Although it comes on like a lightly folktronic-infused, alt-pop groover, on arrival, the futuristic and affected vocals add a whole different feeling to the song, turning it into a chilled, cinematic and futuristic anti-anthem. I’m not really sure what an anti-anthem is, or if it is a thing at all, I’m using the phrase here to try to describe the power and the euphoric vibes that are created by a song so laid-back, so understated, so the opposite of what the term anthemic usually means but how equally powerful the end result is. less is more, as they say.

It swaggers along around a meticulous digital beat and the voice, as I say, is otherworldy and disembodied, but between these, the organic-sounding instrumentation tether the song in a more analogue sounding world, one of gently pulsing basslines and banks of vocal harmonies, shimmering synth washes dancing around chiming guitars.

I’m not really sure how you would categorise such a creation, or if you should even try. All that matters is that Moreorless is the sound of music taking a step into the future. It is the perfect bridge between the familiar sounds of the past, the alternative dance and electronic sounds of the present and a creative leap forward into one possible musical future.

Because of that, it is a song that is not only cool and beguiling, it is necessary and important and not many of those land on my desk in any given month.

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Musician, scribbler, historian, gnostic, seeker of enlightenment, asker of the wrong questions, delver into the lost archives, fugitive from the law of averages, blogger, quantum spanner, left footed traveller, music journalist, zenarchist, freelance writer, reviewer and gemini. People have woken up to worse.

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