Recent from talks
Nothing was collected or created yet.
Life of Leisure
View on Wikipedia
| Life of Leisure | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EP by | ||||
| Released | September 8, 2009 | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 17:33 | |||
| Label | Mexican Summer | |||
| Washed Out chronology | ||||
| ||||
Life of Leisure is an extended play (EP) by American singer-songwriter and record producer Washed Out. Released on September 8, 2009, by Mexican Summer.[1] It is the second EP that the artist has produced, the first being High Times the same year.
Reception
[edit]| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| Pitchfork Media | 8.0/10[2] |
Pitchfork Media's Marc Hogan gave the EP an 8 and stated that "Washed Out, the solo project of Georgia (via South Carolina) multi-instrumentalist Ernest Greene, fits in almost too well with the balmy lo-fi synth atmospherics of peers like Neon Indian, Toro Y Moi, Small Black, the higher-fi jj, or the darker, heavier SALEM, as well as the more guitar-based Real Estate, Best Coast, and Pearl Harbour. Washed Out's debut Life of Leisure EP isn't at the top of its class, but Greene so far is one of this fledgling aesthetic's most gifted students."[3]
The song "Feel It All Around" was released as a single, which became a definitive song of the chillwave genre and appeared on many best-of-2009 lists, including those from Pitchfork and NME.[4][5]
In popular culture
[edit]- "Feel It All Around" is featured in a Proenza Schouler campaign video for the Fall of 2010.[6]
- "Feel It All Around" is also featured as the opening theme for TV series Portlandia on IFC.[7][8]
Track listing
[edit]| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Get Up" | 3:01 |
| 2. | "New Theory" | 2:52 |
| 3. | "Hold Out" | 3:29 |
| 4. | "Feel It All Around" | 3:16 |
| 5. | "Lately" | 2:02 |
| 6. | "You'll See It" | 2:55 |
| Total length: | 17:33 | |
Samples
[edit]- "Get Up" contains a sample of "Got To Get Up" (1983) by Change[9]
- "New Theory" contains a sample of "Feel It" (1980) by Revelation
- "Hold Out" contains a sample of "West Coast Drive" (1975) by V.I.P. Connection
- "Feel It All Around" contains a sample of "I Want You" (1983) by Gary Low[10]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Amazon.com
- ^ "Washed Out: Life of Leisure EP | Album Reviews". Pitchfork. September 1, 2009. Retrieved February 28, 2012.
- ^ Hogan, Marc (September 16, 2009). "Washed Out: Life of Leissure". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved September 16, 2009.
- ^ Pitchfork Staff (December 14, 2009). "The Top 100 Tracks of 2009: 10–1". Pitchfork Media. Archived from the original on February 29, 2016. Retrieved December 14, 2009.
- ^ "50 Best Tracks of 2009: 40–31". NME. July 26, 2010.
- ^ Said video on Proenza Schouler 's official YouTube channel
- ^ Maletsky, Kiernan (January 1, 2011). "Portland isn't the only place with hipsters: Presenting Portlandia, Denver edition – Denver Arts – Show and Tell". Blogs.westword.com. Archived from the original on August 28, 2011. Retrieved February 28, 2012.
- ^ Feel it All Around — IFC
- ^ Got to Get Up by Change – Topic on YouTube
- ^ I Want You by Gary Low-Topic on YouTube
External links
[edit]Life of Leisure
View on GrokipediaBackground
Artist origins
Ernest Weatherly Greene Jr. was born on October 3, 1982, in Perry, Georgia.[9] He pursued higher education at the University of Georgia, where he earned an undergraduate degree in English literature and philosophy.[10] During his college years, Greene began exploring music more seriously, writing his own songs.[11] After completing his undergraduate studies, Greene obtained a Master of Library and Information Science from the University of South Carolina in 2009.[10] Despite his qualifications, he faced significant challenges finding employment in librarianship amid a competitive job market.[12] This led him to return to his parents' home in Perry, Georgia, in June 2009, unemployed and searching for library jobs while turning to music production as a creative outlet.[13] Around 2008, Greene had already started experimenting with bedroom recording, producing lo-fi rock tracks under the alias Lee Weather.[14] These early efforts laid the groundwork for his shift toward more electronic and ambient sounds. In the summer of 2009, Greene uploaded demos to MySpace, sparking initial online attention from music bloggers who praised the hazy, nostalgic quality of his work and drew comparisons to emerging artists like Neon Indian and Memory Tapes.[14] This buzz coincided with the rise of the chillwave genre, positioning Greene's project as a key early example of the style.[14] Encouraged by the response, he adopted the moniker Washed Out for these recordings, marking the formal launch of his professional music career from his childhood bedroom in Perry.[4]EP conception
Ernest Greene, the artist behind Washed Out, conceived Life of Leisure during a transitional period after completing his master's degree in library and information science, when he returned to his hometown of Perry, Georgia, to live with his parents while searching for employment.[10] In this rural setting, surrounded by peach orchards, Greene began experimenting with music in his childhood bedroom, drawing inspiration from lo-fi aesthetics and synth-pop to craft drowsy, distorted, dance pop-influenced tracks that captured a sense of hazy introspection.[15][16] The EP quickly positioned itself as a foundational release in the emerging chillwave movement of the late 2000s, alongside contemporaries like Neon Indian and Toro y Moi, by blending 1980s soft rock, synth-pop, and elements of psychedelia to produce sounds rich in romantic nostalgia and homespun, lo-fi textures.[2][17] Greene's approach emphasized emotional yearning filtered through a dreamy, sun-soaked lens, reflecting the genre's bedroom-production roots and its appeal within online music communities.[18] Opting to self-produce the project entirely on his own using basic home recording tools, Greene embodied the DIY ethos that defined the 2009 indie and blogging music scene, where artists shared rough demos via platforms like MySpace and niche labels.[15][19] This solitary process allowed for an intimate exploration of themes centered on leisure, relaxation, and escapist daydreams, with the EP's title directly evoking idle, unhurried lifestyles amid everyday ennui.[20]Recording and production
Studio process
The EP Life of Leisure was entirely bedroom-recorded by Ernest Greene in his parents' house in Perry, Georgia, during the summer of 2009, utilizing a modest home setup that captured its raw, unpolished essence.[21][13] Greene operated as a one-person production team, performing and layering all vocals, guitars, synthesizers, and drum programming himself through basic tools including an old Dell desktop computer, a MIDI controller, and digital audio workstations such as Reason and Cubase SE.[22] This solo multi-instrumentalist approach relied on software-based layering to build dense textures, with Greene experimenting in real-time to craft the project's characteristic hazy, reverb-drenched atmosphere—evident in tracks like "Feel It All Around," where blurred vocals and syrupy synths evoke a sun-soaked nostalgia.[2] The tracks originated from initial demos Greene shared online via MySpace under his real name, prior to adopting the Washed Out alias, which helped garner early buzz and led to his deal with Mexican Summer.[23] Recording progressed over several months in 2009, with most songs captured in single, focused sessions that Greene later reflected could have benefited from more revision, though the spontaneity aligned with the EP's lo-fi vibe; final mixes were completed just before the label signing and the September 8 release.[21] Greene faced notable challenges from the constrained environment, including the tight confines of his childhood bedroom and reliance on dated, low-end equipment with only a computer and a few synthesizers at his disposal, which amplified the production's intimacy but tested his resourcefulness.[24] These limitations inadvertently shaped the EP's aesthetic, fostering an unrefined, evocative sound that prioritized mood over polish and resonated with the emerging chillwave scene.[25]Technical influences
