Daydream Plus announce debut LP on RFC
SECOND LAST DAY OF SUMMER OUT 7/10

Led by Tomb Mold shredder Payson Power, along with the band's drummer Max Klebanoff and bassist Kevin Sia, Daydream Plus formed in 2020 as a way of exploring melodic, catchy compositions well outside of their main band's hyper-aggressive purview. Over the course of two EPs the group honed their bubbly blend of math rock, jazz, and city pop, along with video game soundtracks and anime scores to create their signature sound. Now with their debut album, the group have proven that the project has legs beyond its initial premise, and they've pushed the music and world building to even greater heights.
Recorded by Darren McGill, then mixed and mastered by Arthur Rizk, Second Last Day of Summer is full of the kind of truly impressive musicality that Tomb Mold fans have long been familiar with, but here every flurry of notes is devoted to sounding lush and pleasing instead of crushing. A richly detailed video game sensibility informs Power's approach, with interludes that play like cutscenes and songs that build out an elaborate fantasy world with instrumentals alone. This attention to the most microscopic details is what allows Second Last Day of Summer to feel focused and controlled, bringing that city pop influence to the table in both a sonic and spiritual way. Second Last Day of Summer is also packed with surprising guests, including American Football’s Steve Lamos, Joseph Shabason of Destroyer and The War on Drugs, and Ryo Kishimoto of Fox Capture Plan. “I just wanted the album to feel like opening a can of pop on an above-average day,” says Power, and the resulting record feels like a get together with friends on a carefree day--the fleetingly perfect times that are all the better because they can't last.
Daydream Plus' video game fandom goes beyond just influence: in addition to all the usual listening formats, the band teamed with Batlab Electronics to create an alternative chiptune version of Second Last Day of Summer called Extended Forecast, which is available exclusively via a limited NES compatible cartridge.
