Support our efforts, sign up to a full membership!
(Start for free)
Register or login with just your e-mail address
Alternative 05/02/2020

Boniface Shares Video For 'Oh My God'

Hot Songs Around The World

Houdini
Dua Lipa
313 entries in 26 charts
Lovin On Me
Jack Harlow
327 entries in 23 charts
Stick Season
Noah Kahan
359 entries in 20 charts
Water
Tyla
328 entries in 20 charts
Lose Control
Teddy Swims
388 entries in 25 charts
Beautiful Things
Benson Boone
234 entries in 26 charts
Si No Estas
Inigo Quintero
303 entries in 17 charts
Yes, And?
Ariana Grande
195 entries in 27 charts
Overdrive
Ofenbach & Norma Jean Martine
186 entries in 14 charts
Anti-Hero
Taylor Swift
620 entries in 23 charts
Greedy
Tate McRae
682 entries in 28 charts
New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Boniface is very excited to share the video for the new single "Oh My God", ahead of the release of their debut album. Boniface is out on the February 14th, 2020 on Transgressive Records and can be pre-ordered now. The video was filmed in one long take, Michel Gondry style, in collaboration with the Canadian director Michael Pugacewicz.

"Oh My God" is another intoxicating, melody-rich example of why this introductory full-length debut could become the first great sleeper album of the decade.

Boniface - who uses they/them pronouns - is the brainchild and primary creative outlet for Canada's Micah Visser. A young artist who once comfortably blended in with the suburban landscape in which they grew up in (Saint Boniface is also the peaceful city in which they reside, on the outskirts of Winnipeg), but has since spent the last eighteen months finding not only their voice and this innate ear for deliriously affecting songcraft, but eventually finding themselves too; where they sit, their identity, and what they truly believe in and stand for.

"Oh My God" is Boniface's ode to taking a deep breath and telling somebody special how you feel about them. Unashamedly. It's the racing heartbeat, the uncertainty of the response and the fear of derision, but also the hope, the longing and that bold step into the unknown. It harbours all those positive things that Boniface's music has a habit of doing in the soaring synths, the micro choruses that exist outside of the song's primary chorus, and the unrelenting insistence that every single they drop has to sound huge.

Of the new single, Visser explains: "'Oh My God' is about letting someone know how you feel emphatically but without expectation. Love can feel big and scary and complicated but mostly I think it's just about speaking your truth and letting it lie. With Oh My God, I'm speaking my truth and letting it lie."

Boniface is a catalogue of Micah and their band's most formative coming-of-age experiences, each moment captured in diary-like detail and set against a magnificently sprawling backdrop. Throughout the album, Micah reflects on falling in love and facing heartbreak whilst struggling with identity, never failing to find an ineffable beauty within all the pain. The result is a body of work both bracingly honest and powerfully exhilarating-an emotional journey that Visser encapsulates as "taking little detours and exploring the times when everything feels perfect."

Growing up in Winnipeg, Visser wrote the songs for the album at home during those tentatively indecisive late teens and early twenties, after shifts at the local coffee shop and lost nights in the city. This intimacy has been preserved on Boniface, with the songs largely recorded in the room they were written, with Visser's brother Joey and longtime collaborator Micheal Dunn also on hand. The trio eventually travelled to London to finish up work with producer/engineer Neil Comber (Charli XCX, M.I.A., Glass Animals) who helped bring Boniface's lavish arrangements to full and dazzling life.

Visser points to a certain touchstone behind the making of their full-length debut: a mission of gently encouraging others to embrace total vulnerability. "There's so much negativity in the world, and it's easy to get caught in that cycle of being closed off and negative too-and then projecting that onto other people, and just continuing the cycle," says Visser. "I've found that in my personal life, pushing myself to be more open helps other people to open up as well, so then it becomes a cycle of positivity instead. And I know that it's really scary to do that, but hopefully opening up in my music will help people to feel safe. I'd love for people to hear these songs and feel inspired, like they can do anything they want with their lives."






Most read news of the week


© 2001-2024
top40-charts.com (S4)
about | site map
contact | privacy
Page gen. in 0.8442500 secs // 4 () queries in 0.0044059753417969 secs


live