Für ihr viertes Release auf Compost präsentieren Siren (Darshan Jesrani und Dennis Kane) den Track Lulu, ein eindringlicher und treibender Song mit emotional geladenen Vocals von Devi Mamboka. Der Song wird begleitet von eleganten Gitarrenriffs von Danny Chavis von The Veldt (sein Zwillingsbruder Daniel sang bereits auf Sirens erster Maxi), Basslines von Sirens Sound Engineer Mark Dann und Percussion von Liquid Liquid Frontmann Salvatore Principato. Die italienischen Disco- und Cosmic-Pioniere Daniele Baldelli und Marco Dionigi steuern eine sagenhaft groovende und zugleich zeitlose Re-Interpretation von -Lulu- bei. Siren sind Darshan Jesrani (Metro Area, Startree) und Dennis Kane (Disques Sinthomme, Ghost Town). Siren’s erste Recording Sessions fingen im Winter 2013 an, aber die Anfänge ihrer Zusammenarbeit reichen zurück zu ihren gemeinsamen Residencies im berühmten New Yorker Hot-Spot APT und anderen Parties, die sie organisierten. Events mit Namen wie Camille 3000, Adult Section und Strobe Lodge wurden liebevoll gestaltet, mit gewagt romantischen Grafiken und einem prägnanten spezifischen Statement, dass Kultiviertheit und Sünde stets zusammen gehören können und immer sollten.
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"Pre nom Lulu" - German dramatist Frank Wedekind published the two "Lulu" plays "Pandora's Box" and "Earth Spirit" in 1895. They are unique and genre shattering as they present a female protagonist with a strong voice, and one possessive of a highly sexualized and independent mind. Following up "Paradise" where their vocalist (Felice Rossner) declares: "Sell the house, sell the car, take my phone, I'm not coming back...." SIREN again delivers another female voice, one that is confronting existential doubt head on; "Darling let's jump..." Devi Mambouka give voice to Lulu in the song and inhabits the heroine's indifference to bourgeois convention with graceful and sensual defiance. She begins by telling her lover to "shut his mouth and listen to me" then describes a trip they will make "losing one's eyes, losing one's bearings, getting free and saying yes". The lyric heralds transformation and builds on the ideas of SIREN's previous songs, Gauntlet, A/Way, and Paradise.
In the barren context of contemporary dance music, which seems indifferent to the ideas of art and philosophy, SIREN is going fully against the grain, drawing inspiration from lyricists like David Bowie, Joni Mitchell, and writers like John Ashbery and William Burroughs. Siren loves bands like Suicide and Bauhaus, groups that make powerful sensual songs while still bringing complex thinking to the table. SIREN feels, like Funkadelic, that you can free your mind and your ass will follow. The songs sleek production and affecting rhythms evoke a journey taken, nocturnal and urgent.
The cover art for Lulu is by NYC artist and owner of the fabled bar/gallery Lit Erik Foss. SIREN and Foss had a dear mutual friend, NYC graffiti legend SPAM (who was the bartender for every one of SIREN's Strobe Lodge parties) and SPAM had a girlfriend named Devi Mambouka – that's how we do. Chatting with Erik about the song Kane asked him if he had anything that might be right for the idea, and after an afternoon of looking at work – they choose the image, "a touch of class", the back cover features an artwork from Kane – a portrait of imagist poet Hilda Doolittle.
NYC still has hardcore community of artists musicians and writers, tough minded and complex, SIREN feels grateful to engage with their collaborators and hopefully add to that storied history of art making and also to provide a motivator to get on the dance floor.
Siren is Darshan Jesrani (Metro Area, Startree) and Dennis Kane (Disques Sinthomme, Ghost Town). Siren began recording in earnest during the winter of 2013, but has beginnings which date farther back, to their mutual residencies at NYC's storied night-spot APT, and to the parties they produced together in APT's wake. Events with names like Camille 3000, Adult Section and Strobe Lodge were lovingly presented, with bold, romantic graphics and a strong, specific statement that refinement and transgression can, and should always hang together