March 29 street date. Kaleida are the transatlantic duo whose darkly mystic soundworld finds glimmers of hope in the disquiet. Spanning an ocean, the pair have nurtured a long distance partnership that withstands the shifting patterns of life. Kaleida first came to international renown in 2014, when their single "Think" went viral overnight and was featured in the soundtrack for the Keanu Reeves film, "John Wick". Their debut album "Tear The Roots" arrived in 2017 and crystallised the pair's moody pop aesthetic, which merges Christina Wood's sylph-like, operatic vocals with Cicely Goulder's neo-Noir electronica. The record earned the duo their second spot in a film soundtrack, this time for "Atomic Blonde" with a tender take on Nena's 1980s anti-war classic "99 Luftballons". It was followed in 2020 by the pair's second album "Odyssey", dubbed "a consummate work of electronic artistry". Their new album "In Arms" is a record that leans into a near transcendent spiritualism, where their minimalist production conceals a raw, celestial power. With a departure from their previously insular way of working, they invited other musicians into the production process, most notably producer Johan Hugo (Self Esteem, M.I.A, Skepta).
March 29 street date. Kaleida are the transatlantic duo whose darkly mystic soundworld finds glimmers of hope in the disquiet. Spanning an ocean, the pair have nurtured a long distance partnership that withstands the shifting patterns of life. Kaleida first came to international renown in 2014, when their single "Think" went viral overnight and was featured in the soundtrack for the Keanu Reeves film, "John Wick". Their debut album "Tear The Roots" arrived in 2017 and crystallised the pair's moody pop aesthetic, which merges Christina Wood's sylph-like, operatic vocals with Cicely Goulder's neo-Noir electronica. The record earned the duo their second spot in a film soundtrack, this time for "Atomic Blonde" with a tender take on Nena's 1980s anti-war classic "99 Luftballons". It was followed in 2020 by the pair's second album "Odyssey", dubbed "a consummate work of electronic artistry". Their new album "In Arms" is a record that leans into a near transcendent spiritualism, where their minimalist production conceals a raw, celestial power. With a departure from their previously insular way of working, they invited other musicians into the production process, most notably producer Johan Hugo (Self Esteem, M.I.A, Skepta).