Brooklyn based trio, Rosalind has conjured a spellbinding new sound for their latest EP, ALMA: CODA. While their freshman album, a synth pop stunner called Mosaic, was often muscular and political, this latest EP is tender, ethereal, and soothing.
The EP weaves together ethereal harmonies and ambient, cinematic textures that reveal their film scoring influences. The tracks have a pleasantly in-the-wild feel to them, dusted with found instruments like wine glasses and an ancient piano with a pedal that creaks.
The band leaned into an aesthetic they cultivated while on residency together on the coast of MA. Inspired by the raw magic of nature, they developed equally raw acoustic covers of their three oldest songs and a haunting cover a familiar classic (Wish You Were Here by Pink Floyd), and a new original inspired by the moon (Moon).
The EP feels handmade, new and old at the same time. Like lemonade on a porch, moonlight on the old upright, herbs drying in the kitchen, a piece of embroidery from the attic.
ALMA: CODA, is a wave goodbye to an old chapter and their previous band name. They are thrilled to share new music and acoustic versions of their classics under their new brand. The trio engineered and produced this track in full in their home studios and at Steiner Studios in Brooklyn, NY.
To learn more about Rosalind head over to their presskit.
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