Ginger Root's 'Nisemono' Is a Euphoric Look at Imposter Syndrome and the Quarter-Life Crisis
Translating to fake or fraud, Ginger Rootâs latest EP Nisemono tells a familiar story of our relationship with time, identity, and the fine line between being both lost and found. Casting a rose-colored lens over his own turmoil, Nisemono romanticizes the inevitable quarter-life crisis. This project is an elixir of truth, but its retro soundscape helps it to go down like citrus sparkling water.
The opening track âKimiko!â introduces us to the projectâs centerpiece, a disillusioned runaway musician who we met in the EPâs lead single, âLoneliness.â Following the narrative of an unlikely star being born, its 1983 setting lends to the nostalgic sound of Nisemono. Beyond its cinematic approach, thereâs a common sonic thread throughout the project, one continuous wave of bubbly euphoria. Ginger Root has managed to find merriment within delicate introspection and sobering surrender.
"Lonelinessâ was born from an intimate conversation between friends, where they all mirrored one another's sense of anxiety concerning the overwhelming nature of life. But the true irony lies in how a song about isolation ended up serving as a safety net for so many of us navigating our own imposter syndrome. Meanwhile, its proceeding track, âHoly Hell,â explores the confusion of a breakup, where Ginger Root questions time as it both holds him hostage and slips through his fingers like sand.
You can hear artists like Toro Y Moiâs influence embedded in Ginger Rootâs self-described "aggressive elevator soul,â but what heâs doing is truly of his own making. Heâs experimenting as he goes, satisfying the different facets of multimedia expression that heâs mastered. Nisemono is a dance within Ginger Rootâs inner playground, using characters to portray the lack of belonging he feels. While he may question how or why heâs on the stage, weâre just grateful heâs exactly where he belongs.
Listen to Nisemono below: