"I'm DADA": 180 Gram Vinyl LP
"I'm DADA": 180 Gram Vinyl LP
Holy Wave

"I'm DADA": 180 Gram Vinyl LP

SSQ252LP
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Pre-Order Item. Release Date Subject to Change.
Label: Suicide Squeeze
Release Date: 10th July

I'm gonna be annoyed if you tell me you've never listened to a Holy Wave record, cos I'm worried you may have been living a life without some of the addictive lo-fi garage rock and psychedelic dream pop of the last decade. The band return with a single disorientating and warped mbv shoegaze dreampop swirler, which achieves that ultimate goal of sounding like the perfect pop song played out in the wild abandons of your sleepy mind.

Working alongside experimental duo Lorelle Meets the Obsolete at their studio El Derrumbe in Ensenada, Mexico, the sessions folded community into the album, though its emotional core had already formed over months of pre-production. Joo Joo Ashworth, mixing engineer and longtime friend, also provided a pivotal presence helping crystallize the album’s rhythmic language and subtly expanding the band’s sound. The songs began reflecting conversations about fatherhood and partnership, breakups and estrangement, the queasy acceleration of AI, and what it means to remain present and principled while the world lurches unpredictably forward.
This tension is not announced but absorbed into the music. Holy Wave stretches their familiar sense of woozy atmosphere into something leaner and more direct. There are more loops and samples woven throughout than before, grooves that feel constructed, cyclical, hypnotic. Some tracks drift toward dub’s elastic spaciousness; others pulse with cinematic downtempo gravity. There is a fresh sense of momentum throughout the record, rhythms that pull forward, dream-saturated textures, sheets of fuzz, and softly suspended vocals.
If earlier Holy Wave records often felt defined by their sense of drift, i’m DADA feels newly grounded. The album doesn’t abandon immersion; it disciplines it. Grooves settle, repetitions accrue weight, and the music is composed and unshaken amongst its heavier themes. What emerges is not reinvention but a sharpening, with Holy Wave sounding less like a band drifting through atmosphere and more like one deliberately shaping it amongst the chaos.

 

Tracklisting:

1. US 54
2. s33.u.in/HAL
3. happy song
4. first DAE
5. lull
6. i’m DADA
7. unison
8. too one
9. to the other
10. dewey’s dirge

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