- Source: Zoom Lens (record label)
Zoom Lens is an independent Los Angeles-based record label founded and operated by Faye Yim. The label was created "in order to explore the implications of popular culture on the human condition and the duality artistic expression discovered through an intersection of both local and international sounds".
History
In 2009, Zoom Lens was founded by Faye Yim, who was at the time "fascinated with Japanese harsh noise and film" and sought out to release music due to the influence of the Orange County experimental music scene.
The first Zoom Lens release was an album by Yim under the name of Yuko Imada entitled "Ome," which came packaged as a CD-R contained in a DVD case soaked in the artist's own blood.
In January 2015, Zoom Lens had its first video broadcast on national television through Adult Swim with Meishi Smile and their video "AJS."
On March 15, 2016, Zoom Lens had its first official SXSW showcase.
On February 22, 2022, the end of Zoom Lens was announced from a message on the label's site, while a new label and art collective, Meta Physica, was announced by Yim.
On October 27, 2023, Zoom Lens returned to operations, announcing a 10th anniversary edition of the Meishi Smile album Lust and plans for events in 2024.
Sound
Zoom Lens' sound has been categorized as "unpredictable", exploring sounds ranging from ambient music, noise music, chiptune, electropop, shoegaze and other forms of experimental music. The sound of Zoom Lens has been described as "broadening definitions of punk", as well as "dreamy indie with 8-bit and rave euphoria."
Imagery
= Aesthetics
=The Fader has noted Zoom Lens as "one of the most aesthetically compelling labels in existence"..
Many of Zoom Lens' images revolved around the concept of burnt photography. This practice was first put to use for an EP by Party Girl released in 2011. The imagery was said to be providing feelings about the disconnection towards memories, a commentary on "silver age" Japanese idol music (or Kayōkyoku) and the over-saturation of the digital music market. This theme was also explored in Zoom Lens merchandise.
In 2014, a shirt based on a manipulated image of Yukiko Okada was released on Zoom Lens' official site, with a banner reading "burn a face of forgotten idols to obfuscate the memories of the truth you lost". In a Red Bull Music Academy interview, Yim noted that they had felt a sadness in Okada's music and story, and "wanted to show people that Okada was a real person with real feelings, and that we all have such humanity."
Music critic Adam Harper has noted some of the imagery as "a conscious attempt at confronting and defamiliarising the visual objectification of women (and its consequences)."
Influences
= East Asian and global influence
=The label has been referenced as one of "the best places for Japanese-inspired indie pop in the online underground," and it hosted a variety of online shows with Japanese venue 2.5D.
Red Bull Music Academy had also noted Zoom Lens' international roster, which "encompasses artists from Japan, the Philippines, Singapore and the US." and "[spans] cultural and continental canyons through our digital world."
While Yim had identified Zoom Lens as something far more encompassing beyond their own personal views they have noted much of the label was established due to the influence of being a fourth generation Japanese (or Yonsei (Japanese diaspora)) and Chinese American, expressing that their identity felt rather unusual, lonely and that Japanese culture in America is still seen as taboo.
The label had ultimately sought out for the artists to "represent themselves for who they are, not just for the assumptions people make about their country". Despite heavy East Asian influence, Yim had said that the label was also about being unashamed of who you are and sharing the weight of existence.
Artists
= Current
== Former
=Discography
References
External links
Official site
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- TikTok
- Zoom Lens (record label)
- Olympus C-3000 Zoom
- Meishi Smile
- Nikon Z-mount
- Photographic lens design
- Camera phone
- Image stabilization
- Sony Mavica
- Sony RX
- Olympus C-310 Zoom