Canadian pop dynamo Andrew Cassara ushers and envelops listeners deep into his dazzling world with the release of his newest album, Freak On Repeat (Deluxe Version), concert video, and single “Gimme More Bass” — all available now.
“Gimme More Bass is one of those songs that kind of surprised me,” Cassara shares. “It happened so quickly; at the beginning it was just a melody that was really catchy and it felt like in the blink of an eye it came to life.
“Growing up, I was the biggest Backstreet Boys fan and ‘Gimme More Bass’ feels like I’m sticking to my roots, but that I’ve fused that ‘boy band’ pop sound with my love for retro funk and disco.
“It’s groove pop and it just feels like home to me.”
As for the album, its title alone telegraphs Cassara’s determination to blaze his own path and encourage others to do the same. “Freak on Repeat is actually a line from one of the songs, ‘Bad Bad,’ and I think it describes this record authentically. It’s about having the best time you can have, being yourself and having fun in the moment.”
Nowhere is that more evident than that first single, a track that channels the glitz and glitter of 70’s era disco while sounding cutting-edge current, and which Cassara describes as, “A fun, party tune about a night of lust and fun with a kind of Saturday Night Fever vibe.”
Although infectiously hooky, groove-driven tracks like “Fever (Bring the F**K mix)” and “Funkadelic” encourage listeners to celebrate life, Cassara’s drive to write about his own experiences with complete honesty finds him covering rougher ground as well. “I wanted to spread a positive message, but I also wanted to write about topics that are sometimes difficult to talk about.”
“You Are” for example, Cassara explains, was written explicitly about his personal struggles with mental health issues. “With ‘You Are’ I had a mission in mind: to tell my story and provide positive reinforcement to anyone listening by repeating lines like ‘you are loved’ and ‘you are strong’. It’s my story, but it’s also a message of inspiration I hope will help people tackle their own issues and give them a positivity boost.”
Similarly, “My Love Again” deals with the lingering feeling that although something’s ended, a new start may be possible. “That’s also a real story,” Cassara says. “It’s a message that, rather than send directly to someone, I wrote into a song.”
“This is probably one of my all-time favourite songs I’ve written to this very day,” Cassara shares of the album’s most recent single and video, “Shock.” “I’m always pushing myself to try writing and singing what feels right for the song while also pushing myself out of my comfort zone to try something new.
“‘Shock’ did just that for me.
“When I was writing it,” he continues, “funnily enough I couldn’t help but picture myself in the movie Grease in the role of ‘Danny’ singing this song… It’s a feel-good song, and it’s a creation I want people to get off their feet for, to dance to and have the time of their life with.
“There’s just this energy that rushes through me whenever I hear it.”
Describing Canadian pop dynamo Andrew Cassara’s style in words doesn’t do it justice; hearing and feeling his music are really the only ways to fully appreciate the 24-year-old’s singular blend of funk, disco and pop. Fuelled by influences ranging from Shawn Mendes, to the Bee Gees, to artists like Jamiroquai – who, like Cassara, blur stylistic lines fluidly – both “Shock” and Freak on Repeat (SGMGroupArtists), may sound familiar, but are absolutely impossible to pigeonhole.
Music has been Cassara’s go to means of expression since first hearing the Backstreet Boys at age four. “They were so inspiring. When I was a kid, I actually won a karaoke contest singing and dancing to their songs. They really paved the way for my passion for music.” His lifelong love affair with music, his determination to write, record and perform, however, is also rooted in his parent’s divorce and father’s subsequent move to the US, which happened right when he started getting into music. “I guess I was just looking for more positivity in my life. Now, when I write, it brings back a lot of those emotions and that plays a big role in my music.”
That said, Cassara’s insistence on replacing negatives with positives and his desire to lift people up permeates every tune on Freak on Repeat and is summed up handily with the stand-out album closer, “Stay Rockin.” “That’s my motto,” Cassara says; his way of dealing with whatever life throws his way. “And putting it at the end of the record, I think, ties the whole album together.”
With previous releases including Lavender Feels, The Big Bang, and Freak on Repeat in its first iteration — as well as a series of singles — Cassara has performed in the US, South Korea, Singapore, Japan and Sweden and shared the stage with artists such as Shawn Mendes, Chromeo, Tyler Shaw, Lauv, and more. He’s also headlined the Youth X Canada Tour, performing for and engaging with audiences at youth centres across Ontario in an effort to encourage young people to share their own stories and mental health struggles.