The production of Life of Leisure drew heavily on analog-inspired digital effects to achieve its signature hazy, immersive quality, with Ernest Greene employing tools like reverb, tape saturation simulations, and low-fidelity compression to blur vocals and instruments into a "washed out" aesthetic.[26] Greene recorded the EP in his parents' home in rural Georgia using basic digital audio workstations, including Reason for effects processing and Cubase SE for capturing synths and vocals, which allowed for these simulations without access to traditional analog gear.[22] This approach created a sense of depth and nostalgia, as the heavy reverb—often applied to vocals via Cubase plugins—drowned elements in a dreamy haze, while tape saturation emulations added subtle warmth and harmonic distortion to mimic vintage tape warmth on sampled loops.[26] Greene incorporated vintage synth sounds and drum machines emulating 1980s pop, sourcing samples from obscure tracks like Gary Low's 1983 disco hit for "Feel It All Around," then layering them with modern software for added distortion and harmonic richness.[26] These elements were processed through his MIDI controller connected to the Dell desktop setup, blending retro timbres—such as shimmering synth pads and punchy, gated drum machine beats—with digital distortion plugins in Reason to create a blend of nostalgia and contemporaneity.[22] The result was a sound palette that paid homage to 1980s soft rock and synth-pop while using software layering to build dense, atmospheric arrangements without relying on hardware synths.[26] In mixing, Greene prioritized atmosphere over clarity, burying vocals low in the stereo field amid ambient soundscapes and applying reverb to produce blurred, humid flows that evoked a nostalgic, dreamlike quality.[22] This technique, informed by his hip-hop production background, treated lyrics as textural elements rather than focal points to enhance the syrupy, immersive vibe.[22] The overall mix avoided polished separation, instead favoring a cohesive wash that mirrored the EP's themes of leisure and reverie.[26] The EP's technical influences were also shaped by the indie label DIY ethos of Mexican Summer, where Greene avoided professional studios to preserve raw, homespun textures through home-based experimentation.[27] This approach, rooted in limited resources during his unemployment, emphasized intuitive sampling and effects chaining over meticulous engineering, resulting in an unrefined yet evocative sound that resonated with the burgeoning chillwave scene.[26]Composition
Musical style
Life of Leisure is classified within the chillwave genre, which it helped define, alongside synth-pop influences and elements of dream pop, neo-psychedelia, and lo-fi electronica.[2][28][29] The EP's tracks are short and concise, averaging 2-3 minutes in length, with structures built around bouncy synth lines, echoing guitar textures, and anthemic hooks suitable for club settings, all set against relaxed, downtempo rhythms.[2][30] For instance, "Get Up" runs 3:00, "New Theory" 2:48, and "Lately" just 1:56, emphasizing brevity and loop-based repetition.[30] Key sonic traits include blurry, distorted production that evokes a humid, nostalgic atmosphere, reminiscent of 1980s soft rock and synth-pop reimagined through a modern psychedelic filter.[2] This hazy quality arises from cheap-sounding synths, out-of-sync atmospherics, and heavy reverb, creating an escapist, summery vibe unified across the release.[2] While tracks vary in energy—such as the upbeat, woozy groove of "Feel It All Around" contrasting the more subdued, introspective "Lately"—they cohere through this shared balmy, lo-fi aesthetic.[2]Lyrics and themes
The lyrics of Life of Leisure predominantly explore themes of romantic nostalgia, leisure, and emotional detachment, portraying idle lifestyles and fleeting relationships through hazy, introspective lenses.[2] These motifs evoke a sense of unhurried existence, where personal reverie and summer idylls serve as backdrops for yearning and quiet resignation.[19] Ernest Greene's vocal delivery is characterized by a buried, echoey style that often blends into the instrumentation, prioritizing mood over narrative clarity and suggesting emotional repression through its slurry, indistinct quality.[2][19] This approach aligns with the chillwave genre's dreamy aesthetic, where words dissolve into ambient textures.[2] Specific motifs include escapism in "Feel It All Around," where lyrics like "You feel it all around yourself / You know it's yours and no one else" convey a vague yearning for connection amid isolation.[2] In contrast, "Lately" highlights resignation through minimal, looped phrases such as "It's all I want, it's all I've got," evoking a gentle surrender to doubt and desire.[19] These elements draw influence from 80s pop lyrics, recontextualized with a modern, ironic lens on relaxation and detachment, as seen in sampled synth-pop hooks that infuse nostalgia with ironic distance.[2][19]Release
Commercial formats
