Tag: Geneva Jacuzzi

ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK’s 30 SONGS OF 2024

Streaming has made music more accessible to people than at any time previously in the music industry’s history.

With traction of new music now very dependent on social media, many artists are playing the algorithm with single songs rather than bodies of work such as EP and albums which are now almost an afterthought.

While ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK has always done end of year summaries around songs rather than albums, as they can best represent an annual period, the release strategy adopted by some proved frustrating for listeners. As a result, with everything now democratised and so much choice available following seemingly random patterns, promising new acts found it much harder to get noticed than 10 years ago and simply fell into the cracks of the web.

In 2024, there were albums released where 90 to 100% of the content comprised of previously released material; while the albums made sense as a journey in most cases, during the build-up, what used to be considered traditional “album tracks” were being issued as underwhelming singles that may have disappointed when listened to out of context from the main programme. Whereas the rant in the past with the plethora of different remixes available might have been “JUST GIVE ME THE VERSION THEY GOT RIGHT!”, today it is more likely to be “JUST GIVE ME THE BLOODY ALBUM!”

Then there were artists who only seemed to release single tracks with no EP or album likely, so unless a consumer had the time or the inclination to become a dedicated follower, it could be quite difficult to follow what was going on. Yes, ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK may be stuck in the past as it is often accused of doing, but it simply does not embrace this bitty fragmented approach!

A straightforward list to compile, ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK’s 30 SONGS OF 2024 gathers tracks available on the usual online retail platforms with a restriction of one song per artist moniker and placed in alphabetical order…


BRIGITTE BARDINI Crush

Hailing from Melbourne in Australia, Brigitte Bardini is another artist to embrace her dark side having begun as an acoustic singer songwriter. Her first venture into the dark side came with the shady gothic techno of 2023’s ‘Start A Fire’. But ‘Crush’ was more ethereal, a dreamy melancholic number expressing some bittersweet heartache where “I’ll forget about you, if you want me to”. But despite a desire to hold on, it really is all over…

Available on the BRIGITTE BARDINI single ‘Crush’ via https://brigittebardini.bandcamp.com/track/crush

https://www.facebook.com/BrigitteBardiniMusic


CHARLIE Let Go

Not to be confused with the classic 1984 Italo disco track ‘Spacer Woman’ but no doubt in homage, ‘Spacewoman’ was the new EP by Berlin-domiciled DJ, musician and producer Leona Jacewska, best known by her stage name CHARLIE. Its highlight was ‘Let Go’, a thumping strobe-lit slice of dark disco saw Chicago meeting Italy in hypnotic bliss. Tonally and rhythmically, it was a sexy and sweaty number that provided an exhilarating ride.

Available on the CHARLIE EP ‘Spacewoman’ via Wrong Era / Slow Motion

https://www.instagram.com/charlieszum/


CURSES Vanish

Berlin-based New Yorker Luca Venezia, better known as CURSES, joined the Italians Do It Better family in 2024. One of the highlights of the ‘Another Heaven’ album comes with the superb ‘Vanish’; this was CURSES’ own ‘Your Silent Face’ with its brightly bubbling sequencers and solemn demeanour. There was even a subtle ‘Heroes’ like quality about it as our hero declared to his love that he wanted to ”vanish with you”.

Available on the CURSES album ‘Another Heaven’ via Italians Do It Better

https://www.cursesforever.com/


MARIE DAVIDSON Sexy Clown

Embracing her inner clown, ‘Sexy Clown’ was a delightful slice of detached minimal synth disco from Montreal’s Marie Davidson. Off her new album ‘City of Clowns’ out in 2025 on SOULWAX’s label DeeWee, the song explored the conflicted feelings around her treatment as an outsider where vulnerability and mettle, candidness and humour struggled to co-exist in other people’s minds. But real life is all about contrasts!

Available on the MARIE DAVIDSON album ‘City Of Clowns’ via https://mariedavidson.bandcamp.com/album/city-of-clowns

https://www.marie-davidson.com/


DIE SEXUAL Need To Sin

From out of the shadows to under the strobe lights, DIE SEXUAL are the erotically charged Los Angeles-based duo of Anton Floriano and his wife Ros. Their second EP ‘Inservio’ developed on the themes of domination and submission of their debut EP ‘Bound’. With their penetrating club-friendly sound, ‘Need To Sin’ was conceived as a tantalizing roleplay of our seemingly innocent subject submitting to their ultimate desires and hedonistic fantasies.

