Bedouine shares video for new track ‘One of These Days’

BEDOUINE SHARES VIDEO FOR NEW TRACK ‘ONE OF THESE DAYS’

SELF-TITLED DEBUT ALBUM, OUT 23 JUNE VIA SPACEBOMB RECORDS

“A real find”
Sunday Times ‘Breaking Act’

“Breathtaking”
The Line of Best Fit ‘Song of the Day’

“Gorgeously understated”
Evening Standard

“[Bedouine]’s ambiguous, fascinating tales are ones that it’s impossible not to follow into the distance”
DIY

Watch ‘One of These Days’ (video directed by Tom Salvaggio) here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6p-OFHW5WGA

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Leading into the release of Bedouine’s self-titled debut album out June 23rd via Spacebomb Records, the singer and guitarist has presented the video for third single, ‘One of These Days’.

The track follows on from the previously shared ‘Dusty Eyes’ and ‘Solitary Daughter’ which were praised by everyone from Sunday Times and Clash Magazine to The New York Times and The FADER. Premiering via Stereogum alongside an interview with Bedouine; ‘One of These Days’ is her brightest, most playfully free track and the one that captured the attention of Spacebomb’s Matthew E. White, subsequently landing her a record deal. While on tour, White recalls listening to the track with his band “like a thousand times” and even setting it as their alarm to wake up in the morning.

Speaking of the track and video Bedouine said, “I had borrowed my friend’s ’84 Blazer and taken it to the narrow streets of downtown Los Angeles to run an errand. The steering was loose and it felt like navigating a cruise ship down a canal. He had JJ Cale’s Naturally in the stereo as long as he had the truck, as if it came with it. I was somewhat familiar but it was then I noticed how JJ Cale turned a phrase on the drop of a dime. He’d sing a phrase that sounded like a complete thought, then all of a sudden move the punctuation over to add a tag. That’s what inspired the phrase “get it, and get it right”.

“The song itself is an optimistic outlook on wanting to speak the same language as someone, or at least close enough for you both to feel loved. Jake Blanton (who owns the Blazer) played drums. Gus Seyffert, the producer, played bass and tracked us live. The video was another collaboration with Tom Salvaggio and pokes fun at its own whimsy.”

Bedouine has a story to match the name. Azniv Korkejian, born in Aleppo, Syria to Armenian parents, spent her childhood in Saudi Arabia, moving to America when her family won a Green Card lottery. Living at various times in Boston, Houston, Lexington, Austin, and Savannah, she eventually found a community of musicians in Los Angeles that feels like home. One day she walked into the studio of bass player / producer Gus Seyffert (Beck, Norah Jones, The Black Keys) to inquire about portable reel-to-reel tape machines and ended up cutting ‘Solitary Daughter’ in a first take.

Eschewing notions of nomadic chic, Bedouine represents minimalism motivated by travel, paring down and paring down until only the essential remains. Her music establishes a sustained and complete mood, reflecting on the unending reverberations of displacement, unafraid to take pleasure along the way.

Watch previous video ‘Solitary Daughter’ here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8P5A3RZd86c

Listen to previous track ‘Dusty Eyes’ here: https://soundcloud.com/spacebomb/bedouine-dusty-eyes/s-bTBde

Pre-order Bedouine here.