“The Only Living Girl in LA” is a chill vibe and debut single from the eclectic trio that makes up ONES. The minute we heard this song we couldn’t get it out of our heads! The vocals are incredibly catchy and added the most perfect touch we could ever ask for on this track. The tune is so beautiful and the production work is polished. We really liked ONES’ vibes and melodies and this incredible track left us totally stuck on repeat! This trio is so original and they are so skilled, their music is unique and sets them apart from the crowd. This track was an amazing experience for our team and we hope you love it as much as we do!
ABOUT THE TRIO:
The eclectic trio that make up ONES stretches both genre and sonic structure to create music that imbues a kind of dystopian sensuality. Fitting for a collection of songs that was written over a period of extreme civil unrest and worldwide chaos. But that’s not to say it’s without hope — the opposite actually. ONES—Poolside producer Alex Kemp, Grizfolk drummer Bill Delia, and vocalist Camron Palmer—came together without agenda or expectation. It was pure creative exploration from the outset, which then became more structured over time as the fruits of their labor proved to be something quite special. For the sake of reference, the band’s sound fits somewhere between disco-heavy synth-pop, and a soft touch of indietronica. But that list of descriptors falls short. Spanning a wide range of age, taste, and skill sets, the members of ONES know that, rather than rely on a single vision, it’s the combination of seemingly disparate voices that makes the music all the more powerful.
“The band’s got a wide age range so we represent some really different perspectives,” Kemp says. “I think that’s why it’s called ONES. It’s really about three very different people seeing the world in different ways and when we find something, whether it’s really subtle or a little bit broad that we can all get behind — it means something to say that as a collective rather than to say it on your own and that’s really what ONES is about.”
In the end, finding commonality in the chaos is what ONES is all about.