There are two things that can happen when members of an internationally venerated music group decide to branch out and go solo. The results are either gloriously realised or an absolute shitshow. You get the beginnings of Beyonce or Michael Jackson (more pertinently in this case, Frank Ocean and Earl Sweatshirt); or you get Roger Water’s Radio K.A.O.S living in the shadow of Pink Floyd. There is little to no in between. Of course, the groups in those examples disbanded completely, and thankfully for us, The Internet are still very much together and look set to remain that way. Vocalist Syd Tha Kid just happens to also be launching a solo career of her own, with the release of her sophisticated, suave debut album Fin today only solidifying her Ultimate Cool Person status further. Despite her remarks that the album is “not that deep” – perhaps true – it is extremely good.
Though largely self-produced, Fin also features production work from Melo X (Lemonade), Hit Boy, Haze, and Rahki. Fans of Syd’s ultra-smooth delivery and swaggering lyrical bravado that are trademarks of The Internet are in for a treat. Fin is nigh on wall to wall matter-of-fact dark braggadocio and confidence, delivered so softly and gently that it feels like a whispered inner dialogue. Though lacking in some of the groovier vibes that one might come to expect as a natural follow-on from Syd’s work with her erstwhile band, there’s no shortage of interesting sonic territory here. Clunky industrial synths, metallic skittering vocals, hypnotic layered effects borrowing from 90s RnB, trap, hip-hop and back.
The lynchpin of this album is Syd’s ineffable star quality. She is fiercely confident, but her utterances are so unassuming that it never feels excessive. Where tracks like Drown in it and Body are relatively straightforward, they are elevated to seductive, lean-in-as-close-as-you-can, don’t-miss-a-second status by this effortless, mellifluous presence. It’s not even simply a matter of Syd having technically great vocal abilities – it’s how she doesn’t even sound like she’s trying, yet is in complete control the entire time. On Fin, you are in Syd’s world, you are eating out of her palm, and she knows it. Oh, and make no mistake: she’s here to steal your girl.
Though essentially a modern reimagining of an RnB album, Fin houses its share of surprises. Know sees Syd sounding alarmingly delicate. At 1:13, No Complaints is the shortest track on the album, feeling closer to party music than anything else on the album with its West Coast beat and references to a “motherfuckin spaceship”. But not even the perennially-confident Syd is without her moments of doubt; Shake Em Off is primarily a “fuck the haters” cut, but temporarily pulls the curtain back on such a moment (can’t sleep cos I’m anxious/counting sheep). Closer Insecurities takes these doubts and turns them on their head with a wry smile. Lead single All About Me sounds like an instant classic, but it’s Got Her Own that hogs the spotlight with its unabashed admiration for the success and backbone of a woman (Heard she got her own/I just wanna be there cos I just wanna know) and anti-rape culture message (You try to sex her but she said no).
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Frank Ocean isn’t the only former Odd Future member who has dropped new music this past week! The Internet’s Syd (formerly Syd Tha Kyd) also released a new song, titled Amazing, seemingly for no real reason other than to bless us all a little more than she already has as of late. Though she’s obviously been busy with her main duties fronting neo soul collective The Internet, she’d been putting out solo material and lending her vocals to collaborations with other artists here and there as well.
https://vimeo.com/169117129
This latest track starts pretty abruptly but is a continuation of the soul stylings that have become synonymous with The Internet over their three albums. We get Syd’s sweet serenade wafting over some very dreamy Dornik production. Throughout the song, Syd professes her adoration for an unnamed woman – though it appears she isn’t the only one trying to win her heart. Syd pleads her case and shares her frustration with having to do so at all, insisting that she’s the right one and singing about how she wants to take this amazing woman to her favourite places and just spend some time with her.
With the song now out in the world, one wonders if she ever did get to actually tell her how amazing she thinks she is, and if they’re together now. It seems a bit of an open-ended tale, mainly exploring the shitty situation she’s found herself in of falling for someone who might not feel the same way.
Any which way, there’s no denying that this song is adding to the weighty pile of ex-Odd Future members (and Syd in particular, who had spent a lot of time behind the scenes as DJ, writer and mixer rather than front and centre) proving that their talents stretch far and wide in terms of genre and even medium (from music to fashion and everything in between) and that they’re not going anywhere any time soon.
Image: Danielle Hansen for Howl & Echoes Full gallery here.