electronic music – Live Laugh Love Do http://livelaughlovedo.com A Super Fun Site Thu, 09 Oct 2025 19:36:12 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 Kelly Lee Owens Shares ‘Ascend’ From The ‘Kelly’ EP http://livelaughlovedo.com/entertainment/kelly-lee-owens-shares-ascend-from-the-kelly-ep/ http://livelaughlovedo.com/entertainment/kelly-lee-owens-shares-ascend-from-the-kelly-ep/#respond Thu, 09 Oct 2025 19:36:12 +0000 http://livelaughlovedo.com/2025/10/10/kelly-lee-owens-shares-ascend-from-the-kelly-ep/ [ad_1]

Kelly Lee Owens is among the best that modern dance/electronic music has to offer, so it’s great news when her name pops up. It has again today as Owens announces a new project, an EP titled simply Kelly.

She also shared the single “Ascend,” a kinetic banger full of thrilling crescendos and satisfying drops.

In a statement, Owens says the project was made with movement in mind:

“This EP is about embodying sound and those collective, physical experiences we only really have in clubs or at music events. Sonically, it’s very visceral. I’ve been drawn to sounds that sit on the edge: ominous, uneasy, sometimes even uncomfortable. That’s just where I’ve been emotionally, and I think the world reflects that too. There’s this constant push and pull between wanting to rise above the chaos, and sometimes, willingly sinking into it.”

A press release also calls the EP “her most direct and dancefloor-ready project to date, a tight, urgent body of work designed for the clubs.”

Listen to “Ascend” above. Owens also has a couple live dates coming up soon, so find those below.

Kelly Lee Owens’ Kelly Album Cover Artwork

dh2

Kelly Lee Owens’ 2025 Tour Dates

10/10 — London, UK @ M.O.T.
11/21 — Manchester, UK @ The Warehouse Project (DJ)

Kelly is out 11/21 via dh2. Find more information here.

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Same Same But Different Is The Best End Of Summer Festival http://livelaughlovedo.com/entertainment/same-same-but-different-is-the-best-end-of-summer-festival/ http://livelaughlovedo.com/entertainment/same-same-but-different-is-the-best-end-of-summer-festival/#respond Sun, 14 Sep 2025 03:49:28 +0000 http://livelaughlovedo.com/2025/09/14/same-same-but-different-is-the-best-end-of-summer-festival/ [ad_1]

Pack that sunscreen, your favorite swimsuit, a bubble shooter and your preferred flotation device, because Lake Perris California’s Same Same But Different is back, and this time it promises to be more than just another weekend of electronic beats and drops (but it’s going to be that too, so bring those dancing shoes). This year, SSBD is going full sensory overload with a chest-rattling lineup sound tracking a lakeside bash that is one part community, one part chaos, and a whole lot of fun.

This year’s headliners include the LSDREAM and CloZee super duo, LSZEE, as well as Zeds Dead, Dr. Fresch, Coco & Breezy, and takeovers by Bass N Babes, Good Society, Odyzey, and more — and that’s really just scratching the surface. The full lineup is a bouquet of electronic artists, all delivering high-energy drops and world-class bass music with a sunrise set by CloZee.

Same Same But Different

But SSDB is about more than music — explore the festival grounds to experience arts and crafts classes, multiple forms of yoga sessions (including stand-up paddle board style because this is SSDB after all), or brush up on your moves at one of the festival’s many dance programs. SSDB is a playground of wellness, art, community and above all else — music.

SSDB is simply one of the finest experiential festivals happening this year — you’re bound to come away from this one with memories you’ll never forget and a few new skills to impress your friends.

The festival will come to Lake Perris, California, from September 26th to 28th. Buy tickets here, and if you’re still not convinced, these photos from prior years will help you imagine what sort of fun (and good trouble) you can get yourself into.

@Neubauer Media
Jose Reyes
Jacquelyn Diaz
Ashwin Khurana
SSBD
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Sydnee Wilson Photography
Gucci Photo

SSBD
Mak Howard Makaylam
Gucci Photo
Franny Kovacs
SSBD
Kayla Alise
Sam Shoots Shows
Jose Reyes
SSBD
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SSBD
Story Trippin
Mak Howard Makaylam
Nick Isabella
Hope In LA Photography
SSBD
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Sydnee Wilson Photography

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GoGo Penguin Move Forward with a Fresh Vibe » PopMatters http://livelaughlovedo.com/culture-and-society/gogo-penguin-move-forward-with-a-fresh-vibe-popmatters/ http://livelaughlovedo.com/culture-and-society/gogo-penguin-move-forward-with-a-fresh-vibe-popmatters/#respond Thu, 07 Aug 2025 07:38:56 +0000 http://livelaughlovedo.com/2025/08/07/gogo-penguin-move-forward-with-a-fresh-vibe-popmatters/ [ad_1]

British instrumental trio GoGo Penguin move forward with a fresh vibe on Necessary Fictions and a big American fall tour on tap. The Manchester-based trio have gained increasing acclaim over the past decade with their unique blend of jazzy chops and electronic dance textures. Now they’re dabbling in eclectic vocal tracks too, as they expand their sonic landscape. The follow-up to 2023’s Everything Is Going to Be Okay finds the group with a new drummer in Jon Scott (formerly with Ethiopian jazz funk legend Mulatu Astatke’s band) and a new outlook on life, all of which makes for a vibrant collection of tunes.

