Sol Seppy
dream pop // laptop folk
Sophie Michalitsianos was born in England, studied contemporary composition and orchestration in Sydney, Australia, and currently is New York based singer-songwriter, a professional pianist and cellist. Her debut as Sol Seppy, The Bells Of 1 2 (2006), embodies gentle and dreamy folkly melodies, Goldfrapp-ish electro-pop tendencies, fuzzy electronic beats and gorgeous vocals. Sophie’s music varies from simple to odd and complex tunes, yet never overly eclectic.
Precious songs.
Sol Seppy – Farewell Your Heart
Sol Seppy – Move
buy this cd
simply wow. Never heard of her and I am totally in love with the music.
Wow.
Thanks, she’s really really great.
(ho, just one thing : the song you call “A to N” is titled “farewell your heart” on the cd.)
While listening to the intro of the song titled Move I though “well, this is where all her musical studies shows, it seems she also has talent”… but when she started to sing her music let me down again. Forgettable stuff.
wow indeed! thanks for this.
Really like “move” :-)
Heard her song “Enter One” on
an episode of CSI:Miami…
Couldn’t hear it too well, but I
was hooked…found out who she was,
downloaded it and the lyrics, and
now I’m hooked even worse…
Yummm. Nice ear candy.
[…] Katrine Ottosen’s album Fall Down (2008) is a debut that should not be left unnoticed despite the flood of DYI Indie artists. The Copenhagen-based musician who records under the name CALLmeKAT takes the listener with a distinctly Scandinavian sound: melancholic, floating and intense. Fall Down shifts between the experimental and the somewhat urban dream-pop, recalling the fragility of Stina Nordenstam and the edgy mysterious soundscapes of such artists as Klima and Sol Seppy. […]
[…] Katrine Ottosen’s album Fall Down (2008) is a debut that should not be left unnoticed despite the flood of DYI Indie artists. The Copenhagen-based musician who records under the name CALLmeKAT takes the listener with a distinctly Scandinavian sound: melancholic, floating and intense. Fall Down shifts between the experimental and the somewhat urban dream-pop, recalling the fragility of Stina Nordenstam and the edgy mysterious soundscapes of such artists as Klima and Sol Seppy. […]