Bipolar Explorer is an American dreampop band from New York City. Formed in its present state and genre by band co-founders Summer Serafin (vocals, spoken word) and Michael Serafin-Wells (guitars, bass guitar, percussion, vocals, spoken word), the group has released ten albums and seven singles on Slugg Records beginning with 2012's double-album "Of Love and Loss". The band became a trio with the addition of French spoken word artist Sylvia Solanas in 2018.

Bipolar Explorer
Summer and Michael, cofounders of indie band Bipolar Explorer
Summer and Michael, cofounders of indie band Bipolar Explorer
Background information
OriginNew York City, United States
GenresDreampop, Shoegaze, Experimental music, Post-Rock, Ambient music, Electroacoustic music
Years active2008–present
LabelsSlugg Records
MembersSummer Serafin (deceased)
Michael Serafin-Wells
Sylvia Solanas
Websitebipolarexplorer.info

Formation and Of Love and Loss edit

After an initial indie rock release – Go Negative (2005, Slugg Records) featuring former Uncle bandmates Michael Serafin-Wells (songwriter, guitars, bass guitar, vocals) and Yves Gerard (drums, backing vocals) – still very much in the style of their previous group, Bipolar Explorer changed direction and personnel re-configuring under the influence of co-founder and vocalist Summer Serafin.

Debuting the new sound in live performance at New York's Cooper Square Hotel, PopMatters described the band as "eclectic, powerful and steadfast"[1] and the group began work on an EP recording for Slugg Records in Brooklyn.

Before it could be completed, on March 18, 2011, Ms. Serafin passed away after a tragic accident. She was just 31.

Many months later, armed with newly written songs post-tragedy, Serafin-Wells and the band returned to those recordings and in October 2012 released a double-album of, for and about Ms. Serafin. Entitled Of Love and Loss, Ground Control Magazine’s Daryl Darko Barnett pronounced it "the most significantly stirring and addictive musical accomplishment we’ve come across in some time", naming it to their Critics Poll of Best Albums of the Year.

Angels and BPXmas edit

At the end of 2014, the band released two albums in quick succession, a holiday one BPXmas on December 3, 2014, and Of Love and Loss’s follow-up, Angels on New Year's Day 2015.

Both critically acclaimed, NPR’s "On Being"[2] noted the band's reworking holiday classics in their signature dream pop style and both albums began rotation on WFMU, notably finding favor with the station's legendary deejay Irene Trudel who called their sound "great, beautiful drifty-pop".[3]

Ground Control’s Daryl Darko Barnett wrote a feature about the former "Bipolar Explorer Work a Double-Shift Through the Holidays" and ended 2015 by naming Angels to his number one spot in the magazine's Best Albums of the Year round up, calling it "electrifying -what music fueled by raw love and emotions sounds like".[4]

Electric Hymnal edit

In June 2016, the band released their fifth album, a collection of devotional songs and spoken word, both sacred and secular, described as "a sonic prayer" for their fallen bandmate, Ms. Serafin. Their first foray into the use of spoken word as a component of their sound, Serafin-Wells would return to its use, composing narrative poetry for a female voice and underscoring it with ambient, post-rock guitars in subsequent releases. Again, Ground Control hailed the work "...Get ready to be swept up and away by a prayerful reverie of melodies. Listening, I began to feel like I was flying. Don't forget that Bipolar Explorer is a post-rock band. Low growling vocals, gnarly grinding tempos, rhythmic looping strands that escape and rise above the weight of this world, where angels and the living mingle..."[5]

Featuring album art by American artist Michael Creese, Electric Hymnal was released as a limited-edition CD only (no digital) and given away by the band to fans upon request as "a gift of faith".

