
Oso Oso "Basking In The Glow"
āLaying in the grass, we were dragging on loud/Got my hand in your hand and my head in the clouds.ā
This is the scene, set with acoustic atmospherics and frontman Jade Lilitriās familiar, layered, honey-sweet-but-burnt-around-the-edges vocals, that flickers to life at the start of oso osoās new full-length, basking in the glow. The track, simply called āintro,ā is just that: an intimate, humble, and hopeful prologue that prefaces a record radically committed to letting the light inābecause Lilitri knows the darkness like the back of his hand.
The spacious opening proposition of āintroā gives way to āthe view,ā an electric, invigorating indie rock banger that showcases Lilitriās slick, effortless melodic excellence and lyrical precision (āIāll grow, weāll see/Thereās something good in meā). The title track follows, driving home the recordās thesis on a chorus like a roman candle cracking a mid-July night sky: āThese days, it feels like all I know is this phase/I hope Iām basking in the glow of something bigger I donāt know.ā
Lead single ādigā rounds out this first act with rainy-day riffing and hushed, staccato vocal delivery on the verse before its tense, charged chorus: āThereās this hole in my soul/So how far do you wanna go?ā Lilitri asks, his voice ethereal and couched in bubblegum harmony. Itās a slow build, twining the best parts of emo around pop punk sensibilities and, eventually, wide-open alt-rock anthemics at the trackās climax before sinking back, in a slow-motion fall, to a deserted shoegaze outro. Itās an ambitious, complex scheme, and one that captures the spirit of the record: clutching tight to the unbridled glee of the short, sunny, major-key moments before they dissolve.
basking in the glow is a wrestle, and it is hard work; it is the sound of refusing to capitulate to darkness, every goddamn day. It is a practice, or perhaps a battle plan (āI see my demise, I feel it coming/I got one sick plan to save me from it,ā Lilitri sings, his voice and hurried guitar crackling as if theyāre coming through a bedroom tape recorder.) It is filled with the delightful, subtle melodic imagination that characterizes the sound Lilitri has perfected with oso oso, but this time out, heās put this sound to use declaring happiness (āI got a glimpse of this feeling, Iām trying to stay in that lane,ā on āimpossible gameā) and sketching out, with keen, desperate detail, warm memories to hold onto (āāOh cāmon Charlie, a little louderā/I say as I hear her singing out from the shower,ā on ācharlieā).
This āone sick planā and its bright disposition does falter and fade. The darkness does returnāit always willābut Lilitri has come to terms with it, armoring himself with the good heās found. Even as the record ends with a relationshipās demise, Lilitri is clear-eyed, leaving us squarely in the sunlight: āAnd in the end I think thatās fine/Cause you and I had a very nice time.ā
Track Listing:Ā
01. introĀ
02. the viewĀ
03. basking in the glowĀ
04. digĀ
05. one sick planĀ
06. morning songĀ
07. priority changeĀ
08. wake up next to godĀ
09. impossible gameĀ
10. charlieĀ
āLaying in the grass, we were dragging on loud/Got my hand in your hand and my head in the clouds.ā
This is the scene, set with acoustic atmospherics and frontman Jade Lilitriās familiar, layered, honey-sweet-but-burnt-around-the-edges vocals, that flickers to life at the start of oso osoās new full-length, basking in the glow. The track, simply called āintro,ā is just that: an intimate, humble, and hopeful prologue that prefaces a record radically committed to letting the light inābecause Lilitri knows the darkness like the back of his hand.
The spacious opening proposition of āintroā gives way to āthe view,ā an electric, invigorating indie rock banger that showcases Lilitriās slick, effortless melodic excellence and lyrical precision (āIāll grow, weāll see/Thereās something good in meā). The title track follows, driving home the recordās thesis on a chorus like a roman candle cracking a mid-July night sky: āThese days, it feels like all I know is this phase/I hope Iām basking in the glow of something bigger I donāt know.ā
Lead single ādigā rounds out this first act with rainy-day riffing and hushed, staccato vocal delivery on the verse before its tense, charged chorus: āThereās this hole in my soul/So how far do you wanna go?ā Lilitri asks, his voice ethereal and couched in bubblegum harmony. Itās a slow build, twining the best parts of emo around pop punk sensibilities and, eventually, wide-open alt-rock anthemics at the trackās climax before sinking back, in a slow-motion fall, to a deserted shoegaze outro. Itās an ambitious, complex scheme, and one that captures the spirit of the record: clutching tight to the unbridled glee of the short, sunny, major-key moments before they dissolve.