Available on the DIE SEXUAL album ‘Elektro Body Musique’ via https://diesexual.bandcamp.com/

https://www.instagram.com/die_sexual/


DINA SUMMER Halkidiki

A product of Berlin, DINA SUMMER blend new wave, synthpop, dark disco, techno and Italo; although their EP ‘Hide & Seek’ embraced a cutting Mittel Europa edge, it was just a precursor to a new album ‘Girls Gang’ in 2025. Released ahead of it, ‘Halkidiki’ was an infectious electronic club tune made for sultry summery nights and named after the popular holidaying destination in Northern Greece know for its sandy beaches.

Available on the DINA SUMMER album ‘Girls Gang’ via https://dinasummer.bandcamp.com/album/girls-gang-idi021

https://dinasummer.berlin/


GAVIN FRIDAY Ecce Homo

With a long gestation period, the ‘Ecce Homo’ long player started as a collaboration between Gavin Friday and Dave Ball who had first produced his band VIRGIN PRUNES on the 1986 album ‘The Moon Looked Down & Laughed’. Combining elements of synth with post-punk, the title song itself was a wonderfully deathly slice of disco gothique that sounded like Ian McCulloch meeting SOFT CELL at Berghain given an extra chill by an opera soprano sample!

Available on the GAVIN FRIDAY album ‘Ecce Homo’ via BMG

https://www.gavinfriday.com/


HAUTE & FREDDY Anti-Superstar

North American glam glee duo Haute & Freddy have only had two songs released but they made an impression in 2024. While ‘Scantily Clad’ was an excellent debut, the best of the pair was ‘Anti-Superstar’, a superb slice of avant synthpop with a chunky driving electronic bass triplet. There was certainly a cool wonderment about their style, sound and theatrics, making them one of the most promising new acts of the year.

Available on the HAUTE & FREDDY single ‘Anti-Superstar’ via Even If

https://www.instagram.com/hauteandfreddy


HELIX Unimaginable Place

North America’s alternative music power couple Tom Shear of ASSEMBLAGE 23 and Mari Kattman returned as HELIX. Blessed with one of the most captivating voices in electronic music, Mari Kattman was on top form with ‘Unimaginable Place’, an infectious slice of electronic pop with sparkling hooks and groovy rhythmics. Tom Shear said “I prefer to make other people dance than to dance myself. If you’ve ever seen me perform live you know why! I can’t dance to save my life”

Available on the HELIX EP ‘Unimaginable Place’ via https://helix.bandcamp.com/https://helix.bandcamp.com/

https://www.facebook.com/HelixElectronic


GENEVA JACUZZI Dry

With a detached Eurocentric poise reminiscent of Gina X, Geneva Jacuzzi described her third album ‘Triple Fire’ “as a hit parade of wildcard synthpop and sly post-apocalyptic camp”. Brilliantly catchy, ‘Dry’ offered alluring danceable synthpop which went weirdly discordant halfway through. A commentary about dehumanisation, it highlighted the song’s lyrical gist about being ghosted following a date.

Available on the GENEVA JACUZZI album ‘Triple Fire’ via Dais Records

https://www.genevajacuzzi.com/


IONNALEE The End Of Every Song

Jonna Lee returned in 2024 as IONNALEE to the electronic sound she is best known for after 2022’s more organic IAMAMIWHOAMI record ‘Be Here Soon’. This third IONNALEE long player ‘Close Your Eyes’ had the twist of having a Swedish Language twin in ‘Blund’. ‘The End Of Every Song’ surprised with a thumping rhythm and a cacophony of chunky sequences and piercing electronics, the vocals sitting brilliantly like ABBA on helium in outer space!

Available on the IONNALEE album ‘Close Your Eyes’ via to whom it may concern

https://ionnalee.com/


ITALOCONNECTION Europa

In 2021, ITALOCONNECTION issued ‘Midnight Confessions Vol1’, a record themed around love. On ‘Vol2’, there was a twist; en Français using an AI generated female voice, ‘Europa’ paid homage to the art movements and machine music of the continent in a dramatic midtempo piece accompanied by synth passages that could be Jean-Michel Jarre. KRAFTWERK, TELEX, PET SHOP BOYS, PROPAGANDA and NEW ORDER were among those getting a name check.

Available on the ITALOCONNECTION album ‘Midnight Confessions Vol2’ via Bordello A Parigi

https://www.facebook.com/italoconnection


JAIN Nobody Knows

French singer Jeanne Louise Galice is more known for mixing pop with Afrobeat, but with an electronic energy and Moroder-esque throb, ‘Nobody Knows’ was very different from her previous work. With a similar lyrical disposition to Taylor Swift’s ‘I Can Do It With A Broken Heart’, where “Nobody Knows, it’s just the way I’m feeling tonight, I’ll keep on dancing, but I feel heavy-hearted”, underneath the glitterball splendour was deep sadness.

