{"id":57645,"date":"2015-09-30T11:28:49","date_gmt":"2015-09-30T11:28:49","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.wonderlandmagazine.com\/?p=57645"},"modified":"2016-09-22T14:33:24","modified_gmt":"2016-09-22T14:33:24","slug":"new-noise-sea-moya","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.wonderlandmagazine.com\/2015\/09\/30\/new-noise-sea-moya\/","title":{"rendered":"New Noise: Sea Moya"},"content":{"rendered":"

Wonderland<\/em>\u00a0sits down with German psychedelic trio Sea Moya to talk about their new EP, their native Berlin, and what they\u2019ve been listening to.<\/p>\n

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A lot of artists out there have sounds that claim to be eclectic, but in the case of Sea Moya, it\u2019s really true. They\u2019re three guys from Berlin whose sound is resolutely psychedelic, but also spacious in scale, free-flowing and funky, with a healthy dash of African disco by way of William Onyeabor. They recorded most of their new EP, Twins<\/em>, between some shipping containers and compose their music via jam sessions: yep, they\u2019re those kind of guys.<\/p>\n

One of their big tracks from earlier this year, “Do Things”, had a dangerously addictive funk-guitar riff that acted as a stabilising anchor whilst synth madness and cosmic-electronica rippled and ricocheted from ear-to-ear around it: wonderful stuff. “Slow Down” was another one we’re still sticking on repeat \u2013 it nicely showed Sea Moya\u2019s range and lived up to the hazy, deliciously-soporific promise of its name (“just imagine you are standing on a Tibetan mountain”). The title track from Twins <\/em>is making an impact on the group\u2019s Soundcloud already with its progressively wonky take on pop and has got Wonderland <\/em>seriously excited to hear the whole EP.<\/p>\n

They sound like our kind of people, so we put ten questions to\u00a0Sea Moya to get to know them a little bit better.<\/p>\n