The previous record was billed as an attempt to generate catharsis from both personal challenges as well as society’s larger struggles in the early 2020s, reflected in song titles like the title track and “You’re Stronger Than You Think”. The new album finds the trio feeling revitalized for a spiritual rebirth of sorts.

Necessary Fictions is about us attempting to speak honestly about who we are as human beings, musicians, and as a band. The title is about us striving to be as open and authentic as we can be and shedding the protective mask that we develop in early life. Each person must find a way to operate in a complex world. To us, this album is about us looking at who we are and what we think are our integral, authentic qualities at this moment in time, as we move forward into the future,” says bassist Nick Blacka in a press release.

The opener “Umbra” comes out of the gate with an energetic bass line, before Chris Illingworth’s keys and Scott’s percussion layer on top and then take off. The way the trio build their sonic layers throughout reveals genuine tone scientists at work, taking their time to distill a specific tonal alchemy rather than just cutting loose. They’re also using a broader sonic palette on Necessary Fictions, including modular synths, Moog Grandmother, and more electric bass in the mix.

The first single, “What We Are and What We Are Meant to Be”, is billed as the spiritual thesis of the album, with a theme of the inner journey to self-discovery. The track starts with a gentle intro, as if the trio were playing in a Zen garden temple. Then the drums come in to add another kinetic element, yet the bass and keyboards still leave plenty of space to generate a sense of sonic comfort. The beat picks up in the fourth minute, giving a taste of what a dynamic tune it might become in the live setting as the bass and keys stretch out a little more.

“It’s really simple, really melodic,” Blacka explains of the track in press for the LP. “It’s not showboating, like ‘Hey, look at all the chops we’ve got, and how great we are!’ There’s not even any improvisation in it. Bass-wise, it’s just got a bass synth like a dance track. There’s still a part of me that’s like, ‘What are people going to think?’ Then there’s another part that just thinks, ‘Fuck it, they can think what they want! This is what we want to make right now, and it feels authentic.’”  

“Fallowfield Loops” features some similar energy, except the trio jump right in as Illingworth leads the way with rippling piano over a tight beat. There are sonic vibes that bring jamtronica stalwarts STS9 to mind, with the dynamic interplay between the keys and the rhythm section to generate upbeat, danceable grooves.

The album also features GoGo Penguin’s first-ever song with vocals, “Forgive the Damages”, with British-Ugandan singer-songwriter Daudi Matsiko (who has previously toured with the trio as an opening act). The song starts out seeming like a piano ballad, but builds behind Matsiko’s voice to generate a grander sonic landscape.

“We’ve often thought about working with other musicians, particularly vocalists, but it had to feel right and not forced. We’ve been friends with Daudi Matsiko for a long while now, and over the years, we’ve talked about writing something together. Originally, we weren’t thinking of having vocals on this track. We had the chords and the melodic idea, but we were thinking of using field recordings, samples, or perhaps even some spoken word.

“One weekend, around the time we were working on this track, Daudi randomly phoned as he’d flown into Manchester from a gig in Slovakia. I went to pick him up from the airport, and we sat in my garden and drank some beers. This is when I explained some of the overall concepts behind the album, and he went away and wrote some lyrics,” Blacka explains.

“He completely understood where we were coming from with this album. Everything clicked into place; it didn’t feel forced, and it definitely felt right. We tweaked a few things together, and we asked for a ‘soaring vocal line’ at the end of the track, and Daudi recorded the harmonised line that sings ‘forgive the damages’ near the end of the song, which is when we really felt we had something special.”

“Luminous Giants” and “State of Flux” feature violinist Rakhi Singh and the Manchester Collective, with a melancholy yet bright string part adding to the former track before Illingworth’s piano comes to the fore. The violin circles back in later to generate more sonic grandeur. “State of Flux” comes out of the gate with more energy, as Blacka and Scott lay down a compelling groove. The piano starts more sparse with the active bassline, but then Illingworth lays down some swirling runs. Blacka has a short bass solo, before the swirling piano runs come back as the trio gels. The strings reappear, too, making this one of the album’s most dynamic tracks.

“The Turn Within” is another highlight, featuring bright melodic piano over an uplifting mid-tempo groove with a warm, comforting bass line. There’s a trippy interlude in the bridge section, where Scott’s drumming is featured before the trio syncs back in. “Living Bricks in Dead Mortar” is another showcase for Scott, as the bass and keys are very subtle around his crisp beats on a track that builds energy in cinematic fashion. “Naga Ghost” also builds into a tight jam where the keys, bass, and drums all seem to solo at once, yet with an alchemy that comes together and moves toward a big climax.

“Silence Speaks” closes the record with atmospheric melodies growing into a vibrant track where the drums feel like one of the melodies, while the keys and bass take on a percussive element. GoGo Penguin are skilled at blending their tonalities in such a way that it generates anticipation to see how these tunes might take off in the live setting.

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