Jonny the Firth: 'Broken Bones' - Album Review

 

Broken Bones

 

Album Review

 

9.3/10.

 

 

He wants to be make music that makes you want to dance. Jonny B very good!

 

 

Availability:

'Broken Bones' is available via http://jonnythefirth.bandcamp.com/

___________________________________________________________________________

 

There is not much pure 'fun' to be had amongst current music...

and yet Jonny the Firth, is- in his own words- a 'one man punk blues band', from Yorkshire. He has a wide aggregation of representation amongst the Internet, and has been creating his unique blend of punk blues for quite a few years now. He stands out amongst the rank-and-file, as is quite atypical a musician. Not what you'd expect from a Yorkshire man: no whippet or cup of tea in hand. He has the flat cap, and he has the accent, amiable demeanour and Northern wit. That is where the, somewhat cliched stereotype ends. He has much more Memphis and Nashville about him. Jonny explained that the band name was a whim he happened upon; an accident, which stuck and has been with him ever since. Investigating the man behind the moniker, his day to life may be considered more sedentary and arable than you'd expect from a punk blues superstar. He is as distinguished and unique as you can find from a Northern musician, yet at his core still revels in the bucolic splendours of Wakefield. Why this style of music, you may ask? Jonny explained that that was the music he grew up listening to, and the music that resonated with him most fervently. It would be semantic null to say that 'you write what you know'. It is often stifling and sanitising if you ration and limit yourself as songwriter. You need to be inspired by your influences, but not wear that repatriation on your sleeve. Similarly, one needs to make their personality and message unique, but not too diverse or impenetrable. Johnnythefirth show acute understanding of the blues spirit of the southern states of America, yet hone and fuse it together with the punk edict of the '70s. There are mining community and real life blues scenarios in Yorkshire. There is hardship, camaraderie, communality and a resolute bonhomie; which one can draw parallels with the Deep South and the songs that would be sung by the slaves whilst they worked. It is by linking the two disparate landscapes in a fraternal handshake that the man and his band succeed. Sprinkling a top the mix with a raw but sweet flavour of punk and blues rock, means that what is to be found amidst 'Broken Bones', is at once familiar and abound with tradition; yet fresh and daring, ready to mingle and fight with the best of modern music.

 

Amongst the somnambulism of the quicksand of modern music, nary but a few acts show attrition by creating sparks and electricity within their sound. Queens of the Stone Age have a June release afoot; there's a couple of post-pubescent indie outfits and lonesome troubadours who, combined, have the ability to set fire to the beige miasma. Released back in May of last year, 'Broken Bones' is johnnythefirth's statement of intent, and one that needs to be heard through a wider audience; as it is as fresh now as is was then, and was, when made by the blues and punk pioneers. It is another act from the ever-expanding and always-impressive Cuckoo Records stall, are producing the new generation of diverse, innovative and mega talented guard. Another day, another Cuckoo sensation...

 

With a jubilant and energetic piano roll, reminiscent of Rachmaninoff, via Muse's 'Butterflies and Hurricanes', 'Just the Way I'm Feeling' is as fun and upbeat a start to any album ever. It's percussion is studded and stamping; it is a drum dance of fun and flits and jumps with gay abandon. After 13 seconds, the pub doors have been locked, disregard has infested the patrons, and a smoke and beer filled aura possesses the night. There is a bit of 'Oliver's Army' a little 'Boomtown Rats'; a smidge of Elvis Presley, and a butt-load of fun and festivity. The voice that steps up to rationalise proceedings is blues-infused and warm. It is authentic and authoritative but unlike any voice you've probably heard. Having an especially keen ear for voices I can usually detect the genealogy of an artist's voice, but with jonnythefirth I was stumped. There's a little bit of Rob Harvey during the chorus but that's it. It has a pleasing individuality and freshness to it. Brass trumpets with Saturnalian wonder, creating an aural Prozac. As an expected juxtaposition to the music, the lyrics have a traditional blues frown to them. There is self doubt: "I don't like myself", but one suspects that the tristesse laid forth has an ironic and knowing wink. There is so much rambunctious revolt that one suspects that the memorable, repeated chorus of "Just the way I'm feeling, baby" portrays a man with a smile, rather than tears in his heart. Whether there is a darker, deeper maudlin beneath the bluster, is unsure; but to keen ears and open hearts, the track is spectacular, delighted and a wonderful opening salvo from an incredible talented songwriter and musician. 9.7

 

At just a few seconds shy of 2 minutes, 'William', is no pithy bon mot, or passing whimsy. It is a homunculus of intrigue and closet secrets. It's beginning is more controlled and serious than its predecessor, yet seems more bloodthirsty. Its fists have had the beer stained washed off, and are showing claws. It jitters, punches and rumbles like an avalanche. Through the employment of scratchy and meaty guitars, it creates quite an awesome and alpha male atmosphere that one can link to the last of the Detroit blues sensations, The White Stripes. It is a problem lovechild of 'Elephant' and 'Era Vulgaris'-era Queens of the Stone Age. The ensuing vocal is sterner and harder than in 'Just the Way I'm Feeling' and has a modicum of early career Jack White, as jonnythefirth recall a tale of faulted love: "You were 26/I was 25", that lead to his beau wearing his shoes, wearing down his body, and wearing him down "in the pouring rain". It staggers, jumps and ratchets bullets of intent and blues via Virginia, through Michigan, across the waves and into your brain. With 30 seconds to go, the riotous recollection of events past becomes more contemplative. There is an Alex Turner edge to the vocal tones with fewer than 30 seconds to go, before the atmosphere picks back up and as soon as things have started with a bang, they end with one. Who the William refers to- maybe a childhood friend, an associate, leaves questions unanswered. Perhaps it is a childhood parable after all. The thing about great blues is a simple and effective story told, is not definitively unambiguous. It makes you mind wander and imagine, and wonder what the song refers to. Psychoanalysis aside it is a thumping and salacious slab of Detroit blues rock, and keeps the momentum hard and fast. 9.8

 

From the album's shortest track, comes the runner up. With a Hendrix/Slash wailing monolith of an opening lick, there is a tangible relevance and appropriateness to 'Fly Away's title. It stomps at first, like a gin bar army, balkanised against a effete stampede of Belibers and One Direction fan-girls. It summons Norse, rouses Poseidon and marches on. Mercifully the dream follows a nightmare, and with a lyrical tenderness: "I don't want to see you fly away", and a restrained but firestorm swell of a rhythm, it is a hypnotic and captivating number. When the guitar slows and calms, one can hear influences of blues masters Robert Johnson, Son House and Blind Lemon Jefferson. The lyrics convey a similar tradition and haunted longing: "The Devil wants me/When I'm alone" and implores for romantic salvation. It is another tight and razor-sharp number, but calmer and more akin to the standard '30s and '40s blues greats. It calms the mood and lets us know there is soul beneath the tough exterior. 9.5

 

Imagine Matt Bellamy, at the summation of his creative prowess with Muse ('Black Holes and Revelations'), having a stab at blues and punk, and you'd be halfway to imagining 'Wolf Boy Cry'. It gallops intergalactic, pirouettes in stasis, before winking and returning to land. There is a little hint of Arctic Monkeys to the verses. You can detect shades of Turner's Northern drawl and spit. Similarly there is a familiar lyrical wit and keen observation: "You take the car out/I'll take the limousine". The track sways from unhinged theremin-style guitars, to regimented, rhythmic balance. Towards the chorus, there's yet another unexpected diversion, as the mood becomes more akin to '70s rock/glam , with an atmospheric vocal backing. Jonnythefirth shows yet more colours in his musical rainbow, displaying keen wit and an admirable mix of restraint and free-spirited ideal. It is perhaps more accessible to those uninitiated to the magic of the blues, but pleasing and memorable to those of us who know who B.B. King is. 9.5

 

'Another Number Another Name's opening acoustic strum hides a secret pain. When our hero steps to the mic to let us know what is on his mind. There is a mixture of vividness: "Breaking glass/On this nowhere train", and undulated sadness: "Bringing me dead flowers/In the rain". It has the spirit of 'Blood on the Tracks' Bob Dylan- confessional, open and in need of a hug. The vocals and raw and aching, and convey a simple and effective weight to them. The sound is a lot more bare than previous tracks, and it is the man and his acoustic guitar. Here the words and made for talking, and the track is all the more striking and impressive because of it. If there has been too much clutter or sound, the message and directness would have been buried, but due to the sparsity of the music, and the passion in the vocals, the overall effect is brilliant. It is one of the strongest tracks, and shows that johnnythefirth can move in mysterious and multi-directional ways.  9.6.

 

With a slight arpeggio and a gentle lilt, 'War Song', may seem like an ironic misnomer. It has a romantic and soothing sigh to its sound, and there is an edge of folk and Irish music as well to the intro. The 'war' is less literal, and more personal. It is a war of poses, and less War of the Roses. The song postulates and professes; it philosophises and ruminates. It has a steam-infused propulsion to it, but is less hard-edged and violent; it is tender and musical. It is the sort of song that Mumford and Sons would record if they had the talent; or the sort Dry The River would sing if they were in a good mood. It has an effectively easy. Again there is a heartbroken diary entry in the year of blues punk. Our protagonist cannot shake off the blues, and whoever hurt him has left a fairly deep wound. Instead of being tormented and wallowing in despair, the music is conscientious and caring. The lyrics are not prone to cliche; instead there are collages of pain and anger: 'Little white lies/Killed your mind" and Northern soul and romanticism: "Hold me dear/Don't let go". It is a prescient blend that tugs at the heartstrings as well as making it ache at the same time. Just as the song reaches its peak of intensity and is rousing and filled with atmosphere, it stops briefly. When it comes back up the gentle strum of the intro returns, and the song ends. It is an inventive and unexpected twist. The war is over and unsure which side has suffered the most causalities. The theme is age-old but the sentiment is not sheer rhetoric; it is a genuine fable of spiritual depanzement, and emotional atomisation. 9.3.

 

Perhaps with a more fitting name this time around, 'Dirty Jokes', arrives with sly grin and perfunctory resolve. The last 2 to 3 songs have been a bit of an emotional response to the pounding hangover of the opening. Now, rested and relaxed and with a lot off of his chest, jonnythefirth is back to his swaggering stride. The intro, again, is jubilant and ready to go, and not hamstrung by formality. It whoops and choruses its intention with a chugging steam train of blues and rock. At its heart is a slingshot paramour: the gravitational pull of the vocal (which has sparks of Mr. White, once more), and the percussion and guitar, which fire furiously forth, creating a building momentum. The words have a repeated mantra: "Dirty jokes/plastic boats/Yes I'm leaving/Leaving you all behind!". It is the composition as a whole that is most impressive of all. There is a raw and bare-boned feel to the music, which is one of the most authentic slices of blues on the album. The guitars swell and throb; stabs and retreat. The drums clatter and canter furiously, pushing and driving the intensity. It is a real thrill ride, and puts you in mind of driving down a highway, wind in your hair. It is the kind of song that you would crank up to 10, and damned be anyone who tries to stop you. When the guitar scuffs, there is a sage drop of glam rock; whilst within the ice cold fists of steel there is a distinct sound of punk. It is 161 seconds of U-turns, mind bends and mood switches and leaves you, in a sense, nonplussed. Your soul and brain have been given so much information and emotional fervency that it wears you down with a big smile on your face 9.6

 

With a nimble guitar opening, 'Reality Bites' morphs into a Rolling Stones jam, all angular, dissonant, sexual and thrusting. It has a punk mise en scene, albeit one with a post-modern twist. Our frontman's vocals are again impassioned and primal. The music is a mixture of parping brass and grumbling guitars, and, the abiding message is that you have to face reality, "before it bites ya". The song itself bites, and has a real sound of The Kinks at its heart, and an overall '60s rock-meets-punk-cum-Northern soul vibe. Although not one of the strongest of the track, it is a worthy and strong counter narrative to the more sedate and emotional songs, and is short and sweet, never wasting a word or outstaying its welcome. It embeds its message in your brain efficiently, and goes on its way. 8.7

 

Ramping the tension and elevating the mood, comes a Dylan-influenced intro. It has a great 'Highway 61 Revisted' '60s electric blues rhythm and gets off to the races. The vocals; a wee bit Turner, a shade Dylan, are confident and sardonic, yet manage to uplift as well. The lyrical snatches: "I wear my grandad's shoes" and "Don't be a hero John/sit back down/Before they break your teeth" displays a typical Yorkshire wit and evocative charm. It has a very chant-able feel to most of the song, and could easily be a song you would bellow, whilst negotiating the dangers of the highway, having spent a memorable evening down the local pub. It ends all too quickly, being quick the tease! Although it is another track, like 'William' that is memorable and catchy, without having to spread itself out and filling gaps. It is sharp, yet has a loose charm to it and will put a smile on your face, as it is fun and up for a laugh, and implores you to sing along. 9.0.

