DECAYCAST PREMIERES: Yama Uba breaks down the walls with “Facade”

YAMA UBA are no strangers to breaking down walls. Through the strings connecting their previous musical efforts to the seminal album, Silhouettes (releasing January 23, 2024 on Psychic Eye Records and Ratskin Records), the US-based duo of Akiko and Winter has slowly and methodically chiseled a sonic and conceptual world all their own.

Through music videos and selective live performances culminating with a Fall 2023 Japan tour, the duo has been steadily building momentum, but all at their own pace and by their own rules. Silhouettes is the culmination of years of refining a vision over time, yet it feels natural and timeless in the most refreshing way possible. Decaycast team sits down with the duo to discuss their new album Silhouettes and their single “Facade,” which is out today! Listen below, and pre-order the album today.

What ground does Silhouettes cover, musically and conceptually?

Akiko: The album didn’t start out with any particular concept, but just because of the timeframe of our writing — five years, as opposed to one-and-a-half or two years in my previous work, we ended up with something that represented that passage of time in our own lives. I think, more universally, the album also speaks to the long-term process of personal evolution. These songs individually are all about the sometimes-difficult moments that give us an opportunity for reflection, and lead to self-discovery. As a whole, I’d say the album is about personal transformation. It’s about how for that to happen, you have to be willing to shed false or outdated beliefs, confront aspects of your life and self that aren’t fun to look at, and give voice to the parts of yourself that have been silenced.

Winter: Silhouettes covers a lot of experiences and expressions of transforming and transmuting energies. It’s a representation of becoming many different forms of self. It’s one the first recordings of me debuting my vocals and saxophone in a full album. It’s an album we both had full creative freedom with, and we were able to expand musically as much as we felt we needed to. We both went through many changes and transformations throughout this album, and this album portrays and reflects that.

Your latest single is called “Facade.” What is it about? 

Winter: “Facade” is about tearing down the walls of false illusion, dismantling any and all power over us that keeps us from being our truest and best selves. It’s a commemoration and celebration of dismantling old structures of belief from a worldwide perspective, within ourselves and outside ourselves, taking down all forms of oppression and injustice.

Akiko: I also think of “Facade” as being about dismantling power and tearing down the illusion of hierarchy. I’ve always had that anarchistic instinct to destroy systemic power structures in the larger world, but this song is about the moment you realize how insidiously those power dynamics are replicated in your own life. It’s about no longer making it your sole responsibility to make a relationship work, and finding the courage to admit that your only way forward is out – out of an abusive situation, out of toxic cycles, out of a social environment that seeks to pigeon-hole, define, or take advantage of you, and out of any structure that is held up by holding you down. It’s about finally breaking free from oppressive power dynamics, and then watching those who held you down fall apart around you. That’s when you can recognize that the abuse you tolerated, to some degree, required your own permission. Even if you get mad at yourself for that, acknowledging and taking responsibility for it becomes its own form of freedom. 

We might not individually have the power to stop the most advanced military in history, but we do have the ability to state that the institutional narratives are outright lies, and to simply refuse to be brainwashed… The crack in the facade, and the tumbling of the tower, starts with each of us.

In “Facade,” there is a long refrain of “It’s just a kiss from a narcissist” throughout the outro. What are you referring to?

Akiko: The song is about breaking free of abuse, and that line speaks to how it feels when you realize how cheap and effortless the scraps of recognition or affection are that you receive in uneven relationships. When we sing it, it reminds me how many times I would have to repeat something like that to myself, sometimes for years, to build up the resolve to finally escape an abusive relationship. I think that, as well as the exhilaration of finding your freedom, is something any abuse survivor can understand. 

We don’t limit ourselves with our sound and we embrace fully going anywhere we want to go. We utilize anything and everything we can, constantly experimenting and approaching our music in a way that feels exciting.

I also think of those lines in “Facade” as I witness global events, where you can see the dynamic of the narcissistic abuser and the abused in imperialism and in capitalism. It feels very personal to witness, for example, the US and Israeli government committing genocide in realtime, right in front of us. In this case, the US and Israeli governments play the role of the narcissist, who only sees others as tools to get what they want, and not as human beings. In colonization, we see the same tactics used in abusive personal relationships: systemic gaslighting, outright lying, abuse of social and institutional power, enforced isolation of the victim, humiliation and dehumanization, leading finally to physical harm or murder. We see the colonizer’s attacks on culture, history and identity in tandem with attacks on the colonized people’s humanity and on life itself. It’s very similar to how personal attacks, criticism and belittling are a part of a larger campaign for total control in abusive personal relationships. 

