Elohim got her start playing music at five years old, after her parents encouraged her to learn
classical piano. But these days, the Los Angeles-based Jill of all trades crafts electronic pop
songs that have gotten crowds at some of the world’s largest festivals shaking. Releasing her
first single in 2015, she’s gone on to tour with high profile artists like Blackbear, The Glitch Mob,
and collaborator Louis The Child. She’s performed at festivals as notable as Coachella and
Electric Forest, in addition to appearing on tracks alongside the likes of Marshmello, Skrillex,
and Hobo Johnson. While Elohim is a gripping performer, her music often juxtaposes
party-starting instrumentals with candid lyrics about her mental health struggles. The end result
is as invigorating as it is vulnerable.
Power Of Panic — Elohim’s latest album for Position Music — finds her soaring to new
artistic heights. Locating strength in a period of flux, the emotional EDM record begs to shake
the walls of the world’s biggest clubs. Across 11 tracks, wubby basses and halftime drum
machine grooves lay the framework for stuttering synth leads. “It makes me feel empowered
and dope and cool and badass,” she says, buzzing about how it turned out. From playing
Chopin at recitals to deploying massive drops on the main stage, Elohim has firmly cemented
her place as a pop star for the next generation.