Watch Jessy Lanza Break Down “Don’t Leave Me Now”
Jessy Lanza dives into her session for “Don’t Leave Me Now” and shows of how the track was made.

Latest

See All
SONIC HIGHLIGHTS 002: Arcade’s Latest Kits

Preview the newest sounds in Arcade, and let them inspire your next track.

SONIC HIGHLIGHTS 001: Arcade’s Latest Kits
Watch Jessy Lanza Break Down “Don’t Leave Me Now”
Output and LAAMP partner — and you could win!
In the Studio: The Futuristics
Jauz: Remixing Ghosts ‘n’ Stuff + Crafting Wise and Wicked Sonic Worlds
Arcade Love Songs Giveaway
Field Recording Workshop: Capture Sounds, Edit Samples & Create Music
What do you love about Arcade?
Music Production and the Creative Process: OSCILLATR x Output
Samples as Inspiration: Pop Songwriting & Vocal Production
Tape Loops & Reverse: Arcade’s New Retro-Inspired Features
Delusional Records: A Vision for the Future of Electronic Dance Music
#MadeWithArcade Giveaway
Mixing for Producers | 5 Ways to Improve Your Mix
Macros + Modulation Masterclass | Advanced Arcade
Lisa Vazquez: Finding the Rhythm in Every Sound
Hank Shocklee: From Samples to Sonic Worlds
What Makes a Great Love Song, and Why Do We Keep Writing Them?
Terry Hunter: House Music Will Be Here Forever
Hidden gem: Arcade’s Sampler Kit Generator

Producer Ricky Tinez demonstrates how he uses Arcade to stay in the creative flow via a streamlined workflow for resampling and reimagining sounds.

Dive deep into Arcade as Onesto shares his favorite music production tips for making beats and polishing tracks with Arpeggiators, Modifiers, Instruments and Custom Kits.

In the Studio: Trooko

Honduran producer Trooko invites us into his studio and shows how Portal, Signal, Exhale, Arcade, and our Frontier studio monitors help him blend Latin sounds and rhythms with electronic music.

In the Studio: MUNA

LA-based trio MUNA invite us into the studio and show how Arcade was an integral creative tool for their latest self-titled album.

Talkback: Yáng Tan

Yáng Tan is one of hip-hop and pop’s most coveted mix engineers and vocal producers, working on projects for the likes of Kanye West, J. Cole, and Kid Cudi.

Drummer and producer Trevor Lawrence Jr. invites us into his studio to talk about performing at the Super Bowl and how he uses Arcade to spark creativity.

Here’s a step-by-step guide to setting up a studio space that’s tidy and conducive to creativity.

Get a look behind the sounds at Output. On deck: Tyler Etters, a lifelong music creator and programmer who has always explored ways to intermingle the two disciplines.

We spoke to a handful of DJs representing a variety of sexualities, gender expressions, and sonic styles about what it means to be queer in the dance music scene in 2022.

Talkback: Richie Souf

Atlanta-based hip-hop producer Richie Souf talks about learning from Future, the importance of community in music, and the art of repetition.

Buying an original Minimoog will burn a hole in your pocket, but snapping up a soundalike plugin won’t.

In this video, Jessy Lanza dives deep into her lead track “Don’t Leave Me Now” and shows off all the layers that went into her “Doofy Bass”, the techniques behind her soft-yet-powerful vocals, how she combines VSTs with analog synths, and her favorite vocal sample in the chorus.

Artist and producer Jessy Lanza’s latest album, Love Hallucination marks her first full-length release since moving to Los Angeles, a journey that has influenced and emboldened her sound. Lanza’s music has been a fixture on the decks for the past decade, and Love Hallucination marks a new chapter in her evolution. The record dances between the frothy and the forward, touching on a variety of classic R&B and pop influences along the way. We spoke with Lanza about how place influences creativity, some of her favorite music, and the nuts and bolts of how she crafts her unique sonic world. 


You’ve spoken about how LA has informed the sound of your latest work. Can you tell us a little bit about that? 

When I started writing Love Hallucination I had just moved to LA. I think that living in a city built on confidence and bravado really helped me to find this artistic voice that I didn’t really know existed within me. I wrote “Don’t Leave Me Now” pretty much right after I almost got hit by a car. So it’s very much inspired by the city and the streets and walking around and what that experience is like. This song is like a celebration of moving to LA for me.

[In the Open Sessions video] it was really fun to dig into “Don’t Leave Me Now” and listen to the lyrics and just be reminded of why I chose this song as the first single, because it is so much about getting over your fears. Like, I almost got hit by a car, but I came home and I wrote a song about it and got through it. 

And you definitely leaned into LA for the music video — the streets of Silver Lake being featured prominently. 

Winston Case, who directed the video, had this idea of doing really long perspective shots of me running up and down the hills in the neighborhood. We spent a lot of time on the steps by the [Silver Lake] reservoir taking long shots — this neighborhood’s known for its really steep hills.

