FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
OCTOBER 22, 2021
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INTRODUCING INTIMATE INDIE-FOLK ARTIST
DYLAN COX
SOCAL NATIVE AND RURAL FRANCE RESIDENT
SHARES SINGLE “THE COMET” WITH COLORFUL VIDEO
A SENSITIVE, BEAUTIFUL MEDITATION ON LOVE AND LOSS
A PLACE TO MEET EP OUT DECEMBER 1, 2021
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SoCal native and rural France resident Dylan Cox shares his new single, “The Comet” with accompanying visuals off of his upcoming debut EP, A Place to Meet. Dylan’s music is an intimate brand of indie folk influenced by his days surfing to escape a turbulent home-life in San Clemente and his time working three jobs while studying philosophy and literature at UC Berkeley.
"The Comet" is home as a moving object: the love we have for another or a place and how it moves, how it changes. What the song confronts and achingly accepts is the built-in loss that comes with loving, the fact that we will in some way or another lose whom or what we love, or we as loved people will be lost by another. A comet briefly occupies the sky as a rare passing, it leaves, and in that departure promises a return in some impossible and inhuman time form. What's "too easy" in the chorus is to let the anticipatory grief of loss outshine the miracle of finding home in another, in finding family, in the first place. The song is a declaration of love, but also a deeply autobiographical reflection on Dylan's life, who was adopted by a different family in his teens.
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The song was written in one of the byzantine-art-deco tiled bathrooms that adjoin the palatial rooms of La Villa Magnan, in the southwest of France. Dylan often performed there to experiment with the enormous acoustic sounds of singing in big rooms. Part of the bigness of the vocals and the string-like melodies of the post-choruses, in this song and others, comes from these spaces, as well as the giant "orangerie" of the villa, a room originally built to nurse orange trees in the cold of winter. Dylan trained his voice and rehearsed there for over two years.
The music video, co-directed by Dylan and photographer Melvin Israel, is another experimentation with metaphors. Dylan created a 40 meter long piece of fabric and dyed it yellow to mimic a scarf of his that was a gift from a close friend. In the mythological looking landscape of the Spanish coastline, dancers Hortense de Gromard and Pierre Lamour choreograph a means of approaching each other. They hold each end of the fabric, slowly tracing a path towards a comet-like center where they finally meet.
Dylan Cox’s new EP A Place To Meet, features some very creative artists, recorded in April of 2021 in the studio of Abraham Rounds and Sarah Walk in Los Angeles, who both produced the record. Abe, a percussionist, drummer, and composer who plays in the band of Meshell Ndgeocello, and often collaborates with Blake Mills, Andrew Bird, and Ethan Gruska, brought a deep musical knowledge and inspiration to the recording and its arrangements. Sarah, an accomplished and brilliant songwriter, singer, and multi-instrumentalist was there to sew together many of the poetic meanings into arrangements. Also featured on the album is Jake Sherman on keys, a frequent collaborator with Abe and who also plays with Andrew Bird, as well as Nick Hakim, among others. On the stand-up bass is Alan Hampton, the long-time collaborator of Bird, and on lead guitar, Mateo Vermot, a young French guitarist.
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LYRICS
I want all that your gravity will allow me As you hold the door and let me know That I am honest, that I promise
We are comets, traveling objects
And in our deep seas, I will be listening To your lightstreak, drawing sincerity As you need it, and we all hope for it
You are home now here with me
And you won’t be, but that’s too easy You are home now here with me
And you won’t be, but that’s too easy
I want all that your majesty will allow me
As I loom the light that loves your moors
And you are turning around, and you are touching down With a blanket around, my dear open brows
And in our speech’s breach, you will cut a line
Through our open skies, and this lovely lie
As you need it, and we all hope for it
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(Photo Credit: Melvin Israel)
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PRESS CONTACTS:
Tamara Simons
Big Hassle Media
Justin Ciccone
Big Hassle Media
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