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Today, Samantha is doing just that. She is pursuing her passion for music and making a name for herself as a talented singer and songwriter. Her vocal range is intense and can both shock and console listeners. Despite the challenges she has faced in her life, Samantha's perseverance and dedication to her craft are an inspiration to others who may be struggling.
Her debut EP, Running In Place, showcased her refined and intricate song structures that blend together elements of various genres, resulting in a sound that is entirely her own. The EP was a promising introduction to Samantha's music, and fans eagerly anticipated what would come next.
Now, the ambitious young musician strikes out with an exquisite conceptual LP titled Summers, The album showcases Samantha's exceptional vocal range and songwriting skills combining mellow acoustics, ethereal melodies, indie rock rhythms and surprisingly heavy percussion lines that provocatively rile your ears up.
“Summer is that but a feeling, it’s never really there right in front of you, but you know It when you feel it, even in the winter"
Samantha Marie Saglibene's album Summers is an introspective exploration of life's complexities and the ever-changing nature of the world we inhabit. Her lyrics delve into the paradoxical coexistence of joy and heartbreak, as well as the intricate relationship between hope and loss. The album is crafted with a focus on the season of summer, with each song interwoven with parallel stories to create a cohesive unit. Samantha carefully curated the order of the songs to convey the fluidity and constant evolution of life.
“I wrote Summers, as I was trying to understand the world in a way that made sense, why the time seemed to go by so fast, why I could feel so much joy, and so much heartbreak at the same time, and why hope and loss intertwine together so well. I crafted the album, with my writing, for the songs to be connected to each other through parallel stories within the songs, lyricism that denotes the season of Summer, and the genre changes to represent how we are constantly changing.”
Complex and borderline celebratory, Summers has feelgood melodies and live-wire riffs aplenty, but they’re all seasoned with meaningful emotional evocations such as with “Push Me out” and “Strawberry Sensation”. Whenever a moodier mood strikes, Samantha flows into folk-hued ballardry and then drifts into nearly abstract, dream-pop expanses that feel an ode to summer doldrums. All of these different feelings ebb and flow like the tide, and they allow us to enjoy a great diversity within a single stunning piece of work distributed deliberately and lovingly across 13 songs and an interlude.
With summer being a time of immense change in Samantha's life, she wanted to explore the emotions that come with it, including friendships, falling in love, loss, and the hope of starting over. The album features a blend of gentle acoustics and indie rock rhythms that reflect Samantha's unique sound.
For Samantha, summer is more than just a season - it's a feeling that can be experienced at any time of the year. It's a time of transformation and growth, where we may have to close one door to open another. All in all, Summers is a beautiful introspective album that speaks to the universal human experience of change and growth and the curve balls that life throws at us.
With music reminiscent of Project X and early 2000s clubbing, Groupthink lets you feel free from obligations. Free from assumptions and stereotypes, anyone can enjoy a Groupthink set. Within the sets, the music, and the atmosphere— there's something for everyone. Groupthink's entire artistic world is a party. Tune into Groupthink's site to attend the party yourself.
office sat down with Groupthink to discuss his career and recent inspirations.
Who are your musical inspriations?
Justice, LMFAO, Arthur Russell, Anna Weyant. That's Mount Rushmore for me right now.
Style icons?
Old people are so fresh. Amanda Bynes in She's The Man— all the styling in She's The Man is actually pretty good. I like to get a new pair of sneakers and jump right into a puddle. I like to dress like the iPod classic. Everyone looks hot in Brazil soccer jersey and a good pair of jeans. Pretty sure I'm addicted to these one pair of pants. Can't say the brand or you'll laugh.
In an age where everyone exists IRL and online, how do you build an identity around your sound?
I make a lot of music on my phone. We are surrounded by sound and lights and music and words and ideas. The material is already there. If you’re trying, then you’re trying too hard. We’re at a party on our phones, we’re online falling in love. We’re having a photo shoot in the middle of the club. The hottest person you know probably has 400 followers on instagram. I hate fake sterile bullshit and I hate bad advertising. The internet is just as real as the people you meet at a house party. And if you throw a sick party, you’re going to wake up in the morning, open your phone and relive the night over again.