 

Being the only song of the 13 on the album to top the 5 minute mark, 'Damages' , sets out its stall as a potential vote winner, and pivotal centrepiece to persuade any hearts and minds not completely in love with johnnythefirth, to do so bloody sharpish. With a tender vocal and a sense of universality to the compositional integrity to the song, this is the outfit's argumentum ad populum. The poetry of the track is pure and undistilled. There is a real urgency to the words: "I'm so young/Why do I feel so old?", are inflected with a lyrical falsetto, complete with elongation, to add extra emphasis. The chorus is more rousing, employing as it does a crew of backing vocal to help the sentiments resonate. Detached as it is from the mantel of 'traditional blues and punk' it is an aching and sensitive child. It has elements of Jeff Buckley and Matt Corby, and there is a great vocal range on display here. Like those worldly fellows, Jonny has an addling, spine curved earnestness to his message: "You are my saviour/My ever-lasting rose". It has gospel tinges when you hear the backing vocals. It gives those same kind of chills. The track is rousing and epically sweeping in places, acting as an emotional and spiritual pre-pro-peptide, and another notch in the belt of our Yorkshire lad. 9.2

 

With its wall of feedback and metallic chug, bringing to mind a 50ft robot stalking London, rendering landmark upon landmark to rubble, 'Pitbull Blues' tells you all you need to know. It has snarl and teeth, and fetid breathe; our afflicted hero protesting: "Bit by/Bit by a woman/Bit by a pitbull". The track has a lot in common with the blues legends, mentioned previously. Whilst those men would talking about throwing bricks at their women, and swearing bloody revenge upon their sweethearts, the mood here less misogynistic and more biting in its wit and tongue-in-cheek humour. That tsunami of a swollen riff in the background is lord of the manor, and stands at the gates of hell, chainsaw in hand, daring you to step forward. Our poor protagonist is low on funds and luck but, low and behold, his lady arrives, swings for the fences and wants nothing but his cash. As Jonny attests, in a triple, double negative: "I haven't got none". It is another short track that I could well have liked to hear on a release like White Blood Cells or The Von Bondies or Hives. It has a raw and razor wire vocal bark, and a Juggernaut of a backing. 9.6

 

With perhaps a nod of self-referential onomatopoeia, 'Boom Bang' explodes and cracks, beginning as it does with a fuzzy and dizzy guitar riff. Undertones of The White Stripes' 'Rag and Bone' linger within the beast as well, as 'White Album'-era Beatles. Just as you are slipping into the music, an ear-shattering scream bellows forth. The lyrics are awash with wit and bile, as Jonny recalls spending time: "in the shittest town on Earth". There is self-assessment, reflective pronouns, and speculative intrigue and wild imagery ("She goes bang/And I go boom") amidst a rousing cacophony of blues noise and intent. It is another example of jonnythefirth's ability to produce fresh sounding blues, alive with tension and excitement, yet retain and pervade elements of classic and modern classic blues rock artists, who have a keen eye for a harder punk edge. 9.2

 

Ending with a more gentle affair, we end our trans-continental blues punk odyssey with 'Sing for the Miners'. The final track has a gentle folk charm to it, that has some similarities with Crowded House, at their most contemplative and analytical. The chorus ends with: 'Sing for the miners/They'll never come back', and has an inevitable emotion to it that does not surrender easily. It is perhaps a very English or very Yorkshire song, in the sense that a lot of the economy, up until recently, was centered around mining. Now that the sector is all but extinct, it seems like a tale of a sadly bygone age and landscape. There are vivid lyrical snippets: 'Blood on the grass', nestling alongside intangible and intriguing phrases: 'Drinking Earl Grey/Whilst you're on the moon'. The track is one of the more accomplished and noteworthy 'slower' tracks on the album and is a fine way to bring the collection to an end. 8.8

 

If you have not heard of jonnythefirth, then you really need to. I am a big fan of blues and punk, as well as modern oral historians of the genres, such as The White Stripes. There are a lot of similarities to be heard within 'Broken Bones'. The guitars are diverse and intriguing. At their most primal and urgent, they are electrifying and awe-inspiring; whilst when toned down they are equally impressive, yet enunciate a more sincere and sensitive side to proceedings. I was impressed from start to finish, and was impressed by the lyrical depth and wit, and were never heavy-handed or immature. There is a real heart and bite to the range of topics and sentiments illustrated. The vocals were constantly intriguing, imbued with an authentic blues timbre throughout, swaying between pugnacious roustabout and tender-hearted Romeo. It is the overall concoction of all these ingredients that makes the album such compelling listening. There are few blues punk bands, no least based in the U.K. at the moment. Amongst the swarm of pop, soul, and 3rd rate rock, it is refreshing and inspiring to hear such a confident and diverse artist who at once can make music sound so fresh, and at the same time so familiar, never succumbing to predictability or pastiche.

 

I can point at few lows. The songs are predominately tight and focused, and the track order is salient and well structured. I would say there is a minor decrease in quality around the 2/3 mark; where the mood slows, some of the momentum is lost. The songs are great, but perhaps a track such as 'William' sandwiched between them, would create an intrigue contradiction, thus creating exhilaration and unpredictability. It is admirable that there are slower, more artful and tender moments to be found amongst the blues Armageddon. 'Reality Bites' is a nice little number, but maybe the weakest song, and could have fared a tad better towards the top third of the album. There is a slight front loaded feel as well. Two of the best four tracks of the lot occur within the first stage of the album, and sets an incredible benchmark. The track order is impressive, but perhaps shifting one of the livelier numbers towards the 2/3 mark or as a final track, would have created a pleasing circularity, and ended things on an audible and exciting high. They are minor quibbles and I can find little else to disagree with.

 

There are a lot of great artists emerging from the stalls of Cuckoo Records, and another gem has been uncovered. Jonnythefirth has been around for a while, and has built up a loyal fan base. I feel that his music should receive a wider-reaching focus and adoration as he has a mix of sheer talent and daring cavalier spirit to his musicianship and diversity. Check out the album, and hear a genrere of music that is much unappreciated in the U.K. and a lot of Europe. I have the feeling, if another album like 'Broken Bones' can be unearthed, or if Jonny keeps ploughing on fervently, then...

 

 

... the spirit of blues punk will not be confined to the U.S. for too long.

 

 

 

Key tracks: 'Just the Way I'm Feeling' 'William', 'Another Number Another Name' and 'Pitbull Blues'.

__________________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 

Official:

http://www.jonnythefirth.co.uk/

Facebook:

http://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Jonny-the-firth/272688779412143?fref=ts

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/jonnythefirth

SoundCloud:

http://soundcloud.com/jonnythefirth

Myspace:

http://www.myspace.com/jonnythefirth

Cuckoo Records:

http://www.cuckoorecords.com/artists/jonny-the-firth

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dear Reader: 'Down Under, Mining'- Track Review

'Down Under, Mining' -Track Review:

 

9.1/10.

 

 

South African-born chanteuse has an important political compass that urges you to follow.

 

 

Availability: 'Down Under, Mining' is available now via:https://itunes.apple.com/gb/artist/dear-reader/id299724538

___________________________________________________________________________

 

Gold is to be found, when you dig down deep...

 

as it is a song that demands repeated listens. It initially will soothe and lull you into a sleep, but builds and expands in all directions, projecting a Bjork-like experimentation and boldness, minus the histrionics or the same malevolent oddness. The voice behind the South African outfit is singer-songwriter, Cherilyn MacNeil, who were formed back in 2006. They changed their name to Dear Reader, from The Younger in 2008, and have been suitably garnered and celebrated in their native land. Looking through the Internet, Dear Reader has an impressive amount of real estate, and music old and young is available widely. I was made aware of their heart-stopping back catalogue via reliable friend The Girls Are. It is a mystery as to why Dear Reader has perhaps a rather muted subscription in the U.K. In the a lot of Europe, especially Germany, Austria, France and Switzerland, Cherilyn will be bringing her unique blend of musical mystery and political assiduity to these nations through most of 2013. Her last album was 2011's 'Idealistic Animals', and struck quite a mixed chord with a lot of the music press. Clash Magazine labelled the release 'quirky and sincere', and commended MacNeil's 'warm vocals'. Perhaps less effusive was Drowned In Sound, who noted at the album's loss of cohesion towards the mid-point of the album, suggesting lyrical wandering was in need of some honing; but they did celebrate her bold and experimenting sound and odd, but fascinating time signatures. NME went on to say that her zoological-themed song titles were too niche, and the album's pervasive themes: loss of religious faith, self doubt, and reflection were going to be too alienating. The point of the album, was to explain why she lost faith in religion; something that initially made her believe she was someone. The machinations within the album were not supposed to deville faith, but give a toned down execration of her changing mindset; explaining to the listening the catharsis and personal ambiguity and fear one goes through when something so meaningful becomes meaningless.

 

Critics, or as I like to label myself, 'music lovers', seek different forms of artists and bands, to keep their mind interested, and being a songwriter myself, I look for talent to inspire me. Adopting new music is scrutiny to personal taste and subjectiveness. Many reviewers and critics are more praise-worthy of artists who best fit their CD collection, and are familiar to them. I am a big fan of female talent, and have been impressed by a huge raft of new artists: Nadine Shah, Fake Club, Emma Stevens, Chess, Little Violet and Rose and the Howling North, who between them cover a large spectrum of sounds and styles. All of them, with little exception are relatively unheard of and maybe not music I would have thought about listening to before I heard them. That is the point when reviewing new music. Whether it is largely po-faced or introverted or fun and frivolous, the idea is to accentuate the positives and look deeper. If you are too margialinsed and unmoving, then you will never accept or love anything new. So long as (new music) stands between at least one of key five pillars: good lyrics, interesting music, interesting sound, great vocals and memorable songs, then reappraisal and repeated listening will be in order. If you are too calumniatory because the music is consistently downbeat or mournful because you don't wasn't to think or feel sad, then it is an inexact parallel to what I have described. If none of the five criteria is met, then fair enough. But if many boxes are ticked, then it is rather narrow-minded and uneducated when being too reproachful. To matters at hand, then.

 

Ahead of the release of new album 'Rivonia' (released on April 8th on City Slang) I listened to 'Down Under, Mining'. The lyrical and thematic shift over the last 2 years has gone from personal examination to political commentary, particularly about Apartheid-era South Africa, which is what this track focuses on. It does not take a huge gasping about the history of South Africa, nor a first-hand recollection of Apartheid, to understand or appreciate the song. It begins with an appropriate immediacy. In the foreground is Dear Reader teasing with a bubbling and springing chorus of 'uh-uh-ohs', whilst behind her, is a somewhat reflective, and to my ears, Gregorian hum. When she gets down to cohesive lyrical intent, the first thing that strikes me is her voice. It has a delicacy and playfulness or modern stateswomen, yet has a lot in common with Bjork. There is an equivocal kookiness to her aesthete, a childlike jour de vivre and joyful over-pronunciation. There is a similar tribal feel to the percussion in the song as well, which propels the vocals wonderfully. Whether acting as a sonic evocation of a gang mining sorrowfully, or just intending to emphasise the overall mood, it is very effective. Perhaps suitably, the lyrics have a striking sting in their tail and are quite foreboding. "Mother/My Brother/Is Dead in/The gutter", is a especially bold and unforgettable lyric, and given extra reverence and chill, due to the brilliant delivery: punchy, studied, making sure you hear and understand every line. The words are intend to resonate, and haunt, and given the sparsity of musical or vocal accompaniment during the 1st half of the song, what is being sung earns an unnerving starkness that will stick with you for a long time. The theme of the song- as you can probably detect from the title- is about mining, and particularly miners dying and suffering whilst digging for coal and treasure for "the white man". The chorus consists mainly of the song's title being sung calmly: no hyperbole or exasperation, bolstered by an army of backing vocal and gutter-punch percussion. There is a political bite to the manifesto laid forth, and through vivid lyrical painting: "Your spell is upon us", and grave foretelling: "Dust chokes above". It is a gloomy tableaux of choking and dying workers (or borderline-slaves); toiling and in pain, as the greedy and tyrannical white man watches from above. It is quite a short song- well, 3:21- and are it does leave you wanting more. Another verse and chorus perhaps, but in a good way: it makes you seek out more and wonder what the album will produce. Special mention should go to the accompanying video. The video uses shadow puppets, painstakingly crafted by Berlin artist Barbara Steinitz, and follows the songs lyrics faithfully and effectively. It is a gorgeous, breathtaking achievement and grips you to watch it over and over again.

 

Overall it is a brilliant song. Dear Reader's voice has touches of modern artists such as Little Boots; it has a sweet and naive tinge to it, but is much more authoritative and impressive. The Bjork comparisons are not foolhardy; there is a very similar tone and majesty to her singing. Lyrically it strays away from the ethology angle and doubts about religion and self, and concentrates on social politics and repression. Whether this is a direct response to lacklustre critical response or reflective of the authour's interest and mind-space is hard to say. Whilst I did love the tenderness, playfulness and innovation from her 'Idealistic Animals', I love the directness and boldness of 'Down Under, Mining'. All of the key vocal and playful elements are in play, but the lyrical and thematic shift is interesting. It is less downcast and hopefully will strike a universal and respective core amongst music lovers and uneducated core of music critics. The subject matter is still relevant and timeless, and it is a brave shift for any artists to stray from the love/relationship/self-interest plateau that accounts for about 95% of all releases today. I cannot wait to see what other delights are in store when the album is released, as Dear Reader deserves a lot of attention and reinvigorated focus.

