An Orange Colored Day Arima Ederra

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2023

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
25.08.2023

Label: Arima Ederra

Genre: Pop

Subgenre: Pop Rock

Interpret: Arima Ederra

Das Album enthält Albumcover

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  • 1 Letters from the Imaginary 02:41
  • 2 Free Again 02:32
  • 3 Steel Wing 04:36
  • 4 Drugz/Wooden Wheel 02:39
  • 5 Message 03:26
  • 6 Loverman 01:12
  • 7 Portals 02:45
  • 8 Orange Colored Day 03:07
  • 9 Yellow Cabi 01:57
  • 10 Fall for You 04:43
  • 11 Dual Skies 03:22
  • Total Runtime 33:00

Info zu An Orange Colored Day

The firstborn daughter of Ethiopian refugees, music and songwriting were inherently part of Arima's upbringing as she discovered the power of mezmur, Ethiopian spiritual music, in the back of an Ethiopian Orthodox Church in Las Vegas where she was raised. That belief in the healing power of songs and stories flows through her own music, which she took with her as she found a home amongst like-minded peers and friends in Leimert Park, Los Angeles. In 2016, she released her celestial 2016 EP Temporary Fixes, which The FADER called "a tranquil offering laced with pleasant vocals and jazzy melodies inspired by love, attraction, and loss." In LA, she found herself a home and community amongst like-minded peers, and toured with Noname around her critically-acclaimed debut album Telefone.

In the time since, Arima's been honing her craft as an artist, working alongside the likes of Jon Bap and Teo Halm, and living through the spectrum of experiences that inform her forthcoming full-length project, An Orange Colored Day.

Waking up feels good. You should stretch when you wake—your voice, your hands, your knees. If it's early, it's just you and the trees and the songs will come visit you. The melody might come dressed like lightning bugs. It might swing down from the crest of a hill and brush over you like wind. When it does come, be ready to grab it fast.

"The album quickly transitions into a picture of hope and resilience in “Steel Wing”, a track with an upbeat drum sound which then beautifully switches to a reggae rhythm. The song is seemingly an ode to her father (a constant figure in the album and by extension the artist’s life) amidst his status as a refugee and coalesces with her own journey to adulthood and self-discovery. “Steel Wing” is not just a song of determination and strength against the harsh realities of the world but also the adoption of personhood through the experiences of our parents, and in this case, the safeguarding of Ederra’s freedom vis-a-vis the “crooked man’s stealing of all their gold.” (orpheusreview.com)

Arima Ederra




Arima Ederra
Born to immigrant Ethiopian parents, Arima Ederra was crowned with the bittersweet curse of being a first-generation American artist, living between two worlds — what her heart yearned for, and the pressure of wanting to make her parents proud, honoring their sacrifices.

“I definitely have felt the feeling of being in-between two worlds, but the guilt sort of turned into motivation for me over time, and their journeys have inspired mine,” she says. Instead of pushing her culture and parents’ teachings away, she uses their stories as a way to connect to a lineage that might have otherwise been lost, using her voice as a vessel to speak her ancestor's greatest wishes into fruition.

Growing up in Las Vegas, the singer steered rebelliously in whatever direction she desired — art, music, spirituality — sometimes landing her as an outlier. "I was a very rebellious kid, I got into a lot of trouble. I was the one where they were like ‘don't be like her’. I just did what I wanted.” Almost ceremoniously, it’s as if the act of revolting was also passed down throughout her lineage. "I ran away, and it made me think about why I am the way that I am, but my dad was also a pretty rebellious political person," she remembers. "It's a very radical act to leave a place that is your home and seek refuge." With this notion, she belts "my refugee blood, you can't take my freedom," on "Steel Wing" from her newest project.

With her debut album, An Orange Colored Day, Arima channels the innocence of a child's wondrous mind. "Children are a really big part of my inspiration in life," she says. "I think a lot of times, when we come into adulthood, we come with so much baggage and we're jaded." What she admires most about children is "their ability to forgive." This sentiment is heard sonically on tracks like "Free Again"; a song that uses toy trinkets and simplistic drum patterns to paint a fluttering sonic landscape worthy of a child’s imagination. Inspiration for the track came from a psychedelic trip Arima took that led to an adventure led by a hallucinatory childhood imaginary friend. As a message to her younger self, the song teaches listeners to not take life too seriously. "This is for everyone to break free from the mental strains of life, break free from the strains of capitalism, break free from whatever society says you need to be at whatever stage you are in life."

Arima understands that healing while breaking free from oppressive experiences isn't a linear process. "Purging for me is like the beginning of that process, you let out all those feelings. And then I think writing is a way for me to articulate them, name them," to her, the act of purging comes as baring all emotions, defining them, and releasing them as fit. She recalls a "huge purge" that took place in her life after a series of unfortunate events that led to tragedy.



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