- in Entertainment News by Mike
Energy Slime’s New Dimensional Out November 11th
Vancouver’s Energy Slime announce their debut release, New Dimensional!
The band, made up of Jay Arner and Jessica Delisle, cram 10 songs onto one glorious 7″ for release on Mint Records on November 11th.
Alongside the starry-eyed synth-pop and minor key melancholia of his self-titled debut, Vancouver’s Jay Arner has mastered the art of deadpan absurdity. Oddball jokes and non-sequiturs linger around the edges of computer-animated music videos and sketchbook scribbles transformed into t-shirts. Now, joined by his partner in crime Jessica Delisle, these poker-faced put-ons have been conjured into a blob of pure sonic ectoplasm. Say hi to Energy Slime!
New Dimensional is the duo’s primordial ooze, cramming 10 songs into a jam-stacked 13 minutes and two sides of a 7”. Like Robert Pollard in quick-hitter mode or a circuit-fried Bruce Haack and Esther Nelson, the pair creates way-out musical miniatures. Energy Slime’s enchanting earworms range from the fuzzed-out glam stomp of “Bustin’ Up” to the stately Eno pomp of “Mother Brother Sister Father”. The breezy blue sky-ride of “Only Clouds” crash lands on the space cruise of “Star On The Ground,” after a 34-second huff of “Gas In A Bag”. Delisle grabs the mic for the shimmering Cyndi Lauper sock-hop of “Cool Ship II” while Arner shares his medical credentials with the feather-banged headbang of “Why U Wanna”. Road trippin’ ramble-riffs follow “Trial Of The Mind” onto the rattling trail of “So Long Snakes”. And the crown-jeweled centerpiece is a lascivious tribute to one half of Stop Podcasting Yourself titled (’natch) “Graham Fucks The Queen”.
“Basically Jay and I will be having a few alcoholic beverages after dinner and watching TV,” explains Delisle on the project’s streaming consciousness. “Jay will say ‘pass me my sketchbook’ and then he’ll write down some psychedelic lyrics. We have a lot of fancy recording equipment like my 100-year-old piano, about seven synthesizers, guitars, etc. all crammed in our tiny studio apartment. Quite often the songs are recorded immediately after Jay has an idea. Each song takes maybe an hour or two to write, record, and mix. Then we listen to it a bunch and laugh and quote all the lyrics to one another for the next week or two until we make the next song.”
In the midst of a tireless touring schedule for their primary guise, Energy Slime sprung forth from the duo’s moonlight desires to get weird. Bustin’ up and out of their comfort zones, these impulse-driven sessions saw them swapping instruments and slathering on gooey overdubs to send pop songs into uncharted dimensions. Now that it’s ready to be dumped on the world’s head à la You Can’t Do That On Television, Delisle and Arner have taken on an even more secret pseudonym as the outlet to their outlet.
“The side project of Energy Slime is called Hard Piss,” she explains. “Jay wrote me a song for my birthday last year called ‘Hard Piss Highway’ about touring across the country. We once played that song at a Jay Arner show in a burrito restaurant. Having a project where you’re not trying to be good frees you up to be good, paradoxically.”
– Jesse Locke
What the press said about Jay Arner’s debut LP in 2013:
“…Arner expertly folds sour feelings into his semi-sweet sounds, and as “Midnight On South Granville” accumulates quivery layers of analogue synths and builds gracefully to its conclusion, it becomes quietly riveting.” Pitchfork
“The 10-song set is made of analog synths, shimmering guitars, propulsive drums, and playful bass lines. But at the center of it all is Arner’s voice — a sonic smile capable of soothing highs and lovely lows” SPIN
“…a two-minute reminder of what’s great in bedroom pop/rock.” The FADER
“What I continue to discover and marvel at with Jay’s music are the myriad stylistic passages chosen, where you never know what vehicle of sound will be used to convey the sentiments and songs from one of Canada’s most exciting songwriters/music-makers of today.” IMPOSE
“…a pretty rad singer-songwriter out of Vancouver whose music falls somewhere between Ariel Pink and Mac DeMarco.” NOISEY
“…comes off like Grizzly Bear letting loose of their carefully-crafted perfectionism and running wild with their emotions.” This Is Fake DIY
“Swoon-inducing New Romanticism and feather-banged bombast is the top down, drive time soundtrack for summer ’13.” Weird Canada
Tracklisting:
1. Bustin’ Up
2. Only Clouds
3. Cool Ship II
4. Gas In A Bag
5. Graham Fucks The Queen
6. Star On The Ground
7. Mother Brother Sister Father
8. Trial Of The Mind
9. Why U Wanna
10. So Long Snakes