Available on the JAIN single ‘Nobody Knows’ via Spookland / Sony Music

https://www.instagram.com/jainmusic/


JULIA-SOPHIE Numb

The long awaited debut long player from Julia-Sophie entitled ‘forgive too slow’ was a contemplative body of work as reflecting on past relationships. Lead single ‘numb’ was a marvellous avant pop set piece over a subtle rhythmic rumble with a stark haunted monologue. But then things took a frantic about turn as sung and spoken passages alternated with the growing intensity. A concluding barrage of unsettling cut-up voices highlighted her resigned state of mind.

Available on the JULIA-SOPHIE album ‘forgive too slow’ via Ba Da Bing Records

https://www.facebook.com/juliasophiex0x


KALEIDA Stranger

It looked as though KALEIDA would disband due to the pressures of parenting and the shifting patterns of life. But Christina Wood and Cicely Goulder made their long distance creative partnership work again and their reward was a third album ‘In Arms’. The glorious ‘Stranger’ sprung a surprise with 808 electro dance rhythms and a superb collage of staccato voice samples, punchy bass and great vocals that came over in a prayer-like chant.

Available on the KALEIDA album ‘In Arms’ via Embassy One

https://www.kaleidamusic.com/


KID MOXIE Ti Einai Afto Pou To Lene Agapi

The Greek love song ‘Ti Einai Afto Pou To Lene Agapi’ was made famous when Sophia Loren sung it with Tonis Maroudas in the 1957 film ‘Boy On A Dolphin’. For 2024, KID MOXIE gave the song an emotive electronic arrangement that was both sweet and haunting. It was included in the soundtrack of the new season of Netflix drama series ‘Maestro In Blue’ which had been the first Greek television series to be included on the platform.

Available on the KID MOXIE single ‘Ti Einai Afto Pou To Lene Agapi’ via Minos EMI

https://www.facebook.com/kidmoxie/


KITE Glassy Eyes

Releasing their first EP in 2008, KITE finally released their first full-length studio album on the American independent label Dais Records. As their seventh body of work and following on from the numbered series of EPs, the appropriately titled ‘VII’ contains music from their seven most recent singles released over the past seven years. Like a slice of Nordic gospel, ‘Glassy Eyes’ confronts the turmoil of existential anxiety.

Available on the KITE album ‘VII’ via Dais Records

https://www.facebook.com/KiteHQ


LEATHERS Daydream Trash

While ACTORS have been gaining increased worldwide recognition, their keyboardist Shannon Hemmett has developed her more synth focussed solo project LEATHERS in parallel. Her long awaited debut album ‘Ultraviolet’ contained romantic synthpop with sinister twists in that classic Lynchian fashion. However, ‘Daydream Trash’ was a wonderful outlier, a summer new wave tune that was “100 in the shade” and could have easily come off the soundtrack of a John Hughes film.

Available on the LEATHERS album ‘Ultraviolet’ via Artoffact Records

https://www.leatherstheband.com


LINEA ASPERA Mycelium

While Alison Lewis has focussed on her ZANIAS solo venture for the past few years, she was back playing live with Ryan Ambridge as LINEA ASPERA in the summer. The pair had quietly been writing and recording together with the absorbing ‘Mycelium’ being the first fruit of labour. Featuring Ambridge’s characteristic arpeggio-laden backdrop, Lewis turned to using the fuzzy mass growing on mouldy food as a metaphor for the state of a personal relationship.

Available on the LINEA ASPERA single ‘Mycelium’ via https://lineaaspera.bandcamp.com/track/mycelium

https://www.facebook.com/lineaaspera


MICHEL MOERS featuring CLAUDIA BRÜCKEN Microwave

Best known as the front man of Belgian trailblazers TELEX, in 2024 Michel Moers released what was only his second solo studio album. Recorded primarily using Logic, the songs were developed over several years. While Moers continued with his distinctive cynical surrealism, the single ‘Microwaves’ featured Claudia Brücken on lead vocals for a more straightforward slice electronic pop with solid bass and icy synth lines that came over like PROPAGANDA meeting TELEX.

Available on the MICHEL MOERS album ‘As Is’ via Freaksville Records

https://www.instagram.com/michelmoers/


MINUIT MACHINE Hold Me

Now the solo project of Parisian producer and DJ Amandine Stioui, MINUIT MACHINE has been described as “disrupted, emotional, and terribly addictive”. But making a fresh restart with a clear sheet on her Instagram, ‘Hold Me’ showcased an optimistic lyrical gist and melodic drive on top of the thumping beats than had been heard in her work with previous MINUIT MACHINE creative partner Hélène De Thoury aka Hante.

Available on the MINUIT MACHINE single ‘Hold Me’ via https://minuitmachine.bandcamp.com/track/hold-me

https://www.facebook.com/minuitmachine/


MOLCHAT DOMA Kolesom

Now exiled from Belarus to LA, MOLCHAT DOMA brought in the dancier but still sombre sequenced pulses of classic NEW ORDER and DEPECHE MODE for their fourth album to create a more refined studio product. The magnificent ‘Kolesom’ was a glorious slice of apocalyptic electronic disco with an obvious NEW ORDER influence although Bernard Sumner never sounded this foreboding! The ominous baritone offered a commentary on the banality of modern life.

Available on the MOLCHAT DOMA album ‘Belaya Polosa’ via Sacred Bones

https://molchatdoma.com/


NIGHT CLUB The Lunatics (Have Taken Over the Asylum)

‘Masochist’ was the highly appropriate title for the fourth NIGHT CLUB album, a dystopian prophecy that came true! Written FUN BOY THREE in 1981 as a metaphor by to the dangerous posturing games played by “The Cowboy” Ronald Reagan during The Cold War, the inclusion of a cover of ‘The Lunatics (Have Taken Over the Asylum)’ with an even more sinister resonance was sadly relevant as the crazy orange monster was mindlessly voted back as the leader of the free world!

Available on the NIGHT CLUB album ‘Masochist’ via Gato Blanco

https://www.facebook.com/nightclubband


NINA & RADIO WOLF My Dark

Created, recorded, produced and mixed at home in Berlin, ‘My Dark’ encapsulated a dark romantic spirit between NINA and RADIO WOLF. “I knew we’d be creating a kind of revelatory anti-love song about the dark side of relationships” said RADIO WOLF while NINA added “we both felt like creating something quite heavy and I wanted to let out my inner femme-fatale… it’s very moving as a dance track yet provocative like a sex scene in a movie”.

Available on the NINA & RADIO WOLF single ‘My Dark’ via https://iloveninamusic.bandcamp.com/track/my-dark

https://www.iloveninamusic.com/

https://www.radiowolfmusic.com/


PROPAGANDA Wenn Ich Mir Was Wuenschen Duerfte

Michael Mertens and Ralf Dörper starting a new chapter of PROPAGANDA young German singer-songwriter Thunder Bae was perhaps on not on anyone’s bingo card at the start of 2024. She gave a superbly enticing performance in a haunting cover of ‘Wenn Ich Mir Was Wünschen Dürfte’ (translated into English as “If I had a wish”), a Weimar-era song written by Friedrich Hollaender in 1930 also featuring Oscar winning pianist Hauschka.

Available on the PROPAGANDA album ‘Propaganda’ via by Bureau B

https://propband.tilda.ws/


R. MISSING Sleep Will Darken It

Following a trail of sporadic singles with minimal promotional fanfare, R.MISSING have not been straightforward to follow. But with the enigmatic voice of the appropriately named Sharon Shy and the backing of Henry Frost, their alluring pop noir has been compelling when it hits the spot. Short and sharp with the air of a more electronic CHROMATICS, ‘Sleep Will Darken It’ came from their long awaited debut album.

Available on the R. MISSING album ‘Knife Shook Your Hand’ via Terminal Echo

https://www.instagram.com/r.missing/


MARIA UZOR What U Need

“I wrote this track on a social media break as an ode to reclaiming oneself from the grasps of Musk et al” said Maria Uzor, best known previously for being a member of SINK YA TEETH with Gemma Cullingford. Self-produced with a feisty twisted energy, ‘What U Need’ was a techno anthem celebrating detox from the online world that signalled another development in her fearsome beat-laden underground.

Available on the MARIA UZOR single ‘What U Need’ via https://mariauzor.bandcamp.com/track/what-u-need-single

https://mariauzor.com


PATRICIA WOLF The Secret Lives Of Birds

Combining modern and natural worlds, one key aspect in the music of Patricia Wolf is her use of field recordings and this shapes her new album ‘The Secret Lives of Birds’ into a soundtrack for an as-yet-unmade wildlife documentary. While the ambience is very beautiful at times, there are darker moments of angst and sadness driven by concern. Self-explanatory and with synthetic droplets simulating contact calls, ‘The Secret Lives of Birds’ title piece sets the scene.

Available on the PATRICIA WOLF album ‘The Secret Lives of Birds’ via Nite Hive

https://www.instagram.com/patriciawolf_music/


XENO & OAKLANDER Magic Of The Manifold

From their Connecticut laboratory bubble, the new XENO & OAKLANDER album sees a further refinement to their precise yet spirited productions. Past works have demonstrated and reinforced Liz Wendelbo and Sean McBride’s talents as the Jane Birkin and Serge Gainsbourg of synth. With an immediate rhythmic bounce, ‘Magic Of The Manifold’ is classic XENO & OAKLANDER with its squelchy bassline programming being a prominent feature.

Available on the XENO & OAKLANDER album ‘Via Negativa (in the doorway light)’ via Dais Records

https://www.facebook.com/xenoandoaklndr


YOTA & JOHAN AGEBJÖRN Universe In Flames

Yota is a Paris-based singer / songwriter hailing from Stockholm, while Johan Agebjörn is the Swedish producer who is best known as the instrumental half of SALLY SHAPIRO. Blending his melancholic electronic pop style to her sumptuous vocals, ‘Universe In Flames’ provides a telling global warning message. A fine mix of Scandipop, synthwave and rock with sinister twists, it showcased the best of both talents, combining classic synthpop styles with dance music.

Available on the YOTA & JOHAN AGEBJÖRN EP ‘Universe In Flames’ is released by Keytar Records

https://www.instagram.com/yota_official_artist/

https://www.instagram.com/johan.agebjorn/


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK’s 2024 playlist ‘The Great Bleep Forward’ containing over 230 tracks from the year can be listened to on Spotify at https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4xMrAkCbeWvUmTfrN6i6Gu


Text by Chi Ming Lai
13 December 2024

GENEVA JACUZZI Interview

Photo by David Zuckerman

Geneva Jacuzzi is an artist whose oeuvre includes music, live theatre, installations, set design, costume, makeup and set decoration.

Released recently by Dais Records, ‘Triple Fire’ is her third full-length album, following her official debut  ‘Lamaze’ in 2010 and 2016’s ‘Technophelia’. Based in Los Angeles, Geneva Jacuzzi brings a collaborative approach to ‘Triple Fire’ while vocally she continues to recall the delightfully odd mannerisms of Gina Kikoine, Lene Lovich and Jyl.

Quirky and fun, ‘Triple Fire’ presents a hit parade of playful avant pop and sly post-apocalyptic camp across 12 songs, each possessing an immediate if occasionally chaotic burst of energy. Geneva Jacuzzi spoke to ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK about her artistic process and her take on the state of the modern world…

You’re an artist with many facets, what attracted you to making music and particularly electronic music?

When I moved to LA at 18, I was fortunate to meet some incredible people who were true music heads, a little bit older, record collectors, book collectors, philosophy quoters, tellers of stories, owners of 10,000 rare obscure books and records kind of people leftover from the 80s and 90s art and music scenes who co-mingled with the hipsters of LA. Mind you, this is the early 2000s, no YouTube or internet music so prior to that, the only electronic music I had heard was 80s pop and disco (which I loved but always felt so produced and unattainable)

Then all of the sudden I was exposed to early CABARET VOLTAIRE, THROBBING GRISTLE, KRAFTWERK, LEGENDARY PINK DOTS, CHROME, HARDCORE DEVO, THE STRANGLERS, early CURE and HUMAN LEAGUE, WIRE, KRAUTROCK, SUN RA, CAN, THE HOMOSEXUALS, LOS MICROWAVES, PALAIS SCHAUMBURG, DER PLAN, DAF and Kate Bush. It all blew my mind because I had never heard anything like it before. But the minimal synth was what really hit my core at the time. I think because it was so simple, my little brain was like “I can make this” so I tried it… and was hooked.

I didn’t have money to buy gear but I would run thrift store keyboards through pedals to manipulate sound and sometimes friends would loan me synths and I would spend hours just designing sounds. I had no intention of being a musician. I was just playing around and challenging myself… for fun and escape. It became a compulsion. I think my lack of musical skill combined with a passion for sound manipulation and inclination towards pop melody started to yield interesting results and I discovered I had a knack for composition.

Did you have an epiphanal moment with a synth, and if so, with which one?

My first real synth I experimented with was a Sequential Prophet One and I feel really fortunate to have had a friend who loaned me one for a couple of years. I remember jamming on it and turning knobs without any knowledge of what does what until I got to the point where the synth would make no sound and I had to figure out WHY?? It literally forced me to learn about what each knob is doing. But it was a great way to learn. It was like being lost in a foreign city with no map and you have to go around asking for directions and looking at the position of the sun and buildings until one day, you just know where you are and how to get to where you wanna go instinctually.

Your first official album release ‘Lamaze’ in 2010 was a collection of 4 track and 8 track recordings as well as demos, what inspired you to issue them “as seen” rather than polish them up?

Honestly, I didn’t think I had any other way of polishing them up. I didn’t own a computer and the songs were accidents trapped in tape so recreating them in a studio didn’t seem like an option. It’s not like I had a record advance or money to go into the studio either. I was just experimenting with music and then eventually someone wanted to press it on vinyl. I’m pretty sure at the time, I thought they sounded perfect as is. It didn’t occur to me to fix or change anything. It’s like having a kid with a crooked nose. What, are you going to take them to a plastic surgeon at age 6? I suppose you could but that would be weird. And what if the kids face grew and the fake nose stayed small? It would just be a bad idea.

Your second album ‘Technophelia’ took a few years and was much more of a produced record, how do you look back on its gestation?

That’s so funny. I recorded Technophelia on GarageBand and the vocals were done with the little microphone above the screen on my white MacBook. Not kidding. But I never used soft synths. I think Chris Coady levelled up the sound in mixing though. He’s a total boss.

I don’t know why the record took so long. Now that I think about it, all of my records take a long time. Not that I’m sitting and working on them for years or anything. I’m just recording songs and playing shows and making art and living life and things come together when they come together. I’ve never been one to wait for ideal situations before I do things. I’ve got my paws in lots of different projects and things come together when they do. My new record coming out is the first in 8 or 9 years but only because I was working on video projects and live performances for a few years. Then I came back to the music again only in the last two years.

The songs on ‘Technophelia’ ranged from synthpop like ‘Casket’ to dysfunctional disco like ‘Cannibal Babies’, could these be now seen as blueprints for where you are now with ‘Triple Fire’?

A little bit, yes. Except I had originally planned to do something totally different. Then when I got started, it sounded like the same kind of stuff that I’ve done in the past. Which is cool but not very interesting to me. I think I realized that I have my way of doing things and if I expect different results, I need to start including different people.

‘Technophelia’ was just me in my room and ‘Triple Fire’ was me with my friends. I brought in other producers and songwriters to collaborate on this record. My friends Roderick Edens and Andrew Briggs who have a great band REPTILE TILE in Virginia Beach. The three of us worked on the majority of the tracks together and it was fun blending skills and styles. Also worked with Josh da Costa on a track and Andrew Clinco from DRAB MAJESTY produced a track as well. This was my first time collaborating like this and it was really fun for me to move out of my comfort zone.

Many of your musical influences appear to be European?

It’s true. Love me some kraut and Italo disco. I don’t know what drew me towards that part of the world. Perhaps there is a depth to it that reflects a culture or history that Americans have yet to achieve. But many American bands like CHROME and DEVO hooked me as well. I think because there is a sense of humor and self-awareness that pokes fun at the insanity of America that I can really appreciate. After all, I am American and I am f*cking insane.

Quite a bit of time has passed since ‘Technophelia’, so has there been any changes in your creative and recording process for ‘Triple Fire’, be it from tech developments or collaborative opportunities?

It’s all about collaboration. ‘Technophilia’ was the peak of my loneliness’. Which I find beautiful but you can only go so far on your own before you start sounding repetitive. I also don’t feel the need to prove anything as far as my musical abilities go. I could of course become a better musician but I don’t think that song writing is about musical skill. It’s about sublimating a moment in time or an experience. ‘Triple Fire’ was me expanding into a collaborative space (which, honestly is a huge challenge for me because I never ever felt comfortable doing that in the past), Roderick has an amazing studio in Virginia Beach that we recorded at so having access to all of those synths also expanded the sound quite a bit. Andy brought in a bundle of synth racks so we had a bountiful bank of sound to choose from. It was such a fun experience working on this record.

‘Art Is Dangerous’ celebrates the subversive potential of all art, what inspired you make such a statement?

Funny enough, it was an accident. Roderick (who co-wrote) misread something on the TV screen one night after our recording session and yelled out “ART IS DANGEROUS?!?!” We looked at each other and both knew that it would be the title to the track that we were working on. Then the lyrics started flowing. I co-mingle with the art world and it was fun to play around with the absurdity of it all. Industry, ego, sensationalism, commodification, celebrity. The bridge vocals are all clichés. “All is fair in love and war”, “All that glitters isn’t gold”!

Cliché is a big theme on ‘Triple Fire’. We have songs like ‘Rock and a Hard Place’, ’Take it or Leave it’, I felt like pop music relies heavily on simplicity and stupid lyrics so I thought it would be interesting to go all in on using the most mundane phrases of the English language to describe something mysterious and deep.

You’ve said ‘Dry’ is about being ghosted after a date but is there a wider metaphor?

