Award-winning Indie-Pop Duo Leyya return with the single & video 'The Paper’
Austrian indie-pop duo Leyya return with the release of their latest single and video, ‘The Paper’ via Minor Changes. The single is their first release as a duo since their album Sauna (2018). Over the last two years, Sophie Lindinger and Marco Kleebauer have been operating independently with Marco receiving another Amadeus Award for his studio work and Sophie putting together the alternative band, My Ugly Clementine, which also won awards and was featured in Spotify's worldwide “Radar” campaign.
The Viennese duo have received significant attention, pocketing two Amadeus Music Awards as well as the UK Music Video Award and recieving support from international tastemakers such as Times Magazine, COMPLEX, Red Bull Music, as well as radio play from BBC Radio 1's Huw Stephens and Phil Taggart, BBC 6 Music's Lauren Laverne, Virgin Radio Playlist, Radio 1 Playlist in Germany and Austrian FM4's Radio Charts. However, the stage is where the duo shine, they’ve toured over 30 different countries and appeared at renowned festivals such as SXSW Festival, Eurosonic Noorderslag, New York’s Indie Week, Benicassim Festival, Liverpool Sound City, PrimaveraSound and Reeperbahn Festival. Leyya have over 22 million plays across platforms and features on tastemaker Youtube channels Majestic Casual, Bass Boost and Sofar Sounds.
Leyya had great plans for 2020, with the two returning to each other musically and a trip to Las Vegas that was cut short as ‘lockdown’ hit but still managed to spark new ideas. As their sound matures over the years, Leyya have found inspiration in the little things from a Beatles classic, a certain vibe last heard on a Talking Heads track, or an effect used recently by a completely unknown artist. 'The Paper' mirrors this, with the likes of Alice Phoebe Lou, Agnes Obel and The Beatles themselves springing to mind.
On new single ‘The Paper’, the pair take a humorous approach to their inner turmoil and indulge in some “self-therapy”. Leyya highlight the void that has shaped this awkward year for many people - in their heads, souls and pockets. The single dispenses with the light electronic beats and instead use DIY elements and acoustic sounds. The video, shot in their local park, mirrors the organic and stripped back sound that still contains modernity. As a result, the pair fight against world sorrow with the help of a metaphorical unconditional hug.
Sophie Lindinger tells us: