CFCF’s new L.U.V. lp out today!
CFCF’S NEW ALBUM L.U.V. OUT TODAY!
VIA BGM SOLUTIONS
“L.U.V. barrels headlong into a world that straddles sleazy techno and post-SOPHIE dance-pop, full of neon-balloon textures, deadpan mantras, and synth hooks blurted out like smoking-area confessions.” – Pitchfork
“Mike Silver dives headfirst into electroclash, bloghouse, and French touch on his gleefully nostalgic and guest-filled new album as CFCF” – Brooklyn Vegan

CFCF’s new album L.U.V. is out today via BGM Solutions! Early singles had already garnered positive attention, with Stereogum praising the “amped up” “Let’s Kill Ourselves (feat. Touching Ice + TECHG1RLS)” as fitting “right in nicely with today’s sort of party-starting electroclash revival,” and FADER deeming the “stellar” “Bad Song (feat. Cecile Believe)” a “Song of the week” upon its debut last month. Now with the release of the full LP, L.U.V continues to win converts, featuring on NPR Music’s New Music Friday playlist, and highlighted by Pitchfork, as one of “8 New Albums You Should Listen To Now” among other plaudits.
Watch The Music Videos for…
“Bad Song” (feat. Cecile Believe) via YouTube
“Let’s Kill Ourselves” (Feat. Touching Ice & TECHG1RLS) via YouTube
“ultra obscene! (Piel a Piel)” ft. EQ via YouTube
L.U.V. marks the first new album for the Montreal born producer (aka Mike Silver) since 2021’s Memoryland, and the first new release since he moved to Los Angeles in 2022. “I didn’t want to necessarily make a ‘Memoryland 2’”, shares Silver about the L.U.V., “but to me this is an organic successor to that album.” Indeed, L.U.V.’s subtitle, Life In Ultra Violet, subtly references the final track of Memoryland, “The Ultraviolet Room”, a loungy interval with a jazzy guitar and bass that evokes the uneasy nature of a waiting room. While Memoryland was built around Silver’s plumbing the depths of his affection for Y2K nostalgia and the music of his earliest formative listening years, L.U.V. sees him stepping past the impressionable nature of childhood and early adolescence to draw from the sophistication of a more refined palate. “The overall vibe of L.U.V. is meant to be sort of eurodance with a sophisticated edge,” he shares, “It’s music for an adult lifestyle.”
As such, on L.U.V. Silver takes more inspiration from the music he was digesting in later high school and the years immediately following. “In some ways, it returns to sounds I played with in my earliest music,” he shares. Touchpoints on the album include a wide swath of influences ranging from Stuart Price (Les Rythmes Digitales), Giorgio Moroder, Felix da Housecat and Kraftwerk to Electric Six, Scissor Sisters, Annie and Kylie Minogue. In contrast to the current cultural embrace of mid-late aughts aesthetics and sounds however (see the rise of neo-electroclash and the retroactive invention of Indie Sleaze as a catchall genre), Silver was conscious to avoid falling into tropes or leaning on lazy signifiers, pulling instead from his own musical history as an outlier of that era. An artist that contributed heavily to the conversation through his own original work and countless high-profile remixes, but could never be so neatly classified or defined so as to serve as a demarcation line for a specific sound or scene.

Photo Credit: Richie Talboy
