Dominic Sen headlines The Broadway with support from Softee, Big Dumb Baby + Grbge_grl!
7:00PM Doors // 7:30PM Show
21+
$12 presale // $15 dos
Dominic Sen
In a bedroom accented by lime green and pink decor, a 12-year-old Alexandra Lily Cohen hacked away at a bulky Toshiba laptop. It was 3 a.m and not the first time that week that she was awake into the wee hours of the night writing the next chapter of her Lord of the Rings fanfiction. This particular work depicted an ill-fated adolescent love story between the sons of two famed leaders. There was elven magic, war, a grand return from the dead, and a romantic connection that transcended time and place.
“I’ve always used storytelling and worldbuilding as a means of escaping the tedium of my own reality,” says Cohen. “They were some of the best tools I had for self-discovery, for exploring what held meaning for me.” Storytelling and worldbuilding are now tools that she employs in each of her releases as Dominic Sen.
Cohen views Dominic Sen as her musical proxy, and uses the persona to occupy an artistic expanse somewhere between myth and reality, weaving truth and legend together to yield music that is usually pop and always evolving. Like a great story unfolding at the fingertips, she entrances listeners with spellbinding hooks and nuanced tales that leave one begging for the next chapter.
Sometimes this mandate is more literal, as was the case with her debut album Visitor, a concept album where the listener followed an extraterrestrial protagonist’s feelings of alienation as she grappled with a strange new world. Visitor was simultaneously a love story, space opera, and thought experiment.
On her latest singles “Steakhouse” and “Lookin’ 4 Pleasure”, the worlds in question are crafted through emotion and sound. “Steakhouse” is a sugary bop meant to evoke the indulgence and the thrills of infatuation in all of its highs and lows. “Lookin’ 4 Pleasure” is a Y2K-inspired love song to the self.