Floating Points Shares Video for New Song “Problems”

Music

Floating Points Shares Video for New Song “Problems”: Watch

The single follows two other dancefloor-focused tracks—“Grammar” and “Vocoder”—from earlier this year

Floating Points

Floating Points, June 2022 (Kieran Frost/Redferns)

Floating Points is back with another new song. “Problems” is the third solo single from the producer this year, following “Grammar” and “Vocoder.” Watch the visual for the new track below.

The “Problems” music video features dancers voguing beneath elaborate lighting effects. Directed and produced by Hamill Industries, the clip makes use of a video processing technique called vector rescanning, which allowed dancers Hannah Ekholm and Jal Joshua to create sound from their choreography that was mixed in with the music as they shot the video.

“‘Problems’ is meant to agitate every single room that its ecstatic sound waves reach,” Hamill Industries shared in a statement. “We wanted to celebrate it with movement and dance and reshape it through sound, by using techniques that allow the signification of images. We have used lasers that spin and move with the music, making visible their sinuous shapes. It was important that this video shaped the electrical feeling you get when being on a dancefloor, the urge of dancing when sound waves reach your ears.”

Floating Points’ latest album, Promises, was released in March 2021. A collaboration with Pharaoh Sanders and the London Symphony Orchestra, the nine-track LP was shortlisted for the United Kingdom’s Mercury Prize, and followed the producer’s 2019 album Crush.

Read Pitchfork’s 2021 feature “Ambient Jazz’s Quiet, Forceful Return.”

Content

This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.

Articles You May Like

Book Riot’s Deals of the Day for December 22, 2024
Will Pregnant Kylie Kelce Have More Kids With Jason Kelce? She Says…
Texas AG Ken Paxton sues NCAA for “deceptive” marketing for letting trans women compete
Jared Leto Playing Skeletor in Live Action ‘Masters of the Universe’
Barack Obama’s Top Songs of 2024: Kendrick Lamar, Rema, Waxahatchee, and More