Life of Leisure was released on September 8, 2009, by the independent label Mexican Summer in digital download, 12-inch vinyl, and later CD formats. The digital version became available first through platforms such as Bandcamp and iTunes, while the vinyl followed in limited edition presses on November 5, 2009, and the CD edition appeared in 2010.[1][30][31] The packaging adopted a minimalist design, featuring a photograph of artist Ernest Greene's wife floating serenely in the ocean, captured during their honeymoon; this imagery directly reinforced the EP's thematic emphasis on relaxation and unhurried existence. The original 12-inch vinyl was pressed on standard black, distributed primarily via independent record stores and online indie retailers, reflecting Mexican Summer's focus on niche, grassroots channels.[32][33] Subsequent reissues expanded format options, including a 2025 colored vinyl edition on pink pressing released directly by the artist, available through select indie outlets and online stores. Mexican Summer briefly supported promotion by highlighting the EP in early online coverage and partnerships.[5][34]Promotion and singles
The lead single from Life of Leisure, "Feel It All Around", was first released in July 2009, earning immediate attention as Pitchfork's Best New Track on August 24, 2009, and sparking early blog hype within the emerging chillwave scene. A limited 7-inch vinyl single followed in October 2009 via Transparent Records. The track gained traction through free streaming on MySpace, where Ernest Greene initially shared his home recordings, contributing to its organic online spread without major radio support.[35][36] No official music video accompanied the single's debut, though fan-created uploads featuring nature footage and time-lapse visuals proliferated on YouTube, amplifying its dreamy aesthetic and virality among indie listeners.[37] Promotional efforts centered on digital accessibility and grassroots tactics, including features in indie playlists on platforms like MySpace and early blog aggregators, alongside Mexican Summer's strategic push via the Pitchfork premiere to build buzz ahead of the EP's full digital release later that month.[6] Greene began live performances as Washed Out in late 2009, with his debut New York show at Santos Party House on October 20 marking a key moment in translating the project's bedroom origins to stage presence and tying into the EP's growing online momentum.[38] These initial outings expanded in 2010, including festival appearances that sustained the hype without relying on traditional media outlets.[39] "New Theory" received post-release promotion through its inclusion on the soundtrack for the 2013 film The Spectacular Now, where it underscored a party scene and introduced the track to a broader cinematic audience years after the EP's debut.[40] This placement highlighted the enduring appeal of Life of Leisure's material, though it occurred well after the initial rollout.Reception
Critical reviews
Upon its release in 2009, Life of Leisure received widespread critical acclaim for its role in shaping the emerging chillwave genre, with reviewers highlighting its innovative use of lo-fi production techniques and evocative soundscapes. Pitchfork awarded the EP an 8.0 out of 10, with critic Marc Hogan praising its "blurry singing, cheap-sounding synths, and humid, syrupy flow," which he described as a standout example of the genre's potential to evoke romantic nostalgia through homespun textures reminiscent of 1980s synth-pop.[2] Hogan noted that tracks like "Feel It All Around" captured an elusive emotional intimacy, positioning the EP as a key artifact in chillwave's brief but influential moment.[2] Other outlets echoed this enthusiasm, emphasizing the EP's dreamy, sample-driven aesthetic. In a 2010 review, The Quietus lauded Life of Leisure as the "apex of chillwave," crediting Ernest Greene's skillful integration of obscure 1980s samples—such as those from Gary Low and Change—transformed via reverb into "depthless oceans of gently lapping sound," making it a fitting soundtrack for the era's blogging culture of borrowed and obscured references.[19] The BBC Music review similarly commended its "affecting beauty" and refined quality among chillwave peers, calling it a charming introduction to Greene's hazy indie pop style, though noting the arrangements' occasional "cheap" sound.[41] Critics commonly praised the EP's innovation in lo-fi textures, which created emotional depth within its brief runtime of just over 18 minutes, blending psychedelic undertones with nostalgic appeal to produce a sense of effortless escapism. Minor criticisms focused on elements like the repetitiveness of certain synth lines and a perceived lack of directional purpose, with some reviewers suggesting the drifting quality might limit its long-term replay value.[41][2] In retrospective assessments by the 2020s, Life of Leisure has been widely regarded as a genre-defining work that helped establish chillwave's core sonic vocabulary of blurred vocals and vaporous electronics. Pitchfork's 2011 review of Greene's follow-up album reflected on how the EP "helped define a genre," a view reinforced in subsequent coverage of his discography.[42] User-driven platforms like Rate Your Music aggregate this enduring appreciation, with the EP holding an average rating of 3.5 out of 5 from over 3,800 ratings, underscoring its lasting impact as a foundational chillwave release.[29]Commercial performance
