Young-Sick
Under the moniker Young & Sick, LAโ€™s beloved album artist and fashion designer Nick Van Hofwegenโ€™s own musical career has had a smooth liftoff. Three years in the making, Young & Sick boasts a sparkling eponymous debut and stints at Coachella and SXSW earlier this year. Now in the midst of a North American summer tour in support of the new album, various media outlets have picked Hofwegen up as the next big thing following in line with The Weekndโ€™s brand of lush, downtempo, and production-focused R&B. Young & Sick will be stopping by The Independent in San Francisco July 3rd.

We caught the five-piece at The Drake Hotel in Toronto last month*, and we were pleasantly surprised by the band’s live execution of their studio album.

Theirs is a distinctly urban sound, thatโ€™s for sure. Young & Sick sits at the musically-structured and concrete end of the PBR&B continuum with the likes of Devontรฉ Hynes (Blood Orange) andย Black Atlass,ย a class readily accepted by the fashion industry, as witnessed by Hofwegenโ€™s relations with Urban Outfitters, rag & bone, and Jean-Baptiste Mondino. However, Young & Sick liveย falls into a fuller,ย more baroque pop-esque style, no doubt due to theย ample support from the band’s live female backup vocalist and violinist.

Young & Sick plays like an album dedicated to art and personal exploration. Itโ€™s guiltless. โ€œI am so damn happy, something must be very wrong. When life is smiling at me, why do I frown?โ€ Hofwegen asks on its opening track, โ€œMangrove.โ€ Its fade-aways spiral into dissonance behind hollow percussive knocks a la Gardens & Villa and its elementary vocal melodies rest comfortably in the hot summer air.

But the albumโ€™s tinny, jazz-inspired keyboard progressions give it an icy, metropolitan quality โ€“ that urban feeling of sitting in a glass-box office, freeing Young & Sick from seasonal boundaries. โ€œCounting Raindropsโ€ is equal parts April evening out and October afternoon picnic, focussing its attention to organic harmonies that somehow work without being perfectly stacked intervals. โ€œGloomโ€ enlists the help of a blues band section and a female scat singer; the latter is borrowed on โ€œGlass,โ€ but the instrumentation turns into deep bass grooves and shaker percussion.

โ€œMy home is the ocean floor with my blood long gone. Get me high and get my love; drink me in vials and let me go,โ€ Hofwegen begs soulfully in โ€œValium.โ€ Subtract some of the songโ€™s electronic aspects, and he could be performing in some 1960s New York nightclub. But cigarette smoke and fur coats donโ€™t fly so well in the summer of 2014, so pour a cold drink (lime, not lemon) and light an e-cig instead. Call into work sick; feign heatstroke. Hofwegen insists.

*This summer, The B-Side reports from locations worldwide including Berlin, London, Los Angeles, and Toronto.

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