We might not individually have the power to stop the world’s most advanced military in history, but we do have the ability to state that institutional narratives are outright lies, and to simply refuse to be brainwashed. We can say, “We see you, the richest and most elite people in the world, using all the world’s wealth without our consent, to kill the poorest and the most powerless. You employ weapons of mass destruction to purposely target and kill children, poets, doctors, and teachers, and then you claim a moral superiority.” That has to happen for any other change to take place, and it’s something we’ll always have the power to do. The crack in the facade, and the tumbling of the tower, starts within each of us.

There is a noticeable difference in the sound of Yama Uba vs either of your previous projects, Ötzi or Mystic Priestess. How does the difference in sound palette affect your compositions?

Winter: The difference is there are no bounds in Yama Uba. We don’t limit ourselves with our sound and we embrace fully going anywhere we want to go. We utilize anything and everything we can, constantly experimenting and approaching our music in a way that feels exciting. We are able to break out of our comfort zone to explore and express ourselves in every way possible. One song can portray the energy of tearing down walls and setting fire to everything, while another is about looking at something from a new perspective, and rebuilding everything in a new way. 

Akiko: I think because we have less defined roles in Yama Uba than in a traditional band structure, we can start purely from the intentional and emotional root of a song. We can play improvisationally and build off that if we want to, but it’s not required to have a bunch of people jam together until something clicks, and that alone makes a huge difference. It’s more like, “I’m feeling a song about this subject. Here are the lyrics, or here is this guitar line” – and then if we’re both feeling it, we build a world around that emotion, supporting it with whatever seems appropriate. Of course I’m unlikely to take up guitar or saxophone in this band, and Winter is unlikely to take up bass or synth drum programming, but we can have all or none of those instruments at our disposal. There’s no sense that we have to, for example, write a line so the synth player has something to play. Every sound is purposeful and exists in service to the idea, and that is definitely freeing. I think it’s really advanced us both as artists. 

Winter’s vocals artfully emanate raw emotion on the tracks “Facade,” “Isolation” and “Claustrophobia.” What led to Winter’s singing on these particular tracks? 

Winter: I have always been shown great support from Akiko to sing more. At the time we wrote these songs, we felt it was fitting to capture the raw feeling and emotion in my vocals to signify the atmosphere of those songs. It’s a representation of how overcoming something is not always comforting or pretty. It’s about finding beauty and appreciation in the raw expression of releasing, and to find strength and power within that vulnerability. It’s about truly appreciating and embracing the rawness, no matter what it looks or feels like, because it is the most genuine form of expression. 

What inspires you as musicians?

Winter: I grew up listening to a lot of different styles of music. Everything from jazz, pop, punk and heavy metal. I draw inspiration from anywhere and everywhere. I am inspired by any form of expression that portrays a message and deeper meaning.

Akiko: I’ve always enjoyed all kinds of modern music, but in the past few years I’ve become very inspired by traditional musical forms from Japan. I’m learning several forms of traditional music and dancing arts, and by that I mean going back to 800 years ago! I also meditate and do somatic therapies for my chronic illness, which encourages me to sing and to learn scales from non-Western cultures. I’ve been playing music long enough that it’s become inseparable from life itself, so I view music and life in a very holistic way at this point, and as a sort of spiritual path. Everything in my life influences and inspires my music, and my music influences and inspires everything in the rest of my life. 

What’s next for Yama Uba?

Akiko: The next release after Silhouettes drops is a 2-CD compilation I curated on my label, Psychic Eye Records, that jointly benefits the people of Gaza and the unhoused community of Oakland, California, where I live. That compilation is called The Ancient Wall, and drops in early February. It has over 40 of my favorite bands, so I’m really excited to get that out there. The Yama Uba song on the compilation is actually “Facade,” so I’d encourage anyone reading this to buy the compilation, which will probably sell out pretty fast!

Then, we’ll have a new music video coming out that I’ve worked on harder than any video in my life, so I’ll be proud of it just being out there and existing. Other than that, I’m trying to learn to not always worry about what’s next, and just enjoy the present. I’ve taken a step back from the sometimes manic-feeling cycle of music production and promotion, and I’m just enjoying this quiet time before Spring. Nothing is fully scheduled yet, but Yama Uba will definitely be touring parts of the US, and is likely to tour Italy, in 2024. Japan was incredibly fun to tour in 2023, so we might go back there in 2024, and maybe to Australia. We’re interested in so many things and so many places that I try to just stay flexible, and be open to the opportunities to come to us.