basking in the glow is a wrestle, and it is hard work; it is the sound of refusing to capitulate to darkness, every goddamn day. It is a practice, or perhaps a battle plan (āI see my demise, I feel it coming/I got one sick plan to save me from it,ā Lilitri sings, his voice and hurried guitar crackling as if theyāre coming through a bedroom tape recorder.) It is filled with the delightful, subtle melodic imagination that characterizes the sound Lilitri has perfected with oso oso, but this time out, heās put this sound to use declaring happiness (āI got a glimpse of this feeling, Iām trying to stay in that lane,ā on āimpossible gameā) and sketching out, with keen, desperate detail, warm memories to hold onto (āāOh cāmon Charlie, a little louderā/I say as I hear her singing out from the shower,ā on ācharlieā).
This āone sick planā and its bright disposition does falter and fade. The darkness does returnāit always willābut Lilitri has come to terms with it, armoring himself with the good heās found. Even as the record ends with a relationshipās demise, Lilitri is clear-eyed, leaving us squarely in the sunlight: āAnd in the end I think thatās fine/Cause you and I had a very nice time.ā
Track Listing:Ā
01. introĀ
02. the viewĀ
03. basking in the glowĀ
04. digĀ
05. one sick planĀ
06. morning songĀ
07. priority changeĀ
08. wake up next to godĀ
09. impossible gameĀ
10. charlieĀ
Description
āLaying in the grass, we were dragging on loud/Got my hand in your hand and my head in the clouds.ā
This is the scene, set with acoustic atmospherics and frontman Jade Lilitriās familiar, layered, honey-sweet-but-burnt-around-the-edges vocals, that flickers to life at the start of oso osoās new full-length, basking in the glow. The track, simply called āintro,ā is just that: an intimate, humble, and hopeful prologue that prefaces a record radically committed to letting the light inābecause Lilitri knows the darkness like the back of his hand.
The spacious opening proposition of āintroā gives way to āthe view,ā an electric, invigorating indie rock banger that showcases Lilitriās slick, effortless melodic excellence and lyrical precision (āIāll grow, weāll see/Thereās something good in meā). The title track follows, driving home the recordās thesis on a chorus like a roman candle cracking a mid-July night sky: āThese days, it feels like all I know is this phase/I hope Iām basking in the glow of something bigger I donāt know.ā
Lead single ādigā rounds out this first act with rainy-day riffing and hushed, staccato vocal delivery on the verse before its tense, charged chorus: āThereās this hole in my soul/So how far do you wanna go?ā Lilitri asks, his voice ethereal and couched in bubblegum harmony. Itās a slow build, twining the best parts of emo around pop punk sensibilities and, eventually, wide-open alt-rock anthemics at the trackās climax before sinking back, in a slow-motion fall, to a deserted shoegaze outro. Itās an ambitious, complex scheme, and one that captures the spirit of the record: clutching tight to the unbridled glee of the short, sunny, major-key moments before they dissolve.
basking in the glow is a wrestle, and it is hard work; it is the sound of refusing to capitulate to darkness, every goddamn day. It is a practice, or perhaps a battle plan (āI see my demise, I feel it coming/I got one sick plan to save me from it,ā Lilitri sings, his voice and hurried guitar crackling as if theyāre coming through a bedroom tape recorder.) It is filled with the delightful, subtle melodic imagination that characterizes the sound Lilitri has perfected with oso oso, but this time out, heās put this sound to use declaring happiness (āI got a glimpse of this feeling, Iām trying to stay in that lane,ā on āimpossible gameā) and sketching out, with keen, desperate detail, warm memories to hold onto (āāOh cāmon Charlie, a little louderā/I say as I hear her singing out from the shower,ā on ācharlieā).
This āone sick planā and its bright disposition does falter and fade. The darkness does returnāit always willābut Lilitri has come to terms with it, armoring himself with the good heās found. Even as the record ends with a relationshipās demise, Lilitri is clear-eyed, leaving us squarely in the sunlight: āAnd in the end I think thatās fine/Cause you and I had a very nice time.ā
Track Listing:Ā
01. introĀ
02. the viewĀ
03. basking in the glowĀ
04. digĀ
05. one sick planĀ
06. morning songĀ
07. priority changeĀ
08. wake up next to godĀ
09. impossible gameĀ
10. charlieĀ












