The membership is historically the place the place you’ll be able to escape all the issues in your life and the world at massive, however it’s the place Ela Minus goes to confront them. On her 2020 full-length debut, acts of insurrection, the Colombian producer drew upon her eclectic musical CV—Bogotá hardcore child, Berklee-trained jazz musician, techno convert, touring drummer for electro-goth queen Austra, skilled synth builder—to make an album that channeled the communal pleasure of dance music and hedonistic attract of subterranean after-hours areas into punky protest music. But if that report’s assortment of misfit mantras and anti-capitalist critique remodeled the dancefloor right into a pulpit, Minus’ second album, DÍA, makes use of it extra like a confession sales space.
For Minus, the interval surrounding acts of insurrection was one among each celebration and dislocation. Just earlier than the album was launched to worldwide acclaim, Minus had to surrender her Brooklyn condominium and recording area attributable to monetary constraints throughout COVID lockdown. She’d spend the subsequent few years bouncing between Bogotá, Mexico City, L.A., Seattle, New York, and London, determined to discover a new place that felt like residence whereas feeling the strain to capitalize on the profession momentum sparked by her debut. By the time she was in a position to piece collectively a brand new album, she realized the songs weren’t talking to her, prompting an Eleventh-hour rewrite that higher mirrored her unsettled way of thinking. That additional time and a spotlight pays off massively with DÍA, an album that pushes Minus’ musical imaginative and prescient outward whereas burrowing deeper inward lyrically. Like acts of insurrection, the album carves out a protected area for outsiders to harness power in numbers, however trades within the DIY basement-club vibe for the open-air expanse of a competition area. And whereas it retains her debut’s insurrectionary edge, DÍA acknowledges that self-care is a vital first step towards constructing a greater world for all.
Of course, step one towards self-care is admitting that you simply want it. In DÍA’s opening minutes, Minus emerges from acts of insurrection’s nocturnal netherworld, capturing the sobering sensation of a dawn hitting your face after an evening spent dancing within the shadows. Musically, “Abrir Monte” picks up the place the joyous second half of Jamie xx’s “Gosh” left off, with a low-end two-chord sample serving because the backdrop for a cluster of synth starbursts, whereas flickering beats conjure a metropolis gearing up for the morning rush. The monitor doubles because the prolonged intro to “Broken,” a cry for assist that swells right into a soul-purifying baptism-by-rave and seamlessly fuses Minus’ clever idiosyncrasies with emergent dance-pop ambitions. Call it “Fever Ray of Light.”