Haunted Summer
The songs of Haunted Summer are dreamy and hypnotic, rich with orchestral strings and sultry electronic textures, and with their EP Something in the Water, the group crafted a captivatingly-ethereal musical journey through a nostalgic world of young love and long-forgotten memories. Consisting of husband-and-wife Bridgette Moody and John Seasons, who share songwriting duties in a true collaboration, the Los Angeles duo have shared the stage and toured with groups and performers including Taken By Trees, The Polyphonic Spree, Islands, Deafheaven, Coeur De Pirate, Olafur Arnalds, Carla Morrison, Meiko, Basia Bulat, Federico Aubele, Laura Stevenson and more. They have toured the country and played venues such as The El Rey Theatre, The Great American Music Hall, The Levitt Pavilion, Amoeba Hollywood, The Observatory OC, The Glasshouse, Crescent Ballroom, North Park Theater, The Chapel, The Beauty Bar Las Vegas, Pianos, The Casbah and many more. Having completed a nine-date tour with Islands and other tour dates with David J of Bauhaus and Jacco Gardner, a 14-date headlining tour across the country, plus a month-long residency in San Francisco, Haunted Summer is poised to bring their psychedelic sound to the world.
Human Touch
HUMAN TOUCH, the musical alias of Natalia Rogovin (San Francisco's Social Studies), finds her shedding her indie rock roots, and layering dance beats, 80's synths, and searing vocals. Originating from the darkness of a selfimposed isolation in rural Northern CA, the music points a finger that feels like the barrel of a gun, all dripping in the hollowed beachy vibes of her LA home. After writing and recording almost two LPs worth of material, she recruited long time friend Nima Kazerouni (LA's So Many Wizards) to contribute velvety guitar lines and androgynous falsetto that play against Rogovin's husky alto. The result: manic depressive dreampop that draws it's influences from the chorused underbelly of the 80's, the electronic samplism of modern RnB, and the dreamy wooziness of the perfect California sunset.
Haunted Summer
The songs of Haunted Summer are dreamy and hypnotic, rich with orchestral strings and sultry electronic textures, and with their EP Something in the Water, the group crafted a captivatingly-ethereal musical journey through a nostalgic world of young love and long-forgotten memories. Consisting of husband-and-wife Bridgette Moody and John Seasons, who share songwriting duties in a true collaboration, the Los Angeles duo have shared the stage and toured with groups and performers including Taken By Trees, The Polyphonic Spree, Islands, Deafheaven, Coeur De Pirate, Olafur Arnalds, Carla Morrison, Meiko, Basia Bulat, Federico Aubele, Laura Stevenson and more. They have toured the country and played venues such as The El Rey Theatre, The Great American Music Hall, The Levitt Pavilion, Amoeba Hollywood, The Observatory OC, The Glasshouse, Crescent Ballroom, North Park Theater, The Chapel, The Beauty Bar Las Vegas, Pianos, The Casbah and many more. Having completed a nine-date tour with Islands and other tour dates with David J of Bauhaus and Jacco Gardner, a 14-date headlining tour across the country, plus a month-long residency in San Francisco, Haunted Summer is poised to bring their psychedelic sound to the world.
Human Touch
HUMAN TOUCH, the musical alias of Natalia Rogovin (San Francisco's Social Studies), finds her shedding her indie rock roots, and layering dance beats, 80's synths, and searing vocals. Originating from the darkness of a selfimposed isolation in rural Northern CA, the music points a finger that feels like the barrel of a gun, all dripping in the hollowed beachy vibes of her LA home. After writing and recording almost two LPs worth of material, she recruited long time friend Nima Kazerouni (LA's So Many Wizards) to contribute velvety guitar lines and androgynous falsetto that play against Rogovin's husky alto. The result: manic depressive dreampop that draws it's influences from the chorused underbelly of the 80's, the electronic samplism of modern RnB, and the dreamy wooziness of the perfect California sunset.
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