Juliette Pearl Davis and Joachim Polack aren't just musical collaborators - they're also life partners. As Pearl & the Oysters, they make songs that speak to eclectic tastes in music and pop culture; as Juju and Jojo, they're kindred spirits. What began as a high-school friendship in Paris blossomed into a creative and personal relationship that has spanned decades and continents.
In another life, Juliette and Joachim made pop music in Paris but when the opportunity arose, the pair skipped town for the U.S. After four years immersed in the open-minded DIY scene of Gainesville, Florida, Pearl & The Oysters headed to Los Angeles, where they connected with artists including Mild High Club and Laetitia Sadier of Stereolab, and finished up their new record, Coast 2 Coast.
Coast 2 Coast draws on this experience for its colorful cocktail of sounds: the swamps of Florida and sandy L.A. beaches under a mirrorball sun; a radio picking up a faraway broadcast before tuning into an oldies pop station; crashing waves that melt into the sound of Juliette's white noise machine. It documents Juliette and Joachim's move across the U.S. and the unfamiliar feeling of being settled, having found a "sense of 'home' in one another." Coast 2 Coast is out 21 April on Stones Throw.
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Put on your Powerglove, have a colorful cocktail and enjoy the view. Stones Throw is excited to introduce Pearl & The Oysters, the duo of Juliette Pearl Davis and Joachim Polack. Their new song "Pacific Ave," written about their move from Florida to Los Angeles, features Alex Brettin of Mild High Club on guitar. The "Pacific Ave" video directed by Sean McGuirk, an '80s-style live TV performance, was inspired by Japanese Jazz Fusion artists like Casiopea and Yellow Magic Orchestra's embrace of both analog and digital in their music and visuals.
Pearl & The Oysters met at high school in Paris and immediately bonded over their mutual love for '70s jazz and '90s space age pop. They have been writing and performing together ever since, and moved across the Atlantic together in 2015.
Pearl & The Oysters say: "'In January 2020, we settled in L.A. full of hope for the future of the band. 'Pacific Ave' was a cryptic attempt to allude to our first steps in this new environment being a little alienating, as we were discovering a megalopolis turned ghost town. Because we were physically confined, it really felt like the only avenue to escape was a mental one. For us, it meant a lot of daydreaming and fantasizing about L.A. itself or what it could represent. The song is inspired sonically by AOR and jazz-pop records of the late 1970s."
Juliette Pearl Davis and Joachim Polack aren't just musical collaborators - they're also life partners. As Pearl & the Oysters, they make songs that speak to eclectic tastes in music and pop culture; as Juju and Jojo, they're kindred spirits. What began as a high-school friendship in Paris blossomed into a creative and personal relationship that has spanned decades and continents.
In another life, Juliette and Joachim made pop music in Paris but when the opportunity arose, the pair skipped town for the U.S. After four years immersed in the open-minded DIY scene of Gainesville, Florida, Pearl & The Oysters headed to Los Angeles, where they connected with artists including Mild High Club and Laetitia Sadier of Stereolab, and finished up their new record, Coast 2 Coast.
Coast 2 Coast draws on this experience for its colorful cocktail of sounds: the swamps of Florida and sandy L.A. beaches under a mirrorball sun; a radio picking up a faraway broadcast before tuning into an oldies pop station; crashing waves that melt into the sound of Juliette's white noise machine. It documents Juliette and Joachim's move across the U.S. and the unfamiliar feeling of being settled, having found a "sense of 'home' in one another." Coast 2 Coast is out 21 April on Stones Throw.
~~~~~~~~
Put on your Powerglove, have a colorful cocktail and enjoy the view. Stones Throw is excited to introduce Pearl & The Oysters, the duo of Juliette Pearl Davis and Joachim Polack. Their new song "Pacific Ave," written about their move from Florida to Los Angeles, features Alex Brettin of Mild High Club on guitar. The "Pacific Ave" video directed by Sean McGuirk, an '80s-style live TV performance, was inspired by Japanese Jazz Fusion artists like Casiopea and Yellow Magic Orchestra's embrace of both analog and digital in their music and visuals.
Pearl & The Oysters met at high school in Paris and immediately bonded over their mutual love for '70s jazz and '90s space age pop. They have been writing and performing together ever since, and moved across the Atlantic together in 2015.
Pearl & The Oysters say: "'In January 2020, we settled in L.A. full of hope for the future of the band. 'Pacific Ave' was a cryptic attempt to allude to our first steps in this new environment being a little alienating, as we were discovering a megalopolis turned ghost town. Because we were physically confined, it really felt like the only avenue to escape was a mental one. For us, it meant a lot of daydreaming and fantasizing about L.A. itself or what it could represent. The song is inspired sonically by AOR and jazz-pop records of the late 1970s."
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