Album Review: DVNA Will Make You Join “All My Friends”
Okay, I’m going to reveal a secret. I love Stacie Orrico, and have yet to figure out why her career fizzled away. In the 90s, she was known for making songs that were groovy and empowering. She also had a voice that fed notes as if she was getting them from a bowl of cherries. I couldn’t help but hear Stacie in DVNA’s FANTASTIC All My Friends EP, which comes out September 25.
DVNA – All My Friends [Official Music Video]
DVNA’s All My Friends EP makes you shimmy upon first track: “Sushi In Tokyo.” The song is light, bright, and girded in rhythms that swish like palm trees under a Caribbean wind. The entire album feels like 90’s pop mixed in with flares of R&B and NuJazz. From “ All My Friends” to “More To Give,” every track is CATCHY! I am talking turn up the radio, know the lyrics, and sing along as if mini-concerts were made for traffic jams. Her sound and style make you drift into a sugary abyss that is distinct to her, which is hard.
DVNA – Sushi In Tokyo [Official Audio]
THERE ARE SO MANY ARTISTS, and it is not easy to sound different and good. I get so many press releases of an artist comparing themselves to Billie Eilish or Lana Del Rey, and, frankly, I TOTALLY understand. How do you show and highlight you are incomparable when people work according to comparisons? Heck, we only know hell because we compare it Heaven! While DVNA fits the pop genre with a Stacie Orrico flare, she is one of a kind. Like Benee or Elena Rose, these are artists that stand out and alone in their delivery of groovy tracks that empower women to have a good time and be good to themselves. From “Half Past Sober” to “Why You Gotta Be So Nice,” All My Friends shows DVNA can make you feel better. For More Information Click Here.