YEEK RELEASES NEW ALBUM ‘VALENCIA’ SHARES ACCOMPANYING SHORT FILM ‘H.A.W.A.I.I’

by the partae
YEEK RELEASES NEW ALBUM 'VALENCIA' SHARES ACCOMPANYING SHORT FILM 'H.A.W.A.I.I'

ACCLAIM FOR YEEK

“Yeek is the pop artist throwing convention to the wind”
i-D

“Unbounded by genre and making music that’s distinctly his own”
Complex

“Yeek’s songs are the best of both worlds, drawing on trip-hop and R&B in equal measure”
Pigeons and Planes

Today, Filipino-American singer Yeek shares his new album ValenciaListen HERE.

The album is his first proper release following his 2019 EP IDK WHERE, which Highsnobiety said “manages to effortlessly showcase his unique sound”, and is his most sonically lush and polished work to date. The record features mixing from Jeff Ellis, who has previously worked with Frank OceanSnoh Aalegra, and Omar Apollo, and focuses on themes of relationship woes and keeping family close.

Valencia is also accompanied by a short film Yeek made for the project that premiered at a drive-in screening in Santa Monica yesterday. Selling out in just minutes, h.a.w.a.i.i. tells the story of a young boy (played by Yeek’s cousin) whose routine is controlled entirely by the sophisticated technology built into the house. What he wears, what he eats – every detail is accounted for and he isn’t given a choice. Until he decides to push back and forge his own path. Scored by Bas, it’s a reflection of Yeek’s own relationship to life expectations and striking the right balance between independence and collaboration. Watch HERE.

For years Yeek preferred to work alone. Across two albums and two EPs, the L.A.-based singer-songwriter handled producing, recording, mixing, and mastering by himself. Because his songs are personal and resistant to genre classification, this method suited him. The DIY approach made sense for his evocative, guitar-driven portraits of youthful wandering and wondering. Singing about sitting alone in his room on ‘Only in the West‘, bummed because he has to board the bus while his drug-dealer friends are out driving cars — quintessential solo dolo music.

But not now. This year Yeek presents Valencia, his most emotionally lush and polished work to date, and his most collaborative too. Featuring production from his cousin, Kevin HalasanValencia is indebted to the vitality of family, close friends, and new romance. After strengthening his voice on tour and with a vocal coach, Yeek’s performances on Valencia are confident and vulnerable, shaded heavily by the R&B records he heard growing up during family karaoke. “R&B music is a deeply-rooted part of Filipino-American culture,” he says.

Valencia’s first track is ‘Lumbago‘, a mellow ode to family via memories of the back pain Yeek experienced as a young boy. His mom, his brothers, his cousin – they’re all embedded in the lyrics, sung over a slow bass riff, methodical drums, and a dreamy ever-present organ. The flipside of working with your loved ones is an increased sense of pressure and responsibility, feelings Yeek explores on ‘Overthinking‘. A propulsive, almost nervous bass line plays under his voice as he captures that sensation of watching your people laugh and have fun while you’re on the outside looking in, stuck in your head, running down your anxieties.

3000 Miles (Baby Baby)‘ announces the album’s other big driving force: new love. More than any of Yeek’s other projects, Valencia is an R&B record – he’s really singing this time around. There’s no genre better equipped to channel the energy of a new relationship in all its complexity, from the lusty highs to the confusing late-night lows. Buoyant with anticipation, ‘3000 Miles‘ mimics the singular ache of a long-distance relationship, when all you want to do is race to the airport and get on a flight in order to touch that person you can’t stop thinking about. “How’d you feel if I came through late at night, 3000 miles?” he asks on the chorus, over the biggest drums on the album. It’s the embodiment of yearning.

His most emotionally lush and polished material to date, Valencia is a deep, ambitious body of work that, along with its short film, invites serious engagement to explore and unpack. It cements Yeek as a generational talent with something to say, a leader who isn’t afraid of his vulnerabilities. Listen to Valencia and watch h.a.w.a.i.i. above, find full album details and read more about Yeek below, and stay tuned for more coming soon.

Valencia is out now, buy/stream it here.

TRACKLIST
Lumbago
Overthinking
3000 Miles (Baby Baby)
Back N Forth
M.H
ETA
Valencia
This Time
Watch Me
Dirty Pillow

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