What was your first exposure to music?
Pretty Ricky's "Grind on Me" is such a hot song. Music from movies— I used to fall in love with songs I never knew the names of until I grew up. I never really played guitar or felt cool enough to look up the names of songs when I was a kid. I like it better that way. I like not knowing, because it lets you fall in love. And it’s so embarrassing to Shazam a song.
When did you first realize this was something you could actually do?
It still feels surreal that I sing or that this is my job, but when I landed in LAX and there was a driver with a suit on holding a sign that say “Groupthink” I thought that was pretty hilarious, a little gauche and kinda too real.
How often are you actually on your phone?
Are you trying to embarrass me? (Too much).
What’s your favorite musical era?
We will never get the feeling back of the summer of 2016. I like a lot of the music that happened when computers first hit the scene. Very rudimentary and stupid in a savant way. I think about kids cutting out shapes from construction paper, that’s what I like in music. French electro is also so annoyingly good to me for some reason. I think there’s a law in France that the radio stations have to be 60% in French, maybe that has something to do with it. Also why did Justice never work with Ke$ha?
Usual after-DJing activity: Where are you at? Who are you with? What are you doing?
This is exactly the type of text I get after DJing. Lmao. Sometimes I bring a book and I’ll go outside and read, just becuase I think that’s pretty hilarious. Honestly, every night is different. That’s what I like about it as an art form— it’s turbulent and constant and dynamic. One night I’m with all of my closest friends and we’re crying on the steps outside grateful for the pure bliss of the moment we’re sharing. Another night I’m totally alone surrounded by strangers being offered shit I don’t want, getting in a G-Wagon and driving around the city. Obviously an afterparty. But more than that, I think people just don’t want to see the end of the movie. Everyone is coming-of-age no one wants to be of-age. And I’m a person just like that. If It’s fun and crazy, then I’m easily convinced.
What do you usually wear to a party?
It really hot and funny to dress like an English major. I can’t really think of something more embarassing than wearing a leather jacket. I have this really cute Margiela bag (lol) that I like to bring out just so I can take a lot of shit with me. I usually bring like 2-3 pairs of sunglasses and some headphones and obviously a USB. Probably a shirt or a book and some really low dose edibles. Half the time I just walk up to a club and take out my USB and someone will just let me DJ. Oh man, I shouldn’t be telling you guys this.
What's the vibe you try to curate at each event?
Hot. Cheeky. Smart. Vodka soda. Soda bitters. I don't know. I'm not gonna teach your boyfriend how to dance. Please don't give me any cigarettes by the way. Guy saves dying house party with his intimate knowledge of danceable left of center pop. "Hit me for the list" (I always add everyone to the list, I just like to make people feel special). This isn't the club you can't get into, this is a party at my house and everyone is invited. "What are you doing after this?" I could never try to curate a vibe but that's what it feels like to me.
Computerwife started when Warncke was 18, after downloading an Ableton free trial to follow the steps laid out by Grimes in a Song Exploder episode. It was a form of spirituality for Warncke, an attempt at reaching a higher consciousness through sonic textures. However, the third-grade band, where she played flute and clarinet, was her initial foray into music. She then learned the guitar and started writing original songs — her first was about Egyptian history for a school project; another early one was a jingle for her family’s cleaning robot. Eventually, she started uploading demos on Soundcloud and Bandcamp that teeter back and forth between private and public, with lyrics that probe the disquiet experience of growing up as a girl online. Through these enthralling, visceral creations, Warncke gained a dedicated niche following in her hometown of Atlanta and the DIY scene of New York City before signing a deal with Danger Collective.
Inside the cozy restaurant, Warncke talks fast and jumps from story to story. She has a lot to say, although it’s never negative. Even during our off-the-record gossip, she admires the vulnerability of some people’s mental breakdown music and dedication to bitchy personas, offering a new perspective to my hasty-hater tendencies. We discussed hacks for finding inspiration, internet spirals, and the troubles of being a sexy, sad girl.
Congrats on your debut album! How does it feel to have this full-length body of work out?
