Mirrors
by DJ Seinfeld
— Released 3rd September 2021
Swedish producer DJ Seinfeld returns with his brand new album ‘Mirrors’.
If much of DJ Seinfeld’s previous work was characterised by a sepia-tinged haze, a result of the producer’s deliberately lo-fi production techniques, then brand new album ‘Mirrors’ sees his music come firmly into focus.
“On this album I wanted to retain a lot of the raw emotionality that brought people to my music in the first place,” says Armand Jakobsson, better known as DJ Seinfeld. ...
Swedish producer DJ Seinfeld returns with his brand new album ‘Mirrors’.
If much of DJ Seinfeld’s previous work was characterised by a sepia-tinged haze, a result of the producer’s deliberately lo-fi production techniques, then brand new album ‘Mirrors’ sees his music come firmly into focus.
“On this album I wanted to retain a lot of the raw emotionality that brought people to my music in the first place,” says Armand Jakobsson, better known as DJ Seinfeld. “But I also wanted to become a much better producer. It’s been an arduous process but it’s a real statement of where I’m at as a producer and person right now. I’ve been through various sonic explorations in the past few years but have come to understand what people like about my music and how to move forward with it.”
Recorded between Berlin and Malmo, ‘Mirrors’ is the follow-up to Seinfeld’s critically acclaimed 2017 debut album ‘Time Spent Away From U’ and his first for Ninja Tune. Named after a quote by Armand’s favourite writer, Argentinean novelist Julio Cortázar, the album finds the producer in a more settled and grounded mood after an unfortunate family incident forced the producer to spend more time at home in his native Sweden over the past few years.
“My dad had a stroke a few years ago which means I need to be home more to help,” he says. “Aside from the obvious tragedy of the situation, it’s also helped ground me in reality. Even when I was at the peak of touring, I’ve always had something I’ve had to come home to and contribute to and it’s meant I’ve grown up a lot and really seen the importance of having a happy relationship and a good group of friends around who will nurture you and appreciate your idiosyncrasies.”
“I saw this quote from Cortázar recently, which says ‘You were always my mirror, to see myself I had to look at you,’ and it just made sense in relation to this album. I don’t know who I am but perhaps it’s easier to see the silhouettes through things like heartbreak, family trauma, but also through the peculiar flickers of light and love that enter your life. If the first album was about getting past a breakup, this one is trying to understand who’s standing on the finish line. This album is my mirror.”
Rising to prominence in 2016 as part of the lo-fi house scene alongside producers including Ross From Friends and Mall Grab, DJ Seinfeld (whose name is a result of extended sessions watching the classic American sitcom after a breakup and move to Barcelona) released his debut album in 2017 which received plaudits from Rolling Stone and Pitchfork to name a couple. It also gained attention from contemporaries like Flume, Flying Lotus, Bonobo and Martin Garrix and saw Seinfeld become a globally in-demand DJ playing sets everywhere from Glastonbury to Coachella, Warehouse Project, Sónar By Night and MoMaPS1, sharing stages with everyone from Jeff Mills to Stormzy, Underworld and Bicep as well as accompanying Disclosure on several dates of their US tour. In 2018 he became part of a select group of DJs that includes Moodymann, DJ Koze and Nina Kraviz when he was chosen to curate an edition of the iconic DJ Kicks mix series. To top it off, Aphex Twin began playing his track ‘Sakura’ in his live shows.
2019 saw Seinfeld launch his Young Ethics label with the ‘Galazy’ EP, which saw support from The Blessed Madonna, Gerd Janson, Jamie Jones and Maceo Plex as well as being preserved for cultural record in the Swedish Royal Library’s Archive For Sound. In the same year he also recorded an Essential Mix for Radio 1. Over the years Seinfeld has remixed Disclosure, Omar Souleyman, George Fitzgerald, Bob Moses, Honey Dijon, SHOUSE, Pendulum, Prospa, MJ Cole, Baltra and more.
Simultaneously optimistic and melancholic in tone, the album is preceded by the single ‘U Already Know’, an italo-tinged summer anthem in waiting featuring an acapella from guest-vocalist Teira, whom Seinfeld met while DJing at a warehouse party in LA.
“That track is very much in the vein of music I’ve released on Young Ethics recently,” he says. “There’s a touch of Italo and it’s got a real funk feel to it. I was happy with it as an instrumental but I added the vocal and it just fitted perfectly and brought the track to life.”
The deliberately naïve production techniques initially used on Seinfeld’s music belie the fact that he is from a long-line of classical musicians and has been playing classical piano from the age of 10. “My dad used to be an opera singer and he met my mum at a musical Conservatoire in Copenhagen,” he tells us. “She’s now a piano teacher and plays flute while my sister is a professional cellist and opera singer too. I can appreciate classical music but I reached a point where I felt Chopin didn’t have all the answers I was looking for!”
With the world slowly waking up, thoughts have turned to creating a live show, with Seinfeld currently working with an esteemed, world class music and lighting designer. He’s already booked to close the Ray-Ban Stage at Primavera in 2022 (with Bicep, Jamie xx and Disclosure announced to close the other days), with more live date announcements imminent.
“It’s been nice to have time away to reflect and recuperate,” he tells us. “But I’m looking forward to getting back to those moments on the road where life becomes a little Anthony Bourdain-esque.”
Citing late night sessions learning how to produce on his laptop while at university in Edinburgh and ‘pretending to be Burial’ as key turning points in his journey, Seinfeld has now produced an album with all the emotional depth and musical dexterity of those electronic luminaries. ‘Mirrors’ touches on everything from UK Garage to down-tempo house to ambient to breaks and is an at times tender, at times euphoric sonic journey with a producer slowly realising his full potential.
Mirrors
by DJ Seinfeld
— Released 3rd September 2021
Physical |
---|
2xLP (ZEN274D)
Colour Vinyl 2LP - 1x 140g Pantone Pink vinyl and 1x 140g Pantone Yellow vinyl housed in paper inners and a gatefold sleeve with remus spine and silver metallic Pantone detail. Download code included. Art Direction and Design by Jay Vaz. Illustrations by Rosie Rackham. |
2xLP (ZEN274)
2x 140g Black vinyl housed in paper inners and a gatefold sleeve with remus spine and silver metallic Pantone detail. Download code included. Art Direction and Design by Jay Vaz. Illustrations by Rosie Rackham. |
2xLP (ZEN274SIG)
2x 140g Signed black vinyl housed in paper inners and a gatefold sleeve with remus spine and silver metallic Pantone detail. Download code included. Art Direction and Design by Jay Vaz. Illustrations by Rosie Rackham. Includes: 1 x - 'Mirrors' 12x12 Poster [ZEN274POSTER12] |
CD (ZENCD274)
CD in a gatefold sleeve with remus spine and silver metallic Pantone detail. Art Direction and Design by Jay Vaz. Illustrations by Rosie Rackham. |
Digital |
---|
SAVE TO SPOTIFY
Add this release to your Spotify account now You will be asked to login with your Spotify Account Read our Terms & Conditions about this service here |
MP3 (ZENDNL274) |
16-bit WAV (ZENDNL274W) |
Bundles |
||
---|---|---|
|
Physical |
Digital |
||
---|---|---|---|
2xLP (ZEN274D)
Colour Vinyl 2LP - 1x 140g Pantone Pink vinyl and 1x 140g Pantone Yellow vinyl housed in paper inners and a gatefold sleeve with remus spine and silver metallic Pantone detail. Download code included. Art Direction and Design by Jay Vaz. Illustrations by Rosie Rackham. |
