Superorganism - World Wide Pop - Limited Edition Gold Vinyl LP

€32

Artist: Superorganism
Label: Domino
Cat no: WIGLP448X
Release Date: 15/07/2022

Superorganism - World Wide Pop - Limited Edition 150gram Gold Vinyl LP gatefold sleeve with 4 page booklet with UV spot gloss & matt inline finishes.

We ship vinyl worldwide from our home in Ireland. View our shipping rates.

When the first Superorganism music surfaced in 2017, the group’s in-your-face aesthetic — a post-everything mishmash of psychedelic indie pop and fizzy, funky electronica — quickly began to resonate with the likes of Frank Ocean, Vampire Weekend, Jehnny Beth and Gorillaz as well as finding them legions of fans across the world.  

Today, Superorganism announce their eagerly awaited return with news of their second album; entitled World Wide Popand due for release on July 15th, it is their first new music since 2018’s self-titled debut.

Superorganism have mutated and are now based around the core of Orono, Harry, Tucan, B and Soul but World Wide Popalso brings in an international set of collaborators including Stephen Malkmus, CHAI, Pi Ja Ma, Dylan Cartlidge as well as legendary musician and actor Gen Hoshino.

Blasting back with thirteen tracks that strike a balance between artifice and earnestness, between sci-fi silliness and existential intensity, World Wide Pop is a showcase for Superorganism’s newly deepened understanding of each other’s interests and impulses, the kind of creative convergence you’d expect when online friends start spending time together IRL (their debut was completed before the whole band had ever been in the same room at the same time).

Alongside the album announcement, Superorganism are pleased to reveal the first cut from the record, “Teenager”. Featuring good friends and former tour mates Chai and Pi Ja Ma, “Teenager” celebrates holding onto the raw passion and emotion of those formative years and is a rejection of cynicism. It is produced by Stuart Price (Madonna, The Killers), who Superorganism tapped to help them achieve the IMAX-sized sheen that their bedroom recordings have always aspired to. The resulting palette on “Teenager” and across the record melds millennium-era synth schmaltz with glitchy wild-eyed weirdness, a textural upgrade that never betrays Superorganism’s signature playfulness.

 

 

 

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