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Vive la Void Share New Single DEATH MONEY From Their Debut Album Out May 4

By: Apr. 12, 2018
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Vive la Void Share New Single DEATH MONEY From Their Debut Album Out May 4  Image

Vive la Void, the solo project of Sanae Yamada of Moon Duo, has shared the new single "Death Money," along with an accompanying video directed by Yamada herself. The track is taken from Vive La Void's self-titled debut, out May 4th on Sacred Bones. "Death Money," is a multi-layered, propulsive exploration of the synthesizer's power to concoct swirls of psychedelic atmosphere, as well as a testament to Yamada's skills as a songwriter. Here she deftly wields repetition and haze, creating interlocking synth lines that build throughout the track as swirling orbs of color overtake the screen.

WATCH: Vive la Void - "Death Money"

Following her well-received debut hometown show in Portland, OR opening for labelmates The Soft Moon, Vive la Void will be playing the upcoming Levitation Festival in Austin, as well as a show in Bellingham with Wooden Shjips.

Vive la Void Live Dates

April 14 - Bellingham, WA - The Shakedown

April 27 - Austin, TX - Levitation Austin

June 19 - London, UK - Lexington

Pre-order Vive la Void: https://www.sacredbonesrecords.com/products/sbr198-vive-la-void-vive-la-void

Vive la Void is the new solo project of Sanae Yamada, co-founder and keyboard player of Moon Duo. Yamada wrote and recorded the self-titled debut album over roughly a two-year period, during windows of downtime in Moon Duo's substantial touring and recording schedule. The dense, shape-shifting atmospheres of the seven songs grew out of late-night basement experiments in the layering of synthesizer tracks, a process that also led to meditations on the changeable nature of memory and perception. The result is an undulating blend of ethereal swirl, low end thrumming, and electric crackle, buoyed by Yamada's understated but captivating vocal melodies and her striking lyrics.

"The lyrics were a way of reckoning with my own memories and also of trying to process my reactions to the human situation," Yamada explains. "I wanted THE VOICE to have a kind of ghostly quality, to emerge from and recede back into the song, or to pass over it like weather. It's one of many layers of sound, which are meant to blend together in such a way that on one listen you might hear one thing, and on another listen you might hear something else, so the music seems to change even as it stays the same."

Yamada has spent the last decade as a working musician, moving between semi-permanent home bases whenever she isn't living in a tour van. In some ways, then, it feels inevitable that Vive la Void became a meditation on the strange rhythms of long-term touring, constant relocation, and the accompanying stream of brief but compelling encounters. It's a testament to her empathy and creativity that these songs feel both specific and universal, familiar yet tantalizingly unknowable.

"I feel like the movement of life in the sphere of consciousness is this process of trace-leaving," Yamada reflects. "Wherever we go, whomever we interact with, whatever we touch, we leave and absorb these invisible traces, this residue of memory that lingers. I wanted the sonic textures of this record to explore that state of being there and not there, of something being with you but not tangible."



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