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Got The Juice

Edition #95 brings you fresh tracks by Marlin, Bo Milli, Moyka, Panik Deluxe, and Psycho Weazel.

Today's hand-selected curation of new music features the up-and-coming talents of Marlin, Panik Deluxe and Bo Milli alongside more established electronic artists like Moyka and Psycho Weazel.

From upbeat R&B, frantic indie-rock, and dark synth-pop to psychedelic and mystic electronica—today's Weekly5 has you covered.

Marlin – Juice

22-year-old Marlin from Aargau, Switzerland, released a hymn to self-confidence. Juice is a compelling and fast-paced R&B track about being enough and coming to peace with being alone. With Juice, Marlin should definitely end up on any artists-to-watch list.

Panik Deluxe – full stop

Taken from her debut album, without hope I am nothing, Panik Deluxe's full stop hides happiness in plain sight. The Austrian artist juxtaposes the theme with the dark and vibrant synth-pop sound that encompasses the entire record.

Moyka – Never Say Sorry

After multiple single releases, Moyka presents her sophomore album, Movies, Cars & Heartbreak. The self-proclaimed Norwegian pop witch's track Never Say Sorry again features danceable beats intertwined with a 2000s-feeling and Nordic mystique.

Bo Milli – Making Friends

Making Friends is the namesake song from Norwegian Bo Milli's latest EP. The 21-year-old indie newcomer plays herself into a coming-of-age rush, influenced by growing up during a pandemic yet ultimately countering existential angst with hopeful hooks.

Psycho Weazel – bateau abstrait

The retro-futuristic sound of Switzerland's duo Psycho Weazel is as eclectic as it is engaging. The track bateau abstrait, released on their motif Ep., transports a nostalgic feeling of electronic music, decorated with slight psychedelic elements, and finished with flickering synths.

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You can listen to today's curation in the Weekly5 playlists. Head here for:

And check out the Weekly5 Bandcamp to support your favourite picks.

Beharie – Are You There, Boy?

Norwegian musician Beharie released his debut album, «Are You There, Boy?». The record conveys stories of a complex character.

With his debut album, Norway's indie soul hope Beharie presents twelve songs with a kaleidoscopic range of tones, sounds, and colours—tied together with his raw singer-songwriter lyrics, swinging between self-confidence and vulnerability.

In 2021, Beharie won the Spellemann prize for his second EP, Beharie // Beharie, and was nominated again a year later for the subsequent EP, Beharie, the Third. Both moments demonstrate the artist's rising profile in his home country and beyond.

Beharie – Are You There, Boy? Artwork

In Are You There, Boy?, Beharie delves into the aspects of his identity as a queer person. Artistically abstracted into different characters, each song is a fragment of Beharie's self, meeting in their common urge for belonging. Or, as Beharie puts it:

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Community Essentials #2: Autumn Songs

For the second instalment of our Community Essentials playlist, our members share some of their favourite Autumn songs.

The fog creeps along the meadows, flows between the branches, and tickles the colourful leaves. A ray of golden sunshine pierces the atmosphere. Autumn is here. It's getting colder, and the music gets warmer, softer, thoughtful, and maybe even melancholic.

For the second edition of the Community Essentials playlist, we were looking for our community's favourite Autumn songs. Here are their recommendations:

Fleet Foxes – Mykonos

«It just sounds golden,» writes Michael about Mykonos by Seattle-based Fleet Foxes. The song, one of their most popular hits, has a thoughtful vibe to it that matches perfectly with the autumn atmosphere yet also feels comfortably warm.

The Beauty of Gemina – I Come To Grief

I Come to Grief by Swiss band The Beauty of Gemina is their bluesiest track to date. Natascha tells us: «It captures a certain mood of reflecting on my life, what was and what could have been, on a lonesome walk through a fallen leaves-filled road.»

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5 Songs That Inspired Dennis Kiss

What songs and artists influenced Dennis Kiss? The musician shares five tracks that inspired his own work.

Dennis Kiss has published his debut album since he became a solo artist. Norddeich Mole was released on October 6, and it's an opus for the thoughtful, the dreamers, and the sad. Raised in Switzerland, now living in Hamburg, Dennis Kiss sings in his native language for the first time.

Melodic Heartache
With «Norddeich Mole», Dennis Kiss presents his debut album. It’s a deep introspection of a young, longing, and seeking man.

Songs like Bordeaux, previously featured in Weekly5, or his latest release, Gewitterwolken, are bittersweet indie-pop songs that perfectly complement Germany's rise in something called «Neue Neue Deutsche Welle», a resurgence in post-punk-esque, melancholic sound spearheaded by artists like Edwin Rosen, Betterov, or Temmis.

At least in Kiss' case, the musical inspiration for his sound, labelled by himself as «Neue Deutsche Einsamkeit» [New German Loneliness], is, in fact, driven by the more saddened works of other artists.

We asked Dennis Kiss to share five songs and artists that heavily influenced his own musical creativity. For Negative White, he opens his treasure chest of influence and tells, in his words, how these songs and artists inspire him.


Editors – Open Your Arms

I love the first Editors album, The Back Room, for its simplicity and bluntness. There are very few other albums that encapsulate tristesse and melancholia like this one does. It always appealed to me how Tom Smith somehow manages to gather so much bitterness and sorrow in so few words.

It’s a fine art to write a song in this typically post-punk-esque manner of monotonously repeating the same line and theme over and over again and then, at some point, just slightly changing it in the most painful way. That’s what always fascinated me about this album: the that lives in monotony.

