“Ribbon Of Hot Plasma” EP is the latest from North London’s Aurora Dee
Raynes, featuring lead single “Something Sensible”, which received
upfront support from Craig Charles (BBC 6Music). It follows their debut
‘Invisible Things’ LP and subsequent remixes from Shy One and El-B.
Beginning on an exploratory trajectory, focus track “Underwater
Shapeshifter” plays with the youthful joy that can be found in the
endless possibilities of the unknown. As the track lyrically looks back
on the past, the hidden parts of our memories and questions around
changing our ways, the energy and driving sub bass carries the listener
through the musical waters. “We started toying with the idea that you
shapeshift into a new world – you don’t mess it up. It’s dangerous and
exciting. It will paint new pictures and give you new directions,”
vocalist Danielle Kranendonk explains.
Built of gentle vocals over a subtly funky groove, “Something Sensible”
explores the simple beauty that can be found in the sensible ending of a
sensible relationship, choosing instead to stay in someone’s life from
afar. “It’s not always about negative and hard feelings, there are
layers”, Kranendonk muses. Pieced together by Raynes, the track begins
with warm and earnest keys from Nicholas
Johnson, which provide a cleansing backdrop for Kranendonk’s softer
vocals to glide across. The funky driving force of the track comes from
bassist Will Harper, consisting of thoughtful takes, reworkings and
layering.
As the first new music since the debut LP from Aurora Dee Raynes, the
“Ribbon Of Hot Plasma” EP sees the group revisit their core ethos, with
the power of honest lyrics and collaborative production and
instrumentation unifying and underpinning each of the tracks. Having
taken the name Aurora Dee Raynes after finding the crashing of particles
to create the Borealis a fitting metaphor for producer Stephen Raynes
and Kranendonk crashing into each other to create music, they looked to
the stars once again for the title of the project.
Stumbling upon the story of mysterious and unusual new aurora borealis
(or more specifically a ribbon of hot plasma), fondly named STEVE
(Strong Thermal Emission Velocity Enhancement), they knew they’d found
their EP title. “It is the “highly ionised plasma consisting of large
numbers of electrons and positive ions, with the temperature of both
being extremely high”. It’s a little weird, it sounds great and when we
said it, we both reacted instantly. It describes our energy, and it had
Stephen’s name in it. A sign and a feeling born from what we decided to
name ourselves,” explains Kranendonk.
On “Reading Fiction”, the metaphor of particles gathering is used to
illustrate the supportiveness in people coming together and becoming
more than the sum of their parts. Radiating with a sultry groove, the
lyrics seek to inspire and encourage people to wear their crown and
“just do you”. Fuelled by producer Stephen Raynes’s late night
beat-making studio sessions and Kranendonk’s night owl tendencies, the
track embodies the colliding energy of Aurora Dee Raynes. Completing
“Ribbon Of Hot Plasma” with final Aurora Dee Raynes touches, “Maths”
comes equipped with urgent energy touching on jazz pianos, direction
changes, vocal drops and varying styles that create space to groove and
welcome us further into the party.
Tracklist:
1. Underwater Shapeshifter
2. Reading Fiction
3. Something Sensible
4. Maths
5. Reading Fiction (Radio Edit)
6. Maths (Radio Edit)
7. Underwater Shapeshifter (Instrumental)
8. Reading Fiction (Instrumental)
9. Something Sensible (Instrumental)
10. Maths (Instrumental)