 

There is a new single- 'Victory'- released on 8th April. It has a gorgeous and spine-tingling vocal chant, of male and female parts, and accompanies a suitably innovative and stunning video. I hope there will be fewer shrugged shoulders and imperious eyebrow-raising from critics in a few weeks. The people that really count: the buying public, know a great artist when they hear one, and have shown support, faith and passion for the music of Dear Reader. I hope she goes forth, boldly, and continues to build on the sheer momentum she has now. In a world where most talent fits neatly into a prefabricated compartment, with little shock, awe, or distinctiveness, it is reviltalising to hear a bold and striking track. 'Rivonia' will be a fascinating study, of an artist who is restlessly moving forward and making bold strides. Listen to her music and make up your own mind about her. But promise me one thing, is you are the kind of person who 'likes what they like', and turns their nose up at anything out of their wheelhouse. Listen to 'Down Under, Mining', and don't feel guilty...

 

... when instead of uncovering coal, you find a diamond.

 

__________________________________________________________________________________

 

Official:

http://dearreadermusic.com/music/

Facebook:

http://www.facebook.com/dearreadermusic

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/dearreadermusic

YouTube:

http://www.youtube.com/user/DearReaderMusic

iTunes:

https://itunes.apple.com/gb/artist/dear-reader/id299724538

Last FM:

http://www.last.fm/music/Dear+Reader

BBC:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/music/artists/dc70bf33-5c52-4699-871b-0008126ba88b

Wikipedia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dear_Reader

 

 

 

 

Rose and the Howling North- Cuckoo. Album Review.

Rose and the Howling North

Album Review:

 

 

'Cuckoo'.

 

9.7/10

 

With a ambitious scope and concept, Leeds-based artists delivers a Tarrantino-esque soundtrack wonderpiece.

 

Availability:

Album 'Cuckoo' is available now from

http://www.cuckoorecords.com/store/#

Single 'Cuckoo' is available via

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Cuckoo/dp/B00BPFJPLO

___________________________________________________________________________

 

Too much fascinating music, is hidden askance a muddy quagmire...

 

making it practically impossible to uncover. Through sleight of hand and pure dumb luck, one often stumbles upon some of the most special music they will ever hear. The mainstream, or what is deemed 'popular', is prefabricated to fit a distinctly round hole. It is okay if you are a round peg, but, if you even have a modicum of innovation or range, success and mass appeal can be hard to come about. Every Mercury Prize winner or 'Next Big Thing', never, initially, grabs the media'a attention, nor that of the general public at large. If you want to reappropriate the wisdom of crowds and perform a coup against the likes of One Direction and Ke$ha, then you need to get the word out to as many people as possible. Social media has been instrumental in helping a few deserving souls, but it shouldn't be serendipity that one discovers such huge talent.

 

This is where Rosie Doonan, A.K.A Rose and the Howling North fit in. They are fresh from the prodigious and beautifully stocked stables of Leeds-based record label Cuckoo Records. They are home to a wonderful array of hot young talent. I have been lucky enough to have reviewed Swing/Jazz sensation Little Violet. Also present at the Cuckoo campaign is Swing/Boogie Era sensation Cisse Renwick- who is also Rosie's sister. Rosie is a more experienced musician, and has been straw-polling and editing her manifesto for a long time now. She is a flame-haired siren with a powerful voice, but don't expect any comparisons with Florence Welch. Rosie is a more ambitious and fertile musician, as I discovered after listening to the debut album.

 

It is with a cheeky smile that Better Days presents itself. With what promises to be a musical Redomptorist from the get-go, the track has evocations of Bernard Herrman and his work on the Kill Bill features. The intro will be instantly recognisable, as it has a cocky guitar swagger to its opening seconds. You can imagine Uma Thurman walking out of a dusty, putrid saloon, flanked by bearded recidivists, samurai sword in hand, and blood between her teeth. The album's cover is presented like a movie poster, our heroine staring you down, straddling astride the footnote credits; which neatly introduces her co-stars. The intro, in a way also has hints of hard-edged country rock as well. Rosie's vocal enters the scene, and is a smooth, seductive vixen. She has shades of Eva Cassidy to her lower notes, and has mellow hints of jazz and blues legends, such as Billie Holiday. Our opening scene sees Rose back with the Howling North, toothpick between her teeth, walking from prison, meagre possessions in hand. "If I feel cornered/If I feel fooled" is sung with intently assignation and is filled with intent. The song has delicious transversion and epic sweeps. Before soon, the vocals rise and are multiple as "There's a change around our hearts" is projected as if sung by a choir. There is Aretha Franklin-like soul and force in the vocal and is at once purring, and the next awash with gospel finesse and reverence. She is testifying and imploring the skies to bring her sunshine, as the chorus is repeated to stunning emotional affect as the percussion propels, and a distorted fuzz of electric guitar, creates a metaphorical rain. The song is atmospheric and cinematic, and with hints of Welch to some of the vocals, it has a chart-worthy appeal but supersedes any expectations in its simple effectiveness. Quite a stirring and epic opener. 9.7

 

There is a mood shift for scene number 2. Things are calmer, and with an intro that has whispers of 'Apple Blossom' by The White Stripes, it shakes off any White comparisons with a thudding percussive beat that blends with guitar splendidly. Rose and the Howling North promised something Kill Bill-esque and huge and they have a awe-inspiring knack for creating scenes and images in your head with just a few notes. The narrative is more of a 2nd person, and recalls a tale of a girl that should have been making waves, but "the waves are moving too fast". From its punchy opening moments, with a Blues Rock feel, transcends into Soul and Blues, with the intro repeated. There is a great call-and-response between the vocal and music during the verses. It has funk, rhythm and a beautiful kick to it. Lyrically, the mood seems to be one of judgement. The song talks about a girl who is never satisfied and "all the things she could have tasted" have passed her by, and her broken soul lays in pieces. Rosie stands over the weeping girl, shaking her head, and walking from the trailer park, and into her muscle car, tyres screeching. Our movie is rolling and our heroine is cutting people down to size and keeps rolling forward. It is a gloriously assured 1-2, and I am amazed at how confident, tight and polished the song is. It is like the band have been playing this number for decades. I adored it, and is could see it cropping up in a big Tarrantino film very soon. Imagine the music video one could come up with; would like to pitch an idea myself! 9.8

 

Scene 3, and it is the title track, and victim number 2 is going being honed and hunted down. The track opens with a simple strum and has a Nancy Sinatra feel to it. It militates a wealth of mood and is sweat-bleak. It has comparisons with 'Bang Bang' , and has a similar crepuscular skin to it. There has been press written about the track, and it has been played on BBC 6 Music and many radio stations, garnering massive positive reviews, and perhaps appropriately, has sent Twitter aflutter over 'Cuckoo'. Its modus opeandi- set a mood, and take your mind to a far off place, works brilliantly. Its familiar sound and destined-for-soundtracks confidence and quality has you hooked straight away. The credits have started, and the infectious chorus bounces forth as the camera pans across an old bar, tracking our protagonist as she makes her way to a cellar and turns on a light. On a table are photographs of hated enemies, as she puts a cross over 2 photos, and smiles. The chorus has a spring and dance, and onomatopoeic sweep in its feet and the repetition "An old cuckoo/an old cuckoo/(that) fell into my room" is infectious and provocative, and employs Gothic and wind-swept imagery throughout. The idea here is that a former beau arrived like a rarely-seen bird, had a primal and ecumenical effect on her and just departed, never to be seen again, leaving out heroine glum and heartbroken. The camera moves and we pan up through the floorboards to outside the bar, as Rose and the band hit the dirty trail, with intent and revenge in their heart as the sun sets. The vocal becomes electric and ecstatic after the 2/3 mark and has a veracious and powerful prowess, becoming almost strangulated in its passion and intensity. The band are up to the task, and instead of restraining our leading lady, egg her on and support her brilliantly, enveloping the track with a haunted and hypnotic bait and switch, that will put a smile on your face. No drop in quality; this thing is on! 9.7

 

Now we are aware of the meat of the plot, the apropos 'Changes' take us into the first night, as our heroine is pensive and in a reflective mood. There is a great guitar sound to the intro, again recalling Herrman, but with a Western, sand-tinged sound. It twangs and flexes, and sets its own scene: city streets, lovers hand-in-hand and bright lights. Our heroine is thinking of her man and admits: "Oh darling/This bed is made for two/But I'm lonely without you", but says that she is through with him. There is a cheeky nod to David Bowie's track of the same name, when, in the chorus, she stutters the 'c' to 'changes', with a sly wink. It is an infects and memorable track, and there are patterns of Kate Bush to the vocal as well as K.T. Tunstall. The mood is more reserved, but the theme is probably the most personal and sensitive yet. Rose and the Howling North know how to balance an album and keep you hooked. To my ears the band is the star here, and it is the blend of different guitar sounds, and propellant and soul-soothing percussion, that keeps the song compelling throughout. Their concision and talent is displayed wonderfully during the track's coda, and leaves you wanting more and more from this song. 9.0

 

The morning rises and a new day begins as 'Shame on Me' plays. It has personal touches as well, and is perhaps the most romantic and delicate tracks, our protagonist playing the role of curvaceous chanteuse. The song begins calmly and tear-stained: "Take a measure to the bed/That we won't lie in". It is a gorgeous vocal display, reminiscent of Kate Bush, Beth Gibbons and conveys a cut-glass soprano that can melt hearts. Just then a drum thuds- and again. There is a sprinkle of piano that reminds me of Jack White's 'Blunderbuss'. The sharp mood change has hallmarks of 'Third'-era Portishead and a ghostly, howling wind blows in the background; combined, creating a heady and intoxicating sound. The interloper and villain has entered the room, and things could well get very tense. The track was probably made to soundtrack a film, reassembling parts James Bond, part Kill Bill and has pretensions to join the great all-time themes- it is already better than Oscar-winning 'Skyfall'! The chorus swells; a wild cacophony of emotion and sound; with a mix of double-tracked vocals, electric swells and a percussive crescendo; the halfway mark notes a sea change. The mood intensifies and the vocal emotion ratchets up to a good 8.5. It has picked the mood up from 'Changes' and danger, once more lurks. 9.2

 

With a lilting strum that put my mind back to the early '90s and Jeff Buckley's 'Live at Sin-e' album, 'Rest Easy', sets a fresh scene during a new day for our assassin-in-waiting. Perhaps this talk of bleeding hearts and lost romance has made her reborn, and she is dreaming of a quieter life? The vocal has a slight distorted, which gives it a far-off sound and makes it sound more ghostly than the intro would suggest. The lyrics paint homely images: "Our second-hand bed/Our self-built shed". Once again, the album has a purely tender heart, and you will imagine yourself in a coffee shop on the Lower East Side of New York, listening to this track, as the rain beats down outside. In our movie schematic, enough wounds have been created so far, and our heroine is resting, thinking about the future. The vocal is a cross between Nancy Sinatra and Buckley in tone and tenderness and shares a lot with Bob Dylan as well: not just the guitar strum and sound (which sounds like a 'lost' track from 'Blood on the Tracks') but the lyrics as well, share his talent for fusing obliqueness and directness into the same verse. To my mind it is the most beautiful track on the album, and at the half-way mark, provides a resting spot in a romantic shade, and leaves you wondering just what the next track will bring... 9.4

 

Okay then, we are back in the Corvette, as victim number 3; whom perhaps had ideas of a long happy life, is forced to redress their naive mind and asses their lot. A bit of 'Stripes, a little 'Songs for the Deaf'-Queens of the Stone Age there, is how the ambitious 'Cherry Ride' begins. The title I guess is appropriate to my analogy thus far, and glad I am on the same page as the band! It is quite a transmogrification, given what had come before, but such is the nature of the beast, nothing can be predicted. It is a huge scorpion with a stinging tale. Before you envisage a storm brewing, the mood is sedates and becomes a tune with a flavour of Boogie and groups like The Andrews Sisters. There are blasts of horns, at once jubilant, the next, composed; sparks of 'Lullabies to Paralyse'-epoch Queens of the Stone Age; fuzzy and gin-soaked. It is an admirable cohabitation; modern mixing with vintage. The words are simply effective: "Tears fall down these rosy cheeks" and heartfelt: "I need you", but convey a direct honest and longing. The journey continues and the track has all the atmosphere of a truncated road trip; one of reflection, eventfulness, but also fun. There is trouble afoot, but for the moment, there is a smile and the sun is shining on the open road. 9.1

 

The lovely little intro is at first Jake Bugg; then The Rolling Stones, with a bit of Led Zeppelin. It manages to pack a lot of intrigue and potential into such a short space. 'Demands' has a slight country twang to it, and has a very contemporary and fresh sound to it. Whilst a lot of the album's tracks share D.N.A with the past, here the song is a 21st century creation. The percussion rolls and the mood is always up and propulsive. It is a short track as well, and leaves you wanting more, but says all it needs to say at the same time. 8.9

 

'All These Years' gets out heroine back on the reflective trail: "These days washed away the pain". There is still an aching heart beating, and, again, is quite a soft, romantic track. The vocal is soulful and full of conviction. Again it is quite a modern track and shares similarlitys with Emile Sande and Jessie Ware in its lyrical themes and vocal delivery. Towards the end of the track there is a repeated lyric: "The boy don'tlie/Tell me you needed me". It builds and builds and has a hypnotic sway to it that will grab you. 9.0

 

Taking us down to land, and ending the movie, plans of a rampage have ended, as real life and praticality have gripped out leading lady. 'Time to Leave' is a sad and emotional end. With spatterings of Eva Cassidy again in the vocal; especiaslly 'Over the Rainbow', it is a wistful and aching track: "I pushed for your love/And now that we're through". Our heroine is looking back and looking on and tells how she has put up with so much. You are hooked into the sublime vocal and simple strummed backing, and it will have quite an affect on you. It is a wonderful end to the album, and who would have guessed that it would end like this. It shows what a range and bag of tricks Rose and the Howling North has. 9.3

