Cayucas proudly release the official music video for, ‘Jessica WJ’
Of all the young illustrators working in America today, there are few with such an immediately identifiable style as Sean Solomon, art director of the FOX TV animated show Lucas Brothers Moving Co. His style β simple but oh-so-expressive faces, pastel backgrounds, thin, curved lines, and satirical references to pop culture β has been often imitated, but never successfully duplicated. To get the real thing, youβve got to go to the source. The members of the Santa Monica band Cayucas have never been ones to cut corners β and theyβve enlisted Solomon to make a video for a new song thatβs already made quite a splash on streaming services. βJessica WJ,β which has racked up over a million plays on Spotify since its late 2018 release, is an instantly memorable pop-rock confection, and Solomonβs clip for the song underscores its wit, its freshness, and its anxious undercurrents. Rarely is a directorβs complete understanding of a song and a bind as manifest as it is here.
Perhaps thatβs because Solomon is a rocker, too. Heβs the frontman of Moaning, the noisy post-punk trio that lit up the Los Angeles underground last year with their self-titled debut album. Maybe itβs because the music of Cayucas positively begs for music video treatment: itβs moody, ruminative, tuneful, a perfect soundtrack for a spring day. Prior Cayucas videos, such as the sunlit suburban reverie of βCayucosβ and the hyperactive stop-motion of βHigh School Loverβ have been California dreams, and theyβve been viewed more than a million times. βJessica WJ,β a tale of a missed romantic connection β and the lengths theyβll go to make up for it β is, perhaps, the quintessential Cayucas song. The track is Southern California breezy, but thereβs a bit of chill in the wind, too. Theyβve found a specialist in melancholy to man the boards: Grammy-winning producer Dennis Herring, who has overseen wistful, nostalgic recordings for Elvis Costello, Modest Mouse, Ra Ra Riot, and many other bands.
Although heβs still quite young, Sean Solomon has assembled an impressive video resume: heβs worked with Unknown Mortal Orchestra, Odd Future, Michael Rault, and many other musicians. To realize his vision for βJessica WJ,β heβs joined forces with animator Sarah Schmidt, who has turned Solomonβs characters loose in a fantastic landscape of their own invention. Hereβs the hopeful lover (a cartoon figure who bears a definite resemblance to Cayucas frontman Zach Yudin) and the object of his desire. Will they overcome all animated obstacles and get it together? Watch and see.





