I want to hide from it like that’s the reality of it. It scares me that people can see, hear, or whatever — which is also kind of the point of making music — but I am proud. I literally cannot believe that with everything else that I've been doing in my time, like working all these jobs — let me count how many jobs I worked while making this [counts off on her hands].
Oh my god, how many years was this?
Three years basically. I worked seven jobs, some at the same time, and I was in school, so I honestly can't believe it. I also lost my apartment and all this fucking fuck shit, but yeah, anyways [laughs]. This album makes me proud because I worked my ass off and proved how strong I can be.
But, also, it feels outdated. It doesn’t feel like me. Finishing an album is a 7-8 month process of getting it mixed, mastered, and doing a lot of stuff. I have more modern stuff that feels more in tune with what I’m going for now. But I am definitely happy that it's out.
What part of your life do you think this album would be a snapshot of then? Who were you, and what were you like during that period?
It feels like 2019 to 2020, then it stops there, which is the thing that’s so crazy to me when I look at the album. I was a million different people and have completely changed who I was and what I was going for so many times, and I can hear it in the songs too. I was anxious, depressed. I was very innocent, and then I was trying to de-innocent myself and then regretting that. I was working my ass off and not even thinking about anything except I’m working my ass off.
The Computerwife EP came out two years before the album, and within that period, there was a point where you deleted all of your music. What emotions were you feeling, and when did you realize you had to dig them back up?
That was my first experience paying for my apartment and shit. I was working way too hard but making a shit ton of money because I was working at a fine dining restaurant — now it’s probably a normal amount of money, but at the time, it felt like a lot — and I was partying and doing crazy shit.
All of my friends were gone. I only had one friend in New York, and it felt weird to call him every day, so I started meeting strangers. I basically, literally, chemically in my brain, screwed myself up. It was so bad. I finally called my parents and was like, I’ve been up for three days — I need to go home. I tried to make music during that period, but since I was changing so much, I felt like everything was so bad. I deleted it all when I got home. Then I started talking to my therapist, and she said I had to keep making music.
I refound my music when Danger Collective signed me because they asked if I had anything I was working on. I had sent some things that aren't on the album, but then I found this Google Drive with stuff I had sent to an ex-boyfriend — that ended up being this album.
What was it like rediscovering everything?
I was like, wow, this is way better than I thought. Now it’s funny because I probably don’t like it again — Jesus Christ. At the time of rediscovering, I was like, why did I think I was so terrible? I wasn’t nearly as bad as I thought.
There are some songs I still remember that play in my head that weren’t recovered, but it would be cool to try and recreate them. Paul McCartney did that one time.
The cover art features a lot of analog technology — record player, crt tv, boom box — which has an older connotation than your project name, Computerwife. How do these mediums interact in your work?
Well, I reject modernity and I honestly hate computers in every way, shape, and form — other than making music. The way I do things as far as visual inspiration — or at least I try to, but it doesn’t always fucking work — is I try to be inspired by things that happened 20 years ago. My friends and I were talking about the 20 years cycle, where culture resets itself around that time. After we started saying that, I realized this is an easy way to come up with cool ideas — even if it wasn’t cool then, it would be now. After I started doing that, it was pretty easy to do different art projects based on things from 20 years ago that might have just been literally a camp counselor’s art project.
This used to be on Tumblr, but I switched to Instagram because it’s easier for me, but I have this blog — it’s very private — of albums, pictures, music videos, and stuff from Flickr, Tumblr, and Instagram that people posted 20 years ago. Every year I reset it. I base my entire inspiration on that one year [laughs].
Continuing that, how do you spend your time online? Can you give me a run-through of a day on the internet for you?
There are two things that I do. Number one, I check in on my favorite people, whoever I idolize. I try to do that every day to see what people are up to — if anybody drops any new merch, music video, or whatever. Then I can have my mind centered for the day like this is something I should be thinking about; this is a cool idea, I can try to do my version. That’s when I wake up, which probably isn’t a good way to wake up because it’s comparing yourself to other people, but it’s how I get inspiration — especially when I’m not going to work and have free time, it’s awesome. Then I start my day like I'm going to do this all fucking day.
