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Spill Tab: “Really a project between friends”

Spill Tab: “Really a project between friends”
The Franco-Korean artist's debut album is in keeping with the times when nothing is canceled out, but everything blends together. This bold and playful pop is experienced by many, as the cover art, which is narrated by Claire Chicha (her real name), suggests.
Spill Tab releases its first album. (DR)

“My previous single covers were mostly photos, and for my first album, it all started with a desire to work with Alexandra Rizk, a friend who is a dentist, but also a painter. This record is really very collaborative. I think about ten producers must have participated in its creation. So I wanted to show that it was a project conceived between friends. When we started working, Angie wasn't finished, but I sent her the tracks so she could understand the atmosphere. We started by creating the single covers so that it would be coherent. This is the first time I've released a physical copy of my music, and I wanted it to be something I could keep and put on a wall.”

"We started with a photo that Alex used as a model. I think the album explores, among other things, the relationship between organic and digital, and it's a bit the same with the method we used. With Photoshop, we added small details—the scissors on the ground, the joints, the salmon—to create a bizarre impression and recall songs from the album. The fish, for example, refers to Angie. It's like a treasure hunt. Then she started looking for a base color, which, even if covered by other colors, sets the tone for the final painting. We started with a turquoise, between green and blue, a bit emotionally dark. She was very quick to create this painting, barely ten days, even though she's a full-time dentist!"

“I invited friends over to create a kind of scene, like a little party. It reminded me of the atmosphere when I was in college in New York, where weed wasn't legal and people only smoked in apartments. I think there's only one time marker, it's David in the top left who looks like he's on a phone, but it could be old. The goal was really to reflect the complexity of the album, the confusion that the music can give off.”

Libération

Libération

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