It is hard to imagine a more timely album than `mydata,' the fourth solo release from the Melbourne-based pop artist Katie Dey. Her unique sound, which blends noisy synths with art-pop poetics, has felt ahead of the curve, but in this moment of quarantine-strained relationships and touch-starved isolation, `mydata' feels even more prescient than ever. "It's pretty explicitly about an internet relationship, which can be precisely as meaningful as a relationship that's physical," Dey says. "Because a long distance relationship is obviously physical too, in a sense. It's physically felt in the body." Dey's signature sound, which has been grounded in the digital since her 2015 debut `asdfasdf,' is perfect to capture this tension between absence and ... mehr lesen