Photo Credit: Graham Tolbet
“Excellent” Singles Of The Week, The Guardian.
“Sounds like the future of R&B” - Jack Saunders, BBC Radio 1
Lupin is the sound of an arrival. Across eight tracks of subverted, expansive pop, Jake Luppen’s solo debut is all sharp edges, a fractured self-portrait pieced together through left-of-center, pop maximalism. The debut LP is out today on Grand Jury Music, and available to stream/purchase HERE.
Prior to release day, Lupin shared lead single “May,” a funk-driven, colossal pop gem with crashing drums that digs even deeper into Luppen’s well-documented pop sensibilities, double-single “Vampire” + “Murderer,” that deal with some heavy emotional liftings and reveal a new depth to Luppen, and most recently “KO Kid,” a sonic fever dream bolstered by a thunderously sluggish beat and Jake Luppen’s trademark falsetto, coyly dipping in and out of the proceedings.
Although Luppen rose to prominence as a vocalist and guitarist in St. Paul’s beloved indie outfit Hippo Campus, the songs on Lupin feel like meeting him for the first time. He puts it succinctly: “With this record I wanted to get to the point, and say how things were, as opposed to dancing around them.”
For Luppen, the process of making the record was one of self-discovery and a path to confidence, learning who he could be – and had always been – as both an artist and simply a person. In the past, he always took a vaguer route to songwriting, eschewing the personal in favor of broader, shared experiences of his bandmates. Striking out as a solo artist allowed him the space to do the opposite. Instead of hiding behind bigger words or looser ideas, here Luppen finds the bravery to write about his life – a serious break-up, a health scare, sexual exploration, and discovering his own personhood – with incisive specificity.
No comments:
Post a Comment