Algorhythm - "Slipping"

Michael
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Expect a high degree of musicianship and unexpected genre-blending hypnotic progressive rock/jazz music from Algorhythm this year.

Hailing from Montreal, Quebec, Algorhythm was formed by Alexander Lioubimenko (Keyboards, Vocals). Protégé of the previous Maestro of the USSR Sympho-Jazz National Orchestra Lawrence Djintcharadze, as well as a graduate from McGill University Schulich School of Music in Jazz Performance with distinction, Lioubimenko has the professional foundation and is as legitimate as it gets. When it comes to composing some of the most complex, reflective and groove based Jazz influenced music in the last decade, he has an ability to synthesize when combining a traditional sense of the Jazz genre with progressive rock. Algorhythm is an explorative vessel whose captain is Alexander Lioubimenko and is manned by his crew; Marc-Gabriel Laverrière (Guitar), Hugo Leclerc (Woodwinds), Marc Scott (Bass), and Gregory Kustka-Tsimbidis (Drums).

As a collective of individuals that each contribute an invaluable element to the music, these 5 artists come together to create a sound based on 70's prog rock and jazz. In July 2019, they immortalized three songs on a debut EP. The band also achieved great success at the Hudson Music Festival by receiving the best overall performance award that same year. Exploration of musical boundaries, experimentation, improvisation and space govern the thematic of Algorhythm. Speaking of space, this brings us to Algorhythm's next chapter in their career:

 Slipping is Algorhythm's upcoming single ready to be dropped on the 10th of July. From the very beginning an unusual synthetic atmosphere creates the conditions to enter the right state of mind to access what unexpectedly comes next...a velvety heart-felt, r&b sound punctuated by bass lines and a great guitar riff: something able to calmly invade the heart. A song about love, or to be more precise about the fear of that void that love could leave deep inside us. So Slipping could be seen both as a metaphor of the unbearable ease through which we fall again and again no matter how much we suffered, and as a reminder: “we must cherish every little bit of love that life presents to us because we never know when that could be taken away.”

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