 

The credits are rolling, but our masterpiece has another tale to tell, in the form of bonus track 'Glory Girl'. It is a spine-tingling and haunting, and fits under the banner of the Kill Bill diatribe and the movie arc. Spirits from the past and memories are flooding back and the vocal is delicate and Sintra-like. There is a pop sensibility, albeit it at the top of its game. It rises and falls and is an emotional number. "Oh Glory Girl/Take me home" is its most repeated message and the atmopshere ends quite upbeat and definat. Bonus tracks can often ressemble a bit of a mess. A tossed off idea or half-finished flyweight in need of a home. 'Glory Girl' shows just how many ideas Rose and the Howling North has. It is strong and beautiful and infuses their romantic astehe with energy and diversity. The song is a great way to bring evrything to a conclusion and it will be intriguing to see how this album will be bettered when the sophmore effort is produced. 9.3

 

So then...what an album! It started with quite a bang and you think that you are in for a Kill Bill thrill ride of blood, guts and action; it mutates into a tense and nervy thriller, before ending with romance and longing. It is a testament to the band, and the range of influences that they have, that they have created such a terrific opus. There are a lot of positives oin display. Rose's vocal is superlative. She can go from a delicate soprano, to the bellow of a soul queen, right through to a solid rock performance. It is quite a feat and not one that is going to have too mnany equals. The songwriting is mature and intelligent, as well as incensive and varied. There is no clumsy hyperbole or vaugness, and simplicty is blended with mixed metaphors and vivid scene-setting lines. The band as well are close to stealing the show. They bring life to each song and demonstrate a wealth of talkent and innovation, creating an orchestral epic sweep to the first few tracks, and a romantic soulful edge to the latter tracks. The entire album gripped me, and had never heard of Rose and the Howling North until recently. I am proud that they are English and shows what talent this country can produce when you look away from talent show dirge. It is a bold and brave call to say that an album can have filmic proportions, and that you could ever picture scenes to go with the songs, and make it cojent, consistent and gripping. This has been acheived with aplomb and many of the tracks could easily score a huge budget film, and wouldn't be surprised if many of them did in the future.

 

If there are negatives, it is constructive. I think the album may be a bit front loaded. Whether this is to make a huge impression early on, or is just a part of a wider plan, I am not sure. I am a bigger fan of the bigger, more energetic numbers, and these are all in the first third of the album. There seems to be a bit of an emotional lull towards the middle of the album. The tracks are spellbinding, but you are so drained after track 3 that you need an energy boost about 3 or 4 tracks on. Perhaps placing the title track further down the mix would acheived that. I would also like to see the band incorporating more symphonic elements. They have a seemingly limitless bag of talent, and a few more strings and larger sound would emphasise sonme of the numbers. Whether this is a plan for a future release I am not sure, but would be nice to hear more strings and orchestra.

 

If you haven't seeked out Rose and the Howling North then do so. I am baffled why a band of such magnitude have been kept a secret. The media and public in general need to start looking towards bands and acts like this, because they have the legs to be standing many years from now. I am a fully fledged fan of Rose' and have been staggered by the quality and originality of their music. They have come from seemingly nowehere...

 

... and have made one of the best, and certainly the most fascinating album of 2013.

 

Key Tracks: 'Better Days', 'Broken Souls', 'Cuckoo' & 'Time to Leave'.

__________________________________________________________________________________

 

Cuckoo Records (Official):

http://www.cuckoorecords.com/artists/Rose-the-Howling-North

Facebook:

http://www.facebook.com/events/294828140623979/

Twitter (Rosie Doonan):

https://twitter.com/rosiedoonan

Myspace (Rosie Doonan):

http://www.myspace.com/rosiedoonan

YouTube:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o-8x25mT2q4

Band to Market Site:

http://band2marketsites.com/rose/

SoundCloud:

http://soundcloud.com/rosehowlingnorth

 

 

 

 

House of Hats: 'House of Hats Compilation' - E.P. Review

 

House of Hats Compilation

 

E.P. Review

 

9.1/10.

 

 

4-piece band deliver gorgeous harmonies, sweet dreamy music, that is irresistible.

 

 

Availability: E.P. is available via http://houseofhatsmusic.bandcamp.com/

___________________________________________________________________________

 

It is hard to rise to the top of the pool, of an ever-expanding musical swarm...

 

not that the increase in talent is a bad thing. A implied false equivalency in people's attitudes to a more is better ideal, is often not dispelled. Music goes through cyclical spells of creative alchemy. To my mind 1994 was the last time, such a wealth of staggering music was on offer. As it is easier now to record music cheaply and simply, often from the comfort of your own bedroom, people from all corners, are declaring their intentions known. A lot of times, the act or band are a facsimile of their idols and influences; many lacking either lyrical and musical innovation, vocal light speed, or market perspicacity. The heart grows heavy, the mind casts shadows, and belief runs dry. I have been smiling a little more as of late; as it seems that there is a consistent core of credible and incredible acts, breaking through. I have been privileged to review a lot of stunning new acts over the last few weeks, everything from metal, to soul, through to jazz, and have been amazed at the quality and convivial ambition of each of them. Today is no exception.

 

With one of the most distinctive and evocative names in the business, House of Hats are a name to be excited by, for a number of different reasons. The group are based in Brighton, and have been playing together for the past 2 years. Their sound has been described as a conglomeration of Crosby, Stills, Nah and Young as well as Fleetwood Mac. They share the former's gorgeous harmonies and possess a similarly heavyweight cache of impressive and memorable songs. Like Fleetwood Mac they contain siblings- Alex and Rob; together with Noddy and James. They posses 3 dapper and fine looking gents, and one gorgeous and alluring woman; but expect no Mac-style tempestuousness, drug-fuelled histrionics and sexual upheaval. The band are focused and tight knit close friends, and if they are to achieve an album as genre-breaking as 'Rumours', it will be down to their talents and quality, with no close scrutiny and dissection of the song's origins and the member's demyelination. The gang are influences by modern paragons such as Bon Iver and Dry The River, as well as the established old guard of the folk genre: Bob Dylan, Neil Young and Johnny Cash.

 

The likes of Zoe Ball and Maverick Magazine have extolled the virtues of the band's unique blend of soothing, lilac-scented vocal harmonies and folk aesthetic. The E.P.'s lead-off track is 'Never Lost'. It is a complication-free, beautiful birth, delivered as it is with gloriously gentle and evocative acoustic strings. There are early hints of Young and Iver in the intro., which never feels subordinate or disingenuous; it is reassuring and a statement of intent. There is already a definite mood set, and the scene is nimbly instigated: calm streams, sunshine smiles and tall grass in empty fields. The inter-gender vocal melt that proceeds it is equally calming and tender. The lyrics are imbued by their fashion choices: neutral colours, mo0desty, but always eye catching and thought-provoking : "The tenderness of home" and "The streets I used to roam", are picturesque ("The sky is black as coal" is particularly defined) and aching sentiments, delivered with a whispered evocation. The guitar sound, and in a way, the vocal construct and melody has common ground with Kings of Convenience, yet posses a richer flavour and are more captivating. If one is hunting for a companion piece to this song, I would advise The Cinematic Orchetra's 'To Build a Home'. That song manifests an unadulterated charm and child-like innocence, as well as a credence concerning the safety and familiarity of home. The vocals swoon and glide across the blue sky and caress your soul. The conscientious gentility and descriptive scenes transcend your mood, and makes you close your eyes and picture all of the things that the band sing of. There are plural possessive nouns, vivid recollections and poetic longing: ("The air as still as stone") It is a very definitive folk number that fans of Fleetwood Mac's more langouresness numbers will adore, and its warm heart will find you at your best; calm and at peace with the world. Just before the 3:00 mark there is a sound of harmonica as the chorus is delivered once more. The mood is slightly more intense, as there is an increase in passion and urgency. The message overall is, that however far they are from home, House of Hats will never be lost; the memories stay with them and that will never change. It is one of the most harmonious and spellbinding tracks on the E.P. and a brilliant opening salvo.

 

Like The Beatles track of the same name, 'Across The Universe's intro manifests a similar transient mystique. It shimmers with beauty and its acoustic propagation trickles dlictaerly, its riparian delights flow to and forth before entering the sea. The vocal is by Noddy and glistens magnificently. Her soft caress and otherworldly vocal is reminiscent of Eva Cassidy and is pure and crystalline. It pervades a sense of comfort and stability to its sound as well as its lyrical message. "Seasons may change/But still you always remain" is an early example of the potency of a simple and well delivered message. The vocal elongates, floats and purrs feline, seducing and quivering. At one point the vocal sounds like Kate Bush in her upper reaches, and possesses an impressive range and cupboard of emotional delight throughout the song. The guitar punctuates the mood and has a loyal folk aesthete to it, but within the chorus does have flecks of a more introverted version of psychedelia and '60s experimentation. The song does not break too far from the theme of longing and wanting what is familiar and reliable. Lyrics such as: "As you're not nearer/Every darkness is clearer", convey an air of loneliness and wistfulness. Our heroine longs for the day where she can cross the universe and redress her unbalanced heart that haunts and pulls her down. The song is superbly tight and concentrated, and gets its message out in just over 2:30. The vocal is the type that can send shivers down the hardiest and most unmoving of people, and the Cassidy parable is especially prescient. I am confident the song will be remembered in similarly revered tones and covered extensively by artists from many genres. It is an exceptional performance and to my mind is the strongest song of the E.P. Its universality and romanticism will strike a chord with everyone and is the kind of song one can be cheered by when it is wet, and sing along to when the sun shines.

 

With its modulating arpeggio, Sewing Machine caresses and intrigues in equal measures within the intro. The vocal duties are once more shared and enter with quite a burst and possesses more of an energy and country-tinge. The folk elements are still predominant, but there are sadder touches here and there. One can sense the spirit of Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young as well as Bon Iver in this haunted little number. The themes of the songs range from regret ("Missed out opportunities") to optimism ("Hope is always close to me") to lost opportunity ("Somebody stole my sewing machine"). The vocal harmony is brilliant and when they combine at 2:20 and rise into the heavens the effect is amazing. The two leads support and link up perfectly, giving the song particular authenticity. It seems like a lover's call; a kind of duet that will put you in mind of a romantic movie, the heroine and hero divided by time, geography and circumstance, calling to one another from across the divide. The musical backing is effectively studied and concise. Piano lilts pop up to elevate sentiments, and the guitar varies in pace and signature, giving a sense of movement and storytelling to the track, and also contextualises the lyrics brilliantly. The song has a admirable constancy to it, and mixes metaphor and the literal with great aplomb. Whilst many contemporary acts may tell a similar tale with a needless edge of licentious cynicism, House of Hats are restrained and mature, thus meaning there are no wasted words or breathes. There is quite a modern sound to the track as a whole. Whilst it has a lot in common with the classic folk of the '60s and '70s, I was reminded of Dry the River and Laura Marling; the celestial rise that arrives just before 4:00 sounds, however like nothing else. It is the longest track of the quartet, but does not feel forced and plodding.

 

Conversely, the shortest track completes the journey. I am particularly fond of the band's handy knack of nailing titles. The brilliantly-titled 'King of the Average Pace' hits you immediately. There is no mood lighting or build-up, the song has no time to spare! The harmony again has touches of Crosby' in its fullness, with the entire group joined and mobilised to uplifting effect. Perhaps it isn't world-weariness, but maybe taking things at your own speed is the mission statement for the track. In the band's own words: "Give me time to find my place/I am the King of the Average Pace". The mood of the song is more upbeat and revitalised. I was thinking that the track would work brilliantly well on a full album. It is quite the tease in its flirtation. I would have happily heard about 3 more minutes of the track, but as the group say: "Give me patience and show my grace". They have earned and expect to be left to do things at their pace. It is an invigorating number and ends the E.P. with virulent satiation. That said, it provides a tempting glimpse at what could be on the album. The band have shown quite a range of sounds and emotions over 4 tracks.

 

I was incredibly satisfied and won over by The House of Hats. I have been slightly disheartened by the sect of musicians purporting themselves to be 'folk' or 'acoustic pop'. It is a section of the market that is vastly subscribed and variable when it comes to quality. It is down to the band's fantastic vocals, concision, grace and talent that means they not only bring a fresh dynamic to a crowded market, but are also pleasingly familiar at the same time. They have a great range of influences and adopt a little one of each, without ever being too heavy handed or in danger of pastiche. They have their own unique style and incorporate their idols seamlessly. The track order and weighting works very well. It is quite shrewd to end the E.P. with the shortest track as it leaves you wanting a lot more, and the numbers are arranged with precision, that means the emotional balance and overall effect is greater than if they had ordered the listing any other way. The entire band are brilliant and incredibly passionate, precise and talented, and for a relatively new band, they have an incredible confidence and maturity to them. It is the vocals and the overall vocal effect that struck the biggest chord with me. When harmonising or isolated, the vocals are gripping and striking and they feel a lot more exciting and porteneuous than their peers. The band are tight and you can feel the closeness of the members; everything and everyone are in perfect time, and they have a great respect for each other and that shines through. They can also balance a fun mood with a more emotional sound, but they never allow themselves to become maudlin or overwhelmed.

