LCMDF
Gig Seeker Pro

LCMDF

| INDIE

| INDIE
Band Pop EDM

Calendar

This band has not uploaded any videos
This band has not uploaded any videos

Music

Press


"Review: LCMDF - Love & Nature"

LOVE & NATURE is Artrocker’s album of the Month and receives 5 stars! - Artrocker Magazine


"Review: LCMDF – Mental Health EP"

Despite the dayglo cover and tongue-in cheek approach to photo shoots, their ludicrous website and general approach to public relations, LCMDF really aren’t the “trivialisers” of mental health issues that one publication rather unkindly described them as recently.

Yes, you’re likely to run into accusations of treating a sensitive matter too lightly if you call your new EP Mental Health AND name tracks ‘I Go Insane’ and ‘Paranoia’, but there’s a genuine positive outlook at work on the Finnish duo’s new release.

Once called Le Corps Mince de Francoise (The Skinny Corpse of Francoise), the band have slimmed down both their name and their members since their debut album Love & Nature, and LCMDF now consists solely of sisters Emma and Mia Kemppianen but they remain as fun a proposition as ever. Mental Health is the first of three EP releases which LCMDF believe to be the best fit for their themes of mental health and self-help (plus yoga and bubble tea, apparently), rather than addressing the subjects over the course of a full album. Citing influences as wide as TLC, Weezer, Chemical Brothers and All Saints, Mental Health is four sharp songs of dance-rock/pop, with the opening shoegazey guitar noise of ‘I Go Insane’ a completely wrong-footing beginning for what becomes a girl-group chant-along backed by the Chemicals’ backwards-drumbeats of ‘Setting Sun’. As the grooves burrow into your brain, you can’t help but sing along to “Check your head, before I need to check myself/It’s unfair, I don’t feel sane anymore”, and realise that it’s an unhealthy relationship that’s making the Kemppianen sisters fear for their sanity.

That feeling feeds into ‘Paranoia’ which begins with the lyric “All this, all this hate/Gimme a break, gimme a break” over wah-wah guitars and a proto-R’n'B beat, then a Mel B-like half-singing, half-rapping voice declares “I got my mind messed up by the things you say/Some people love and other just hate/When I go to bed at night/I’m petrified/But it’ll be alright”. Everything is then strafed by some heavy dance-rock riffing in the chorus, making for a brilliant, brilliant pop tune.

The rest of the EP has a lot to live up to after those ace tunes, and ‘The Big Skip’ is a little too second-division-’90s-girl-band level to be much cop and yet… The tune, with its little sampled whistle and seesaw synths, slowly becomes an immovable earworm, and sets us up nicely for the closing track ‘I Want to Believe’. This track screams All Saints right from the off – and let’s not forget that Mel, Shaznay and co had a run of excellent singles between 1997 and 2000 – with its swinging, swag(gering) beats and sharply strummed acoustic guitars, the verses talking of going on Google and social media to find someone with the answers, in reply to the questioning chorus of: “Where should I go to find me a partner/What should I do to get me some laughter/I shouldn’t feel… feeling like this/Cuz I’ve been treated like shit”.

Underneath all the talk of dead ends, there’s hope shining through the content of Mental Health Part One. Who knows what will come with the next couple of releases (depression? Mania? Violent mood swings?) but for now, LCMDF make life coaching seem fun for probably the first time ever. - The Line of The Best Fit


"This is Hard Corps"

LCMDF – Finnish sister act Emma and Mia Kemppainen – are bucking the trend in a country in love with metal. Emma tells LAUREN MURPHYabout scary men in black coats, how shedding a member was no big deal, and why pop stardom is just one career option

IF APPEARANCES really count for something, then Emma Kemppainen should be a right moody sort. Her band, LCMDF (who were briefly known as Le Corps Mince de Françoise before abbreviating), make music that treads a thin line between ultra-trendy pop and the more obscure end of 1980s and 1990s indie. Their artwork is sleek, and accompanying press photos of the Finnish duo – Emma and her younger sister, Mia – exhibit sharp cheekboned pouts with nary a smile. - The Irish Times


"New music: LCMDF – I Go Insane"

Briefly known under the full moniker Le Corps Mince de Françoise (The Skinny Body of Françoise), Finnish sisters LCMDF have recently been working on the follow-up to 2011's Switch-produced debut Love & Nature. A delirious mix of electro, punk and pure pop, it was led by the single Ghandi, which featured a chorus so brilliantly dumb it bordered on genius: "Voodoo-ah give me Karma/ What's Mahatma Gandhi, Gandhi, Gandhi." Rather than follow it up with another album, the duo have decided to release a trilogy of EPs. "I felt the traditional way of releasing 12 tracks at once wasn't fitting for us right now," explains Emma Kemppainen. "Giving the songs out in EP-sized bundles just feels like a more LCMDF way to go." First up is Mental Health, a four-track rumination on exactly that, which opens with the imposing throb of I Go Insane, premiered here. Over big clattering drums and spikey guitar figures, the pair shout the title over and over as if exorcising inner demons, while the hook of "It's unfair, I don't feel sane any more" buries its way slowly into your brain. - The Guardian


"Tracks: I Go Insane"

You might remember Finnish group LCMDF from a few years ago, when they were called Le Corps Mince de Françoise ; this time around, sisters Emma and Mia Kemppainen have shed the words in their name, the other band members, and-- most promisingly-- any deadweight that existed in their previous singles. The cloud of guitar feedback and sitar haze (gotta earn that "New Age" Soundcloud tag somehow) that begins "I Go Insane" suggests something entirely different than what it is: a dance-rock track about gaslighting yourself to death, as thick with hooks as the unbreathable air they sing about. It's a lot like the noisy, percussion-strewn new-wave that Ladyhawke's been making lately, but with half the anxiety replaced with who-cares abandon and half the chorus bolstered by the chant, "I GO INSANE!" If you're having the thought, you might as well shout it. - Pitchfork


Discography

Mental Health-trilogy, three EP's, FAN Recordings, 2012-2013
Love & Nature, Heavenly Recordings/Sony Finland, Album, 2011
Something Golden, Kitsune, single, 2009
Ray-ban Glasses, New Judas, single, 2009
Bitch of the Bitches, Relentless, single, 2008

Photos

Bio

Emma and Mia are LCMDF, a 2-piece electro-pop group that originates from Helsinki, Finland. LCMDF is a visual, energetic and fun mix of pop, rap, synthesizers, guitars and quirk. The group has been picked up by Pitchfork, Perez Hilton, BBC R1, The Guardian, to name a few. After releasing music on EMI, Kitsuné, Cooperative Music and Sony the girls decided to start their own record label, FAN Recordings. In October 2012 FAN released Mental Health pt.1, the first part of an EP trilogy set to be released during the years 2012-2013. The second part of the trilogy will be released in the spring of 2012. LCMDF has played support shows for acts like Robyn, Sleigh Bells, Two Door Cinema Club and performed at Paris and Milan fashion week, BBC Radio 1 and the NME awards tour.