Dream Together edit

On New Year's Day 2017, the band released their sixth album, Dream Together. WFMU’s Liz Berg featuring tracks on her show called it "just a great record".[6] Again, WFMU’s Irene Trudel, praising it as "beautiful, full of sadness and wonder".[7] The album made its way onto the charts of California's free-form KDVS, as well, starting as the station's No. 4 New Add the first week of January and rising to No. 18 overall in the weeks after.[8]

Reaching Europe, the album was praised by France's Indiemusic as "Magical and majestic – an ultimate tour-de-force".[9]

On February 20, 2017, the magazine's associate editor, Raphael Duprez, followed up with an interview with Michael. In answer to a question about how he and the band continue in light of the tragic events of 2011 he replied, "All of this is entirely for her. I often say that our music, each album, is of, for and about her. It's my way of telling people about her and talking to her myself. That's the "for’ and "about" parts of the equation. And Summer remains an integral part of the band – not only as its inspiration but, because I have lots of her isolated vocals from other recording sessions – as her voice, both spoken and singing, graces each record. I'll write songs and fly in her voice. Summer isn't the main reason BPX goes on, she's the only reason. She is the reason. And I think I can trust that I'm doing things for the right reason if I always know the reason for it is her. Not out of any ambition other than to honor and conjure her. She's my conscience."[10]

Sometimes in Dreams edit

On New Year's Day 2018, the band released their seventh album, a double-album, called Sometimes in Dreams. Surface Noise's Joe McGasko called it "Epic and affecting",[11] the new album again found its way quickly onto playlists at WFMU, notably both Irene Trudel[12] and Gaylord Field's[13] shows, on Tuesday and Sunday nights, respectively.

On January 2, France's Indiemusic called the new album "Unforgettable and essential. Have no doubt, this is a major record."[14]

By May 2018, Sometimes in Dreams had reached the No. 19 position on WFMU's album charts, leading medium rotation and officially entered the North American College and Community Radio (NACC) charts, tracking college radio airplay in the US and Canada.[15]

Til Morning Is Nigh edit

In November 2018, the band's eighth album,Til Morning Is Nigh: A Dream of Christmas, was released. Featuring new additional instrumentation including synth, organ and melodica, the band also welcomed a new member, Sylvia Solanas, who voices spoken word[16] and with whom Serafin-Wells started a parallel dreampop band under the name Tremosphere.

As they started working on both an EP for Tremosphere and the Christmas album for Bipolar Explorer, Serafin-Wells got hit by a car in New York City, suffering from several severe injuries followed by a near-fatal pulmonary embolism, thus being hospitalized for several weeks.[citation needed]

Both albums were eventually recorded and released, Til Morning Is Nigh: A Dream of Christmas later than planned, at the end of 2018, and the Tremosphere EP turned into a full album, Interiors, in 2019, with Serafin-Wells still in convalescence.

Til Morning Is Nigh: A Dream of Christmas was well received, getting radio plays in Australia, as well as in America on WFMU, and in the UK on The Sound Projector Radio Show on London's Resonance FM.[17]

The Dark Outside, The Light Within/Til Morning Is Nigh Documentary edit

In July 2019 the band released their fifth single, The Dark Outside, The Light Within – composed and recorded for London's experimental radio show "The Dark Outside" and premiered in a special event broadcast on June 20, 2019, on London's 87.7fm.[18]

July 2019 also marked the group's Dutch radio debut on Radio Hoogeveen's post-rock show, De Mist,[19] and the completion of a six-part mini documentary about their eighth album – The Making of "Til Morning Is Nigh",[20] which premiered episodically August–September 2019 on the band's YouTube channel.

Deux Anges edit

On November 13, 2020, the band released its ninth album, the double-album, Deux Anges. UK zine The Sound Projector found the record “steeped in a very wistful melancholy, a poignant longing - with allusions in the lyrics to the afterlife, heaven, angels, mortality, ghosts, miracles - and the gentle, lulling pull of their mesmerizing songs.”[21] Deux Anges was named to multiple Best Albums of the Year lists - including Resonance FM's “Fog Cast”,[22] Radio Hoogeveen’s “De Mist”,[23] The Irene Trudel Show[24] WFMU and that of BBC 3 /Soho Radio’s broadcaster Max Reinhardt.[25] Deux Anges reached the Heavily Played radio charts of both California’s KFJC[26] - who premiered the album during a three hour special about the band on September 19, 2020 - and WFMU,[27] where it stayed at the #23 spot seven months after its release.

