{"id":5677,"date":"2025-04-22T16:41:48","date_gmt":"2025-04-22T16:41:48","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.isshicare.com\/?p=5677"},"modified":"2025-04-24T18:23:17","modified_gmt":"2025-04-24T18:23:17","slug":"poptropicaslutz-are-reinventing-gen-z-alt-pop","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.isshicare.com\/index.php\/2025\/04\/22\/poptropicaslutz-are-reinventing-gen-z-alt-pop\/","title":{"rendered":"poptropicaslutz! Are Reinventing Gen Z Alt-Pop"},"content":{"rendered":"

<\/p>\n

poptropicaslutz! <\/a>aren\u2019t fresh to the scene, but their new sounds are. The duo, Nick Crawford and Christian Cicilia, have multiple projects and tours under their belt, but their single \u201cmdma keeps the doctor away\u201d from their sophomore LP, the new 925 <\/em><\/em>is reigning in a new era. The piano intro on \u201cmdma\u201d fakes out listeners, easing them into what becomes a speedy, rap-heavy track that you might hear while shifting Grand Theft Auto<\/em> radio stations. The song fuses Fall Out Boy-esque vocal delivery with glitchy production not dissimilar to that of their contemporaries, Glaive or 2Hollis.<\/p>\n

The Long Island-born, LA-based duo set out to \u201ckill the old poptropicaslutz\u201d with this project. They\u2019re retiring the hyperpop-inspired, punk guitars found on their previous releases Face For The Radio, Voice for A Silent Film<\/em><\/em>, and just in case the world ends<\/em><\/em>, for harsher, sexier SoundCloud-era beats. They want fans to know that their back catalog is just music, but the new 925<\/em><\/em> is an entirely new world. <\/p>\n

Follow-up singles \u201cit boy\u201d and \u201ctryna get that Kate Moss 2025\u201d build upon the landscape established on \u201cmdma.\u201d They each play into the band\u2019s signature feelings of 2000s nostalgia, leaning heavily into the modern indie-sleazification of electronic and hip-hop scenes.<\/p>\n

<\/h3>\n


\n