Thursday, September 6, 2018

AV Super Sunshine drops explosive Single




 “Time Bomb” comes in two distinct mixes, the radio DJ and club cuts, and both pack one hell of a wallop in different ways. One characteristic distinguishing both versions is the five star production focusing the musical elements of each song in such a way that everything works in concert rather than listeners experiencing the feeling of different sounds and instruments pulling against each other or working at cross purposes. The club mix is very uptempo, but backs off the pace at a handful of points in a way generating tremendous momentum for the next passage and the effect is quite good for listeners. 

Electronic instruments dominate the club mix, certainly not unexpectedly, but they are always presented in such a way that it never feels overwrought – the mixes are very different from one another, but one common approach linking them is how muscular both takes are in approaching AV’s musical ideas. They come leaping to life in the club mix and it isn’t hard to hear how appreciative listeners and audiences across the world will be to hear this version.

Unlike many acts in this vein, there’s never any sense of Bradford attempting to bury the vocals in order to strengthen the sound of the electronica. Instead, he wisely keeps them equal throughout much of the performance and only restructures the singing in a major way during the club version’s second half. Guitar and melody take on important parts with this mix, although there isn’t as much emphasis during the club version as we hear with the radio DJ cut. The club mix is much longer, as well, running over five minutes long, but we never hear any sense of Bradford overreaching to make an impact on listeners
.
The radio version of “Time Bomb” shares some of the same mounting quality we hear in the club mix, but it likewise never comes off overcooked in any way. The same muscularity makes this work as well, but it stresses traditional instruments much more than the synthesizer work in the club version. Despite the quality of the instrumental playing, the key for the radio version ends up being the strong vocals courtesy of AV’s lead singing coupled with some strong backing vocals. It’s a much shorter number than the club take, less than four minutes in comparison to its companion, but both songs share another quality – the laser-beam push of both versions never wastes your time and involves listeners from the very beginning. 

It’s a performance designed to have the widest possible appeal, but it’s equally appealing to fans who’ve been listening to music for years. I’m not even that much of a fan when it comes to electronic instruments, but this song made me a believer earlier on and it holds up under repeated listens.


Richard Spradley

No comments:

Post a Comment