Vinyl Williams


Vinyl Williams is an American neo-psychedelic band led by Los Angeles-based multimedia artist and musician Lionel Williams, active since 2007. Vinyl Williams has released four studio albums: Lemniscate, Into, Brunei and Opal.
Williams, who calls his music "celestial pop", has been described as neo-psychedelia,, electronic, dream pop, shoegaze, krautrock, chillwave and hypnagogic pop. Dummy Mag has called Williams a "retro futurist with a penchant for analogue noise and sonic transcendentalism".

History

Lionel Williams is the grandson of cinematic composer John Williams, and the son of session drummer and producer Mark Towner Williams and classical pianist Leah Williams.
He began recording as Vinyl Williams in 2007, and self-released the extended play Naked Sanctuary in July 2010. Other musicians who played with Williams in these early days included drummer Bryan Lee and bassists Calin Stephensen and Craig Murray.
In 2011, Williams assembled a backing band that included synth player Nikita Arefkia, multi-instrumentalist Ian Gibbs, drummer/synth player James Lake, and bassist/drummer Billy Winger.
Prior to the release of the Ultimate World EP, its first single, "Chroma Heart", was premiered on March 9, 2012 on Abeano.com and International Tapes. Abeano described the song as "kaleidoscopic, gleaming with the soft, lush hues of something lovingly crafted and utterly gorgeous". On March 26, 2012, The Line of Best Fit featured another single from the EP, "Teal Palm", as their "Song of the Day", calling it "deceptively simple four-chord pop, played through a kaleidoscopic filter of Can-esque kraut and Secret Machines-esque post-rock, constantly modulated with bits of Luke Abbott-indebted pastoral electronica". The Guardian featured Vinyl Williams in its "New Band of the Day" series on March 21, 2012, with Paul Lester describing Williams' music as playing host to "the effulgent aura of the more gently experimental noise-pop, with the ghostly pall of chillwave"
Ultimate World, written and performed solely by Williams, was released by Warmest Chord on April 9, 2012, A mixtape by Williams, Spacebeat, was released to promote the release via Dummy Mag. The video for "Chroma Heart", premiered by Vice Media's Noisey site on April 10, 2012, was directed by Williams and included reference to his collage work.
Vinyl Williams' debut studio album, Lemniscate, was released on November 12, 2012 by No Pain in Pop in Europe and Williams' own Salonislam imprint in the US. The Fader premiered videos for "Higher Worlds" and "Harmonious Change" prior to the album's release. The album received a positive reception from critics. The Guardian gave the album a positive 4 out of 5 rating, while Pitchfork critic Patric Fallon said, "Lionel 'Vinyl' Williams' retro-obsessed psych-pop is obscured in lo-fi tape hiss, riddled with microphone distortions, and sounds as if it was crafted purely from the dust lifted off of Can records. His wavering voice floats inside gobs of delay and reverb, constantly changing tone and pitch amidst the thick smoke of smoldering synth tones and destroyed guitar strums".
Vinyl Williams was interviewed by Dazed & Confused in October 2012, and contributed original art to the article.
No Pain in Pop released the "Stellarscope" single on March 1, 2013, including a Europa51 remix featuring ex-Stereolab member Andy Ramsay. Williams and Arefkia created an interactive music video to coincide with the release, which premiered the same day on Dazed Digital. Williams said: "'Stellarscope' is an interactive environment. It's meant to be explored as a generative process - in other words you create the visuals by wandering throughout. Certain objects have sounds that emanate out of them which are in congruency with the actual song. If you can make into a close proximity to those objects during the duration of the song, in a sense you can jam with it. It's supposed to allow navigation into a visual and sonic improvisational world. There is no interface or goal, it's really about exploring, and ultimately a test of digital dexterity. It appears to be a little difficult to navigate through a space jungle kingdom built on seamless stream-of-consciousness."
While in Seoul, South Korea, Williams met with Chaz Bundick of Toro y Moi and the two decided to collaborate on a conceptual, interactive record combining music and visuals; Trance Zen Dental Spa was released as a free digital EP on December 10, 2014 by Bundick's Company Records. Williams explained: "The most conceptually-intact way for this project to exist is as a digital form. It's about issues of simulated phenomena that ultimately end up as choose-your-own-adventure hypnotism".
Company Records released the second Vinyl Williams studio album, Into, on 24 July 24, 2015. The album's lead single, "World Soul", premiered on April 29 on Stereogum, and was described as a "clinic on layering synths and electro atmospheric sounds". On June 15, the video for "World Soul" was premiered by Clash, which described it as "a feast for the eyes - flickering colour, hypnotic shapes and more".
Vinyl Williams released his third album, Brunei, on August 26, 2016 on Company. It included the singles "Riddles of the Sphinx" and "L'Quasar".
A fourth album, Opal, was released by the French label Requiem Pour Un Twister on July 20, 2018, preceded by the singles "Lansing" and "Noumena" and a 360-degree video for "Aphelion".

Art

Lionel Williams has developed a collage art catalog that has received worldwide acclaim. His artwork was exhibited at the Ugly Art Room's "All That Remains" show in Brooklyn in 2011, and the "Let the Sunshine In" exhibition at Mindpirates Gallery in Berlin in January 2012, during which he improvised with other musicians including Jochen Arbeit, Travis Stewart, Miguel de Pedro and Verity Susman. Williams' artwork was also featured in Dazed & Confused magazine's art issue in November 2012. In 2013, his work was exhibited under the title "Sri Neter" at the California Institute of the Arts.

Video work

Williams has directed music videos for other bands such as Tears for Fears, Medicine and Unknown Mortal Orchestra.

Members

Members

Studio albums