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LIONEL BOY Shares Official Video For 'Mango Michelada'

The track is accompanied by lo-fi, documentary-style visuals, shot by Casey Liu and Lionel, that quite literally take the viewer along for a ride.

By: Jul. 21, 2021
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LIONEL BOY Shares Official Video For 'Mango Michelada'  Image

Today, the Hawaiian-born, Long Beach-based songwriter Lionel Boy shares the official music video to "Mango Michelada," the silky smooth, artfully laid-back tune off his debut, self-titled album. The track is accompanied by lo-fi, documentary-style visuals, shot by Casey Liu and Lionel, that quite literally take the viewer along for a ride.

"'Mango Michelada' was made during two short months right before the pandemic between me, my friend Jacqueline and my girlfriend Casey." Notes Lionel Boy. "The opening lines of this song, "Mango Michelada with Clamato..." were just words Jacqueline started reading off her beer can during mic check. Besides that one line and the title, the song really has nothing to do with the beverage. It's a random title for a song we wrote during the oddest year of our lives."

"We wanted the music video to convey the same emotions we were all collectively feeling last year." Lionel Boy continues. "From being cooped up in a small studio space drinking mango micheladas to being holed up at home during quarantine. Casey grabbed our vx camera and we all took turns driving around San Pedro and Long Beach, cooped up in Jacqueline's car."

Lionel Boy is out now via Innovative Leisure. Lionel Boy's sound mixes spacey synthesizers, impromptu breakbeats & bedroom pop. The airy, jazz-cracked, electronic pop of Lionel Boy belies a wistful romanticism, a careful observational streak, and a meditative fixation on life and death. Lionel Boy is soulful and easy-going, both introspective and laissez faire, extremely mellow but never soft-headed. Listen to Lionel Boy via Innovative Leisure HERE.

Last month, Lionel Boy shared an intimate live performance of "Tide" via FLOOD Magazine's 'Neighborhoods' session. Watch Lionel Boy perform "Tide" HERE.

Consider the power of the vibe. After all, the power of positive vibes transcends simple categorization or a Sopranos meme. A good vibe is a cool breeze and ice cream on a sweltering afternoon. It is the athlete whose sixth sense and unselfishness makes everyone on the court play better. It is those Bob Ross videos where with a gentle voice and a few quick brush strokes, the painter conjures arcadian beauty. Good vibes are something that the modern world desperately needs. Graciously, such benevolent energy can be found on Lionel Boy, the Innovative Leisure self-titled debut LP from Lionel Boy, the Oahu-bred singer-songwriter.

In the case of Lionel Boy, the native Hawaiian sense of the Mahalo spirit is inextricable from the art. And like the word "Mahalo," there is a deeper meaning to the music beyond superficial translation. Mahalo literally translates to "thank you," but it's an entire approach to life: it encompasses the value of thankfulness, appreciation, and gratitude. While those might easily interpret it as indifference and apathy, it is a product of profound connectivity and three-dimensional perspective. Few things are more difficult than making a work of art appear effortless. The airy, jazz-cracked, electronic pop of Lionel Boy belies a wistful romanticism, a careful observational streak, and a meditative fixation on life and death.

A famous John Keats quote holds that you shouldn't write poems unless the words come naturally as leaves falling from a tree. In a slightly different sense, you can use this notion to trace the trajectory of Lionel's career. For most of his life, the apostle of chill born Lionel Deguzman was a skater kid. The pursuit taught him the value of individuality -- in the sense that there are myriad ways to ride a skateboard and you find your own way by figuring out your own natural style -- a singularity that sets you apart from everyone else who can do a backside 180. It's this attitude with which Lionel approaches music. Even then, this evolution had a streak of serendipity.

In the summer of 2018, Lionel first entered a studio in Long Beach with two close friends (he'd moved to the West Coast port city several years prior). The recording session started by shouting obscenities into the microphone. But inspiration slowly took root and the Lionel Boy vision began to manifest. That same year, Lionel began working with the celebrated producer Jonny Bell on an unrelated project. The strength of the artistic kinship eventually led him to produce the Lionel's first single, "Are You Happy Yet," and the Who Is Dovey? EP, released on Innovative Leisure.

Flash forward, a few years later, and the creative union has led to Lionel Boy, an electric synthesis of Lionel's sounds -- which FADER previously hailed as "slacker pop" (alternate ascription: "liquor store pop."). It's a warm and mellow album built to keep you company on long drives. If Lionel's artist DNA stems from a classic singer-songwriter tradition, it's been subtly transposed with the influences of the rappers, beatmakers, and R&B singers that dominate his listening habits. "Kam Highway" sounds like a breathless moonlit torch ballad laced with a touch of inspiration derived from Boi-1da's kicks on "Mob Ties." With "Tides," Lionel Boy updates Jack Johnson and Ben Harper for a generation in dire need of expansive and endearing mood music. "Mango Michelada" reimagines the synth sounds often used by Frank Ocean to create a song that comes off as refreshing and tropically chill as its namesake.

Despite being recorded during the pandemic, Lionel and Bell somehow managed to create an antidote for the anxiety. They'd visit each other several times a week, slowly fleshing out the demos that Lionel recorded at home, aided by a squadron of highly gifted virtuosos (Fred Garbutt, synthesizers; Bell, Nic Gonzales, Andrew Pham and Sam Wilkes, bass; Brett Kramer, drums; Sarah Hinesly, keys, and Andres Renteria on percussion). Lionel Boy is soulful and easy-going, both introspective and laissez faire. Extremely mellow but never soft-headed.

For a moment fraught with stress and chaos, this album is a relaxed exhale of joy. Yet it refuses delusion. These are real-life circumstances that play out with thought and concern. After all, there is a subtlety to the art of the vibe. Lionel Boy isn't just playing a series of chords to create a serene mood. It's at the essence of his being. Something that can't be forced or faked. A timeless cool apart from momentary trends, eternal as the tides rolling in and out.

Watch the new video here:

Photo Credit: Basil Vargas



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