“Streets” from Blake Langdale

“Streets” from Blake Langdale

Celebrity, Fashion, Music

A world torn apart by a virus, social tensions and a constant plague of poverty that seems to have no end in sight. Indeed, the backdrop for the new music video “Streets” from Blake Langdale is definitely nothing to scoff at, but when attacked with the melodic command of this singer/songwriter’s vocal it doesn’t seem impossible to defeat.

Surreal but ultimately focused more on the substance of the songcraft above everything else, this music video is definitely the right way to get introduced to Langdale’s sound, and if you ask me it makes for one of the more intriguing and provocatively pushy releases out of the underground this season. There’s something really honest about the way this player is coming after the subject matter at hand here; almost as though he’s been waging a war on the evils of the world going back long before he ever set foot inside of a recording studio. Although not without a sexy beat and some high style melodies here and there, “Streets” is a song about its creator and his ability to capture the essence of a society in incredible pain, which makes this one of the smarter pop cuts you’re going to find this year in my opinion.

Beyond the visuals we encounter in the music video, the lyrics that Blake Langdale strings together so seamlessly allude to an isolation that isn’t as quarantine-inspired as it is systemic of a life devoted to artistry. The western influences here run head-on into a European-style dance beat in the midsection of the track that at first seemed a little odd to me, but after a few listens I felt myself getting hypnotized by its swing and grasping a deeper emotional layer of the verses not audible to me in my initial sit-downs with the song and its video.

The rhythm of the percussion maximizes the catharsis within the lyricism as Langdale comes undone from center stage, and while the production quality is noticeably DIY (in a good way, I should mention), it does the climax here plenty of favors by preserving the sonic integrity of every element as-is.

Indie pop is having what some would call a second renaissance in 2020, and if you’re looking for the root of this new phase for the genre, I don’t think you need to search much further than the work of artists like Blake Langdale. Langdale doesn’t try to be anything other than a street-wise poetic master of simple melodies in this song, and in doing so he leaves room for avant-garde trappings to slip into focus and warm even the most chilling of components inside the track and video. I want to hear more of the cerebral parts to “Streets” in the future, and as long as he’s able to stay off of the commercialized synthetics that often get utilized in making a complete album when he does decide to cut an LP, I believe his is a name I’ll be hearing more of in the years still to come.

Jodi Marxbury

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