Analog-warm electro-soul frames Joya Mooi’s “Technicolour,” easing the room into a soft glow before the groove taps in. The pulse is steady, the mood is tinted, and Ric Wilson steps through with measured presence—plain talk, clean lines, everything placed to keep the floor moving.
Why it hits
Joya Mooi treats envy as shades—greens and blues in conversation—so the feeling turns from static to motion. The hook loops with purpose, circling back and tightening its grip each pass. Because the mic is close and her phrasing is tidy, even the smallest syllables feel methodical, the way a quiet note can center a busy room.
What it sounds like
It starts on ’80s electric-piano stabs that flicker, then a crisp digital-kit thump locks the tempo and sets the table. When the chorus arrives, a Chic-coded guitar adds snap, while the bass rolls with a low, analog wobble that thickens the floor. Small details keep the track alive: a wind-chime sweep on the turn, synth-brass at midpoint, a little extra sparkle on the hats to push momentum forward. Joya sings near-field and airy. Phrases rise, hang a breath, and settle back under the snare, which keeps everything lined up and clean.
The cut-through
Color maps the emotion—green envy, blue skies resisting control, eyes as windows—and that palette gives the record its backbone. Joya Mooi writes in prismatic fragments that feel true to the way thought and feeling collide, then hands the moment to Ric Wilson, who trims the haze to time, work, and straight truth. The handoff lands smooth, the way a calm voice can reset a busy scene. And the chorus keeps the temperature steady while the verses add detail. Taken together, you get dance-floor glide with a clear center. Short lines, tight focus, and a tone built for any-kind-of-day replay.
Credits
Producer(s): EASY FREAK • Label(s): Unity Records • Release: 09/2025 • Album: N/A