I’ll work on something for the rest of the day — I’ll make electronic music, rock music, design merch, or commission somebody. That’s when it feels good. When I’m at work, it sucks because I’m just thinking about shit that other people did.
The second thing, I spend all of my time sourcing images from Flickr, which inspires me directly instead of copying other people. I’d rather copy these people from Flickr, NPC people, an obscure video, or a piece of art that a three-year-old drew at camp — it’s better than an actual human being who is directly alive in your present time. That’s so dangerous and unhealthy. I try to be inspired by those people in a business form but not in an art form because that's where the biggest mistakes of my life have been from.
What are your favorite types of rabbit holes to fall through, and what are your go-to sites?
The only rabbit hole I ever fall through is looking up shit from 20 years ago. It started in 2018, so I've been doing it for five years now — God, that's scary. First, it was with Getty Images, which is not a good image website. Then I started doing it on Tumblr, which was betting for hearing music and seeing music videos, art, movies, and obscure art-oriented stuff. I was also using Instagram, but they changed their format, so you can no longer fucking see every post from a tag — it’s all filtered by fucking algorithms. I can’t see, like, what a random person in the Czech Republic with two followers posts, which sucks because that was my favorite part. So now it’s just Flickr and Tumblr. Flickr is good because it's time correct; people posted their stuff in 2003, which is cool; Tumblr is good because it’s art-oriented and fan-oriented.
How do you translate those experiences and findings into music?
I incorporated it more in my lifestyle and visual stuff, but it goes into the music too. If I release another album, I'd go way harder on that. But the sounds — like the actual sounds and tones of the guitar, sounds of the synths, and some of the rhythms used — are pulled from albums I've discovered.
In the future, I want to completely commit; I want to recreate albums that are lost in time but with my own ideas.
The name Computerwife almost represents being married to the internet. What is your relationship to the digital world?
I mean, if we are going to talk about being married to the internet, then I would definitely call it my ball and chain — like I'm dragging that shit around with me, unfortunately. I wish I didn't grow up with the internet. I wish sometimes that things were a lot more chill and normal. Sometimes it’s exciting because I feel like I can make the coolest world for myself, but that's a lot of pressure.
I wish I didn’t stalk people; I wish I didn’t compare myself to people and all that shit. I’m connected with lots of people in the music community, which is cool because every day is a new fucking thing to do, but then also every day — it’s just too much. I wish I was bored [laughs]. You know what I mean?
Some of your lyrics explore mental illness and antidepressants — thanks for the Lexapro representation by the way. What are your thoughts on how this is discussed on the internet, and what role do you think the internet has?
I think the internet gave me depression — like I do. It’s cool that you said that about “Lexapro” too, because I did not expect people to connect with it like how they did.
I feel like it’s always Prozac, Zoloft, never really Lexapro.
It's weird that mental illness is so sexy, and I literally still think that it is, but I hate it. I hate it so much. But I do think to be cool and sexy, you have to already be fucking doubting yourself and not be confident in yourself in some ways. Maybe I’m wrong about that.
I mean, I love saying I'm a sad girl, wallowing in it, and making art about it. It’s difficult because I don’t want to romanticize it too much, but it’s also like, what else am I going to do?
That’s how it started for me. I think there’s a chicken or egg situation — I wrote an essay about this for music because I was involved with the Skramz community. Like what came first, people being angry and depressed and making Skramz music or people listening to angry and depressed music and then fucking making themselves angry and depressed. I feel the same way about the internet, Tumblr, and shit like that.
Especially early Tumblr.
Growing up, thinking about it, I had pain throughout my life. I think everybody does. Then when I got involved with the Tumblr thing, I saw it expressed in a way that was very beautiful and sexy or whatever, which made me feel like I needed to be even more like that. Eventually, that turned into it, not to minimize the actual struggles that I had in my life, but I probably could have been fucking fine if I hadn’t tried to be some type of way.
What are you most excited about for your show at Baby’s?
I’m excited to see Downgrade and Shower Curtain — I’m excited for everyone to see them. I’m excited for them to meet each other because I think they’re going to get along, that’s what I’m looking forward to the most.