duendita: Melodies That Morph
The EP feels like a long meditation, with each track carrying you to the next. Listening in different settings, I found it hard to pinpoint when one song ended and another began. Candace’s voice plummeted me deep into the valleys of her vocal cords, her vibrations lifting me back up through layers of sound and instrumentation.
Returning from a summer in Berlin, Candace seemed to be adjusting back into normal life. Much of the mind is a miracle was created there, in what she describes as an “unofficial residency.” Working with her bandmate Noah Becker and other artists, she expanded on the EP’s original demos, welcoming new ideas and perspectives.
As Candace spoke about her summer and the people she worked with, it was clear they hold a special corner of her heart. The collaborators were the driving inspiration for the mind is a miracle, with many songs “starting with people in a room rather than in creative isolation.” Candace started playing the songs live while on tour with Crumb, sampling her own performances to inform and shape the final tracks.
I admired how easily Candace embraced the shifts in her creative process — creating only when it felt right and letting go of expectations. Taking a bite of a pot sticker, she said, “It's so beautiful how we can work on something for a long time and see the many shapes it could take.”
Listening to the mind is a miracle, you can sense that organic evolution. Candace perfectly matched up different elements and sounds over time. From a recording of her best friend making breakfast to layers of a harmonizing bassoon, the EP feels like a long-form journal entry, capturing Candance’s life, mindset, and experiences over the four years it took to develop.
When I asked Candace the ideal setting for listeners to hear the EP, she responded with, “Honestly, I don't know if this music is listenable. You gotta be in the mood for it.” I beg to differ, but also love her answer. What the mind is a miracle offers is a different kind of listening experience that changes over time, whether it's through live performances or listeners’ personal perspectives.
In that way, the mind is a miracle feels timeless, forever morphing with intention.