 

Their debut album is released this Spring, and will be interesting to see what direction they take. Whether they are going to remain true to the four tracks here, or expand or alter their sound, will be interesting. It would be great to hear more tracks like 'Across The Universe', mingling alongside the more collaborative songs, as shows the full range and palette that the band have. I can point at no negatives at all and was left wanting more and coming away a fan of the group. I hope that they experience resounding success and longevity, as in today's market, there are few bands or acts that can compel you to be inspired, revisit past acts or influence your own songwriting with a mere few songs. The House of Hats, however, have managed to do this, and whilst not overly-familiar with folk myself, sans Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, I will now be seeking out more new music like this. Make sure you give them a listen and patronage, because they are deserving of the attention they are sure to receive. Listen to the E.P. and put yourself in a good mood...

 

... because how much music can achieve that with such ease?

 

__________________________________________________________________________________

 

Official website:

http://www.houseofhatsmusic.co.uk/

Facebook:

http://www.facebook.com/houseofhats

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/houseofhats

SoundCloud:

http://soundcloud.com/houseofhats

You Tube:

http://www.youtube.com/user/houseofhats

Last FM:

http://www.last.fm/music/House+of+Hats

Noise Trade:

http://noisetrade.com/houseofhats

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fake Club: 'Do What You Gotta Do'- Song Review

'Do What You Gotta Do'-

 

9.6/10

 

Five-piece female band are hard to categorise, and impossible to ignore.

 

 

Availability: http://www.facebook.com/#!/fakeclubband/app_178091127385

___________________________________________________________________________

 

It will take the wind out of you, and make you want to not catch your breath...

 

not so much my assimilation, but a less than verdant paraphrasing of Art Wednesday's judgement call. They go on to describe their song, 'Over and Over', as a mythological "Doc Martin stomping bitch-slap right in the gob". It is a vivid and augmented reality of the experience one received from listening to Fake Club. No hyperbolic 'angst' or pseudo-rebellion; the five-piece group are a genuine article. Albeit it, one with tears in their tights and blood in their hair. That track, is filled with the band's clench-fisted auteur; sound clips and distortion, mingling with collegiate passion and jittery assassination. The riff that baptises the song in a lake of fire, is staunch and invigorating. It is reminiscent of Arctic Monkeys, circa their debut; fresh and street-smart. When the vocal swings into action, it is all guns blazing. There is a little distortion, giving the tones and edges nods to the likes of Alison Mosshart, during her Dead Weather days. The guitar is barbaric and domineering; it wills you to stick your head in its jaws; and makes you tremble with fear and excitement as it crawls away. The percussion is staccato and pummeling; I could imagine the likes of Dave Grohl and Gary Powell exchanging fervent glances of jealousy. It is a stampede of a track, but not simply one of bluster and effect. The words, vocals and overall mood of the track is enforced to educate, enunciate and seduce as well as slap you. The track is quite chorus-lead. In the sense that the words 'over and over' are mixed with 'under' to create clever lyrical twists and catchy, chant-able snippets. There is no chorus-verse-chorus. The title and chorus is queen, and the sound chaperoning, is its abiding king. What you take away from that song, is a huge respect for the originality and zeal of the group; who also manage to integrate and incorporate elements of '70s punk, creating a resultant head rush. I shall talk about the new single anon; a little more about the girls in the band...

 

Fake Club, are, consequently, Aicha, Chloe, Carmen, Rosie and Vicky- a London-based quintet. Perhaps sardonically done, or intended to be ironic or understated, the girls have ascribed themselves "Spice Girls with instruments". It may be a fey piss-take or insouciant rebellion. The girls are a five piece likes the girls of spice. They are each undeniably gorgeous and heart-breaking; they have distinct and varied personalities, and are a close-knit band. The label is not altogether flippant. They have the potential and star power to be hugely popular and inspiration to a wide demographic; not just the premiated teenage market. They are not management tools or prefabricated characters; they are intuitive and headstrong, and intend to make a mark and exorcise message of encouragement, inspiration and meaning. In a sense they are a more mature, 21st century equivalency of The Spice Girls. Less concerned with the business of 'fun' and 'catchy', with all its ephemera; they have politics, passion and stacked heels. They admit themselves that they want to- some one imagine literally- kick against the odorous sub-culture of 'fame', 'celebrity' and all the assorted talent contests, prurient tail-chasing and noxious glossy magazine covers. They share ideologies with the punk pioneers, and in a sense they sound something quite brand-leading. The prevailing ideology amongst female solo artists and groups, has been towards a soul/pop leaning, with perhaps a hint of rock to its demeanour. To my mind there are seldom few, especially all-female, groups that can convey such a raw and authentic edge of punk, blues rock, metal and everything else you care to mention. Having looked at a rather fully-fledged and comprehensive article by The Guardian, I discovered that Fake Club are in the process or recording and finishing a debut album. That will be present, shortly, and will contain an intriguing and inscrutable mixture of sounds, attitudes and messages. Now, then; to the business at hand!

 

It is not with a bang or trumpeting nor punk thrash that begins 'Do What You Gotta Do'. Instead it is studio chatter and ad lib. It is a little like Let It Be, only less tumultuous. One of the band are remarked to say: "Okay...when should I go?", before a close-mic order of: "We're rolling, whenever you're ready" orders the music to begin. A subterfuge of a scream is let rip before an almighty riff beacons from the heavens. It is a swampy, staggering, wounded Joker, hunting for Batman on the streets of Gotham City. The street is on fire and the good people run, nullified by a denigrated cannonball of an intro. There are shades of Jack White; I'm thinking the White Stripes debut, and later The Dead Weather. It is moody and a real blues stomp. In, what will become a repeated requisite during this review, Queens of the Stone Age linger in the mix too. Also Superunknown-era Soundgarden crackle with furious intent. Seeing as some of those bands contain the greatest and most innovative guitars of the last 10 years, it is a remarkable feat. After the spoken word beginning, the fierce introduction shocks ever harder and the band display a keen and mature understanding of the importance of psycho-acoustics. If you hook the listener in before a word is sung, you are on to a winner. The drumbeat is fastidious and primal and ballasts the guitar beautifully as a metal toe-capped manifesto is pinned to the door of the Church of Celebrity, written in Dejavu Sans Condensed blood spatter. As the vocal cuts in, the overall sound fuses '90s grunge and metal, together with Suzi Quatro '70s glam; shifting and conflagrating the two in a wild tryst of sound. The lyrics: "I'll tell you a secret/I'm afraid of lightning/put it in the shoebox" are quite dadaesque in its philosophyy, but perhaps is the beginning of the Fake Club's modernisation of Parable of the Sower. I especially like the howling bursts of guitar played lower in the mix, punctuating the lines in the verses. It gives a great blues rock touch, and adds atmosphere and firepower too. The lyrics ride the line between Mosshart's tenure during 'Weather's 'Sea of Cowards': all fuzzy drawl and cigarette store conversation. There is a fraction of Quatro, as well as rough-edged Patti Smith and Brody Dalle, and a more utilitarian Joan Jett. Just before the 1:00 mark there is a wordless vocal call and the mood becomes less aggressive as the chorus arrives. The title is repeated, delineated like a motivational mantra amidst chaos. It is catchy and grunge-tinged all at once. It is the sort of line the likes of Eddie Vedder, Chris Cornell or Kurt Cobain would utilise. However, Fake Club give it a slight pop edge, an air of accessibility. Almost to counterbalance the fight club of fused electrics that have assaulted your brain; the chorus sweeps in to invade your heart. It has an everyman appeal, and a simple message for a modern age: "Living isn't easy/When you're growing up/In the town". There is a distorted whoops and an insidious chuckle as we are back to the harder sound. Against the ghosts of White, Mosshart and Quatro stand at the doorway as a more Gothic tableaux is unveiled. One that talks of graveyards, floral theft, moonlit rebellion, where out heroine explains she "put kisses on (your) forehead". The chorus comes back up, and the displaced elation of '90s grunge and modern pop combine gloriously. Where as the song's initial stages reassembled a killer stalking her victim in the shadows, the closing stages are more jubilant and crowd-pleasing. The lyrics are given a less anxious feel to them and the sisters-in-arms spirit of The Spice Girls is influential.

 

I have gone into so much detail, as I was blown away by the band. They have the stunning looks what you would expect from a 'girl band', but are more mature and sexier and have brains and guts to their aesthetic; they are not plastic fake-ness and vapid-mind ambitions. They are strong, independent women, making incredible music. It is rare to hear an entirely female band making such authentic blues rock/metal sound, whilst able to infuse it with a populist edge that will appeal to the masses and underground, alike. The guitar work is inspired and enthralling from start to end. There is a lunging, staggering grunge punch to it. You can almost smell the rain of Seattle percolate lustfully. During the intro as well as towards the chorus there is an essence of stoner rock and metal. Blues rock is a common thread and the sound of Detroit and Mississippi join the party. There are a lot of modern influences too, and the guitar has a new and urgent aura to it. The bass and drums are superb, and help propel, levy and emphasise the lyrics wonderfully. Special kudos must be given towards the vocals. Although there are clear influences from The Kills, The White Stripes as well as glam and punk, again there is a uniqueness to them. They are intent and stick in your head a long time after the song has ended. The band are incredible tight and studied, and create a motivational monster of a song. I can't think of any negatives, but it will be intriguing to see if any softer tones are present when the album is released, as I believe Fake Club have a vast array to their arsenal and can span genres and moods effortlessly with authenticity.

 

Get into the club, as it were, and hear everything they have recorded. It attests to a challenging and restless group of young woman, who could quite easily top charts and rule BBC 6 Music, XFM and Aboslute Radio's play-lists for months on end. I loved the track and was not expecting such a feast for the ears and minds. If you are looking for something fresh and bombastic with a modern message of relevance and incredible reverence...

 

... Check out this wonderful single.

 

__________________________________________________________________________________

 

Official site:

http://fakeclubband.tumblr.com/

Facebook:

http://www.facebook.com/fakeclubband

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/fakeclubband

YouTube:

http://www.youtube.com/fakeclubband

Guardian:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2012/nov/13/new-band-fake-club

Google:+

https://plus.google.com/117766536300221820254#117766536300221820254/posts

Art Wednesday:

http://artwednesday.com/2013/02/12/fake-club-over-and-over/

 

 

 

 

 

 

Katsuo (remixed by Night Wolf): 'Stereo Jesus'-

'Stereo Jesus'-

 

Song Review

 

9.5/10

 

The Dynamic Duo join forces, and create an audio smash that lives up to its title.

 

Availability: Track will be available from 1st April.

___________________________________________________________________________

 

It's the combination of wolf and masculinity that defines this remix...

 

because a lot of remixes add nothing to the original. There are a whole host of DJs and producers that will take an existing song- some good, some dreadful; and really not improve upon it. It is a waste of time and effort and rather than emit seminal flow of awfulness, you need to make it better; add something new. There are some worthy trysts of artist and collaborator. Whilst searching Google, I hit upon a remix of 'Paradise', reconfigured as a dub-step monster. What was once a listless wandering tramp of a song, with no real USP or destination, was at once put in a suit, shaven and is a borderline-paragon of innovation. It takes a bold astuteness to tackle a song and make it sound new and engaging.

 

Katsuo and Night Wolf are fairly disparate in context; the former is a rock step maverick, fronted by Alex Larkman. The latter is multi-faceted artist, displaying feathers of dub-step, classic and political spoken word to his plumage. It's chairman, Ryan Wilcox has shown a great diversity in his music and producing, and have been impressed by his alma mater's output as of late. Together, they appeal to a wide array of music lovers. I am usually entrenched in indie, rock and stoner rock and as of recently, hadn't broadened my pallet to include the pairs respective genres. It is at the intersection of their audio venn diagram where the remix flourishes. It is guaranteed to thrill the old faithful, as well as pull in the po-faced, and undecided voters, alike. I was wondering whether this wonderful one-night stand would birth an apoplectic progeny; a guaranteed long-term romance, or a metaphysical testosterone brew of sweat, blood, tears; or simply a bloody good track.

 

There is immediate validation from the remix. Before you can compose your thoughts and get comfortably seated there is a sledgehammer execration. The electric guitar sound shreds and kicks, and is a bucket of acid to the face. The vocal is quite high up in the mix, which is prudent, as it gives a chance for the lyrics to profiteer. Katsuo is up at the mic., fully intent on telling you what's what: "I could be a rock star/Or just your mate/Take away the mic./And I'm not so great", is the intriguing lead-off. I have heard the lyrics before, but notice, that given comparative isolation, the lines have an added piquancy to them. There is much more of a sting in the tale; somewhat of a rap/hip hop spit to it. That instant combination of guitar catapult and vocal sucks you straight in. That guitar is played to great effect; punctuating and teeing-up the vocal, and creating its own cacophonous brew in the background. straddling the first two vocal segments is a cocksure, almost rebellious laugh. As the chorus comes in, the mood is slightly lighter; not timid or overly-'radio friendly', but calmer and studied. There is an effective and stern drumbeat that italisises the mood. The chorus is given considerate tenderness. In the original it was catchy and had a euphoric spirit to it, and lynch-pined the song. It was a strong track from start to finish but it is the chorus that sticks in your head. Now there is a competing meritocracy within the space of 30 seconds or so. Sounds, ideas and moods campaign for your approval. There is a guitar hold and the drums come to play; then the vocal comes to the forefront and when the lyrics "And when the music gets loud/And you're out of your mind/You better get down and testify", are sermonised, they are given additional fervor and pertinence; I gave a sly grin during the word 'testify'- the 3rd syllable is elongated. I could imagine Alex given a similar reaction in the studio! There are great moments of varied interjection; some of the syntehsiser/electronic sounds lower in the mix reassemble the New Romantic pioneers of the '80s; it has a romanticism to it. The drums that accompany it are pulsating but have a hollow sound to them; this way it gives the mood a tribal air and the vocal becomes less a mission statement, and more of an election promise, that they will definitely keep. The lines: "Would you put me on a pedestal/like a diety" are given particular reverence. The song retains a lot of its original influence: Skrillex, Example, Chase and Status, but new sonic influences come to the fore. There is a harder rock sound, maybe reminiscent of early-Muse. When the lines: "And when the music is loud/And you're out of your mind/you better get down and testify" are delivered and we float down to land, the experience ends.

 

Overall it is a triumphant result. The two display an entrepreneurial spirit and dispel any antiquated notions or cliches, of what a remix should sound like. Katsuo has recently completed a remix for Chess, and tackled one of the songs from her debut E.P. It will be fascinating to see what comes from that. In the same way that acts such as The Avalanches can take sounds and songs and create a light and fascinating mood, Night Wolf's Ryan Wilcox has achieved this. Similarly, artists like Moby who can weld older sounds and voices and make it sound retro and alive is another influence I would point to. The mood shifts effortlessly between dream-like trance, dark streetlights and danger, through to hardcore rock step. The key components of the original are kept in place. The lyrics are sharp throughout. In the chorus there is a simplicity to them, to make sure they lodge in your head. In the choruses there are messianic declarations, self-doubt, confidence and the result is a mixed causality. The vocal is confident and strong throughout. Katsuo has a more lyrical voice than a lot of his contemporaries. The music is fascinating and ever-changing. Night Wolf have come into the fray and shown respect for the author. Soundscapes and ingenious touches are added; vocals are emphasied where appropriate and far from suffering from questionable cause; the song is intensified and made that much more daring due to his input.

 

Katsuo is touring London over the next month, and has new music and intrigue afoot. Night Wolf have released E.P. 'Watts the Time Mr. Wolf'. The two are good friends and have a mutual respect for each other's music. This shows through on this remix. It will be interesting to see if they work together more extensively or not. I would certainly like to hear more of their collaborative innovation. It is post hoc ergo propter hoc to assimilate that this close kinship is the reason for the resultant smash. It is in part true, but is mainly due to the strength of the original. All the foundations were in place. It is Katsuo's comrade who weaves his magic and adds shades of light and dark where needed; tampering with the mood and making it more electric and interesting, thus creating a song that sounds new in its immediacy but familiar and safe too. 2013 will be a busy and successful year for both artists, and, truly...

 

... it will be fascinating to see what moves they make next.

 

__________________________________________________________________________________

 

Katsuo:

 

Tour dates:

 

March 21st:

Dear or Alive @ The Buffalo Bar, London

April 9th:

The Dublin Castle, London

April 30th:

The Good Ship, London

 

Official site:

http://www.theycallmekatsuo.com/

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/callmekatsuo

Facebook:

http://www.facebook.com/#!/theycallmekatsuo

YouTube:

http://www.youtube.com/user/theycallmekatsuo

 

 

Night Wolf:

 

Check out Night Wolf's E.P. via:

https://itunes.apple.com/gb/album/watts-the-time-mr-wolf-ep/id607001115

 

SoundCloud:

http://soundcloud.com/nightwolfuk

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/ryanwilcox6

YouTube:

http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdicASr89xZUiCQdNF-eEiQ

PureVolume:

http://www.purevolume.com/nightwolfhome

ReverbNation:

http://www.reverbnation.com/nightwolfuk

 

 

 

 

The Shakeouts: 'Straight Edge' - Track Review

 

The Shakeouts- 'Straight Edge'- Track Review. 

 

8.7/10.

 

 

An Australian band in their infancy, are displaying a fierce, rebellious maturity.

 

 

Availability: 'Straight Edge' is available at http://soundcloud.com/theshakeouts

___________________________________________________________________________

 

This is just one selection from about half a dozen available on SoundCloud...

 

which is probably the most relevant website showcasing their unique sound. They have featured in the press of their native land, Australia. They themselves have colourfully described themselves as an 'eight-tentacled surf punk' of a curiosity; backed by an octopus woman, death demon, and puffer fish. It sounds like a nightmarish mix of David Lynch and Home and Away. At the moment, they are campaigning to win a slot at a prestigious festival in Brisbane, and currently have 163 'likes' on Facebook. In the developmental lifespan of their aquatic crossbreed, there are at the larvae stage. Don't be fooled by thinking that 'new' is a synonym for unfocused or half-baked. It is true that there is but a mere smattering of songs available via the Internet, but they have a tireless blue-collar campaign spirit; a 21st century Manifest Destiny to their ambition, sound and combustible firepower.

 

When one thinks of the music of Australia, once you get the impression of didgeridoos, Rolf Harris and surf scenes, complete with long-maned guitar strummers exculpating their prurient end-game. There is no Summer Bay or Ramsey Street middle-of-the-road indie and over-emotive balladeering; nor any novelty or indigenous noise making. Whether it is the British influence (back in a time where the British had colonised the country) that enforces the sound of The Shakeouts, or whether they are inspired by equivocal U.S. acts is an enigma I'd love to unravel. If you dip back into the catalogue of their native output over the last 40 years, a large swathe of worldwide mega talent has emerged from the wizards of Oz. INXS, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Kyle Minogue, Silverchair, Crowded House, Midnight Oil, The Avalanches, AC/DC, and most epically of all; wife-collecting, body oil salesman and nightclub opener extraordinaire Peter Andre. Although he lives 5 miles from me, so Australia got lucky on that one!

 

Upon being greeted with The Shakeouts' back catalogue I notice they have a glorious knack for titles. 'Octopus Woman', 'Night Surfer', and most memorable of the lot, 'Surfing with the Death Demon' spring to mind. I was tempted to review them as well to see if the music could live up to the slightly Baroque titles. The track 'Straight Edge' begins like a harder edged interpretation of the intro. to The Cure's 'Close To Me'. It is an intriguing smoke signal, that beckons you closer, unaware of the hording nautical army, waiting over the precipice. There is a slight indentation of The Doors, circa 'Riders on the Storm', albeit a looser, less tempered version of it. The drumbeat, cymbal and build up is reminiscent of some of the modern British rock crop, such as Kasabian and Cold War Kids. As the sea bubbles and froths, from a '60s rock vibe to a beast of bouncy candour, the vocal enters the mix. It has a punk edge to it, chained and subservient to begin with as the opening line, "I love the way that you smile", is proclaimed; the 'smile' elongated, with a pleasing familiarity to its diction and enunciation. Just when you think we are heading off to a punk thoroughfare, all broken windows, cigarette ash and piercings in the most inaccessible nether regions, the tone shifts again. Electric guitar comes in to supplement the solid bass-line. It is scuzzy, blues-indebted, corpulent and distorted. Put in your mind 'Black Math' from The White Stripes' 'Elephant' and you get a sense of the lo-tech awesomeness that is about to be unleashed. The guitar is altogether funkier and- in a White Stripes analogy- has flavour notes of an introverted 'Hand Springs'. It punches and pounds at the senses, and is an instantly likeable and memorable hook. It is guaranteed to pitch stool on your tongue for the foreseeable future and announce itself at the most embarrassingly inconvenient times. There are tones of the '60s hit 'Money', as performed by The Beatles, as if they had been given full access to an electronic arsenal of grunt and innovation. In just over a minute, the band have introduced the players, presented a number of different twists and turns, and unfurled a cocoon of barbed wire, before standing their singer up to survey the wreckage. She has a pleasing individuality to her voice. There are influences of Joe Strummer and The Kills, but with fewer rough edges, and an overall more soothing tone. She has a raw authentic blues edge to her sound and has a great range as well. As the song progressing, there is a brief injunction; a fuse of The Lizzards' 'Money That's What I Want' and The Clash's 'Should I Stay or Should I Go'. It is a great testament to the band that they produce such a fresh sound. Sure there are hints of this and that to the trained ear, but everything here is new and alive. It does not wistfully long for days and bands past. It has a clear white testament and is begging for your attention. The infectious riff is riden for maximum affect, defying you not to dance and fist-pump along with it. The vocal comes back in and a real vivid sense of anarchic storytelling comes to play: "If I hit the bottle every night every day/You would get up and leave/You would not stay", starts us off before she explains that she would "go straight edge for you". Nota bene, the title refers to a song of the same name, by 1980s band Minor Threat. In that track, Ian MacKaye's explains his straight edge philosophy. He had better things than to hang out with dead-heads and wasters. It was revolutionary, as it emerged from the dungeon of hardcore punk hedonism and excess of the time, and propagated the abstinence of alcohol, tobacco, promiscuous sex and drug use; extending as far to promote a vegan diet. In the case of our Australian friends, the heroine of the song is saying she would commit to a clean life and give all of her bad habits and proclivities up, if it meant a stable relationship. It is a clever allusion to a tangible past, and quite a radical and underused sentiment during the 'oos. Our heroine goes on to implore that "all she wants is you and me". Around the 2:20 marker, there is a great moment of free-form solo work. It wails, contorts and belches black smoke, staggering locomotive and tattooed. The volume is turned down, and the awaiting army is seen in the distance. The lyrics tell of how sobriety and stability are better than pills, booze and chaos. Just then the guitar and drums pick up and gain more momentum. In a way it is like 'Zorba The Greek' in its pattern and sound. You can imagine a taverna filled with rambunctious revellers, plates smashing all over the place, arms flailing and legs kicking in a wild dervish of revelry. It goes a bit 'The White Stripes'/'White Blood Cells', a little 'The Stooges', and begs you defy it. And like that it is done. It is over 3:30 minutes, but damn it, I wanted more!

 

There is much to recommend about the track. It blends punk, blues and rock together brilliantly. The central riff is memorable and a striking thing. Sort of sounds like Black Rebel Motorcycle Club and 'Rush Hour Soul' slowed and given knuckle dusters. I love the guitar work throughout and is effective and gives the song a necessary swing and bite. The entire band are brilliant, and each player simultaneously create a fresh live sound, and a studied studio feel to things. The vocal is strong and raw where it needs to be, composed and subtle at other times. It is fantastic that there are so many different shifts and sounds within one song, and the track is tight and muscular.

 

If I had to point at suggestions, maybe giving it a crisp edge would help bring out the overall effect. If it were put back into the studio and cleaned up slightly, it would not take anything away from its hard edge and guts. The song itself is brilliant; it's just a track I would love to see on an E.P. very soon. I want it louder, crisper, perhaps with the drums given more prominence, and the vocals brought higher into the mix. The vocal is strong but would like to hear a bit more force and volume to emphasise the lyrics. There are not many great hard rock/punk female singers on the scene at the moment, and The Shakeouts have one. I would like to hear that highlighted. Maybe double-track some of the chorus, have backing vocals, and to assimilate itself with the catchy riff, possibly giving some of the vocals echo or re-verb, would add intensity and sexiness, whilst staying true to the lyrics. The lyrics themselves are great, and I was impressed by the theme and context of the song. Contained within are noble sentiments, home truths and inspirational messages, if you are willing to look for them.

 

And you should look. You should check out the remainder of their tracks too, and try to liberate their unique and refreshing sound to a wider sphere. There are plenty of people in the U.K., U.S. and Europe who would take to the band passionately, and there is plenty of room for them. It is with support and fan patronage that they will accomplish this. I will safely and confidentally rubber stamp this track with my fondest approval. They are at an early stage and the band admit themselves that the songs they have, including this one, were written a few months ago, and are pretty raw. But that is the sound they are going for. With a bit of studio polish (but not too much), and a legion of fans ready to snap up their music, The Shakeouts will be huge. Take the band into your hearts, and seek them out...

 

... before Peter Andre covers one of their tracks.

 

__________________________________________________________________________________

 

Facebook:

http://www.facebook.com/TheShakeouts

Last FM:

http://www.last.fm/music/The+Shakeouts

SoundCloud:

http://soundcloud.com/theshakeouts

 

 

 

 

 

 

Little Violet- Track Reviews

'Don't Stop'

&

'Shut Up'

 

 

9.7/10 & 9.5/10

 

 

Electro swing queen delivers knockout blows, on this superb, defiant double-A side.

 

 

Availability: Tracks available now via https://itunes.apple.com/gb/album/shut-up/id576530246?i=576530835

___________________________________________________________________________

 

If you like your music edgy, exciting and shapeshifting; then you need to hear...

 

Little VioletShe came to my attention fairly recently, via online music website, The Girls Are. They are the unequivocal brand-leaders for promoting great female talent in the music industry, and I also was made aware of fellow allumnae Nadine Shah, and her single 'Dreary Town'. I was blown away by that song;s unabated consistency and its ethereal langurouness. I was surprised I had not heard about Shah before, and it was with a similar awe, that precipitated my discovery of Little Violet.  The act, consists of male backing; dapperly dressed multi-talented musical wing-men, reminiscent of the sort of musicians who would accompany Ella Fitzgerald or a swing idol of the '40s. They have a similar intellectual integrity.  In the spotlight, providing the voice is a young Northern lady with a hell of a curious aesthete. She has an undeniably remarkable beauty. Jaw-dropping yet with a vulnerability or shyness about her, she has a Siren's allure. Unlike her equivocal beauty paragon, Cheryl Cole, Little Violet is a very different kettle of fish. From reading interviews and watching video clips, she is much more accessible. She told The Girls Are that she can be shy and sensitive, and she speaks with a smile; banters and jokes, unafflicted by the need to pander to anyone's expectations. She adores music and expressing herself through this medium. She is incredibly cerebral and immensely likeable. She explains that she hails from a family with a musical background. Her childhood home was awash with sounds of the greats such as Sinatra; but there was a great range of genres heard emanating from the homestead, from doo-wop, to glam rock, and almost everything between and beyond. It is with a fervent admiration of the authentic jazz swing age, that Little Violet tries to reflect in their songs. There is a tangible sense of authenticity ensconced within the tracks. It is above everything, fun, lively and unexpected.

