
Co-founded by Detroit natives Rahill Jamalifard and Lenny Lynch, Habibi got its start in
Brooklyn in 2011, earning early raves everywhere from Pitchfork and NME to All Things
Considered and The New Yorker, who praised the band for infusing “the Colgate-white glisten
of sixties-girl-group pop with an uncensored edge.” Dreamachine, Habibi’s mesmerizing new
record releasing on Kill Rock Stars, marks a major sonic evolution for the band, rising beyond
the critically acclaimed five-piece’s garage rock roots to arrive at a singular swirl of analog
and digital elements that underpin their search for spiritual and physical transcendence.
Produced by Tyler Love and longtime collaborator Jay Heiselmann and featuring MGMT multi-
instrumentalist James Richardson, the collection draws on a mix of post-punk, experimental
pop, and vintage disco, calling to mind Tom Verlaine, Diana Ross, Kate Bush, and Kim Deal, all
filtered through the band’s shared love of Middle Eastern psych music. The songs here are
their own distinct worlds, each an immersive quest in pursuit of something greater, and the
band’s performances are relentless and hypnotic to match, driven by lush synthesizers, sinewy
guitars, and a muscular rhythm section. The result is a record as fearless as it is enthralling,
an alternatingly fierce and joyous work that ascends to new heights as it reckons with desire
and escape, love and surrender, rebellion and reality.