There are some visual similarities between this video and the “Kathy Lee” video you did a few years back — is there any connection?

Kathy Lee was shot in my hometown of Hamilton, Canada. What we wanted to capture is that even though I know it’s uniquely Hamilton, it really could be any city — it could be Cleveland, it could be Philly, it could be Pittsburgh. There are so many cities that look like Hamilton to me in North America. As much as the Kathy Lee video is unique to Hamilton, I honestly think it could have been shot anywhere, which is what I really love about the video. 

The thing that’s really cool about the “Don’t Leave Me Now” video is we’re shooting it very much in the same way that we shot the Kathy Lee video, which was like, we don’t have a big budget. We have the city and the city has so much personality. Just being on the streets tells the story. 

In general, do you think place influences creativity?

I think place does have a big influence. I mean, I’ve always struggled with that connection because I’ve never lived in a place that was in the epicenter. Like I’ve never been in the zeitgeist. I didn’t grow up in a booming club culture — I grew up in a place where it was Top 40 music and jello shooters — which is why I love r&b and rap so much because that was the only good music that was on the radio. Hamilton, Canada is really close to Toronto. It’s also really close to Buffalo, so there’s a ton of snow. The winters are pretty brutal — very different from the city of Los Angeles. Moving to LA, away from my friends and family, was such a huge step for me — to move here and connect with this kind of confidence — place has a huge impact on music.

Can you share a few of your references for this album and “Don’t Leave Me Now”?

When I was making Love Hallucination, I was also working on DJ-Kicks for !K7 Records, so I was listening to a ton of dance music, and then at the same time I was also listening to a lot of synth pop. I think of Love Hallucination as those two worlds coming together. One group I think does that better than anybody else is The Other People Place. Their record Lifestyles of the Laptop Café is just such a huge influence for me because it’s definitely a dance record, but there are vocals over top that manage to… there’s still songwriting there. I think that’s such a hard line to walk — to do a pop song, but it’s still a dance track. When I was making this track, I thought a lot about what they would do to make this a really engaging song.


What did you focus on in the production of the track to help express the concept of this song?

Because “Don’t Leave Me Now” was gonna be the first single from my new record, and because Love Hallucination is so much about confidence and being in LA — which is like the most confident city in the world, I wanted the track to be really big and really full. I was focused on layering the tracks and making them sound as big and deep as possible. I took the same approach with the synthesizers that I did with the bass, where I ended up layering a lot of different frequencies to get the sound that I was looking for. I also processed a lot of my Juno through a software I really like called Iris. Basically, it lets you like sculpt a sample as though you were using Photoshop, which is really cool. It’s really all about the layers on this song.

Keep up with Jessy Lanza.
Keep up with Output.

Popular

See All
Why the Music in “Gears of War 2” Gets Stuck in Your Head
Why Logic Pro X Works With the Output Music Studio Desk
What Makes a Great Love Song, and Why Do We Keep Writing Them?
What Is Tresillo: The Cuban Rhythm That Powers Pop Songs
What Is an EP? Why Should I Release One?
What do you love about Arcade?
Watch the “Cobra Kai” Composers Face off in a Scoring Battle
Watch Output Artists Make Tracks Shine With Brass Knuckles
Watch Jessy Lanza Break Down “Don’t Leave Me Now”
Watch James McAlister Process Arcade Using Analog Gear
Watch Dresage Perform “Center” Live
Valerie June Is Country Music’s Spiritual Guide: Interview
Use These Simple Plugin Presets to Elevate Any Melody
This Tax Break Is Specifically for Music Makers
The Ultimate MIDI Controller Buying Guide
The Ultimate List of Travel Essentials for Musicians
The Top Music Studio Instagram Accounts for Gear Envy
The Secret Sauce Plugins Behind Your Favorite Music
The NAMM Show 2020 Highlights
The Modular Synth Starter Kit Guide for Beginners

Buying an original Minimoog will burn a hole in your pocket, but snapping up a soundalike plugin won’t.

Producer and multi-instrumentalist Keepitinside builds a hyperpop track from scratch using samples from Arcade’s Future Perfect Line.

The Best USB Audio Interfaces for Home Studios in 2022

Antelope vs. Apogee? Universal Audio vs. Focusrite? Find the best USB audio interface in this guide to take your sound to the next level.

Home recording can be tough if you’re living with roommates or working with limited space. Here’s the best compact gear for an effective small music studio.

Did you know that you’re walking around with a studio in your pocket? Here are the 10 best mobile beat-making apps for novices and pros alike.

The 8 Best Studio Monitor Speakers at Every Price in 2022

Looking for the best studio monitor speakers? From the Output Frontier to the Presonus Eris E5, there’s something for every genre and budget.

Never miss a beat. Get Output announcements, tips, inspiration, and more sent to your inbox.
By entering your email and clicking “Sign up”, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy. You may modify your email preferences at any time in the future.