There always is lol. “Set it and Forget it” is a catch phrase from a 1990s infomercial selling a mechanical appliance. I suppose I felt that the modern approach to love via technology sort of mechanizes the magical. Not to say we are being dehumanized by dating apps or anything lol… But shopping for love on a cell phone can definitely alter amount of value we place on our human interactions thus creating a tricky landscape for a type of love that celebrates coincidence and the sweetness of imperfection. I’m an over thinker so when I get my heart broken by my cell phone, I tend to find the absurdity of it all and can’t help but see how funny it is when the mere chime sound of a text message is enough to ignite a Pavlovian flood of emotions… or in this case… No text message!

How did Andrew Clinco come to produce ‘Speed Of Light’? How was his approach compared with your own and was there something you learnt that you will continue with your own productions?

Andrew and I have been friends for years and have collaborated on different projects and bands in the past so when I told him I was making a new record and hoped to work with him on something, he was super down. I’m pretty sure he sat down one night with me in mind and cooked up the track to ’Speed of Light’. When I heard it, it was a definite “Yes!” And I heard the vocals / lyrics in my head almost immediately. I recorded the demo vox then we finished it up together in his studio.

Andrew is one of those special kind of humans that can do everything… but unlike me, he does it quickly and has some incredible production tricks up his sleeve that I have yet to master. He is a machine who compulsively makes music non-stop and I witnessed the effects of his skill with production. It’s almost effortless and our personalities really get along so it was super fun and easy to work together. When it comes to collaborating, it’s important to pick the right people. I’m fortunate to have friends like Andrew who are incredibly talented and funny who totally get it.

Is there a key track or favourite on ‘Triple Fire’ which summarises what you were hoping to achieve on this album?

It changes. ‘Art is dangerous’ and ‘Dry’ feel the most “Geneva Jacuzzi” but I definitely strayed from the box with tracks like ‘Heart Full of Poison’, ‘Rock and a Hard Place’ and ‘Keep it Secret’ which I love. But ‘Bow Tie Eater’ , ‘Nu2U’ and ‘Yo-yo Boy’ are secret favorites. I wish they were singles. ‘Laps of Luxury’ is also a strong track and I’m really excited for it to come out with the release.

Who is ‘The Scene Ballerina’? Has this “main character syndrome” become worse since the advent of social media influencers or has it always been one of those social diseases particularly prevalent in the entertainment industry?

I think everyone knows a “Scene Ballerina”. That person who loves to make it all about themselves and craves drama. It’s so funny, I never really thought to write about those sorts of people but Andy and Roderick invented the term and we just ran with it for fun. I wasn’t expecting it to be a single but it ended up so poppy and fun that it made the cut. I don’t think that social media has anything to do with it. There have been Scene Ballerinas since the beginning of time. It’s just a weird personality type. So silly and obnoxious.

Before ‘Lamaze’ was released, MySpace was the social media of choice while Facebook and Twitter were beginning to gain traction but now, there’s TikTok and algorithms prioritising reels on Instagram… do you find this aspect overwhelming or does this all slot in nicely with your artistic ethos?

Yeah, it took me two and a half hours yesterday just to announce a show because I had to log into 20 different apps and tag everyone lol. So yeah, that can be overwhelming but I’m not ungrateful!!! Social media, like anything else has its pros and cons. It’s just bigger and faster. You can reach more people but good luck holding anyone’s attention. I think every artist over the age of 25 has a love-hate relationship with it because it’s real / not real and emotions and expectations get tangled up into algorithms and AI. I find it to be neutral in the artistic sense. Good and evil depending on how you look at it. I think it’s just an energy, like money. Best to not overthink it and play with the fun of it all. Because as much as I like to talk shit about it, my Instagram feed is full of probably the funniest memes on the planet and I find it deeply entertaining at times so there you go. I’m a tool like everyone else.

Walter Gropius said “Today’s luxuries are tomorrow’s norm” but has the world become more culturally ignorant despite it getting smaller due to the indirect consequence of smart tech becoming ubiquitous?

Great question! It’s such a fascinating phenomenon. Things getting smaller when everything gets bigger. Or slower when the world speeds up. Isn’t it crazy to think that art and music looked and sounded sooooo drastically different between the 1960-1980 verses 2004-2024. I think technology is creating the illusion of things speeding up but everyone is oddly slowing down as a result. At least as far as culture goes. And when it comes to ignorance? I don’t know if people are more ignorant as much as they place less value on things because of the amount of accessibility we have to it all at any given time with little effort and little investment.

Yeah, everything is going to shit but it’s always been going to shit. I think the pendulum swings but now the swing will be more subtle and unconscious / abstract. I believe that we will start to crave a deeper and more meaningful connection to things and each other which will tip things over in time. It will never be like how it was in the past. I’m rambling here. Probably not making any sense but I do believe it is the duty of the artist to keep making art regardless of it all and to strive to be authentic. Otherwise humanity is lost.

