FOLLow Sarah Marie Nicolosi viA:
Buckle up for a musical joyride with Sarah Marie Nicolosi and their band of brainy musicians in the Golden Mean Project. Their song “Gimme A Laser (Kyrie Eleison)” is like a funky math party for your ears.
Sarah Marie Nicolosi, the brain behind it all, plays a bunch of things like synth, melodica, and even a wooden frog. The band includes Charles, Jonathan, Charlie, and Michael. Each brings their flavor to the mix. With synths, percussion, bass, and other instruments you’ll go, “Whoa, that’s cool!”
While the cerebral concept seems tailor-made for prog-heads, the songcraft delivers immediate, effervescent appeal. Glimmering keyboards and punchy 808 basslines build an infectious groove – this is EDM with a higher purpose. As it cycles through kaleidoscopic synth presets, the arrangement feels appropriately fractal. When a children’s chorus enters chanting “Gimme a laser!” it’s a masterstroke, perfectly encapsulating playful chaotic energy.
Gimme A Laser (Kyrie Eleison): Who Should Listen?
Recorded and produced in the band’s Minneapolis hometown, “Gimme a Laser” masterfully balances mathematical sophistication with sheer musicality. It succeeds as a listener-friendly earworm and a mission statement from this collective of polymath creatives. If the upcoming Golden Mean Project album extends this winning formula into additional modal explorations, those with a penchant for geometry must listen to it.
For Nicolosi, “Gimme a Laser” provides a vibrant manifesto on embracing neurological diversity amid slippery synth riffs and radius vectors. When she asserts “the beauty of how my brain is wired,” it’s a paradigm-shifting declaration of self-love with euphoric results. Uplifting and complexly harmonious, the song lives up to its own multivalent meaning.
Much like Fibonacci’s equation, “Gimme A Laser (Kyrie Eleison)” towers too infinitely tall for a single listen to fully scale. But why overanalyze perfection? Simply surrender to the sacred sonic architecture, let intuition navigate towards understanding, and discover a fractal glimpse of divinity embedded in this audacious four-minute pop prayer.