Jon Bryant Shares Euphoric Single “Lightspeed”; Announces New EP ‘PsychIdyllic Salutations’ Out 11/26
September 10, 2021 BY Nettwerk
Alternative singer, songwriter & multi-instrumentalist Jon Bryant announces his new EP PsychIdyllic Salutations due out on November 26th via Nettwerk. Bryant shares a new taste of the EP with single “Lightspeed,” a mystifying blend of pulsing beats and euphoric R&B-inspired melodies.
“This song is about change,” reflects Jon Bryant. “How fast it can happen. I remember during the week before COVID shut our lives down, I was out alone one night and suddenly realized the people I was with 30 minutes ago were gone, and I was with a whole new crew. It hit me pretty hard and I got thinking about how incredible moments and opportunities pass us by. How people we’ve known for so long change and its hard to accept that sometimes. I like change but I don’t want it to happen too fast…or get left behind.”
“Lightspeed” will join previous single releases “Tied Up,” and “Candied Tangerines,” on the new EP which sees Bryant leaning into his funkier side.
Watch + Share “Lightspeed” Here:
Life was good when Jon Bryant got the inspiration for what was going to become his funky, soulful Psychidyllic Salutations EP. It was early 2020, when bars and restaurants were still very much open—and Bryant, while visiting Los Angeles, had dropped by the historic Sportsmen’s Lodge Hotel pool for a lazy Sunday lounge. But what started out as a solo mission for a margarita and a dip turned into a much more substantial social affair, as a larger group took Bryant into their party’s wing.
It wasn’t long after that experience that Bryant found himself back at home in Vancouver, with the world shutting down. The polar contrast of going from “being more alive than ever” to being stuck inside kept bringing him back to that perfect day in LA, which had eventually turned into a perfect night as well. So, Bryant decided to write music about it, following up his acclaimed 2019 LP Cult Classic, written in the aftermath of leaving the NXIVM cult, and the subsequent EPs, Half Bad and Back to Love.
Listening to it, you’d imagine Bryant wrote the tracks as they appear, flowing into one another, but the EP’s 6 songs were the laborious result of a self-applied challenge to write 50 songs in 50 days. In the end, he actually had more than 50 songs. He revisited the full batch with fresh ears, looking for the ones that gave him goosebumps. By the time he whittled it down to 6 tracks, he found the story of his wild 24 hours in LA looking back at him.
The end result is one of the most wide-ranging releases of Bryant’s career.