Culture, Music

Track of the Week: Lost In Yesterday – Tame Impala

0 380

By Ellie Tyson


Aussie band Tame Impala have released the fourth single from their upcoming album The Slow Rush. “When we were living in squalor, wasn’t it heaven / Back when we used to get on it four out of seven” – the opening lines of the track sound like most of our uni days and do an excellent job of establishing the theme of rose-tinted nostalgia that continues throughout. The song is an eclectic mix of electronic and disco-infused rhythms accompanied by a compulsive bass-line which works almost perfectly to create another enjoyable single.

Listen to ‘Lost In Yesterday’ below:

The Slow Rush is out on February 14th via Interscope/Fiction records, just in time for Valentine’s day. The band has previously shared with fans three other songs from the record: “Posthumous Forgiveness,” “Borderline,” and “It Might Be Time.”

Tame Impala are set to headline All Points East Festival in London on the May bank holiday weekend, their only UK exclusive show of 2020. Tickets can be found here.

Social Media
Official Website
Facebook
Twitter
Instagram
Youtube

About the author / 

aAh!

aAh! Magazine is Manchester Metropolitan University's arts and culture magazine.

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

More News Stories:

  • Is This Thing On? @ Contact Theatre review – raw, outstanding and heartwarming

    Featured image: Aaron Shaw ‘Is This Thing On?’ is a unique debut show, a product of the creative collaboration between Ellie Campbell, Megan Keaveney (MissMatch), and the So La Flair theatre company. Following its debut appearance at Contact Theatre, the show promises to be a memorable experience for those attending the tour across Wigan, Leeds,…

  • Album review: Seagoth – How to Stay Wide Awake

    Featured image: Seagoth “This album is dedicated to all of the people who can’t take a day off from themselves, to the people who have to face their greatest fears every single day – and to all the pain we feel, may we heal”. – Seagoth on How to Stay Wide Awake. While studying music…

  • Is This Thing On: Feminist theatre with a twist comes to Contact

    Featured image: So La Flair Theatre Ellie Campbell and Megan Keaveney graduated last year from Manchester Theatre School. The pair met at a house party in their first year, where Ellie was standing on a table singing her heart out to Florence and the Machine. Megan locked eyes with her and knew they would be…