Justice- One Night/All Night Ft. Tame Impala


French electronic music duo Justice has teamed up with Tame Impala for an iconic disco-electronic mix as a lead single from the group's upcoming album "HYPERDRAMA." While it has been nearly eight years since the band's last album, Xavier de Rosnay and Gaspard Augé created "One Night/All Night," taking listeners on an exhilarating music drive as Impala's phaser vocals lead the baseline synth. The song begins with a firm techno beat as a shy echo of "Woman/'Cause if that's the only answer/Then we could be together/'Cause I wanna feel the pressure/And I could be your one man," smoothly transitions the verses into the chorus. As the music progresses, the instrumentals begin to volumize for a more transparent sound. The drums gear up the beat's climate, and Impala's repetitive verse hooks the melody together, turning the song into a psychedelic disco phenomenon. Just as the cohesive tune feels familiar in its sound, an added drop which almost samples like Queens, "Another One Bites the Dust" drum and bass structure intersects and uniquely precedes the artist's own rhythm. Funk and disco couldn't be more fluent in the lyrics as the song progresses into a bridge: "One night/All night/One night/Oh, all night/If only one night (All night)/Or all night (All night)/One night (All night)/Oh, all night."

While "One Night/ All Night" captures a sense of strain that enlightens listeners' ears, the accompanying music video portrays the interior functionalities of the cross used in the duo's album cover.

Justice's “HYPERDRAMA” album cover

The trippy film, directed by Anton Tammi, courses through human lungs as it strobes through the heart, which is illustrated in the cross. With every beat, rave lights shine through the organs, amplifying a hue color scheme. The visuals become realistic, creating an infrastructure that facilitates systems of the body of the cross, giving the film an attention-to-detail appearance and allowing viewers to become attracted. As the song lingers towards the end, spinal structures begin to showcase, while streams of blue and red-orange elements wrap around the bones, leading viewers on a journey out of the cross.

As the song aligns with the video's ending, energetic lights strobe continuously before the cross reaches a frontal view, unveiling the illustrative fundamental functionalities of the cross and the genre of the album.

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