Top40-Charts.com
Support our efforts,
sign up for our $5 membership!
(Start for free)
Register or login with just your e-mail address
Pop / Rock 12 May, 2021

Hear The Debut Single From The Narcotix, A West African Art-Folk Band Based In Brooklyn

Hot Songs Around The World

APT.
Rose & Bruno Mars
318 entries in 29 charts
Die With A Smile
Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars
542 entries in 29 charts
That's So True
Gracie Abrams
233 entries in 21 charts
The Emptiness Machine
Linkin Park
200 entries in 21 charts
Sailor Song
Gigi Perez
258 entries in 19 charts
All I Want For Christmas Is You
Mariah Carey
1414 entries in 28 charts
Birds Of A Feather
Billie Eilish
748 entries in 25 charts
Rockin' Around The Christmas Tree
Brenda Lee
526 entries in 24 charts
Last Christmas
Wham!
1264 entries in 26 charts
Jingle Bell Rock
Bobby Helms
423 entries in 20 charts
A Bar Song (Tipsy)
Shaboozey
717 entries in 22 charts
Stargazing
Myles Smith
443 entries in 20 charts
Espresso
Sabrina Carpenter
796 entries in 27 charts
Si Antes Te Hubiera Conocido
Karol G
277 entries in 13 charts
Hear The Debut Single From The Narcotix, A West African Art-Folk Band Based In Brooklyn
New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Today The Narcotix shares its first official single, "John/Joseph" from the forthcoming EP Mommy Issues, which the band will self-release on June 11.
The Narcotix is a West African art-folk band based in Brooklyn, with feathers all over. It is many-limbed and limber, a five-piece with voices, guitars, bass, keys and drum set. Reverb-laden vocals blur and swell in dissonant intervals, buoyed by a riverbed of shimmering Congolese guitar riffs, thumping P-bass, cavernous synths and traphouse hi-hats. The result is a compelling musical statement whose relationship to identity is as fraught, complex and ever-changing as anything else in this time.

Composers Esther Quansah (guitars, vocals) and Becky Foinchas (keys, vocals) met in an elementary school chorus class in the ghostly woodlands of Woodbridge, Virginia. The daughters of African immigrants (Quansah from Cote D'Ivoire and Foinchas from Cameroon), they soaked up influences as far-flung and varied as choral symphonies, African wedding music, and progressive math rock, distilling them through a unique lens.

While attending the University of Virginia, Foinchas and Quansah met Sierra Leonean guitarist Adam Turay, showing him their compositions and bonding over a shared love of both avant-pop music like early Grizzly Bear and Stereolab and African music like the intricate soukous guitar rhythms of Koffi Olomide and the pulsing chimurenga of Thomas Mapfumo. They became interested in applying these ideas to popular western forms, using unconventional ways to arrive at accessibility. The nascent Narcotix found a home in the DIY venues and house shows of Charlottesville and Richmond, merging meticulous, vocal-driven arrangements with raucous performances.

Quansah, Foinchas and Turay relocated to Brooklyn in 2017, developing their West African-inspired psych-folk concept and playing at clubs and venues like Rockwood Music Hall, C'mon Everybody, Berlin and Mercury Lounge. Galvanized by these live experiences, the Narcotix embarked on tours from Brooklyn to SXSW, driving through the American South in the midst of significant political upheaval and touring the Bay Area and L.A. a year later.

The full ensemble came together after a few years in the city. The Narcotix met N.Y. native Jonathan Joseph in Bushwick's thriving neo-soul scene, instantly drawn to his love of trap music, his appreciation for D.C.'s go-go music, and gospel chops honed by playing in his grandfather's church every Sunday in Far Rockaway. New England Conservatory alum Jesse Heasly rounds out the rhythm section, his pocket bass playing and avant-garde sensibilities providing an ideal complement to the music.

Mommy Issues was recorded in a quarantine-fugue state at the exquisite GB's Juke Joint in Long Island City (Samia, La Vida Bohème, Vicentico). It is a culmination of boyish triumph and charm, belied by mesmerizing snapshots of contemplation and isolation not specific to this time. It is a collection of spectral elegies for the living, a macabre homage to Brothers Grimm folklore through an Afromasochistic lens.






Most read news of the week


© 2001-2025
top40-charts.com (S6)
about | site map
contact | privacy
Page gen. in 1.1137061 secs // 4 () queries in 0.0045223236083984 secs


live