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Son Little invisible

Son Little - invisible
  • Release date: October 11, 2019
  • Label: Anti/Epitaph
  • Recording year: 2019
  • UPC/EAN Code: 45778751983
  • ©2019 Anti
  • ℗2019 Anti

About Son Little's invisible

Recorded at Paris’s iconic Studios Ferber, Son Little’s brilliant new EP, ‘invisible,’ offers up a tantalizing preview of his highly anticipated third full-length album, due out early next year on ANTI- Records. While Little plays nearly every instrument on the EP himself, he put his songs in the hands of an outside producer for the first time here, collaborating with French studio wizard Renaud Letang (Feist, Manu Chao) to create his boldest, most self-assured statement yet. Equal parts vintage and modern, the collection blends classic soul, old-school R&B, and adventurous indie sensibilities into a timeless swirl fueled by gritty instrumental virtuosity and raw, raspy vocals. It’s an ambitious work of vision and reflection, to be sure, but more than that, it’s an ecstatic testament to the freedom that comes from letting go.

“I’d always produced myself in the past,” explains Little, “but it’s easy to get caught up in an endless quest for perfection when you do that. Working with Renaud let me see what I was doing from an outsider’s perspective, let me see the songs from a bird’s-eye view. It was liberating to have someone there to help me focus on the bigger picture like that.”

Little’s newfound liberation is clear from the outset of ‘invisible,’ which revels in freewheeling wordplay and daring sonic juxtaposition. Opener “hey rose” marries distorted, jittery guitar with smooth, sinuous vocals, while the slow-burning “about her. again.” injects trippy psychedelia into Sam Cooke soul, and a cover of “Skid” from Love’s long lost masterpiece ‘Black Beauty’ uses a 1973 meditation on homelessness to make a pointed statement about our indifference to suffering in modern America.

“I’ve heard that song a million times, but I didn’t realize how relevant the lyrics were until I recorded it myself,” says Little. “It’s easy to become desensitized to people's pain when you encounter so much of it every day, but every single person you see struggling, wherever they're at, is a human being with their own story.”

Son Little's artist page