Missed Connections
Reviews
DJ Dissociation
Reviewed 2018-09-28
Reviewed 2018-09-28
Missed Connections (High Sunn)
Reviewed by: DJ Dissociation, 9.26.18
High Sunn is the solo project of 18 year old San Francisco native Justin Cheromiah; Missed Connections is his first full-length album after a series of EPs. Heavy vocal filters and indie rock instrumentation characterize the majority of the album, which picks up in energy after the fifth track. Each track is short, 3 minutes at most. RIYL: Tame Impala, Cage the Elephant.
Rec: 6,7,8. FCCs: none
1. (2:17) Midtempo indie lament with shakily delivered vocals. 2. (3:18) Strong start with spots of shrieking guitar, vocals are the low point of this track. 3. (2:47) Tame Impala vibes, distorted vocals over uptempo rock. 4. (2:33) More washy indie rock, refrain ‘I am a terrible person.’ 5. (2:43) ‘Kokuhaku’ is, roughly, the act of confessing love in Japanese culture; the lyrics reflect this. Besides that, the track doesn’t stand out from the rest. 6.* (2:50) With clearer vocals and a more driving instrumental line, this track picks the album up from the monotony of its first half. 7.* (2:24) Upbeat guitar and drums cut through mildly monotonous vocals for a pleasant indie rock track. 8.* (2:41) This one features a catchy motif ‘so I made a song/ for you to dance along’ and an upbeat instrumentation. 9. (3:01) Bright guitar riffs and a driving indie rock beat. 10. (3:04) Vocals half-yelled reminiscent of Tame Impala, strong guitar.
Reviewed by: DJ Dissociation, 9.26.18
High Sunn is the solo project of 18 year old San Francisco native Justin Cheromiah; Missed Connections is his first full-length album after a series of EPs. Heavy vocal filters and indie rock instrumentation characterize the majority of the album, which picks up in energy after the fifth track. Each track is short, 3 minutes at most. RIYL: Tame Impala, Cage the Elephant.
Rec: 6,7,8. FCCs: none
1. (2:17) Midtempo indie lament with shakily delivered vocals. 2. (3:18) Strong start with spots of shrieking guitar, vocals are the low point of this track. 3. (2:47) Tame Impala vibes, distorted vocals over uptempo rock. 4. (2:33) More washy indie rock, refrain ‘I am a terrible person.’ 5. (2:43) ‘Kokuhaku’ is, roughly, the act of confessing love in Japanese culture; the lyrics reflect this. Besides that, the track doesn’t stand out from the rest. 6.* (2:50) With clearer vocals and a more driving instrumental line, this track picks the album up from the monotony of its first half. 7.* (2:24) Upbeat guitar and drums cut through mildly monotonous vocals for a pleasant indie rock track. 8.* (2:41) This one features a catchy motif ‘so I made a song/ for you to dance along’ and an upbeat instrumentation. 9. (3:01) Bright guitar riffs and a driving indie rock beat. 10. (3:04) Vocals half-yelled reminiscent of Tame Impala, strong guitar.
Recent airplay
Banh Mi
w/e (rebroadcast from Oct 10, 2018) — Jul 30, 2021
Summer Solstice, Kokuhaku
Hot Probs — Dec 04, 2018
Indirect Kiss
The Fuzz Deli — Nov 28, 2018
Those Last Words
Music Genealogy — Nov 25, 2018
Indirect Kiss, Kokuhaku
Hot Probs — Nov 20, 2018
I Thought You Were There
Hot Probs SPECIAL — Nov 16, 2018
Charting
2018-09-30 — 2018-12-02
| Week Ending | Airplays |
|---|---|
| Dec 2 | 2 |
| Nov 25 | 1 |
| Nov 18 | 5 |
| Nov 11 | 2 |
| Nov 4 | 1 |
| Oct 28 | 1 |
| Oct 21 | 2 |
| Oct 14 | 4 |
Track listing
| 1. | Summer Solstice | ||
| 2. | I Thought You Were There | ||
| 3. | Those Last Words | ||
| 4. | Soft Spoken | ||
| 5. | Kokuhaku | ||
| 6. | Banh Mi | ||
| 7. | Indirect Kiss | ||
| 8. | Dedication | ||
| 9. | Freshman Year | ||
| 10. | Hoho Market |
