In a world where every band is scrambling to resurrect the ’80s, Basic Elements isn’t some cheap imitation. They lived it, breathed it, and carry the battle scars to prove it. Their sound doesn’t chase trends—it pulls from the rawness of an era they helped define. It’s a testament to survival, to standing tall through the wreckage of time, where synths throbbed and guitars snarled. Grit, guts, and grime—they’ve seen it all, and they’re here to remind us that history repeats itself, even the cold wars of music. Basic Elements knows what goes around always crawls its way back. After breaking up in 1991, Basic Elements returned true to their Phoenix roots, resurrecting themselves 30 years later in Los Angeles.
Hide Live channels the raw urgency of early U2 anthems, breaking open with a sharp synth riff that cuts through like a distress call. The track pulses with relentless drums, a gritty bassline, and a chorus that digs deep and stays with you. Guitarist Gene Micofsky revives the lost art of guitar theatrics, tearing through solos that scream with intensity, while the band’s core—Jonathan Goldman on synths, William Bowling on bass, and John Denis on vocals—holds the track steady. With OK Go’s Dan Konopka pounding the drums and Micofsky’s electric guitar riffs driving the momentum, the live performance pulses with a fierce, unrelenting energy. The layered synths and driving basslines surge beneath vocals that balance between the introspective cool of Simple Minds and the fierce, passionate fire of Tears for Fears, with moments that echo James Murphy’s sharp, biting delivery in LCD Soundsystem. It’s all power and precision.
The eerie video arrives just in time to haunt the Halloween season. Created by Jonathan Goldman, it draws on crowd-sourced stills from the audience, each moment captured through the lens of those watching. Goldman takes these photos and, using A.I., breathes a strange life into them—turning static shots into flickering five-second video clips. The result is a bizarre, almost dreamlike vision, where reality blurs into something otherworldly. The performance itself, once grounded in the tangible, is reshaped into a surreal, artificial reimagining. The video feels less like a recording of an event and more like a glimpse into something half-remembered, like the flicker of a memory that refuses to sit still.
Bassist William Bowling had concerns about using A.I., but is pleased with the results: “It was interesting to see all the various outputs and selecting ones that were consistent with the others – it was a whole process – but the end result was surprisingly beautiful and surreal.”
Frontman John Denis found the process humbling, “We’re not young, sexy kids in our 20s anymore, but we’re also not warped, distorted figures with blurry faces, so this video kind of works out perfectly for us.”
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Produced by Ed Buller (Suede, Pulp, Psychedelic Furs), Basic Elements released their studio cut of “Hide” in 2020, just before the last presidential election. The live version of Hide, along with its Nite Mix, were recorded last April at Phoenix’s Last Exit Live, marking the band’s first Arizona show in over three decades. Rising from the ashes of the state’s gritty ‘80s post-punk scene, Basic Elements shared stages with local legends like Gin Blossoms, Gentlemen Afterdark, and Caterwaul, while also opening for The Bolshoi and Gene Loves Jezebel—all as teenagers.
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