DECAYCAST Premieres: A.S. Valentino summons sleaze, synths, and sin in new single “Let Me See Your Sin”

A.S. Valentino’s new single, “Let Me See Your Sin,” is a slinking exploration of kink and redemption and is the first track from Valentino’s forthcoming debut album, Summoning on Psychic Eye Records. In “Let Me See Your Sin,” synthpop glides effortlessly into darkwave, with occasional industrial elements grinding against each other, all underscoring lyrics that swell with pain, resolve and love. Describing his music as “trans darkwave,” A.S. Valentino expands in the interview below on the almost inseparable links between his trans identity and his music. In “Let Me See Your Sin” and throughout the album as a whole, A.S. Valentino’s Summoning invokes enough power and mystery to set him apart as a gatecrasher to watch in 2024.

What is your newest single, ‘Let Me See Your Sin,’ about?

A.S. Valentino: “Let Me See Your Sin” is about the redemptive power of BDSM and kink to expel or reclaim shame around sexuality and desire. I was raised Catholic, and I am very attracted to the overlap between religious imagery and ritual and the power of ritual in BDSM and D/s relationships. Particularly in Catholicism, it’s so kinky, gory, sadistic and masochistic all at once. And of course, I enjoy the blasphemy and perversion as well, that’s an added bonus. Catholicism is all about shame, guilt, and the confession of sins for repentance, to be wiped clean again, to be accepted into heaven. In the world of “Let Me See Your Sin,” sinners are encouraged to present their lust, sins and impurity like holy sacraments to be amplified, bringing rapture and redemption through the ritual of BDSM.

How do you describe your music generally?

I would describe my music as informed by darkwave, coldwave, industrial, synth pop, and metal at times, but filtered through a specifically trans and queer lens. The music on Summoning vacillates between creepy and sexy, frenetic and crushing, but some songs are pretty melodic. I like to describe it offhandedly as a soundtrack of sleaze, synths, and sin. 

What inspires you to create the kind of music that you make?

I am drawn to dark music, to the interplay between dissonance and melody. 

I started this project about the same time as I started medically transitioning. I think my music channels the anxiety of being transgender in a world that hates and fears us. You can hear my voice changing over the course of the Dancing with Dysphoria EP to Summoning, my debut album. Rather than hide it, I leaned more heavily into the androgynous, gravelly sound of my voice. It’s very vulnerable to record a record while your voice is actively changing. I also leaned more into how much of the world sees me, as monstrous, shapeshifting, that which subverts and perverts the natural order. 

On the one hand, a lot of my music dwells in the darkness in life – oppression (“Gatekeeper,” “Circle of Dissonance”), death and mortality (“Bodies,” “The Attic”). And in other ways, I explore what is life-affirming for me – kink as spirituality, trans self-determination, the power in being a monster, of being a threat to the order of society. 

“I think the synthesizer is inherently sort of a trans instrument – it can emulate and embody new sounds, despite how it looks, and is infinite in its expression.”
— A.S. Valentino

The title of your upcoming album is Summoning. What is this album summoning?

The track “The Summoning” is about returning to what is natural and authentic. It starts with the moon calling, asking you to shed your identity, your clothes, name and money and instead bring your “claws, hair and fang.” 

I think for me the album is a summoning of what is natural and authentic in me that others may see as unnatural. I believe that people are often most authentic when they are children before they have completed their indoctrination and domestication into society. Part of my adult life has been dissecting this process of indoctrination, shedding the parts that aren’t actually me. It’s also the first full-length I’ve put out since medically transitioning and the first one under A.S. Valentino, so it’s a couple of firsts all in one. 

There’s also a ton of sounds from the natural world on here even though they sound unnatural. Wolves, bats, hyenas, vultures, wind, stuff like that. I love pairing natural sounds with unnatural, synthesized sounds, which is why there’s also a lot of live, improvised percussion samples on the record. I don’t own many proper percussion instruments, however, so I usually improvise with different items and textures around my house. I love going on a sound hunt, looking for what would add atmosphere or excitement to a track. 

I think the record also summons the duality of lightness and darkness in myself and in life – the horror and the beauty, the dissonance and the melody, and the anxiety in between. The song “Bodies” deals a lot with that. How the body can be a site for miracles, but also horror, and the way bodies are controlled, perceived, and policed by society at large – particularly trans bodies, Black and Brown bodies, and so on. 

What is your musical background, and how did you decide to focus your output into this sonic sphere?

I started out in punk, indie rock, and metal bands, and then fell in love with drum machines and synthesizers and the ability to work alone and write whole songs and control all the parts. I think the synthesizer is inherently sort of a trans instrument – it can emulate and embody new sounds, despite how it looks, and is infinite in its expression. 