 

The first thing I would mention about the song 'Don't Stop' is the video. It has quite an authentic mise en scène, with our heroine, battling against the tide, trying to catch her man's attention. He is more concerned with an advert for burlesque dancers and sets off to catch the show, unaware that his wife has similar lasciviousness intent. It is a comical and fun video, and 'fun' is an adjective that best sums up the mood of the song. As soon as the scat introduction trumpets forth, your mind is immediately transported to the swing jazz age, and your toes tap and you want to get up to dance. The vocal is passionate and strong, and lyrics like: "Take control of what you're worth" emit a steadfast refusal to be subjugated; with "Take it easy/just one step at a time", imploring some ambition restraint. The theme of the song concerns not being content to stand still and taking the step to break the mould. "Keep on moving/Don't stop" is the motivational mantra of the track. Special kudos goes to the band, who genuinely emit an appreciation and understanding of the jazz and swing greats, and yet add a retro, updated sparkle and kick to the sound, fusing a little bit of modern jazz to its supreme bodywork. The sound is tight and mesmeric throughout, and does what any great song should do: not only want to make you smile and dance, but dive into the jazz swing annals, and hear the original purveyors as well. On a positive note, the vocal as well has pleasing shades of Fitzgerald, Peggy Lee, as well as a little touch of Paloma Faith. In a way too, one can cross reference Little Violet with Caro Emerald. She too has a great talent and passion for a bygone, better age, but is similarly capable of modernizing the sound and making its appeal devoid of boundaries and labelling. It is such a fresh and lively drag, and blows a multitude of mental cobwebs away as you listen. It has no hidden agenda or skeletons in its closet. It wants you to jive, dance and get happy; employing a demonstrative edge to it. It grabs you by the hand and implores you to become involved. Reinterpreting the vocal again, I was impressed by the skilled improvisation throughout: there is sexy, pouting scatting, cohabiting with elongated notes, syncopated delivery and a sense of adventure. The heart and soul of the vocal, mind, is authenticity. Whilst it pays homage to its idols, it has an electioneering spirit and proves what an exceptional voice is on display. It is sweet, zesty, bonhomous, and bloody sexy, as well. There is an austerity to the cocktail as well (Remember how you made it here/A game of truth or dare), advising you to "keep your eye on the prize". Although the path to Greenwich Mean Time has been fractious and risk-laden, as you are where you are now, take it easy, be true to yourself and you'll be fine. It is a simple and inspirational mandate, and one that has a personal relocatability, and universal in its efficacy. One suspects that there is a personal relevance to the lyrics for Little Violet's front-woman, who you can tell, loves telling this story and suspect that if she weren't, her life would be listless by comparison. The trumpets percolate, the mood is indigo, and the words"If you can find that leap of faith/Then let the games begin" whisper in your ear. Before you can allow yourself to become seduced the chorus beats back in, rides the waves and keeps the Cheshire Cat grin where it should be. Back in the video, our protagonist- at once Grecian and Amazonian in equal measures, is back in the kitchen of their home, and rebuffs her houndog husband, before coyly turning and flashes a huge, alluring grin. It is a great metaphor for the song itself, and completes an exhilarating listen. But I have rambled too long, I will sum-up later.

 

Okay, then; next up is the flip of the double-A side. It is a more flagellatory animal. The sequin-adorned chanteuse Jekyl has, by the moon's pearly light, transformed into a leather clad vixenous Hyde, in a missed heartbeat. Thematically, of course. From a cursory viewing of the video to 'Shut Up', the sequins and sparkle are in fashion, but where as before there was a sense of open palms, here the claws are out. The song slithers confidently forth, with the words: "He finds it easy to critise", its in utero mindset, the babe born forth has a pugnacious cry. Its father was a no-good; not appreciating what was right in front of him; in his lover's own words: "You're too late/And you finished last". The chorus wears its sleeve on its heart. The man has blown it, and his friends, and former paramour does not want to hear any excuses; all she wants to hear is "ssshhhhh!". If I can break from the cautionary-tale and speak of the track's D.N.A. Firstly it is quite a juxtaposition of 'Don't Stop'. Instantly the band have shown that there is more than fun and dance to their demurrage. The sound is slowed down, and smoother, allowing the vocals and lyrics to resonate appropriately. The band are tight and stunning throughout. As the chorus fades I can hear echos of Miles Davis's 'Kind of Blue' (particularly the track 'Blue in Green'). The band turn Lyrebird in their range of sounds. Davis can be seen, also shades of 'Life in a Glasshouse' by Radiohead can be detected; a little of Glenn Miller's 'In The Mood'; a smidge of Fletcher Henderson and Cab Calloway show up in the blood count. The band do not try to parody or replicate them. The sounds, spirits and perfumes are poured together and stirred to give a heady blend. It updates the genres and revitalizes them for the '00s. The vocal does not suffocate or feel forced. At its most demure, it evocates Carmen McRae and modern singers such as Adele. When the tempo rises, Amy Winehouse, Sarah Vaughan and Nelly Furtado. It is a smoky and gutsy performance and has incredible soul and veracity to it. Our single lady talks about how (her former beau), had "a temper, which could break a heart"; who'd: "babble at you/Make you want to scream". The chorus is deployed effectively between the heartbreak tableau vivants; the entire track is a bloodstained parable telling the story of a woman who is less Moll Flanders and more gangster's moll. In the video, the heroine is fed up and looking for vengeance. She looks undeniably resplendent as she head into a smoky alleyway, as the disgraced hero drops his cigarette, and subsequently, drops to the floor, as she walks away.

 

My earliest musical memory was around about aged 6. I had a red co-kart my late grandfather built. Myself and a couple of my friends would speed along with racing pretensions listening to a red cassette player. If it wasn't T-Rex being played it was an old compilation called; 'Jive Bunny and the Mastermixers: The Album'. It was a novelty act that would fuse swing and jive classics from the likes of Glenn Miller and Chubby Checker. I loved it and was fascinated by the sounds and fell in love with swing and jazz before any other form of music. For a number of reasons, the music has a personal relatability. I love the snatches and snapshots of sounds and moods the band collate to produce a visceral and chemical reaction amongst the listener. For a genre of music that was once roaring, it is somewhat of an underground niche. There is no need for a reappropriation; more of as revilalisation, and Little Violet are going to make big strides to achives this. The mix of brass, drum, upright bass and piano, delivers authenticism and a passionate love letter to the past swing and jazz era. The combination of band and singer works wonderfully. No one is too high in the mix; each are given equal weight to tell their tale, and both tracks are diverse and brilliantly impressive. The music is positively Newtonian. The band want you to be inspired and to smile and to get as much pleasure out, as they put in. They can close caption a relatable malaise in 'Shut Up', a track, one suspects will resonate more strongly with a female audience. In 'Don't Stop' acts as a premiate; it gives you self-belief and implores you to get up and be inspired. I would advise you to listen to the tracks with the videos as well, as the films are brilliant shot, projecting a very noir feel to them. They are miniature tapestries and tell the stories perfectly. Although both tracks have been available since November of last year, there is new music afoot; and I for one, cannot wait. I have been so depressed and uninspired by a lot of new music and hunted for something fresh and invigorating to sleep soundly in my brain. I have found it, and has inspired me to write and experiment with my own music.

 

Little Violet deserves huge success and plaudits. She gives a great appraisal and recognition to her cohorts and comes across as thoroughly cultured and intelligent and thoroughly likeable. She is fun and upbeat and, whilst following her Twitter and Facebook feeds she is good to her fans, and has an accessibility and savviness to her. Complete with a maturity and worldliness that belies her 20-something years, she is someone who understands the importance of saluting her musical heroes, whilst updating their sound; in order to allow for cross-border popularity; thus drawing in new listeners and not betraying the roots of the core sound. Combine this with a voice that can melt hearts and inspire minds, and a beauty that is genuinely staggering, success and popularity will not be hard to achieve. Not to gush, but the songs I have heard today, are amongst some of the best tracks I have heard this year. Little Violet explains that she has a constant stream of lyrics and melodies building towers and planting seeds inj every corner. She explains that the only way to block these out and get to sleep is, curiously, by using the sound of a hairdryer to create a white noise affect. This is something I can sympathise with. I have been writing lyrics for 15 years and still not peaked. I find myself drifting off with a couplet in my head, and have envelopes filled with vaguely decipherable lines of various songs on them. My main passion is vocals and often have various vocal lines and key changes struggling to get out. I have not perfected a method to stop me seeming like a madman and singing to myself all day. I will have to try a hoover or hairdryer! In the meantime, I am going to fall in love with YouTube all over again and revisit my passion for blues, swing, jazz and the all-time greats. Little Violet is the flag-bearers of a new wave of exciting and inspiring music. Listen to their songs now, and wait with baited breathe, because...

 

 

... something truly special awaits.

 

 

Key Track: 'Don't Stop'.

__________________________________________________________________________________

 

Official site:

http://www.littleviolet.co.uk/

YouTube:

http://www.youtube.com/user/cuckoorecords?feature=watch

Facebook:

http://www.facebook.com/littlevioletmusic

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/_Littleviolet

iTunes:

https://itunes.apple.com/gb/album/shut-up/id576530246?i=576530835

The Girls Are:

http://www.thegirlsare.com/2012/11/08/introducing-little-violet/

SoundCloud:

http://soundcloud.com/little_violet

 

 

 

 

Olivia Sebastianelli- Track Reviews

Rose of Stone/Despite The Day/Sunset.

 

 

 

9.5/10, 9.5/10 & 9.5/10

 

A woman with guts, brains and a rebellious distain for BRIT School posers. I'm a fan already.

 

 

Release date: Tracks available via: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2013/mar/06/new-band-olivia-sebastianelli

___________________________________________________________________________

 

With a beguiling allure, a steadfast work ethic, and a terrific ear for quality, Olivia is sure to rule your head and heart...

 

and kick you in the nuts whilst she's at it. Olivia Sebastianelli, as you can probably detect from her name, has Italian roots (her dad is Italian). She has quite a curious family. Her mother is an English businesswoman, whilst her Italian dad is tattooed and is a hotrod enthusiast. She is not your usual girl-with-a-guitar, and loves grunge, and the harder edge to music, citing Chrissie Hynde and Debbie Harry as influences. She suffered isolation and bullying during her childhood and is not exactly Amy Macdonald when it comes to her vocals. She has a more haunting tone, and a real conviction to her work. A lot of her storytelling is informed by loss, guilt, revenge and sadness, and has an incredible maturity to her work and attitude. She hates the BRIT School graduates and talent show rejects. The world does not need another Ed Sheeran- someone with no teeth, who is all image and no substance; Sebastianelli has a lot more backbone, talent and wonder to her, and I can fully understand why she hates shallow, fame-obsessed sub-breed; I do too. Music will be rooting for her. Olivia is a child of a past time, and confessed to being opposed to iPods and loves vinyl. In a way she has similarities with the old blues legends and protest singers. She has endured tremendous hardship and internalisation and wants your heart to bleed when listening to her songs, as one suspects her heart bled when writing and singing them. She has a diversely ambitious business plan. She wants to travel the world and reach as many people as possible. But in her soul she would be delighted if even one of her songs changes one person's view on life or made a difference.

 

Olivia is a big fan of Elvis Costello. Her favourite song is 'Alison', and I was curious as to whether there would be an Costello music on the tracks I was about to listen to. I was in for a lot of nice surprise. She has an album in the works, to be named 'Pebbles'. The title, she explains, refers to the fact that, like snowflakes, no two are alike, and that is what she attests her songs will reflect. There will be range and diversity, and will play like a storybook. A lot of the current stock of solo artists release debut albums that rehash the same sound 11 times, and never really wow you. Sebastianelli will be hot property, and a genuinely inspirational artist who has a brilliant ethic and ethos, and will never to succumb to a Napolean Complex, any time soon. She is incredibly beautiful, striking and sexy; as well as being relateable and having a slight air of vulnerability to her. A lot of lazy journalists compare every male singer who can sing falsetto, to Jeff Buckley; and every woman who has an ounce of soul to her, to Amy Winehouse. The comparisons are always ludicrous and narrow-minded. Olivia's voice and words are her own and spectacular. She can appeal to the proletariat and upper-classes; the men with tears in their eyes, and the women with maternity in theirs. She is raw, but not under-cooked; heart-stopping but life-affirming, and wants you to be moved and inspired.