Have you any fears as an artist with the advent of AI and seemingly more conservative attitudes being shouted out louder than ever?

So much of that is outside of my scope. But I think about it often. I’m fascinated by it all.

Back to the pendulum, it will always swing left and right as long as we believe in the binaries of good and evil. Duality processors lol. I’m convinced AI is nothing more than parasitic intelligence or a self-cannibalising mechanism of the collective unconscious feeding back and eating itself alive.

What are your hopes? Can music, art and chaos energy save mankind?

Music and Art is the only thing that can. It is the only thing that has this far. Without it we would have destroyed ourselves thousands of years ago.


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its warmest thanks to Geneva Jacuzzi

Additional thanks to Frankie Davison at Stereo Sanctity

‘Triple Fire’ is released by Dais Records in various vinyl LP, CD + digital formats, available from https://found.ee/TripleFire

https://www.genevajacuzzi.com/

https://www.facebook.com/genevajacuzziofficial/

https://x.com/genevajacuzzi

https://www.instagram.com/genevaxjacuzzi/


Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
24 September 2024

GENEVA JACUZZI Triple Fire

US independent label Dais Records are on a roll with a roster now including acts such as KITE, TR/ST, ADULT. and DRAB MAJESTY; the latest signing is Los Angeles-based multimedia artist Geneva Jacuzzi.

With a detached Eurocentric poise reminiscent of Gina X, her oeuvre includes not just music, but performance art, live theatre, installations, set design, costume, makeup and set decoration. Her full length debut came in 2010 with ‘Lamaze’ which was assembled from various lo-fi recordings and demos made over the years. Featuring the eerie synthpop of ‘Casket’ and the dysfunctional disco lento of ‘Cannibal Babies’, her second more polished long player ‘Technophelia’ followed in 2016.

‘Triple Fire’ is her third full-length album which she has primarily written and produced with the additional input of a cast including Roderick Edens and Andrew Briggs. It is something she has described “as a hit parade of wildcard synthpop and sly post-apocalyptic camp” as well as “the record that’s going to save mankind”. While all these cheeky proclamations are in the name of art, what Geneva Jacuzzi does definitely possess is catchy hooks in her own surrealist world.

With chunky New York disco influences, the opening salvo ‘Laps Of Luxury’ presents propulsive art pop in the sultry vein of Jyl. More detached but revealing some squawky guitar, ‘Art Is Dangerous’ is Geneva Jacuzzi’s joyous celebration of the art community and its potential for cultural subversion.

Produced by Andrew Clinco of coldwave exponents and label mates DRAB MAJESTY, ‘Speed Of Light’ is jagged and more nonchalant vocally while displaying an enigmatic demeanour, ‘Nu2U’ introduces a deep groove. Brilliantly catchy, ‘Dry’ is alluring danceable synthpop but although it goes weirdly discordant halfway through, it works as it highlights the song’s lyrical gist about dating disconnection following being ghosted.

In ‘Scene Ballerina’, there are cascading modular lines and even jazz piano inflections over the strong rhythmic centre while ‘Take It Or Leave It’ provides glorious new wave pop. ‘Keep It Secret’ adds mystery and a chill to an offbeat bounce with a feline touch recalling Eartha Kitt.

With a vintage drum machine backbone and understated vocals sections duelling with a bizarre gothic backdrop, ‘Rock and A Hard Place’ is oddball and fun in the manner of Lene Lovich, before ‘Bow Tie Eater’ gets some electro funk in to provide another flavour.

The playful ‘Heart Full Of Poison’ parties like its 1983 and could be a synthier Cyndi Lauper but then there’s a sax break to authenticate that desired effect. ‘Yo-Yo Boy’ provides a moody conclusion to ‘Triple Fire’ with cascading synths and Geneva Jacuzzi’s vocal both appropriately soothing.

With Geneva Jacuzzi herself saying the album is “Funny, sexy, sad, scary, witty, hopeful, menacing. Eventually it deconstructs, turns into a party, and then ends sweet and soft”, ‘Triple Fire’ is enjoyably quirky in its delightfully odd mix of accessible electronic pop and energetic art chaos.


‘Triple Fire’ is released by Dais Records on 23 August 2024 in vinyl LP, CD + digital formats, available from https://found.ee/TripleFire

https://www.genevajacuzzi.com/

https://www.facebook.com/genevajacuzziofficial/

https://x.com/genevajacuzzi

https://www.instagram.com/genevaxjacuzzi/


Text by Chi Ming Lai
20 August 2024