Pozi are the sort of band to tackle the creative cycle of deconstruction and rebuilding with relish. Second album 'Smiling Pools' is testament to that. An LP that sees them at their most expansive yet, it follows a gradual swelling of their sound across two EPs preceding the urgent, self-enforced minimalism of their debut album PZ1 in 2019.
The trio of Toby Burroughs, Rosa Brook, and Tom Jones quickly established something of a foundational template on that first album: a hyper-skeletal sound palette of drums, bass and three distinct vocals disrupted by Rosa’s churning violins, from which emerged biting social observations and political angst.
These hallmarks haven’t fully gone away over time, but from that urgent energy there has emerged greater confidence and a playful desire to push further out from the loose genre tag of post-punk they were initially saddled with.
“It’s not our goal to totally embrace and restrict ourselves within a genre.” Tom says. “I feel that the tracks on Smiling Pools demonstrate that we’re taking our music to a different place and we want to bring the listener along on that journey.”
Pozi are the sort of band to tackle the creative cycle of deconstruction and rebuilding with relish. The trio of Toby Burroughs, Rosa Brook, and Tom Jones quickly established something of a foundational template on that first album: a hyper-skeletal sound palette of drums, bass and three distinct vocals disrupted by Rosa’s churning violins, from which emerged biting social observations and political angst. “It’s not our goal to totally embrace and restrict ourselves within a genre.” Tom says. “I feel that the tracks on Smiling Pools demonstrate that we’re taking our music to a different place and we want to bring the listener along on that journey.” And while Smiling Pools speaks to a more hopeful perspective overall, new track Failing grapples with how 12 years of Tory power have entrenched us with homelessness, poverty and division: “People with nowhere to turn are surrounded by empty homes and forcefully held down where they are. Whatever your politics, investing in and supporting people makes both humanistic and economic sense. This song expresses bewilderment that such a blatant disregard for humanity can exist in a society with all the resources we have. While the sentiment is doomed, there’s a slim glimmer of hope that this can’t last forever.” The video was a collaboration between Kate Bilbow (2D Animation and storyboard) and Toby Burroughs (Stop motion and post production), with Kate explaining the themes behind it: “For "Failing" I used a mixture of 2D digital and traditional hand-drawn animation that was then projected onto a screen for Toby to add the stop motion elements. We wanted to create fluid movement between locations that explored feelings of alienation and escapism, and that visualised the perpetual cycle of injustice that entraps those who fall through the cracks.”
out on May 19, 2023
via PRAH Recordings
out on May 02, 2023
via PRAH Recordings
out on March 28, 2023
via PRAH Recordings
out on February 22, 2023
via PRAH Recordings
out on October 29, 2021
via PRAH Recordings
out on July 14, 2021
via PRAH Recordings