Light Asylum: A Certain Person The Burgeoning Art Pop Duo Premiere an Electrifying New Video

Light Asylum: A Certain Person

0 comments

Light Asylum: A Certain Person

Eden Batki

Light Asylum: A Certain Person

MY RATING

RATE THIS VIDEO
MY RATING
EDIT RATING

RATE THIS VIDEO

COMMUNITY RATING

Music & Dance

Light Asylum: A Certain Person

The Burgeoning Art Pop Duo Premiere an Electrifying New Video

Uniting the steely cool of Grace Jones with an elegiac synth-pop sound, Light Asylum frontwoman Shannon Funchess slinks between murky forests and ecstatic strobe lights in her band’s new music video “A Certain Person.” Filmmaker Eden Batki trailed Funchess and keys man Bruno Coviello last summer on the band’s west coast tour, capturing the duo performing at fog-filled venues, exploring the Portland wilderness and soaking up the atmosphere in a twinkle-lit lodge in Santa Cruz, described by the singer as “a haunted old resort where Joan Crawford-types would holiday.” With fans including LCD Soundsystem’s James Murphy, Funchess spent years singing back-up vocals for the likes of !!! (Chk Chk Chk) and TV On the Radio before finding her own sound, culminating in the release of the band’s recent debut EP, In Tension. “I grew up listening to Siouxsie and the Banshees, Depeche Mode, The Cure and The Human League—the new wave and the romantics,” she says. “Having all these inspirations, it took me a long time to figure out what exactly I was supposed to be doing.” 


RELATED TOPICS

MORE TO LOVE

Solange Knowles for Saint Heron: Eldorado Ballroom

Supported by Ferragamo and Ilia, Solange Knowles for Saint Heron curates Eldorado Ballroom, featuring six programs across three major Houston venues: Jones Hall, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and the historic Eldorado Ballroom. The series aims to honor the legacies of Black artists while showcasing new voices and innovation in music. As a celebration of Houston's musical legacy, the program features nights of classical works by Black female composers, spiritual/gospel music, contemporary and performance art, and many other tributes to the city's sound culture. Two free film screenings accompany the series. 10 - 16 June.

UK AIDS Memorial Quilt

Initiated by Charlie Porter, the Tate Modern displays the entire UK AIDS Memorial Quilt, bringing its 42 quilts and 23 individual panels to the Turbine Hall. Visitors will have a rare oppurtunity to view the work, which spans the entire floor of the hall and represents 384 individuals affected by HIV and AIDS. The UK AIDS Memorial Quilt is a chapter of the largest community art project in the world, continuously aiming to raise awareness of the ongoing AIDS pandemic. There will also be an opportunity to warch unseen documentary There Is A Light That Never Goes Out (1995), screening in the Starr Cinema, along with a live reading of the names, and a special choral piece by the London Gay Men’s Chorus. Until 16 June.

David Hockney 25

David Hockney, one of the most influential artists of the 20th and 21st centuries, has taken over the entire building of the Fondation Louis Vuitton for an exhibition that is exceptional in its scale and originality. David Hockey 25 brings together more than 400 of his works (from 1955 to 2025), including paintings from international, institutional, and private collections, as well as works from the artist’s own studio and Foundation. The exhibition shows how the artist has continually renewed both his subjects and his mode of expression, reinventing his art with the use of new media to become a champion of new technologies. Until 31 August.

Light Asylum: A Certain Person