Trójkąty i kwadraty
Dawid Podsiadło
Playful, geometrically curious, and laced with an intellectual wit that keeps the warmth from going saccharine, this track represents Podsiadło at his most conceptually playful. The arrangement draws on post-punk and indie rock more than his folk-leaning work, with choppy guitar rhythms that actually sound angular — the music performing its own subject matter. There's a jittery, almost nervous energy in the production that resolves into something tender in the chorus, suggesting that the shapes the song discusses might be about incompatible people trying to find common ground. His voice carries a lightness here, almost amused at itself, but with an undercurrent of genuine feeling that prevents the cleverness from becoming cold. The rhythm section is notably more prominent than in his quieter material, giving the track a physical momentum. Lyrically, the geometry operates as metaphor — the persistent question of whether fundamentally different people or ideas can ever truly fit together, and whether the friction of that mismatch is a problem or simply the nature of things. This would appeal particularly to listeners who came to Podsiadło through his early X Factor visibility but stayed for the growing sophistication of his artistic identity — it bridges accessibility and depth without sacrificing either.
medium
2010s
angular, bright, rhythmic
Polish indie rock
Indie Rock, Indie Pop. Polish post-punk influenced indie. playful, anxious. Starts jittery and intellectually restless, resolves into something genuinely tender in the chorus — clever tension yielding to honest feeling.. energy 6. medium. danceability 6. valence 6. vocals: light amused male, slightly self-ironic, undercurrent of sincerity. production: choppy angular guitars, prominent rhythm section, indie rock arrangement. texture: angular, bright, rhythmic. acousticness 4. era: 2010s. Polish indie rock. For listeners who want cleverness and warmth in equal measure, best while moving through a city.