Английская Википедия:Goldmyth

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Шаблон:Infobox musical artist

Goldmyth is the stage name for Jenessa Smith, a harpist and songwriter who performs indie pop in Provo, Utah. She learned to play the harp as a teenager, and is influenced by indie rock. Critics praised her ethereal and melancholy harp sounds in her tightly produced indie-pop songs from her EP Faded Dream (2017). Her single "My Mistake" had a similar reception. "Lover's Letdown" was featured in the pilot episode of the HBO series The Sex Lives of College Girls.

Background and influences

Smith took harp and piano lessons as a child. As a teenager, she listened to indie rock.[1] Her influences are Joni Mitchell, James Blake, Sufjan Stevens.[2] and Death Cab for Cutie.[3] Nate Pyfer and Mason Porter co-produced her EP Faded Dream.[2] Pyfer previously produced for Kaskade and The Moth & The Flame, while Porter has produced for Haarlem and Polytype.[4] Smith said that Robbie Connolly was helpful in getting her solo project off the ground.[1] Smith writes her songs using a harp and a looper in Provo, Utah.[1][5]

Critical reception

At Cover Me, Ben Easton praised Smith's music, describing it as "washed-out and blissful, filled with malaise yet still musically vivid."[6] HillyBilly praised Smith's Faded Dream (2017) EP for showing "undisputed skill in crafting tight, concise indie-pop compositions."[2] Paste magazine described her vocals as "otherworldly" in songs with "vulnerable lyrics."[2] Birch Street Radio reviewed Smith's debut EP, Faded Dream, describing her music as a blend of her "delicate" voice with "harp [and] layers of synth and percussion."[7] Obscure Sound described "Lover's Letdown" as alternating between rhythmically sparse and lush and "infused with glistening harp sounds".[4]

Her single "My Mistake" has a "melancholic pop sound" and "lush vocals" in a song with "excellent production and songwriting," according to indie music review site Obscure Sound.[8] Birch Street Radio included the song in their July 2020 roundup and noticed that the harp took center stage.[5] Indie Shuffle also liked the harp's unique role in the song, writing that it created an "organically magical sound."[9] At Cost Magazine liked the song's "quiet pensiveness" and its "ephemeral fade".[10] Smith wrote the song after reflecting on her mistakes, or lack thereof, after a long-term relationship ended and she moved to LA.[3]

Smith said that when she first heard Gorillaz's "Melancholy Hill", she felt a kinship with a song that led her to cover it.[6] Smith's song, "Lover's Letdown", was featured in the first episode of the HBO series The Sex Lives of College Girls.[11]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links