quilium’s “holy shit” Thrives On Impulse Than Predictability

You’ll definitely know when an artist loves to create. There’s no hesitation, no attempt to sound acceptable or perfect. quilium‘s debut album “holy shit” will give you a hundred percent of that energy, where impulse and guts dominate more than resemblance and predictability.

Bedroom producer quilium debuts with 20-part album holy shit. This record is one of the few rare cuts that refuses to settle into one sound. May it be indie rock, electronic, synth pop, or dark wave, quilium makes sure you’ll get a bite of each genre. It’s eclectic, experimental, and feels less like an album and more like a tapestry helmed together. Something you’d never expect to work together until it did, in the most striking, brilliant way. 

Living Heat radiates in layered guitars — fuzzy, jagged, and stretched like it’s been played in a small town studio with old amplifiers where imperfection becomes the cornerstone of the track. quilium’s vocals come raw and unpolished, riding above the tension, resistance, and survival. 

Clash of Titans got that colossal chaos contained in one compact sound with an intoxicating blend of electronic rock, and dream pop. The throbbing beats, shimmering synths, and quilium’s raps has that strange duality that feels hypnotic and uncomfortable at the same time. 

Birddance invites you to move and let loose with unpredictable waves of electronic synths and vocals. It’s futuristic, partly weird but in the best way

Precision has that engineered chaos, screeching and abrasive without sounding too heavy. It’s sharp, glitching, you know the kind that almost feels manic? But instead of giving into noise, it locks you into a hypnotic rhythm until you can’t escape. Must Be Up Or Down welcomes you with dynamic beats and throbbing bass. quilium‘s vocals come in with a dark, brooding kick all throughout. 

Anyone Who Isn’t Confused rings in a familiar tone, which honestly feels like it traveled through a time machine and landed into a modern, overcrowded bar instead of an underground dance club where it truly belongs. And while it pulls you with nostalgia, the layers lean onto sleek, modern edges that invite you to move. 

This album also features R.E.M classic Near Wild Heaven and Mk.gee’s Are You Looking Up, reimagined in his touch without stripping down its emotional core. 

One thing about holy shit there’s no attempt to sound unique or different. You know when others try to say you can’t be everything all at once? This album counters that. The abrupt turns on sounds makes it feel more lived in. While everyone relies on what’s trendy and accessible, quilium delivers sounds born out of pure talent and creativity. What you’ll also love about this is you’ll hear imperfections, cracks, and it doesn’t even try to hide it. It stays there all throughout, becoming the DNA of the album.

quilium‘s versatility and range is evident from the start to finish, perfectly executing each sound presented into the album. The various genres in one curation reflect the artist he is, daring and bold enough to experiment. The unpredictability ties each song together, enough to pull you in and lock your interest. 

The thing is, it takes guts and audacity to chase ideas, collide with noise or chaos no matter where it leads. Overall, holy shit proves that music can be more than just structures and neat sounds. Sometimes all you need is a little bit of imagination and instinct to create something that is unapologetically sticky and unforgettable. 

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