"but you don't have the skills to do it..."
“Night Life” from Hypoluxo is an infectious jam that pulls you in as it energetically progresses. The track is perfectly paired with its video by Molly and Judson Valdez, filmed at the Honore Club in Brooklyn, NY depicting the night life of the city that “never sleeps.” I get a little bit of Devo out of this track with its urgency and emotive vocals, which you could call new wave but it’s more like an integral corner of the foundation of punk. Hypoluxo melds those sectors of new wave and punk creating rhythmic and vehement pieces that end up not actually needing a genre to describe them. Just listen, I doubt you won’t dig it. Their self-titled album was released November 20th and I really hope you love it as much as we do. While listening to it I involuntarily mumbled “that’s the stuff.”
-Alyssa Holland
side notes: "Night Life by Brooklyn's Hypoluxo feels like Pavement and Talking Heads in an atom smasher." - Robb Donker Curtius
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Hypoluxo almost didn’t make it. Members of the Brooklyn-based quartet have been playing together in some form since their teens but their experience with the music industry could have broken a less tenacious group. Young and impressionable they signed an opaque deal that left them at the whim of a label with no interest in transparency or care for their releases. Many bands have broken up, fallen apart and moved on from lesser struggles but the frustration born from this experience crystallized into an aggressive and urgent album of power-pop inflected post-punk on Hypoluxo’s LP3.
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https://www.facebook.com/hypoluxomusic/
Hypoluxo almost didn’t make it. Members of the Brooklyn-based quartet have been playing together in some form since their teens but their experience with the music industry could have broken a less tenacious group. Young and impressionable they signed an opaque deal that left them at the whim of a label with no interest in transparency or care for their releases. Many bands have broken up, fallen apart and moved on from lesser struggles but the frustration born from this experience crystallized into an aggressive and urgent album of power-pop inflected post-punk on Hypoluxo’s LP3.
On Hypoluxo’s LP3 the band have crafted their most polished, unmediated and rousing songs to date. Eschewing the dream pop of their previous work LP3 hits immediately with lead guitarist Cameron Riordan’s angular post-punk lines whirling over the unrelenting rhythm section of drummer Marco Ocampo and bassist Eric Jaso while lead singer Samuel Cogen’s emotion packed vocals, replete with distinct yelps and near-screams grab you by the collar and refuse to let go. With help from San Fermin’s Allen Tate, who produced LP3, these songs exude a charismatic charm that belies the surreptitious despondency that runs through Hypoluxo’s new album.
Hypoluxo take no time launching into their entrancing brand of intricate post-punk on first single, “Ridden”, which delves into the band’s near dissolution, while their jaded lyrics are cut by Riordan’s fluttering guitar work through the chorus while Ocampo’s frenetic beats are perfectly complemented by Jaso’s driving bass line. It’s not all doom, though, as “Ridden” concludes and Cogen leaves a glimmer of hope with the repetition of “I feel Im stronger than that / I feel Im better than that”. “Nimbus” is a derisive takedown of weathermen, written during Cogen’s time working delivery on his bike in NYC and the mercurial nature of the job. “Shock” opens with shimmering guitar work and allows the rhythm section to shine on the most aughts indie rock influenced song on LP3, with these big building verses and Kristina Moore sweetly sung backing vocals that belie the quarantine-induced insomnia, sleep deprivation and feeling of being trapped that spawned the song. While on “Nightlife”, with it’s wildly vacillating rhythms, Hypoluxo recalls the feeling of moving to the city, finding your footing, or not, and the hedonistic lifestyle that’s much too easy to fall into. Throughout the ten songs on LP3 the band traces their own growth from teenagers on their 2016 debut If Language, the eagerness and enthusiasm that was dashed by the onslaught of adult life and the exploitation that is rife in the music industry. There are glimmers of hope and a deep sense of resiliency in these vignettes of growing up, finding yourself and your confidence in a world that wants nothing more than to beat you down. On LP3 Hypoluxo are resolute in their refusal to be taken advantage of anymore and the results are an album that is urgent in it’s convictions. Maybe a bit of a “fuck you” as well.
Hypoluxo take no time launching into their entrancing brand of intricate post-punk on first single, “Ridden”, which delves into the band’s near dissolution, while their jaded lyrics are cut by Riordan’s fluttering guitar work through the chorus while Ocampo’s frenetic beats are perfectly complemented by Jaso’s driving bass line. It’s not all doom, though, as “Ridden” concludes and Cogen leaves a glimmer of hope with the repetition of “I feel Im stronger than that / I feel Im better than that”. “Nimbus” is a derisive takedown of weathermen, written during Cogen’s time working delivery on his bike in NYC and the mercurial nature of the job. “Shock” opens with shimmering guitar work and allows the rhythm section to shine on the most aughts indie rock influenced song on LP3, with these big building verses and Kristina Moore sweetly sung backing vocals that belie the quarantine-induced insomnia, sleep deprivation and feeling of being trapped that spawned the song. While on “Nightlife”, with it’s wildly vacillating rhythms, Hypoluxo recalls the feeling of moving to the city, finding your footing, or not, and the hedonistic lifestyle that’s much too easy to fall into. Throughout the ten songs on LP3 the band traces their own growth from teenagers on their 2016 debut If Language, the eagerness and enthusiasm that was dashed by the onslaught of adult life and the exploitation that is rife in the music industry. There are glimmers of hope and a deep sense of resiliency in these vignettes of growing up, finding yourself and your confidence in a world that wants nothing more than to beat you down. On LP3 Hypoluxo are resolute in their refusal to be taken advantage of anymore and the results are an album that is urgent in it’s convictions. Maybe a bit of a “fuck you” as well.
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