NEW LP, METEORS COULD COME DOWN, OUT NOVEMBER 6, 2020 VIA COAX RECORDS
WATCH AND SHARE “METEORS COULD COME DOWN” HERE
BUY / STREAM “METEORS COULD COME DOWN” HERE
Photo Credit : Nadja Sayej // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES
Today, Toronto duo LAL (comprised of Rosina Kazi and Nicholas Murray) are sharing the title track from their upcoming LP, “Meteors Could Come Down”. The song itself “is a metaphor for how we felt during the first 2 months of the COVID, after returning from the West Coast, while on tour,” says Kazi. “If anything, what we’ve learned in the past 6 months is that anything could happen and at any time. Even though we have been preparing for that anytime-anything, we must further prepare to live in the moment and in community. Not only has our world changed, but this song is an invitation to go deeper and into more embodied ways of being regardless of what could go down.
“But, many of us, and our communities, have been dealing with so much; systemic racism, homophobia/transphobia, gendered violence, environmental destruction, poverty, ableism, mental health and all the ways these thing intersect and more, well before the COVID-19 pandemic.
What we have been doing and been re-learning to do, is to create our own universe despite any hardships we may face. To also focus on joy and love, as a means of decolonizing our bodies and spirits. While on tour we got to connect with some of these alternative communities and they reminded us to keep doing what we do.”
WATCH AND SHARE “METEORS COULD COME DOWN” HERE
BUY / STREAM “METEORS COULD COME DOWN” HERE
“Meteors Could Come Down” Single Art // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES
For over two decades, Polaris Music Prize longlisted electronic duo LAL have built a catalogue of silvery, internationally-influenced electronica that insists that the dancefloor remain a place of resistance. In the process, they’ve become the backbone of Toronto’s sprawling DIY scene, nurturing and propping up a multi-generational group of artists.
Recorded in the early months of 2020, Meteors Could Come Down finds LAL looking inward, examining the intricacies of their own relationship to understand how to provide care to their community. Experimenting with minimalism and a concise inventory of sounds, the album explores for the potential for open space offered through drums and voice—dually centering on the richly dynamic textures of Kazi’s vocals and Murray’s skilled ear for world-building through silvery synths and drum beats—to hold a great deal of emotive weight
WATCH AND SHARE “TURN WATER INTO BLOOD” HERE
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It advocates for a complicated kind of hope that’s only available when the end feels near: that’s at times slow and grating; confusing and confounding; and urgent and breathless. On Meteors Could Come Down Kazi and Murray capture a lofty anticipation that’s uniquely available to artists who have long been on the frontlines of radical change: hope for the energetic transformation into a new world.
WATCH AND SHARE “END OF THIS WORLD TOGETHER” HERE
BUY / STREAM “END OF THIS WORLD TOGETHER” HERE VIA BANDCAMP
Their 7th album, Meteors Could Come Down captures the spirit of a season fueled by a moment of pause that stoked the embers of revolution. Inspired by road trips along the coast to radical DIY arts scenes in Oakland and Olympia, and Adrienne Maree Brown’s bestselling book Pleasure Activism, Meteors Could Come Down is both their most minimal, and intimate, album to date.
Utilizing concise inventory, Meteors Could Come Down, finds Kazi and Murr pulling back the curtain to examine the mechanical intricacies of their own relationship to understand how to provide care to their community. Hypnotic, opaque, glittering, and meditative; Meteors Could Come Down was designed to soothe, and settle into, building an album to support the many ways bodies utilize sound to repair. At its core, the album is fiercely futurist and a sprawling love letter to their chosen family and community that places the intimate space of (two) bodies as the first space of reconciliation. Together, they capture a lofty anticipation that’s uniquely available to artists who have long been on the frontlines of radical change: hope for the energetic transformation into a new world.