Super Natural
Turnover
"Super Natural" feels like sunlight hitting water — warm, diffuse, slightly blinding if you look at it directly. Turnover's guitars here have been scrubbed of any aggression, leaving only a clean shimmer that sits high in the mix while a thick, melodic bass line carries the song's emotional weight below. The tempo is unhurried in a way that doesn't feel lazy but meditative, like something being savored rather than consumed. Austin Getz's voice is characteristically airy, nearly boneless in its delivery, sitting in the upper registers with a kind of unbothered ease that the production mirrors back. There's a psych-pop dreaminess in the arrangement — chords that dissolve into reverb tails, harmonies that appear and disappear without announcement. The lyrical core explores something almost mystical about connection, about finding something larger than the self in ordinary moments, and the music earns that sentiment without becoming saccharine. This is a record-store discovery that you play three times in a row on a late spring afternoon, windows down, somewhere between nostalgia and presence, before you've even learned all the words.
medium
2010s
warm, shimmering, diffuse
American indie, Virginia Beach/Richmond scene
Indie Pop, Dream Pop. Psych-Pop. dreamy, nostalgic. Sustains a warm meditative glow from first note to last, moving between presence and nostalgia without ever resolving into either.. energy 4. medium. danceability 4. valence 8. vocals: airy male, boneless upper-register delivery, effortlessly unhurried. production: clean shimmering guitars, melodic bass carrying emotional weight, reverb tails, psych-pop arrangement. texture: warm, shimmering, diffuse. acousticness 5. era: 2010s. American indie, Virginia Beach/Richmond scene. Late spring afternoon with windows down, playing it three times in a row before you've even learned all the words.