Floating Points shares new single & video “Problems”

Sam Shepherd aka Floating Points has today shared a new single, ‘Problems’ which is out now via Ninja Tune.

This year Floating Points has shared two new tracks, ‘Vocoder‘ and ‘Grammar’. The tracks mark another about turn in a career defined by them and follow up the release of Promises, last year’s celebrated album composed by Shepherd and recorded alongside Pharoah Sanders & the London Symphony Orchestra.

Remaining worlds away from Promises, ‘Problems’ takes a different approach from this years’ previous singles showcasing a thrilling and expertly realised side to Floating Points that sounds like nothing he’s ever done before.

Following a summer of electrifying festival sets at Glastonbury, Coachella and Field Day, this Autumn/Winter Shepherd will take things back indoors. With an upcoming show on an incredible bill from The Warehouse Project, today he announces a marathon open-to-close set at London’s brand new 25,000 square-foot club on New Year’s Day 2023.


Ongoing collaborators Hamill Industries continue their work with Floating Points in the video for ‘Problems’. Building on the ideas of movement and the intricate interactions of electrical pulses introduced in the visuals for ‘Vocoder’ and ‘Grammar’, ‘Problems’ steps things up a notch. Using a technique called Vector Rescanning, they transform video into sound and turn it into a vector image, all in real-time. They filmed the dancers, Hannah Ekholm and Jal Joshua, and transformed their movements into sounds, which they were able to tangle and morph with different sonic elements of Floating Points’ music. From the resulting sound, a final image was projected into a custom-modified Vectrex system, an 80’s video game console that projects vector images onto a screen.

“‘Problems’ is meant to agitate every single room that its ecstatic sound waves reach”, Hamill Industries say, “we wanted to celebrate it with movement and dance and reshape it through sound, by using techniques that allow the sonification of images. We have used lasers that spin and move with the music, making visible their sinuous shapes. It was important that this video shaped the electrical feeling you get when being on a dancefloor, the urge of dancing when sound waves reach your ears.

Listen to Floating Points Problems on Futuristic Playlist

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