Toronto’s I HATE COMPUTERS share debut single, “You and I”
Toronto-based indie digital trio I HATE COMPUTERS delivers a compelling debut single and video with “You and I,” a uncooked, atmospheric monitor that blends moody synths, layered guitars, and emotionally charged vocals. The track creates a soundscape the place human vulnerability collides with digital dissonance—melancholic, immersive, and unfiltered.
Lyrically confessional, “You and I” explores fractured id and misunderstood connection, unfolding with the aching chorus “Don’t need to let it go.” It’s a meditation on being seen solely in fragments, on the stress between notion and actuality, and on the quiet chaos of emotional complexity.
The only is the primary launch from the band’s upcoming EP Die For You, out September 12—a group the group describes as a mirrored image on disconnection, digital disillusionment, and the messy fantastic thing about being human in a world of machines.
The accompanying music video includes a solitary astronaut, a robust visible metaphor for the isolation and emotional distance we are able to really feel—even inside our most intimate relationships. Set in opposition to an unlimited and surreal panorama, the video mirrors the track’s exploration of disconnection in a world the place appearances not often match actuality.
I HATE COMPUTERS is Aaron Christie (vocals, guitar, synth, bass), Jeff Boulton (drums/percussion, synth, vocals), and Steve Davis (vocals, guitar, keys, bass). The trio additionally data below their indie people alter-ego Earlier than The Flood—a mission that showcases their extra natural, acoustic-driven songwriting, offering a stark and considerate distinction to the synth-heavy, emotionally digital world of I HATE COMPUTERS.