Find Your Light, Louie Rubio tarafından mutlu ve sakin playlistler için üretilmiş Electronica türünde bir parçadır. Monarch Records etiketiyle 04.08.2023 tarihinde yayına girdi.
Label Announcement:
Louie’s new indie single “Find Your Light” grabs you from the start with its sardonic opening line: “You kill yourself just to make a living”. The salvo plays over the backdrop of Louie’s stripped-down 60s Fender Bass and drum groove, seamlessly plunging you into a pre-chorus inspired by 80s cassette-era indie hymns. The song then lifts you to the hook where a West African Crelicam acoustic guitar cascades through a tweed amplifier. We then close, gracefully winding down as a chordal Fender Bass VI dances in harmony with an upright piano, culminating in a beautiful epilogue.
Thematically the song follows a disenchanted protagonist escaping the Escher-like labyrinth of workaholic careerism and the status quo. They’re ready to relinquish control, opting out in search of something redemptive while invoking the plea: “God come save us”. As with his first two singles, Louie followed his DIY ethos: writing, recording, and mixing everything alone in his LA studio.
Earmilk calls Louie a “multi talented instrumentalist” with a “diverse and thorough skillset normally reserved for full stage bands of 6+ members” that can blend genres from “every decade since the 70s”. The New York Times, Variety, and Complex say he’s a “Successful music producer and writer” and “Seasoned act” that isn’t “even signed”. Vice and XXL say Louie can “churn out big records”; “the results make you smile”.
Louie Rubio is an indie singer and multi-instrumentalist from LA. Louie’s first 2 singles “Mar y Sol” and “Heart of Gold” were both #1 on Submithub with 35 #ReallyGoodBlogger points (including a Spotify Editorial playlist placement on “Fresh Finds”). The studio has been used by the likes of Post Malone, Louis Bell, Justin Tranter, Bonnie McKee and more. The result is a cohesive and personal sound that layers his smooth vocal textures over upbeat guitars and yacht grooves. Imagine Tame Impala vs Steve Lacy, with a dash of Pharrell for good measure.