I spent over a decade writing electronic pop music. I liked the challenge of trying to write hooks and earworms. However, my original creative impulses were towards darker music. I’ve struggled with depression throughout my life, so darkwave is a natural way to channel that part of myself. Songwriting is often a process of chewing and digesting for me. However, you can still hear some of the pop boy come through on “Summoning”. 

The song “Butch Dyke” is a sort of industrial ode to butches of the world, which is an interesting flip from the standard “sexy femme” trope and implied (hetero)sexuality of most of industrial music. I have to ask: Which came first in writing this song, the lyrics, or the music? And what was your thought process as you worked on the track?

This is an interesting question. I would say the concept came first. I wanted to write a tribute to my butch ancestors, and in particular, a love song to the first butch I ever saw. 

I grew up in a very rural, isolated area and didn’t see my first d*ke until I was 17. Me and my best friend had fake IDs and we snuck into a bar and that was where I saw my first butch, shooting pool, short cropped hair in a white T-shirt. I’d like to say I had a revelatory moment and was struck with awe, but honestly, I felt a reflex of repulsion and fear. What I didn’t know at the time is that I was seeing a part of myself that I wasn’t ready to accept. 

But also, I think that’s a common reaction to butch and transmasculine people in general. Our existence is a threat to many. It’s taken many years to accept and love my butchness and transness, and I wrote this song as a sort of love song, a reclamation, and an apology to that first butch I ever saw and to all of my butch and trans ancestors, many of which have disappeared into history, their names and stories erased.

It’s also interesting because I feel like in the queer community there is a narrative that the “butches are disappearing” because more people are choosing to pursue medical transition. I guess I don’t see that as mutually exclusive. I am butch and I am trans masculine and I am forever grateful to my butch ancestors who made it possible for me to exist in this form. 

In terms of the music, I wanted it to sound intimidating, confrontational, but also sexy, with a lot of swagger. I actually wrote several different drafts and this is the one that made it on the record. 

What artists do you think have influenced your music?

Honestly, I find this one of the hardest questions to answer because I have a voracious appetite for music. I listen to so many genres and pull inspiration from so much. Just today, I listened to modal jazz, house, industrial hip-hop, doom metal. I guess in my genre I would say big influences are Siouxsie and the Banshees, HEALTH, She Past Away, Paradox Obscur, Author & Punisher, artists like that. I’m sure I’m missing a ton. But in terms of an artist I’ve probably listened to more than any other artist – I’d have to say Prince. 

Will you be touring in 2024? If so, where do you foresee going?

In 2024, I plan to do a West Coast tour and play cities from Seattle down to the Bay Area, maybe down to LA as well. 

DECAYCAST Premieres: Post-Industrial Darkwave duo V.E.X. Shares New Video “Dancing At The End Of Time”

DECAYCAST Premieres: Post-Industrial Darkwave duo V.E.X. Shares New Video “Dancing At The End Of Time”
0006663860_10Bay area artists Roxy and LuLu, as V.E.X., (and a myrid of other projects) have been playing music and creating art together for years on end in the bay area and beyond, yet somehow always bring something refreshingly new and politically necessary to the table, and their latest single, supported with a brand new video here “Dancing At The End Of Time” is certainly no exception.
From the artists;  “Dancing At The End Of Time” is a low-fi synth ballad of remembrance and resistance in a dying world, the true story of two femme freaks gentrified out of the city but not out of their souls, holding onto their love in spite of all the hate, dedicated to crafting underground subculture music for outcasts, the forgotten, and those fighting back in this genocidal abusive white supremacist capitalism patriarchy death spiral.
“Dancing At The End Of Time” offers a celebratory, yet real and  visceral look at two femmes resisting the violent forces of oppression and gentrification through the streets of a forgotten and endlessly morphed San Francisco.  “Dancing…” gels haunted vocals and murky, analog synth arpreggiations, creating both a serene and haunting vibe which encapsulates the listener into a tale from the past.  Watch the  video below and read some words on the track and video from V.E.X. below. The track is from an upcoming split with Moira Scar.

“Roxy and LuLu have been playing music together since 2001, as The Floating Corpses, Angel On The Nod And The Phantasy Defylement, Terrran Traumantics, Moira Scar, and V.E.X. being the most recent incarnation. V.E.X. (Vortex Empath Xen, formerly Voltage Empath Xanaxax, Ventriloquest Ectoplasmold Xanaxax) is Lu Lu “Lucifer” Gamma Ray and Roxzan “Roxy Monoxide” Zatan as industrial-dark-wave synth-punk surreal-doom noise-romance duo. V.E.X. creates, V.E.X. records, V.E.X. plays shows.”

