self-titled “Elton John” from 1970 and the raw energy from “11-17-70”.

The grandeur of the harmonies and the orchestra conducted by Paul Buckmaster undoubtedly resonates here and there in everything I set out to do.

Despite being rivals, the presence of David Bowie, especially in his “Station to Station” (1976) to the Berlin trilogy era, also mentioning his work with Iggy Pop on “The Idiot,” is responsible for a large part of the atmosphere- the dark and eery aesthetic that I tried to reproduce.

I couldn’t avoid mentioning the cruel and mocking tone in which Lou Reed writes his lyrics and sings them cynically, like a punch in the stomach, and certainly was one of my main discoveries while developing my writing skills as well as the way I would like to express the messages that I purpose.

Last but not least, I still mention here the names of Kate Bush, Tom Waits, Nick Cave, and Talking Heads for their courage to dance to their own rhythms throughout their careers that had few mistakes because they never justified any of their works. They do what they want to do, it’s their truth.

What were your intentions with the debut album? 

The most selfish feeling possible of pleasing myself: to be able to feel the relief from managing to do a substantial work that I can still be proud of in 40 years ahead if it was my only one

For someone who graduated from Law School and tried the corporate world due to external pressure, this personal validation arises as an honour and respect to myself for all the years of consequential frustration for doing something I didn’t want in the first place.

If anything I did bother someone, I take that as credit too.

How did you discover your preference for disturbing the comfortable and comforting the disturbed rather than creating euphonic art? 

First of all, having no regrets when it comes to creation, being unbearably unapologetic.

From some point in my teenage years, I began to be more interested in arts that caused me a strangeness, something that I couldn’t classify or that demanded me listening more than once to understand the artist’s intention.

…The provocations within the lyrics, the tones, the energy and aura created… something that would take me out of the comfort zone of radio-friendly stuff and that’s why Tom Waits, Lou Reed, and Kate Bush always fascinated me a lot.

I think it was Rick Rubin who once said that the listener’s opinion is the last thing that comes when creating music, but I believe it should never come at any part of the process.

Art, considering it as its unique appearance described by Walter Benjamin as “aura”, must come, just like the uniqueness of life, from the deepest, most disgusting, and horrifying core hidden behind all social masks: it’s the intrusive thought that comes out soundly or not (John Cage understood it very well) from the devils and voices of the mind.

Besides that, it’s fast food.

Do you think too many contemporary artists have fallen into the people-pleasing trap of playing it safe and have dulled the music industry? 

I think it’s the evilness of pop music in general.

Every generation had its own formulas and ways of making money from the music market… which is not necessarily bad, the 70’s explored and valued the technical-creative capacity of artists for the mainstream.

Currently, with all the revolution/intellectual impoverishment of “knowing a lot, but knowing nothing” of post-social media society, it undoubtedly accelerated that decadent process.

Artists record 1:30-minute songs to be successful on TikTok through bizarre and dystopically stupid dance videos…

… Besides all the streaming distribution on platforms like Spotify that operate on the edge of a pyramid scheme classification at the moment that only benefits pop entities at the top of that food chain who don’t even count on this kind of income with royalties anymore…

Everything is ingeniously created for money to generate money and artists enter the game because, unfortunately, they need to just survive.

I don’t blame the independent community for wanting to be pop music, but I wouldn’t feel bad if I knew that Spotify or Universal Music CEOs had an airplane accident.

It’s an audacious move to self-produce a debut LP backed by a big orchestra, does pretension factor into your execution of the album? 

Hahaha and it was also a nightmare for the sound engineers who mixed the album.

In fact, all the orchestra elements, woodwinds, and brass were made with digital instruments by myself because it would certainly be financially unfeasible to transmit all those ideas by paying that many musicians and hours at the studio, which I don’t consider bad because it challenged me to learn to program and produce alone what came to my mind. It was a new language acquired.

I wouldn’t say that ambition influences the album’s execution, but it is the engine that prevented me from creating my own barriers and having imposter syndrome to achieve what I wanted.

I also believe that ambition is an external perception because the artist is just exploring ideas without thinking too much about that kind of thing.

Now that the album is out in the world, what’s next? 

There’s still a lot to be said, but since making an album is very expensive for an independent artist as I am, it also depends on how many problems I’ll have with banks and money haha Because I already have about 6 albums composed, but not recorded so far.

What I can anticipate is that, if what I do causes angst, I guarantee that I’m still far from the maximum discomfort I could cause: this is just the beginning.-

Slip into the theatrically macabre avant-garde eponymous debut album via Spotify, and follow PH Mazza through the haunted corridors of his mind on Facebook and Instagram.

Interview by Amelia Vandergast