3700551785650
3700551785667

Pulsar

L'Imperatrice

Regular
£15.99
Sale
Regular
£15.99
Sold Out
Unit Price
per 

Format: CD

Cat No: QLIMA040CD

PRE-ORDER: This item will be shipped with the aim to deliver on release day.

PRE-ORDER: This item will be shipped with the aim to deliver on release day.

Release Date:  07 June 2024

Label:  Microqlima

Packaging Type:  Jewel Case

No of Units:  1

Barcode:  3700551785650

Genres:  Indie  Pop-Rock  

Release Date:  07 June 2024

Label:  Microqlima

Packaging Type:  Gate Fold Vinyl

No of Units:  1

Barcode:  3700551785667

Genres:  Indie  Pop-Rock  

  • Description

    With two successful albums and a sold-out world tour under their belt, Paris-based L'Imperatrice have matriculated from a good-times instrumental act created by music critic Charles de Boisseguin to a six-piece powerhouse whose sashaying mixes of funk and French Touch, disco and deep house now include the fetching vocals of singer Flore Benguigui. Their new album Pulsar, is a focused but far-reaching record, the jubilant testament of a band with plenty to say and the skills to say it themselves.

    Across 10 tracks, L'Imperatrice move freely and authoritatively among the sounds they love, bridging hip-hop, kosmische, and modern pop with their most unabashed embraces of French Touch and international house ever. Benguigui, meanwhile, boldly sings of self-empowerment by shirking beauty standards, ageism, and drab normalcy, with a little help from an exciting set of new friends.

    A longtime fan who had seen the band multiple times, Maggie Rogers flew to Paris to lead the svelte and graceful "Any Way," approaching the song with an unabashed vim. They had a similar encounter with Erick the Architect, who was so enthusiastic about the sample- based and panoramic "Sweet & Sublime" that Benguigui scrapped one of her own verses to make more room for him. And Italian singer Fabiana Martone (Nu Genea) crafted the melody for "Danza Marilu" the moment she heard its disco thump.

    Throughout these 10 songs, L'Imperatrice espouses the rare willingness to be real about life and its woes while also sounding like a perfect picture of joy. Pulsar opens like a window being slid open onto an unimagined world. During the title-track finale, where a casual confession of suffering climbs into a mighty climax rooted in redemption, the band intertwines dubstep, turntablism, and symphonic strings to offer a bracing conclusion: however we are is OK.

    Description

    With two successful albums and a sold-out world tour under their belt, Paris-based L'Imperatrice have matriculated from a good-times instrumental act created by music critic Charles de Boisseguin to a six-piece powerhouse whose sashaying mixes of funk and French Touch, disco and deep house now include the fetching vocals of singer Flore Benguigui. Their new album Pulsar, is a focused but far-reaching record, the jubilant testament of a band with plenty to say and the skills to say it themselves.

    Across 10 tracks, L'Imperatrice move freely and authoritatively among the sounds they love, bridging hip-hop, kosmische, and modern pop with their most unabashed embraces of French Touch and international house ever. Benguigui, meanwhile, boldly sings of self-empowerment by shirking beauty standards, ageism, and drab normalcy, with a little help from an exciting set of new friends.

    A longtime fan who had seen the band multiple times, Maggie Rogers flew to Paris to lead the svelte and graceful "Any Way," approaching the song with an unabashed vim. They had a similar encounter with Erick the Architect, who was so enthusiastic about the sample- based and panoramic "Sweet & Sublime" that Benguigui scrapped one of her own verses to make more room for him. And Italian singer Fabiana Martone (Nu Genea) crafted the melody for "Danza Marilu" the moment she heard its disco thump.

    Throughout these 10 songs, L'Imperatrice espouses the rare willingness to be real about life and its woes while also sounding like a perfect picture of joy. Pulsar opens like a window being slid open onto an unimagined world. During the title-track finale, where a casual confession of suffering climbs into a mighty climax rooted in redemption, the band intertwines dubstep, turntablism, and symphonic strings to offer a bracing conclusion: however we are is OK.

  • Tracklisting

      Disc 1

      Side 1

      • 1. Cosmogonie
      • 2. Amour Ex Machina
      • 3. Me Da Igual
      • 4. Love From The Other Side
      • 5. Danza Marilu (feat Fabiana Martone)
      • 6. Any Way (feat Maggie Rogers)
      • 7. Deja-vue
      • 8. Girl!
      • 9. Sweet & Sublime (feat Erick the Architect)
      • 10. Pulsar

    Tracklisting

      Disc 1

      Side 1

      • 1. Cosmogonie
      • 2. Amour Ex Machina
      • 3. Me Da Igual
      • 4. Love From The Other Side
      • 5. Danza Marilu (feat Fabiana Martone)
      • 6. Any Way (feat Maggie Rogers)
      • 7. Deja-vue
      • 8. Girl!
      • 9. Sweet & Sublime (feat Erick the Architect)
      • 10. Pulsar