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Chorusing

CHORUSING shares new single "Midday Sun". Debut album 'Half Mirror' out August 13th via Western Vinyl.

Chorusing—the creative moniker of Raleigh, NC-based songwriter/producer Matthew O’Connell—today shared his new song “Midday Sun, the second single from his forthcoming debut album, Half Mirror, which is due August 13th via Western Vinyl.

“‘Midday Sun’ is the only song on the record that takes place during the day and not at night. It’s a song about waking up late after a long night—attempting to leave old habits behind and

fantasizing about a simpler, more settled life,

explains O’Connell of the cadent, transfixing track.

“It’s kind of my ode to Nirvana Unplugged, stripped-down drums and bass providing a bed for the vocals and noisy guitar. I wanted that slide guitar to seem like a mirage, like heat waves coming off hot asphalt, a kind of sonic metaphor for the lyrical themes.”

“Midday Sun” follows the hypnotic and ambient, yet pulsating lead singleWatching The Beams, shared last month.

On Half Mirror, O’Connell superimposes warm analog synths onto self-described “confessional folk” with a simultaneously cosmic and earthly outcome. Tracked at home in the mountains of North Carolina using a vintage tape delay, electric guitar, and a homemade synthesizer he named ‘Balsam,’ the album is at once a lonesome push-pull of electronics humanized by folk elements, and folk music made alien by electronic adornments. O’Connell’s own story is just as captivatingly segmented, and he crafted the personal and cathartic Half Mirror over the course of a decade.

While the album directly reflects back on memories and experiences from O’Connell’s twenties, Half Mirror is also steeped in earlier formative years. There are elements mined from his Indiana childhood spent obsessively practicing metal drumming and recording on 4-tracks with his brothers Joe (of Elephant Micah, on whose recent album Vague Tidings Matthew also played) and Greg; years playing in Louisville, KY, punk and hardcore bands, when he also first began writing songs (some of which are included on Half Mirror); and time studying math at an intensive college program in Hungary, where he continued writing song fragments and fiddling with musical electronics at the Kitchen Budapest—a collective of artists, theorists, and coders.

In 2011, O’Connell’s interest in electronics and engineering led him to Asheville, NC, where he worked for Moog Music calibrating and building synthesizers, and testing vintage analog delay chips by day. At night he would spend his time building homemade synths and writing songs. It was here that he began the bulk of the work on Half Mirror, imbuing his music with the qualities of his environment almost by necessity. O’Connell made a deliberate effort to keep the album's production sparse and with a sense of restraint, citing albums by artists including Tricky, Songs: Ohia, Mark Hollis, Arthur Russell, and John Martyn as inspirations. This skillful incorporation of influences evokes the same sense of balance and natural grace O’Connell may have gleaned in his physics and math studies; in fact, Half Mirror’s cover bears a visual translation of its songs’ waveforms.

When pressed about the meaning of the album’s title, O’Connell says,

“Almost all of the songs are retrospective, and Half Mirror is a metaphor for trying to reflect on experiences in an incomplete or unsatisfactory way. Or maybe it’s the paradox of trying to relive something outside of the moment it was actually experienced.”


Filtering the poetry of fractured, imperfect memories through a lush, yet sparse palette of sounds, Half Mirror evokes a profoundly moody sense of place: the fog heavy in the mountain peaks, the dew present on early morning walks, and the musky smell of rhododendrons in the air.

Photo credit: Matthew O'Connell



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