Great Skies teams up with Stockholm's China for the elegant and gauzy "Softly"
04 December 2015, 10:45
| Written by
Michael Lewin
Float away on warm melodic currents on this cold winter's day: Radio 1Xtra-hyped Kent producer Great Skies has pulled back the veil on his collaboration with Stockholm's China.
Like a tropical dance seen through a shining sheet of ice, new cut "Softly" is the best kind of meeting of minds. A stunningly demur and distant vocal from China is given space to dream amongst Great Skies' clipped and yearning production. The track harks back to the late hour lovers' respite of great garage productions like Roy Davis Jr's masterpiece "Gabriel": at the same time as evoking the languid vibe of St Etienne. China's vocal hovers beyond reach, cocooned by the production and also protected from it, out of reach of the sparkling meteor shower of effects contained in the track. Of its lyrical content, China says it captures the melancholy of being between place. Having been called back to Stockholm from London, it's a reflection on "recognising the impact of those persons who bring a place to life as much as it is the love of the place itself." The track follows China's "Flow", picked up by Spotify's Discover Weekly playlist - a more jarring and dissonant track that unsettles like a stark yell in the night. On "Softly", by contrast, we see a languid vocal meet a lounging production, soft like the caress of warm rain.
Latest
- Yuuf sign to Technicolour and announce forthcoming EP, Alma’s Cove
- The Swell Season announce first album in over a decade, Forward
- End Of The Road Festival announce stage and day splits
- Gordi shares new single, "Cutting Room Floor"
- Joe Armon-Jones joins forces with Greentea Peng and Wu-Lu on new release, "Another Place"
- Picture Parlour unveil new track, "Who’s There To Love Without You?"
- Future Utopia team up with Lava La Rue on new single, "The Pleasure Trap"
Get the Best Fit take on the week in music direct to your inbox every Friday
Read next
Listen
8485’s “G.I.R.L.” is an early aughts anthem for the chronically online
Le Charme’s “Garden (I Know You Want Me, You Want More)” is a postcard etched, but never sent
AtticOmatic weaves a rich tapestry of sound in the tender post-rock “Two Alarms”
For Nina balances between tension and release in driving alt-rock single “Hounds”
Experimental soul artist McCabe gets vulnerable in his bittersweet summer single “Vicious”
Tapeworms explore the ups and downs of following your dreams in the atmospheric “Safe And Sound”
Reviews

Emma-Jean Thackray
Weirdo
23 Apr 2025

Viagra Boys
viagr aboys
23 Apr 2025

William Tyler
Time Indefinite
23 Apr 2025

Tunde Adebimpe
Thee Black Boltz
16 Apr 2025