Member News Sarah Leota Member News Sarah Leota

SOLA ROSA 'BACK TO YOU'

With a synth heavy undercurrent that floats along to a pulsating half-time drum and bass beat, ‘Back To You’ is yet another cracking tune, which is in keeping with Sola Rosa’s (Andrew Spraggon) long-standing reputation of pushing further into new musical territories.

Sola Rosa (Andrew Spraggon) is one of New Zealand’s music’s most evolutionary and enduring acts.
 
With seven full-length albums, four EPs, a handful of hits, countless collaborations and numerous world tours, it’s been a near 20-year labour of love for the man behind the music, Andrew Spraggon.
 
The Auckland-based music-maker is now poised to take the next steps in the Sola Rosajourney with an upcoming EP that sits firmly in the realms of electronic and synth. He has already given fans a taste of what’s to come with the stonking beat-heavy track ‘So Fly’, featuring British singer Kevin Mark Trail (The Streets), released towards the end of 2016.
 
Now, comes the latest Sola Rosa single ‘Back To You’, which features the soulful and haunting vocals of Berlin-based Kiwi singer Noah Slee.
 
Also featuring on the track is keyboard player Michal Martyniuk (Nathan Haines) and guitarist Dixon Nacey (Sola Rosa, King Kapisi, Tama Waipara). Final mix duties were done by Andy Morton (Fat Freddy’s Drop, Mark de Clive Lowe, Che Fu) and it was mastered by Kelly Hibbert at Almachrome (J Dilla, Aloe Blacc, Flying Lotus).
 
With a synth heavy undercurrent that floats along to a pulsating half-time drum and bass beat, ‘Back To You’ is yet another cracking tune, which is in keeping with Sola Rosa’s long-standing reputation of pushing further into new musical territories.

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Member News Sarah Leota Member News Sarah Leota

SOLA ROSA 'SO FLY'

With seven full-length Sola Rosa albums, three EPs, a handful of hits, countless collaborations and numerous world tours, it’s been a near 20-year labour of love for the man behind the music, MMF member Andrew Spraggon

Have a listen to this catchy-as-all-hell, beats-heavy track 'SO FLY' featuring Kevin Mark Trail from one of New Zealand’s most evolutionary and enduring acts, Sola Rosa.
 

With seven full-length Sola Rosa albums, three EPs, a handful of hits, countless collaborations and numerous world tours, it’s been a near 20-year labour of love for the man behind the music, MMF member Andrew Spraggon.
 
And although it’s punctuated with twists and turns in the form of constant change and innovation, one thing has remained the same – Spraggon’s steadfast commitment to making great albums that seamlessly blend a myriad of genres, from hip-hop and jazz, to neo-soul, latin and funk.
 
Now, the Auckland-based music-maker is poised to unveil the next steps in the Sola Rosa journey. It begins with the stonking beat-heavy track, ‘So Fly’ featuring British singer Kevin Mark Trail, who rose to prominence in the early 2000s working with The Streets.
 
The song, which Spraggon describes as having an “angular analog feel”, sits perfectly alongside the vibrant and eclectic Sola Rosa sound that fans have come to know and love. And yet, it pushes further into new musical territory. “The overall feel is an unusual one for me as a producer, but I wanted to make it have a retro kind of vibe. It’s pretty much a synth-laden production and heavy on the beats,” he says.
 
Written by Spraggon and Sola Rosa’s one-time guitarist Ben White, with additional keys later added by Michal Martyniuk, the track was originally created for the 2014 album Magnetics but it wasn’t finished. Trail then heard it over the 2015/2016 summer and wrote and recorded the vocals in one day.
 
Adding to the magic of ‘So Fly’ is the expert touch of Andy ‘Submariner’ Morton at Creative Orchard, known for his production and mix skills with the likes of Kiwi music icons like Fat Freddy’s Drop, Mark de Clive Lowe and Nathan Haines. And last but not least, mastering by Kelly Hibbert at Almachrome in Los Angeles, who’s worked with a lengthy list of who’s who in music, from Aloe Blacc, to J DillaFlying LotusDam Funk and more.
 
It all makes for a kick-ass track that demands volume and is not only a sure-fire festival anthem but the kind of tune that has just what it takes to pack dancefloors across the globe.

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