Last updated: 2 hours ago
At the intersection of music, technology, fashion, and film, you’ll find a band as innovative as they are addictive, as experimental as they are exhilarating, as bold as they are insightful. They’re called The Unfits, and they’re here to remind you that, with a little faith and a whole lot of work, anything is possible.
“Satisfy Me” which was released a few months ago was an immediate hit, garnering more than a million streams on Spotify alone and was produced by Emile Haynie known for his work with Kanye West and Lana Del Rey. El Seuño directed an adrenaline-pumping video for the tune, as well, drawing on his background as an avid skydiver and extreme sports enthusiast to capture jaw-dropping footage on three different continents.
For The Unfits, that journey includes every element of the performance, right down to the clothes on their backs, which often exude a dark, dystopian air that blends high fashion with apocalyptic futurism.
“Everything we do has intention behind it,” El Seuño says. “The music, the visuals, the fashion, it’s all part of the DNA of this band.”
Even the name El Seuño comes loaded with meaning. Spanish for “The Dream,” it hints at both its namesake’s remarkable rise and the distinct possibility that nothing in this life is real. Perhaps we’re all characters in the same collective hallucination; perhaps we’re all part of some intricate digital simulation. Either way, The Unfits’ message is clear: dream it, then go do it.
“Satisfy Me” which was released a few months ago was an immediate hit, garnering more than a million streams on Spotify alone and was produced by Emile Haynie known for his work with Kanye West and Lana Del Rey. El Seuño directed an adrenaline-pumping video for the tune, as well, drawing on his background as an avid skydiver and extreme sports enthusiast to capture jaw-dropping footage on three different continents.
For The Unfits, that journey includes every element of the performance, right down to the clothes on their backs, which often exude a dark, dystopian air that blends high fashion with apocalyptic futurism.
“Everything we do has intention behind it,” El Seuño says. “The music, the visuals, the fashion, it’s all part of the DNA of this band.”
Even the name El Seuño comes loaded with meaning. Spanish for “The Dream,” it hints at both its namesake’s remarkable rise and the distinct possibility that nothing in this life is real. Perhaps we’re all characters in the same collective hallucination; perhaps we’re all part of some intricate digital simulation. Either way, The Unfits’ message is clear: dream it, then go do it.
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