SAVE TO SPOTIFY
Add this release to your Spotify account now You will be asked to login with your Spotify Account Read our Terms & Conditions about this service here |
||
2xLP (ZEN274)
2x 140g Black vinyl housed in paper inners and a gatefold sleeve with remus spine and silver metallic Pantone detail. Download code included. Art Direction and Design by Jay Vaz. Illustrations by Rosie Rackham. |
MP3 (ZENDNL274) | ||
2xLP (ZEN274SIG)
2x 140g Signed black vinyl housed in paper inners and a gatefold sleeve with remus spine and silver metallic Pantone detail. Download code included. Art Direction and Design by Jay Vaz. Illustrations by Rosie Rackham. Includes: 1 x - 'Mirrors' 12x12 Poster [ZEN274POSTER12] |
16-bit WAV (ZENDNL274W) | ||
CD (ZENCD274)
CD in a gatefold sleeve with remus spine and silver metallic Pantone detail. Art Direction and Design by Jay Vaz. Illustrations by Rosie Rackham. |
|||
Tracklist
- CD
- 2xLP
- 2xLP
- 2xLP
- MP3
- 16-bit WAV
-
1
She Loves Me
-
2
Walking With Ur Smile
-
3
U Already Know
-
4
The Right Place (feat. Teira)
-
5
Home Calling
-
6
These Things Will Come To Be
-
7
Tell Me One More Time
-
8
Someday
-
9
I Feel Better
-
10
Song For The Lonely
-
Play All (10)
-
1
She Loves Me
-
2
Walking With Ur Smile
-
3
U Already Know
-
4
The Right Place (feat. Teira)
-
5
Home Calling
-
6
These Things Will Come To Be
-
7
Tell Me One More Time
-
8
Someday
-
9
I Feel Better
-
10
Song For The Lonely
-
Play All (10)
-
1
She Loves Me
-
2
Walking With Ur Smile
-
3
U Already Know
-
4
The Right Place (feat. Teira)
-
5
Home Calling
-
6
These Things Will Come To Be
-
7
Tell Me One More Time
-
8
Someday
-
9
I Feel Better
-
10
Song For The Lonely
-
Play All (10)
-
1
She Loves Me
-
2
Walking With Ur Smile
-
3
U Already Know
-
4
The Right Place (feat. Teira)
-
5
Home Calling
-
6
These Things Will Come To Be
-
7
Tell Me One More Time
-
8
Someday
-
9
I Feel Better
-
10
Song For The Lonely
-
Play All (10)
Swedish producer DJ Seinfeld returns with his brand new album ‘Mirrors’.
If much of DJ Seinfeld’s previous work was characterised by a sepia-tinged haze, a result of the producer’s deliberately lo-fi production techniques, then brand new album ‘Mirrors’ sees his music come firmly into focus.
“On this album I wanted to retain a lot of the raw emotionality that brought people to my music in the first place,” says Armand Jakobsson, better known as DJ Seinfeld. ...
Swedish producer DJ Seinfeld returns with his brand new album ‘Mirrors’.
If much of DJ Seinfeld’s previous work was characterised by a sepia-tinged haze, a result of the producer’s deliberately lo-fi production techniques, then brand new album ‘Mirrors’ sees his music come firmly into focus.
“On this album I wanted to retain a lot of the raw emotionality that brought people to my music in the first place,” says Armand Jakobsson, better known as DJ Seinfeld. “But I also wanted to become a much better producer. It’s been an arduous process but it’s a real statement of where I’m at as a producer and person right now. I’ve been through various sonic explorations in the past few years but have come to understand what people like about my music and how to move forward with it.”
Recorded between Berlin and Malmo, ‘Mirrors’ is the follow-up to Seinfeld’s critically acclaimed 2017 debut album ‘Time Spent Away From U’ and his first for Ninja Tune. Named after a quote by Armand’s favourite writer, Argentinean novelist Julio Cortázar, the album finds the producer in a more settled and grounded mood after an unfortunate family incident forced the producer to spend more time at home in his native Sweden over the past few years.