The Cure – Pictures of You

It was my mother who first showed me The Cure. Generally, if it wasn’t for my parents, I don’t know where I would have gotten my musical education. From early on, they confronted me with bands like U2, the Chili Peppers, Nirvana, and so on.

I remember trying to dislike The Cure as an act of rebellion as a teenager. Obviously, this act didn’t last long, and I soon had to give in and admit that this band probably inspired me more than I would even imagine today. Pictures of You is the second song on Disintegration, my mother‘s favourite album by The Cure, and it’s a downright masterpiece.

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Gallery: Dennis Kiss & Kaufmann at Werk21, Zurich

On Saturday, October 7, Dennis Kiss celebrated the release of his debut album, «Norddeich Mole», in Zurich. We've captured his concert and his supporting act, Kaufmann.

It was a night of celebration at Werk21 in Zurich, in this gloomy cellar next to the river Limmat. Here, Dennis Kiss presented his debut album, Norddeich Mole, to the audience with a release show. Kaufmann, a Swiss band, supported the Swiss-German act.

Kaufmann

Dennis Kiss

Melodic Heartache

With «Norddeich Mole», Dennis Kiss presents his debut album. It's a deep introspection of a young, longing, and seeking man.

My 20-something self would have devoured Norddeich Mole, the debut album of Dennis Kiss. It's a brilliant collection of sad indie songs, a descendant of Hamburger Schule tuned to churn out maximal melancholy.

But can you really enjoy this tribute to longing for love and coming of age beyond a certain threshold?

Born and raised in Switzerland, Dennis Kiss first made an impression together with his band The Sleepers. In 2021, they released the album Poco Bono. The beginning and the end were wrapped up in one as they split up right after. However, in parallel, Kiss already started to work—maybe unknowingly—at his next step.

Flaschenpfand marked a new phase for the musician: He wrote a song with German lyrics for the first time. During a pandemic, shaking up everybody's life, Kiss shook up his songwriting.

Now, around three years later, Dennis Kiss lives in Hamburg and releases Norddeich Mole. It's not only an hommage to his home, Northern Germany, but a deep introspection into the heart of a young, sensitive man—and beyond, a generation that feels lost yet yearns for connection and love.

Negative White presents Dennis Kiss on Album Tour
Dennis Kiss will release his debut album on the 6th of October. Negative White presents the subsequent tour of the Swiss-German artist. Here are the dates.

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Hollywood, you f*cked me good

Edition #94 recommends fresh tracks by Mary And The Sharks, Botticelli Baby, Mr. Linus, Rosa Rendl, and Fomies.

For the most part, today's edition of Weekly5 is a raw, maybe even unhinged, collection of songs. From the slightly drunken sound of Botticelli Baby to the spoken word punk of Mr. Linus to Fomies' fuzzy attitude.

For those who are enthusiasts of melodies, we can wholeheartedly recommend the new tracks by Mary And The Sharks as well as Rosa Rendl.

Botticelli Baby – Poems

German outfit Botticelli Baby is known for incorporating an impressive number of variables in their sound: punk, jazz, blues, folk, funk, and Balcan elements. Their new single, Poems, stalks in the verses but then explodes with the band's brass section, creating an addictive stir.

Mary And The Sharks – Hollywood

A sinister beat welcomes us to Mary And The Sharks' fresh track, Hollywood. The Berlin-based artist created an empowering, unapologetic anthem for starting over where the dream factory stands as a metaphor for a broken dream. It's dangerously catchy: «Hollywood, you fucked me good!»

Mr. Linus – faust

Raw, direct, and angry; that's the essence of faust, one of three songs on Mr. Linus' new EP, Aporie. The Swiss trio returns after their well-received debut EP, Revue, in 2019. The indie-esque, melodic sound juxtaposed with the rather spoken than sung lyrics creates an edgy yet fascinating cocktail.

Rosa Rendl – Stonehenge - Edit

Originally released as part of Rosa Rendl's 2023 EP, Always, the edited version of Stonehenge adds a lot of electronic elements to the piano-driven composition. As a result, Stonehenge morphs into a lucid electro-pop song, indecisively meandering between dancefloor and dream.

Fomies – Glass Pyramid

Hauling from Vevey in Switzerland's French-speaking part, the quintet already announced their fifth studio album with the single Glass Pyramid. The fuzzy, escalating song is a delicious treat for everyone in love with heavy-stomping, borderline psychedelic rock.

Follow The Sound 🎧

You can listen to today's curation in the Weekly5 playlists. Head here for:

And check out the Weekly5 Bandcamp to support your favourite picks.

reLISTEN #16: Recently Discovered

We share some of our recent discoveries in today's edition—random in subject but great in variety.

In most cases, reLISTEN revolves around a specific topic, like goosebumps provocation, that connects the featured songs.

However, today's edition presents itself curated by time rather than subject. I will share some of my more recent and random discoveries across different genres.

Death Of Lovers – The Absolute

Death of Lovers, a Philadelphia-based shoegaze band, draws from the darkened underbelly of the 80s, from post-punk and goth vibes. The Absolute from their 2018 album The Acrobat is a classic melancholic post-punk song at first glance. However, the quartet adds a bold saxophone to the bridge, adding a fresh flavour to the song's thoughtful sound.

Kwengface, Joy Orbison, Overmono – Freedom 2

Kwengface, a child of London's drill scene, released Freedom as part of his 2023 album The Memoir. While the original is already a force to behold, the collaboration with Overmono's Joy Orbison catapults Freedom 2 into new spheres: The fusion of drill and UK garage, supported by a rumbling bass, works perfectly, morphing the track into something enjoyable for both hip-hop and electronic fans.

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