Bay Area musician
Jackson Phillips earned plenty of buzz in the mid-2010s with his breezy bedroom pop project
Day Wave. A pleasing blend of homemade indie pop with layers of light shoegaze and dream pop,
Phillips issued a couple of well-received EPs before making his full-length debut on 2017's Harvest-issued
The Days We Had. After a five-year gap,
Day Wave returns, this time on the
PIAS label, with
Pastlife, a wistful, low-key collection that more or less picks up right where his debut left off. Like so many musicians riding a bit of hard-won momentum,
Phillips suddenly found his career stalled by the global pandemic. Already a contemplative songwriter, he spent much of the lockdown placing his life and career under the microscope, making music with a deeply reflective and often nostalgic air. But rather than sink into a navel-gazing mire, he also challenged himself to stay present, engaging with fans on the live-streaming platform Twitch, which he used to broadcast the creation of several of his new songs. This mixture of self-examination and yearning for social connection is at the heart of
Pastlife's ten tracks. Over a repeating two-chord melodic hook,
Phillips applies a pervading sense of existential ennui to "See You When the End Is Near," a song that features a guest verse from Cleveland's
KennyHoopla. Other tracks like the percussive title cut and the acoustic "Great Expectations" fuse themes of loss and loneliness with a calm tranquility. Despite a handful of pretty melodies and a yawning sense of melancholia,
Pastlife is rather unassuming, passing by in an affable 30 minutes of chiming guitars, burbling synths, and hushed introspection. If anything, it is a little smaller in scope than
Day Wave's earlier releases, though painted with the same palette of sounds and moods. ~ Timothy Monger