“My dad had a stroke a few years ago which means I need to be home more to help,” he says. “Aside from the obvious tragedy of the situation, it’s also helped ground me in reality. Even when I was at the peak of touring, I’ve always had something I’ve had to come home to and contribute to and it’s meant I’ve grown up a lot and really seen the importance of having a happy relationship and a good group of friends around who will nurture you and appreciate your idiosyncrasies.”
“I saw this quote from Cortázar recently, which says ‘You were always my mirror, to see myself I had to look at you,’ and it just made sense in relation to this album. I don’t know who I am but perhaps it’s easier to see the silhouettes through things like heartbreak, family trauma, but also through the peculiar flickers of light and love that enter your life. If the first album was about getting past a breakup, this one is trying to understand who’s standing on the finish line. This album is my mirror.”
Rising to prominence in 2016 as part of the lo-fi house scene alongside producers including Ross From Friends and Mall Grab, DJ Seinfeld (whose name is a result of extended sessions watching the classic American sitcom after a breakup and move to Barcelona) released his debut album in 2017 which received plaudits from Rolling Stone and Pitchfork to name a couple. It also gained attention from contemporaries like Flume, Flying Lotus, Bonobo and Martin Garrix and saw Seinfeld become a globally in-demand DJ playing sets everywhere from Glastonbury to Coachella, Warehouse Project, Sónar By Night and MoMaPS1, sharing stages with everyone from Jeff Mills to Stormzy, Underworld and Bicep as well as accompanying Disclosure on several dates of their US tour. In 2018 he became part of a select group of DJs that includes Moodymann, DJ Koze and Nina Kraviz when he was chosen to curate an edition of the iconic DJ Kicks mix series. To top it off, Aphex Twin began playing his track ‘Sakura’ in his live shows.
2019 saw Seinfeld launch his Young Ethics label with the ‘Galazy’ EP, which saw support from The Blessed Madonna, Gerd Janson, Jamie Jones and Maceo Plex as well as being preserved for cultural record in the Swedish Royal Library’s Archive For Sound. In the same year he also recorded an Essential Mix for Radio 1. Over the years Seinfeld has remixed Disclosure, Omar Souleyman, George Fitzgerald, Bob Moses, Honey Dijon, SHOUSE, Pendulum, Prospa, MJ Cole, Baltra and more.
Simultaneously optimistic and melancholic in tone, the album is preceded by the single ‘U Already Know’, an italo-tinged summer anthem in waiting featuring an acapella from guest-vocalist Teira, whom Seinfeld met while DJing at a warehouse party in LA.
“That track is very much in the vein of music I’ve released on Young Ethics recently,” he says. “There’s a touch of Italo and it’s got a real funk feel to it. I was happy with it as an instrumental but I added the vocal and it just fitted perfectly and brought the track to life.”
The deliberately naïve production techniques initially used on Seinfeld’s music belie the fact that he is from a long-line of classical musicians and has been playing classical piano from the age of 10. “My dad used to be an opera singer and he met my mum at a musical Conservatoire in Copenhagen,” he tells us. “She’s now a piano teacher and plays flute while my sister is a professional cellist and opera singer too. I can appreciate classical music but I reached a point where I felt Chopin didn’t have all the answers I was looking for!”
With the world slowly waking up, thoughts have turned to creating a live show, with Seinfeld currently working with an esteemed, world class music and lighting designer. He’s already booked to close the Ray-Ban Stage at Primavera in 2022 (with Bicep, Jamie xx and Disclosure announced to close the other days), with more live date announcements imminent.
“It’s been nice to have time away to reflect and recuperate,” he tells us. “But I’m looking forward to getting back to those moments on the road where life becomes a little Anthony Bourdain-esque.”
Citing late night sessions learning how to produce on his laptop while at university in Edinburgh and ‘pretending to be Burial’ as key turning points in his journey, Seinfeld has now produced an album with all the emotional depth and musical dexterity of those electronic luminaries. ‘Mirrors’ touches on everything from UK Garage to down-tempo house to ambient to breaks and is an at times tender, at times euphoric sonic journey with a producer slowly realising his full potential.