Forests, Voices, Coastlines, Dreams: Recordings for The Dark Outside/The Other Room Radio Show edit

On December 1, 2021, the band released their tenth album Forests, Voices, Coastlines, Dreams: Recordings for The Dark Outside comprising the seven experimental music pieces Serafin-Wells composed and the band recorded for the UK’s Dark Outside radio project between 2019 and 2021. WFMU DJ Irene Trudel, called it “Wondrous! A great album!”[28] - Forests also found airplay on both London’s Resonance FM and Soho Radio. On December 17, 2021,BBC 3 and Soho Radio broadcaster Max Reinhardt reviewed the new album on air, pronouncing it “Sublime. Maybe their finest. Brilliant. Brilliant.”[29]

France’s CAMP Radio (cited by The Wire in their 100 Essential Online Stations feature[30]), offered the band, in November 2021, their own monthly show. The first episode of Bipolar Explorer’s “The Other Room”, a monthly one-hour program of "experimental and ambient music, field recordings and otherness” aired on January 4, 2022,[31] and can be found, archived, as future broadcasts will be, on the station’s MixCloud page.[32]

In The Hours Left Until Dawn edit

On April 7, 2023, the band released their 11th album, their 4th double-album, In The Hours Left Until Dawn. The new album was singled out for two important aspects in the development of their work - their continued multi-genre long-form recordings in the creation of soundscapes, and the spirituality under-pining these works.

In an extensive hour-long interview with BBC 3 and Soho Radio broadcaster Max Reinhardt introduced the segment by pronouncing the band “holy sonic icons” and characterized the new album as "breaking ground because it feels and sounds like a whole, an unstoppable beating heart that's emanating fragile sonics and thoughts and words at the fringes of consciousness and subconsciousness, sleep and waking, dream and vision."[33]

Mr Reinhardt also posited that the work struck him as “almost like sacred music” - a theme that others would return to in describing the double-album. Jeffrey Davison of Montreal’s CKUT-FM calling it “just a gorgeous, gorgeous album” and adding that “a lot of their music has a really strong spiritual undercurrent and maybe never more evident than on this new record’;[34] while Portland’s Uncertain Reverie found the album “Beautiful, shimmering, hypnotic, dreamlike; always a sense of passage through unnameable dimensions; the haunt is palpable but as an enveloping wonder and at times I felt I was listening to stained glass…"

Returning to the band’s evolving musical style, the UK’s music zine Fog Songs said “this is an album of nocturnal dreamscapes, a sprawling 2-hour long double-disc album, which is a bold and ambitious move to make in the year 2023. The band use effects-laden guitars, moody basslines, spoken word poetry, ambient synths, airy drones, abstract field recordings, swirling vocalizations, percussive instruments and trippy audio manipulation techniques to create these gorgeous shimmering soundscapes that both haunt and comfort...'In The Hours Left Until Dawn' is an album of pure atmosphere and feeling. It's an epic accomplishment, and a gorgeous work of art that contains pop sensibilities, trippy experimentations and everything in between.“[35]

As regards chart positions, the double-album held spots in Heavily Played Albums lists of both California’s KFJC and New York’s WFMU throughout the spring of 2023.

Former and affiliated members edit

  • Sean Lahey (2008–2012, on hiatus) – guitar
  • Kim Donovan (2015–2018) – spoken word
  • Jason Sutherland (2012–2017) – guitar
  • Eva Potter (2013–2014) – bass guitar
  • Elizabeth Rossa (2009–2011) – bass guitar
  • Alan Foreman (2012, on hiatus) – guitar, bass guitar
  • Yves Gerard (early indie rock line up, 2005) – drums

Discography edit

Albums edit

Year Title
2005 Go Negative (earlier line-up)
2012 Of Love and Loss
2014 BPXmas
2015 Angels
2016 Electric Hymnal
2017 Dream Together
2018 Sometimes in Dreams
2018 Til Morning Is Nigh: A Dream of Christmas
2020 Deux Anges
2021 Forests, Voices, Coastlines, Dreams: Recordings for the Dark Outside
2023 In the Hours Left Until Dawn

Singles edit

Year Title
2013 (O Come O Come) Emmanuel
2015 Downtown Train
2016 We’ll All Go Together
2017 Watchers and Holy Ones
2018 Better Girl
2019 The Dark Outside, The Light Within
2020 eleven:eleven