Life of Leisure, released independently by Mexican Summer, achieved modest initial sales primarily through niche indie distribution channels, reflecting its status as a debut EP in the emerging chillwave genre. The vinyl edition, pressed in limited quantities of around 500 copies, sold out quickly following its 2009 launch, with early copies including special artist-direct editions that were particularly sought after by collectors.[43][2] The EP did not chart on major Billboard rankings, underscoring its limited mainstream radio exposure at the time, though its performance was propelled by viral promotion on music blogs rather than traditional outlets.[44][45] The lead single "Feel It All Around" provided a key boost. Post-2009, the EP experienced strong growth in digital streaming, with "Feel It All Around" accumulating over 153 million streams on Spotify as of October 2025, contributing to the project's enduring online popularity.[46] This streaming resurgence highlighted the EP's long-tail success, as renewed interest from digital platforms amplified its reach years after initial release. By 2025, Life of Leisure had garnered significant user acclaim, with over 3,800 ratings on Rate Your Music averaging 3.5 out of 5 and 737 ratings on Discogs averaging 4.5 out of 5, demonstrating sustained fan engagement.[29][5] The EP's ongoing demand was further evidenced by its 2025 vinyl reissue, an indie-exclusive colored edition released on November 7 by Mexican Summer, which quickly became available through specialty retailers.[8]Legacy
Cultural impact
Life of Leisure played a pivotal role in popularizing the chillwave genre in 2009, emerging alongside contemporaries like Toro y Moi and Neon Indian to define a sound characterized by nostalgic, vaporous synths and lo-fi production.[47][17] The EP's release helped crystallize chillwave as the first major genre of the internet era, with its bedroom-recorded tracks capturing a hazy, escapist vibe that resonated through online music blogs.[47][48] The track "Feel It All Around" garnered significant accolades, ranking at number 11 on Pitchfork's Top 100 Tracks of 2009 and number 36 on NME's list of the year's best songs.[49][50] Retrospectively, Life of Leisure has been ranked among the top chillwave releases, placing fourth on Pitchfork's best chillwave albums list and earning high marks on platforms like Rate Your Music for its enduring influence.[51][29] The EP's production style encouraged a DIY ethos and hazy aesthetics in indie music throughout the 2010s, promoting homespun textures and blurred vocals that inspired lo-fi electronica and bedroom pop movements.[2][52] This ripple effect is evident in artists like Tame Impala, whose psychedelic explorations carry chillwave's dreamy DNA, and Mac DeMarco, whose slacker indie draws from the genre's relaxed, lo-fi intimacy.[53][54] On a broader scale, Life of Leisure symbolized escapist music in the digital age, offering nostalgic reverie amid online fragmentation, a theme Ernest Greene has revisited in later work.[55] Pitchfork has credited Greene as the "godfather of chillwave" for this foundational impact, a moniker reaffirmed in 2024 coverage of his ongoing innovations.[56][57]Usage in media
The track "Feel It All Around" from Life of Leisure served as the opening theme song for the IFC sketch comedy series Portlandia, which aired from 2011 to 2018.[7][58] This placement significantly increased the song's visibility, with the show attracting over 1.3 million total viewers for the season two premiere night line-up, including encores, and maintaining a dedicated audience across eight seasons.[59] The recurring use in the opening sequence helped solidify "Feel It All Around" as an iconic element of the series, associating the EP's hazy, atmospheric sound with the show's satirical take on urban culture. "New Theory," another standout from the EP, was featured on the soundtrack for the 2013 coming-of-age film The Spectacular Now, directed by James Ponsoldt.[40][60] The song appears during a key party scene, enhancing the film's introspective and youthful tone with its dreamy synth layers and reverb-drenched vocals. In the fashion realm, "Feel It All Around" was licensed for Proenza Schouler's Fall 2010 campaign video, a behind-the-scenes look at the photoshoot that highlighted the brand's grunge-infused prints and edgy silhouettes.[61] The track's ethereal, leisure-evoking vibe complemented the collection's relaxed yet sophisticated aesthetic, marking an early crossover of Life of Leisure's music into high-fashion advertising. Tracks from Life of Leisure saw additional streaming placements in various television shows and advertisements throughout the 2010s, contributing to the EP's enduring presence in visual media.[62] Remixes, such as the RAC Mix of "New Theory," and cover versions appeared in indie music compilations and online playlists, further extending the EP's influence in niche digital spaces.[63]Track listing and credits
Standard edition
The standard edition of Life of Leisure features six tracks with a total runtime of 17:21. The track listing is as follows:- "Get Up" – 3:00
- "New Theory" – 2:48
- "Hold Out" – 3:28
- "Feel It All Around" – 3:12
- "Lately" – 1:56
- "You'll See It" – 2:53 [30]
Vinyl configuration
The vinyl release divides the tracks across two sides:Side A
A1. "Get Up" – 3:00
A2. "New Theory" – 2:49
A3. "Hold Out" – 3:29 Side B
B1. "Feel It All Around" – 3:12
B2. "Lately" – 1:57
B3. "You'll See It" – 2:54 [64] Digital versions match the physical track order and durations closely, with no major alternate editions produced.[65]
