Single Review: LA Talk

ASHY

Review by Danica Bryant // 16 February 2023
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Single Review: La Talk 1

LA Talk is the latest hit from Kiwi creative ASHY, a starlet who’s seen the stages of Electric Avenue, Going Global and even Texas’s South by Southwest. It’s a single that proves she knows pop music inside and out. 

LA Talk is undeniably polished to perfection. Slick basslines riding the modern disco-funk revival create a strong danceability, alongside clapping percussion and easy choruses which drive the track into sing-along territory. Although Ashy’s vocal melodies are plain, their extensive layering, subtle harmonies and perfect mixing give them a sense of oomph over the highly produced instrumental. Some elements feel less inventive than they could be, such as the pop trope of phone call effects opening the number, but this of course gives it extensive commercial potential. The song’s strongest feature is its expansive range of dynamics, building up and dropping at just the right moments.

Lyrically, LA Talk tackles a relationship in its early stages where both people play hard to get. Each line clicks into place naturally as ASHY notes the excuses her love interest repeatedly makes. It’s relatable and direct, also taking on a level of (perhaps unintentional) irony as whilst ASHY bemoans how her love interest puts up such a wall, she seems to do the same in response.

ASHY speaks to the possibilities of pop music in Aotearoa. Despite other genres seeming to receive the most local interest, tracks like LA Talk are a testament to the quality our own artists can achieve, with widespread appeal sure to please.

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About the author Danica Bryant

Sharply bitter and sickeningly sweet all at once, Danica Bryant is not your ordinary songwriter. Born to the fruitful music scene in Napier, New Zealand, her songs cover intense topics such as adolescence, mental health, sexuality, and young love. Danica Bryant is “all hard guitar and pain-filled howl” (The Hook NZ) – this woman bites back. Bryant played her first gig at age twelve. Her career ripened when Smokefree Rockquest awarded her the National APRA Lyric Award in 2018, for ‘Dizzy’. The following year, her track ‘Sugarbones’ featured on Play It Strange’s annual songwriting compilation album, and she won their national ‘Who Loves Who’ contest covering Aldous Harding’s ‘Horizon’. Bryant was also selected for mentorship by Bic Runga at her Christchurch Art Centre workshops. After opening for Kiwi legends like Jason Kerrison and Paul Ubana Jones, Bryant was cherry picked to support Elton John on his ‘Farewell Yellow Brick Road’

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