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Bipolar Explorer: 2.Mar.10 – New York". popmatters.com. March 16, 2010. Archived from the original on June 23, 2011. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  2. ^ "Reimagining a Christmas Classic". The On Being Project. December 21, 2015. Archived from the original on March 2, 2018. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  3. ^ "The Remains of Holiday Revelry: Irene Trudel's show". WFMU. Archived from the original on October 5, 2016. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  4. ^ "This Was The Year in Music – The Best of 2015 – Ground Control Magazine". groundcontrolmag.com. January 8, 2016. Archived from the original on September 15, 2016. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  5. ^ "Bipolar Explorer – [Album] – Ground Control Magazine". groundcontrolmag.com. June 26, 2016. Archived from the original on June 2, 2017. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  6. ^ "Tiki drinks and other resolutions: Liz Berg's show". WFMU. Archived from the original on September 10, 2017. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  7. ^ "Songs splashing across the pond, with Hamish Hawk and Viking Moses: Irene Trudel's show". WFMU. Archived from the original on July 7, 2017. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  8. ^ "Today's Aberration Tomorrow's Fashion". kdvs.org. Archived from the original on March 2, 2018. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  9. ^ "[LP] Bipolar Explorer – Dream Together". indiemusic.fr. January 17, 2017. Archived from the original on January 22, 2017. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  10. ^ "[Interview] Bipolar Explorer". indiemusic.fr. February 20, 2017. Archived from the original on February 22, 2017. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  11. ^ "Red Herring: Surface Noise with Joe McGasko". WFMU. Archived from the original on March 2, 2018. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  12. ^ "Voices in solidarity, with a live set by Barbez.: Irene Trudel's show". WFMU. Archived from the original on March 2, 2018. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  13. ^ "Highbury Fields Forever: Gaylord Fields's show". WFMU. Archived from the original on March 2, 2018. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  14. ^ "[LP] Bipolar Explorer – Sometimes in Dreams". indiemusic.fr. January 2, 2018. Archived from the original on March 2, 2018. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  15. ^ "WFMU Recent Airplay + News, May 5th, 2018". blogfiles.wfmu.org. Archived from the original on June 18, 2018. Retrieved June 18, 2018.
  16. ^ Les Oreilles Curieuses, Bipolar Explorer – Sometimes In Dreams / Til Morning Is Nigh: A Dream of Christmas. December 8, 2018.
  17. ^ The Sound Projector Radio Show – March 22, 2019, The Sound Projector Radio Show – 22 March 2019.
  18. ^ "The Dark Outside". The Dark Outside. Archived from the original on October 30, 2019. Retrieved October 31, 2019.
  19. ^ "Playlist 19-07-2019". www.demist.nl. July 18, 2019. Retrieved October 31, 2019.
  20. ^ "Serious Moonlight Sonatas with Carol: Playlist from October 27, 2019". www.wfmu.org. Retrieved October 31, 2019.
  21. ^ "Hark The Herald". www.thesoundprojector.com. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  22. ^ "Best Of 2020: The Age Of Isolation". www.mixcloud.com. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  23. ^ "Top 50 best post-rock releases of 2020". www.demist.nl/. January 2, 2021. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  24. ^ "Streaming Stars: My Favorites of 2020 in No Particular Order of Importance (part 2 of 2)". www.wfmu.org. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  25. ^ "Max Reinhardt's Late Lunch Show (04/12/2020)". www.mixcloud.com. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  26. ^ "Bipolar Explorer/Deux Anges". spidey.kfjc.org. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  27. ^ "WFMU's Recent Airplay + News, February 22,2021". blogfiles.wfmu.org/. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  28. ^ "Irene Trudel: Playlist from November 1, 2021". wfmu.org. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  29. ^ "Max Reinhardt's Late Lunch Show (17/12/2021)". www.mixcloud.com. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  30. ^ "The Wire Issue 449 - July 2021". www.thewire.co.uk. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  31. ^ "Bipolar Explorer's "The Other Room"/04th January 2022". www.mixcloud.com. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  32. ^ "CAMP". www.mixcloud.com. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  33. ^ "Max Reinhardt's Late Lunch Show (05/10/2023)". www.mixcloud.com. Retrieved October 5, 2023.
  34. ^ "Terminal 5 (04/05/2023)". www.mixcloud.com. Retrieved October 5, 2023.
  35. ^ "Fog Songs (05/23/2023)". fogsongs.blogspot.com. Retrieved October 5, 2023.

External links edit