Ice Cream Shares "Receiver" video via BlackBook | Out Now via Bad Actors Inc.

ICE CREAM SHARES "RECEIVER" VIDEO ON BLACKBOOK

'LOVE, ICE CREAM' DEBUT LP OUT NOW VIA BAD ACTORS INC. 

  WATCH & SHARE: Ice Cream - "Receiver"
"It harnesses the retro fabulousness of classic Moog synthesizers and nascent drum machines to create a sort of futuro-pop for a new generation of the black-clad and ennui-disposed." -BlackBook

LISTEN & SHARE
 Ice Cream - 'Love, Ice Cream'
"NO WAVE, NEW WAVE, WHATEVER YOU CALL IT, ICE CREAM'S DEBUT ALBUM IS EXTREMELY COOL AND FUN SHIT" - NOISEY
 WATCH & SHARE: Ice Cream - "Material"
"[Ice Cream] specialize in cold, minimalist tunes which blend live instrumentation with electronics" - THUMP Ice Cream are a Canadian duo making "molecular pop" whose debut LP 'Love, Ice Cream' came out last week on Bad Actors, with   NOISEY  praising it as "a strong intro to the duo's monochrome disco, neither new wave or no wave, but something else entirely." 

Today, they shared via BlackBook their newest video for the track "Receiver," which stars Brook Lynn Hytes, Miss Continental 2014-2015._________________________
Ice Cream is the Toronto based musical project of long time friends Carlyn Bezic and Amanda Crist. Since 2014, the duo’s minimal, machine inflected “molecular pop” has been sending icy pulses through Toronto’s underground.

Love, Ice Cream , their debut long-play, was produced by Young Guv (Ben Cook of Fucked Up) and Tony Price in co-ordination with Toronto’s secret weapon engineer Steve Chahley, and is due out now on Bad Actors Inc. Through the meticulous manipulation of Moog synthesizers, bass guitars, and various boom box inflated drum machines, the record finds Ice Cream melting down their acidic brand of oblique funk to its bare essentials.

Collaboration is a key component of Ice Cream’s musical and visual DNA. When they are not staring at mannequins and drum machines in their dimly lit sound laboratory, Crist and Bezic are also known to be two of the Toronto’s most industrious musical allies. As members of rock and roll powerhouse Darlene Shrugg, the Slim Twig band and U.S. Girls (Meghan Remy has been a key visual collaborator since the beginning) the duo’s distinct sonic and visual stylings continue to lend their city’s scene a heavy dose of cool.
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Published on June 07, 2016 22:00
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