
Automatic
Con A Certain Ratio, Air, Arctic Monkeys, Cameron Winter, Halle Saxon, Izzy Glaudini, Loren Humphrey, Nice As Fuck, Patrick Cowley
L.A. pop duo Automatic perform tracks from their politically charged danceable album Is It Now? in Birmingham.
Automatic make deviant pop music that cuts through the brainrot. Balancing irreverence with sharp commentary, the L.A. band approached their third album with a dark sense of humor and a renewed sense of momentum. Izzy Glaudini (synths, vocals) and Halle Saxon (bass, vocals) believe messages of change land best with a backbeat and a cheeky groove — on their new album Is It Now? they ask us to confront the world's oppressive structures with fresh urgency.
For Is It Now? Automatic collaborated with producer Loren Humphrey (Cameron Winter, Nice As Fuck, Arctic Monkeys), building on the minimalist, danceable sound of Signal and Excess. Where earlier records leaned more grid-based, this album was made live and loose — favoring long takes and a rhythm section that breathes. Perky grooves and affable pop melodies act as a Trojan horse for playful political commentary; it may take a few listens to realize that the pulsing bassline, stabbing synths, and sci-fi FX of "mq9" are meant to echo the sound of drone bombs.
The band wanted the record to sit comfortably alongside artists like A Certain Ratio or Air. On "Don't Wanna Dance" they nod to late-1970s British scenes shaped by Caribbean music, where dub collides with punk and funk slips into motorik grooves. "Smog Summer" draws inspiration from Patrick Cowley, grounding its environmental message in a disco thrum.
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