This Week’s ‘Spring Folklore’ is About the Profound & Soft Moments

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Carla Patullo – Nomadica 

Carla Patullo’s sonics are a new age brand. She crafts alt folk with moments of imaginative electronica, immersive imagery and moving instrumentals. Her latest release is the ‘Nomadica’ album, a collection of profound and pleasing soft alternative music. The title track beautifully introduces the many horizons and ranges of the artist. There’s so many levels within the soundscape, each one forging a landscape of its own. Seemingly, even an emotion of its own. And with soft and meaningful fusions of these layers, she creates the musical consciousness that is nomadic. Wild, free, and ethereally connected with everything. It’s the perfect song to kick off our folklore list this week. In its vast and expansive beauty, the listeners are sure to find a perspective they might have missed before. Best enjoyed during sunrise. 

The Easter Parade – Sing Our Kids to Sleep 

The Easter Parade is an acoustic banner that explores the human emotions that have no name. Those complex swirls of feelings, sentiments that move you tremendously. He delves into those moments and turns them into indie films. His latest release is ‘Raindrops on the Lenses’ EP, a stark yet blurry flow of music. There’s so much romance and so much melancholy. Both so striking and compelling in their flavors. ‘Sing our Kids to Sleep’ opens with storytelling visuals. They come alive in the mind as you listen. Flickering piano melodies lift into the soundscape like a brightening candle. And the artist’s vocals, a shadow dance, baritones that weave and wind around the soundscape. Soft orchestras sound progressively – violins, guitar, drums; so immersive that you cannot climb out of it, nor will you want to. It’s tearfully beautiful, fantastical yet so human. Listen Now! 

Digney Fignus – American Rose 

Digney Fignus’s ‘American Rose’ is an old-school, retro folk rock song. Glinting and sparkling with floating acoustics, it has an old-timey romance to it. Despite its simplistic lines, the instrumentation is pretty intricate, casting the song in an elegant charm. His vocals are warm baritones that complement the golden tones of the acoustics. The song keeps swaying and swaying, like clothes in the summer breeze. So natural is its rhythm and fluid in its notions. It brings a sense of authenticity to the composition. And just like that, he finds such elegant and insightful ways to throw light on the beautiful girl he loves, the American Rose as he calls her. 

Check out our Spring Folklore Playlist :

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