Check their bandcamp below and make sure to check for select tour dates and an upcoming split with Moira Scar.
https://xanaxax.bandcamp.com

 

DECAYCAST : Fifty + Impactful Genre- Defying Music Releases of 2018 : Part One

DECAYCAST : Fifty + Impactful Genre Defying Music Releases of 2018 : Part One
*part two to be released Feb 2018

2018 was a wild year for music and the world. Bad politics and worse people coming to positions of power often spark good art. Here’s fifty genre defying releases from 2018 that we at Decaycast found absolutely exceptional.
Please seek these albums out and support the artists as directly as possible!

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700 Bliss “Spa 700” (Halcyon Veil)

Akvan “بلک متال آریایی” (Self Released)

Anna LuisaGreen” (Practical Records)

Attilo Novellino & Collin McKelvey “Métaphysiques cannibales” (Weird Ear)

BbymuthaMD3” (Self Released)

Beast NestA History Of Sexual Violence” (Self Released)

Black Spirituals “Black Access / Black Axes” (SIGE Records)

Bonemagic “Cult Of The Red Vest” (Cult Love!)

The Breathing Light “Light Fast, Black Power!” (Self Released)

Burmese “Privilege” (Fuck Yoga Records)

CBN “Neblastya” (Phage Tapes)

Colin Bragg & Bill Pritchard “Andedyr” (Self Released)

Compactor “Technology Worship” (Oppressive Existence Recordings)

Conscious Summary “Exhaustions” (Skin Trade Recordings

Dental Work “Fog Of Summer Ghosts” (Placenta Recordings)

Dreamcrusher “Grudge2” (C-I-P)

Drew McDowall “The Third Helix” (Dias Records)

Eleh “Wear Patterns” (Self Released)

The Fathers “Sound Advice” (T/ECA)

Fletcher Pratt “Dub Sessions, Volume 4” (Crash Symbols)

Lara Sarkissian “Disruption” (Club Chai)

Girlz N The Hood ‘All 4 Nia’ (Self Released)

Golden Donna “Date Night” (Self Released)

Hiro Kone “Pire Expenditure” (Dias Records)

HIRS “Friends. Lovers. Favorites” (Self Released)

House Of Cake “House Of Cake” (Houdini Mansions)

Jeff Carey “Zero Player Game” (Ehse)

Jasmine Infiniti “Sis” (Club Chai)

Jonathan Snipes “The Nightmare” (Deathbomb Arc)

JPEGMAFIA “Veteran”  (Deathbomb Arc)

K 23 “Blacklight Sessions” (Fantasy 1)

Kepla & DeForrest Brown Jr. “The Wages of Being Black is Death ” (PTP)

King Vision Ultra “Pain Of Mind” (Self Released)

KK NULL “Pulsar X” (Self Released)

Kohinoorgasm “Synthwali and The War Empire” (Self Released)

Lunar Tomb “Tierra de las Brujas” (Distort Discos)

LSDXOXO “Body Mods” (Self Released)

Luke Stewart “Works For Upright Bass And Amplifier” (Self Released)

Lana Del Rabies “Shadow World” (Deathbomb Arc)

Macho Blush “Users Guide” (Tymbal Tapes)

Midmight “Cut Cut Cut Bruise” (Resipiscent)

Moira Scar “Wound World Part 1” (Psychic Eye)

Nightmare Difficulty “Run and Gun” (Self Released)

Open Mike Eagle “What Happens When I Try To Relax”

ONO “Your Future Is Metal” (American Damage)

Portal “Ion” (Profound Lore)

Russell E.L. Butler “The Home I’d Build For Myself And All My Friends”

Ryan King “How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love To Bomb” (Serious Hype)

SAN CHA “Capricha Del Diablo” (self released)

Serpentwithfeet “Soil”

S.B.S.M “Leave Your Body” (Thrilling Living)

The Sorcerer Family “Hidden Rooms” (Stay Strange)

TAHNZZ “XILA” (Self Released)

The Bedroom Witch “Triptych” (Self Released)

Turkish Delight “Howcha Magowcha” (I Heart Noise)

Voicehandler “Light From Another Light” (Humbler Records)

White Boy Scream “Remains” (Crystalline Morphologies)

Witches Of Malibu “Fever Dreams” (Self Released)

Yves Tumor “Safe In The Hands Of Love” (Warp)

V/A: “Energies” (Practical Records)

V/A: “Stable Submissions, Vol 2” (Stable)