machines_type



Following the solid gold pop smash that was their debut 7″ Circles, South Coast soul boys :Kinema: return with their biggest and best song to date, My Beautiful Machines, a joyously upbeat love song to their synthesizers.

A live favourite, the band have been closing their sets with Machines for much of the past 6 months, prompting euphoric stage invasions at venues such as Proud in Camden and Brick Lane’s 93 Feet East.

Showing off the classic pop nous that has already seen the band likened to Phoenix, Hot Chip, Culture Club and even Wham!, My Beautiful Machines comes backed by Heartstrings, another fan favourite that this time celebrates that first heady, brain derailing, feeling of falling in love, and ‘I Love Your Beam’ what is possibly the world’s first song about the opposite sex to get way with using Star Trek metaphors.

Having spent the past six months building up a devoted, high kicking, table dancing following, including a devoted Japanese fan base, My Beautiful Machines sees the band ready to fulfill their potential as one of the UK’s best new bands.

Also available on heavyweight 12″ vinyl are the Drop Out Orchestra remixes of My Beautiful Machines and a 5 track digital EP (available Feb 28) with both the original versions, the remixes plus a bonus track I Love Your Beam.

Cover Photo courtesy of Jessica Gary | www.jessicagary.com

press

“Lead single, My Beautiful Machines, is an infectious ditty of retro-electro-funk that instantly echoes similarities between Montrealers Chromeo and Parisian pop-outfit Phoenix.” Notion

“An exercise in pure dancefloor grooves and slick romance” Electronic Rumours

“A blinding glow that’s packed with exciting potential” The Recommender

Kinema

biography

Thrown together across an epic European road trip Dom Ashton, Andy Nelson and Ross Flight discovered their shared love for music, laptops and famous actresses. :Kinema: have developed their sound over the last 18 months, combining elements of Yacht Rock, Soul and Contemporary Pop and Dance music into something sounding like Off The Wall-era Michael Jackson being re-imagined by a 21st Century Indie band.