 

Her single, and biggest song to date is 'Rose of Stone'. It possesses a casual link to her childhood, and the psychological tumultuousness is reflected within. Her childhood, at times, seems to have been a curate's egg. The video for the song, was filmed outside of the chapel at her former school, where she spent years being tormented and feeling an outcast; a miasmic influence in a sense. The inventory has been compiled and I sat to watch the video, ready to be haunted. I can only describe Olivia's voice with great reverence. It is husky and seductive, filled with emotion and when she sings: "Take a look around/Winter's creeping in", it is evocative and spellbinding in its imagery. The beginning of the video is snapshots of cigarette smoky, half empty coffee cups and empty, wind-rushed rooms; meanwhile Olivia sits behind the wheel of a car, staring listlessly into the distance, explaining "you know as much as I do". Although the song's protagonist is a mere 19-year-old, there is a vast maturity to her voice; it is calming and has the heart of the blues in its mouth. The musical background allows for the vocals and lyrics to shine, and is kept simple; painting the black and white with colours of grey and blue. There is a hint of The Cardigans' 'For What It's Worth' to some of the vocal delivery, and a smattering of Chrissie Hynde in the vocal tone, as well as a bit of a young Beth Gibbons and maybe Bjork too. There are jazz inflections in the background, but the voice is highest in the mix, rightfully spearheading the track, with Olivia singing sweetly and tenderly about a time that was probably not too nice for her. Her lyrics are a potent allegory, and when she sings "lost among the flower blooms", it is a bare-fisted and bare-breasted confession. The luscious musical paradigm, is evocative of smoky Hollywood streets of the '40s. All black and white scenery; thin-lipped heroes taking another drag, whilst staring at a neon sign above a disreputable gin joint. Olivia gives the impression of being forgotten about and there is a great sense of lost, and a lost childhood. The video lends credence to the theory, which shows her looking on mournfully and a collage of visual metaphors are displayed.

 

With a rapacious guitar strum, that is lighthearted in its insistence, has me thinking immediately of Oasis' 'Wonderwall'. That was unexpected! Before I could conjure images of Liam Gallagher, clad in a parka and sunglasses, hands behind his back, about to sing "Today..." a much more pleasing voice comes to play. It is reminiscent of Hynde again, and has a soothing familiarity to it. The guitar sound, as well as having dabs of Oasis to it, also has a measure of The Bends-era Radiohead and Nirvana's 'Polly' to it. It differently is an intoxicating rock/grunge cocktail, and when we kick into fourth gear, a little before the 1:00 mark, Olivia's voice becomes inflamed and strong. She is on a Harley Davidson, toothpick between her lips, her hair whipping in the wind. Around about 20 seconds later, we kick into fifth, and a slight shift that reminds me of Green Day's 'Boulevard of Broken Dreams' in its cool-eyed Strum und Drang. The song also had a resonance of regretful confession and resignation and when Olivia delivers sermon fragments such as: "If the world spins/It stops to burn" and "The sky turns black/the sun is like a lead balloon", Dante is penning another chef d'oeuvre. The lyrics are alarming in their vividness, yet one suspects metaphors for dark memories or current malaise. In that sense they have a lot in common with grunge, and especially pioneers such as Pearl Jam and Soundgarden- the latter coming most to mind. It is the sort of lyric that one would hear on 'Superunknown', yet one has the inkling that Sebastianelli is singing of romance, rather than clinical depression. In fact she has a bona fide sonic range of epic proportions. She can match Alison Krauss and Jessie Ware when she purrs and emotes sweetly; yet when she lets her lungs stretch she becomes a female Chris Cornell and Kurt Cobain. The lyrics are sharp and focused on the task at hand, and again display a vast maturity to them. The track is tight and memorable and despite some of its more mordant subject matter, has a peppiness to it, and manages to make you smile as well as frown. It also is demonstrative of the fact that Olivia has no intention of being labelled, boxed-in or defined by current music's standard and critical expectation. She is the sole author of her songs as well, and means that it is purely her voice and talent on display; undiluted by an army of plastic, fatuous producers and so-called 'songwriters'.

 

There, was to my mind, a bit of gallow's humour on display, during 'Sunset's divinely gentle introduction. I suspected that there was going to be a mood shift soon enough and a harder beat would emerge. I'm delighted to say that that wasn't to be the case. It is simply a stunningly beautiful song, and shows yet another incredible shift. Where as previously we have heard grunge, rock, Britpop, haunting balladry and jazz, now the mood is... folk? Acoustic? It is bloody gorgeous. The guitar work brings to my mind Eva Cassidy, Kings of Convenience and Fleetwood Mac, circa- 'Rumours' (Songbird, Dreams and Gold Dust Woman). Olivia's voice has shades of Christine McVie and Stevie Nicks, in its combination of sexiness and seduction, and also is a near match for Cassidy, and has a similar spellbinding and ethereal, hymnal quality to it. The lyrics have a cynical and betrayed edge to them. There is wisdom and recrimination to be unearthed: "Laugh out loud/though the joke's worn thin"; ruminative wonder: "I could freeze one moment in time", to string-backed photographs of city life: "Urgent traffic lights/Trumpets of doom". There is wit, mystery, and undulation in the themes and scenes conveyed, backed by a simple picked guitar arpeggio. It is a beautiful and delicate number. The music and vocals take you down to the riverside, and hold you in their arms, tenderly stroking your hair, as the sun sets.

 

Whilst her contemporaries were hard partying and wasting time, Olivia was listening to music, studying and learning. She was learning her craft and building her artillery. In many respects she is ahead of her times. There are not many female talents out there who solely write their songs, play guitar and sing, and have such a refreshing view on music and celebrity. In a sense she belongs with the legendary '60s performers such as Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell and Nick Drake. I guess, coming from the life that she used to have; one of struggle and emotional deciduousness, she could be perceived as an outsider. It is being an outsider which forces you to be good; to be better than 'ordinary' people. I had very similar experiences myself, and have always been on the outside. I immersed myself in words and lyrics and have consecrated a large amount of time to my voice. Seeing what I could do with it, how far it will go and what range it can produce. I hope one day to be able to premiere it, and let it do the talking. For now, Olivia Sebastanelli is showing her peers how it is done. She is a formidable songwriter, with an admirable, adventurous edict; no one from a talent show or BRIT School could ever produce anything like this. She has taken a range of influences, included Costello, and produced something unique and exceptional. As a lyricist she is vastly intelligent and sharp, and can craft lines of poetic soulfulness, as well as dark foreboding sentiment, and pull each off with conviction. Her voice is impressively expansive capable of a delicate hush, to a full bloodied shout, and again she has shades of other singers but sounds like no one else. And from what I have learnt about her as a human being, she deserves to be enormous. She has put a great deal of herself into her music, and deserves so much from it. She adores music, and authentic genuine talent and is a strong and gorgeous woman.

 

I have only heard three songs from her, and was blown away by them. I love her attitude and personality and am genuinely excited to hear her album. In a year that promises releases from the likes of Laura Marling and The xx, Olivia can proudly stand toe to toe with them. Whatever you do...

 

... check this musician out and make yourself proud.

 

Key Track: 'Rose of Stone'.

__________________________________________________________________________________

Official site:

http://www.oliviasebastianelli.com/

Facebook:

http://www.facebook.com/OliviaSebastianelli?filter=3

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/OliviaSeb

Myspace:

http://www.myspace.com/oliviasebastianelli

VDM Music:

http://www.vdmmusic.com/artists/olivia-sebastianelli/

MTV:

http://www.mtv.co.uk/artists/olivia-sebastianelli

YouTube:

http://www.youtube.com/user/OliviaSebastianelli?feature=watch

Night Wolf: 'Burn The Money'- Song Review

 

'Burn The Money'-Song Review

 

9.5/10

 

A teachable moment, for a dark time; that is not made to be forgotten.

 

Availability: http://soundcloud.com/nightwolfuk/night-wolf-burn-the-money

___________________________________________________________________________

 

The Night Wolf is stalking, and hungry for prey...

 

Probably wouldn't make much of a difference trying to run, either. I was recently impressed hugely by Ryan Wilcox's (Night Wolf) debut E.P., 'What's The Time Mr. Wolf?'. I hadn't them before reviewing, and was wondering what to expect from the outfit. Any act that purports to blend sounds effectively, whether it be rock, rap, dub-step or hip hop, a lot of times fall short of the mark. I needn't have worried mind, as the tracks on show were varied, constantly surprising, incredible and non-colloquial; thus achieving two key outcomes: it introduced me to, and opened my mind to a different type of music, and consequently compelled me to delve into the archives of the music the songs fused. Secondly it roused me to be more daring and adventurous in my own music; not to be content with one particular style, but to experiment and see if alchemy can be achieved.

 

When the latest song arrived into my in-box, I was thinking that it would be a continuation of the E.P.'s style and mission statement. Possibly a slab of dub-step/classical/hip hop cocktail that would have you seeing double, dancing manically and drooling over a toilet bowl, before the bell for last orders had been rung. It takes literally less than one second, to realise that a different sort of wolf was lurking beneath's the moon's candid glow. An angrier, more politicised is baying for flesh; one with intention.

 

Night Wolf was inspired to write 'Burn The Money' after watching a series of videos. It was then that the idea to write a hip hop number, all be it a grittier, more diverse song. The first thing that happens in this song is the introduction of a vocal. It is not sung, however; it is spoken word. As the title may suggest, the manusia of the song is a financial figure; it is a relate-able tableaux for a modern age. The music underscoring the voice, begins life bearing dark, languid strings. It is an instant mood setter that does not dominate or even try to equal what is being said; instead lurks in the shadows. The recording itself seems to be from an American newscast or news programme; I am not sure. Instantly there is a sense of mystery about who this man is, that is prophesying imminent economic doom. He talks about interest rates on national debt will mean that, theoretically, by 2013 it could mean "total bankruptcy for the U.S. economy". Instantly there is a immanency to proceedings. The message does not go on to bring us tidings of joy, but stays on message, explaining what the wider implications will be. At the 0:30 junction, the recording is stopped and the piano line is not in the spotlight. It is initially dark and funereal; reminiscent of Stravinsky and Raschmaninoff, with a hint of an audible shoulder drop. There is a build-up as lighter notes mix with dark; a feint drum cymbal is heard, before strings come back to play. They are playful and delicate, counteracted by a solid and militaristic drum beat. In a way the mesh and interplay of sounds and moods reflects the theme of the song and act as a musical countenance. The tone now has more of a hip hop theme; a bit of Massive Attack, Tricky, maybe later Portishead too with a delicate nod to Cypress Hill, The Progidy and Jay-Z. Just before the news recording recomposes itself, your mind is somewhere else. In mine at least, driving down a dark road heading for London, neon, multicoloured light beckoning my hence. Before I can be too entrenched in my own fantasy, we are back. It is only for a nanosecond, and the hip hop roll is in the fray; the synthesised night crawler is back; doing battle with a voice that says "the only way to make more money/Is to create more debt and inflation". The combination of the two mileaux's creates a psychotropic effect. The words affect the mind, soul and brain; the music raises the body, inflames the ears and brightens the eyes. It is a curious sexual call, from a curious allure. The sea has calmed slightly, and the infectious beat pitches tent in your limbic system. Just when you think that we are preparing to fade, Mr. Ominous, like Carrie in a 3-piece suit, rises bloodied from the water, to deliver another apocalyptic bromide. The coda of 'Burn The Money' is that in spite of all the downturn, and fiscal tsunami, we need to "use it to our advantage". Bloody Americans!

 

The track as a whole has a sort of retro feel to it, that harks bark to the genesis of hip hop and big beat. Unlike many of the pre-pubescent shirt tuggers that are trying to acclimate base camp in your brain through a series of left turns, explosions and sample-laden perturbation, Night Wolf have pulled off a neat illusion. The track is quite uncategorisable. Sure there is hip hop, big beat, romantic classical with a light crust of old school rap. There is much to recommend for any lover of any genre of music. The spoken word segments are deployed effectively, punctuating the mood, and coming to the fore at the most effective times. The announcer is suitably anodyne and Mid-Western; in essence quite flat. This, coupled with the extraordinary soundtrack that levies the momentum, interject perfectly and the resultant song is spellbinding its efficiency and effectiveness. It is a tight number as well, and does not overplay its hand or descend into parody or morbid hyperbole. Instead, it is a tight manifesto that will long by remembered once the song has ended.

 

Night Wolf are a multi-directional Mevlevi Order. Ryan has a Queens of the Stone Age rebellion to his musical ambitions. Their front-man Josh Homme has never concerned himself with what is on trend, or what is considered 'mainstream'. The band have stayed true to what they know and what works: keep it heavy, interesting, varied, and unpredictable. It is no coincidence that they are, in my opinion, the most dominating musical force in the world today. They do not derisk their sound to 'fit in'. Night Wolf have a similar trading forecast in their business plan. I have heard a range of songs for them, and could not put them into one family tree. There seems to be little direct lineage at play and it is because of this that the songs are so fascinating.

 

I would advise you check out this track. Once you do, check out the E.P. When you have done that listen to everything else and disagree with me. I'm not sure you will, as it is clear that...

 

 

 

Night Wolf are here to stay for a long while.

 

__________________________________________________________________________________

Check out Night Wolf's E.P. via: http://soundcloud.com/flyproductionzltd/sets/watts-the-time-mr-wolf?utm_source=soundcloud&utm_campaign=share&utm_medium=facebook&utm_content=https%3A%2F%2Fsoundcloud.com%2Fflyproductionzltd%2Fsets%2Fwatts-the-time-mr-wolf

 

SoundCloud:

http://soundcloud.com/nightwolfuk

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/ryanwilcox6

YouTube:

http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdicASr89xZUiCQdNF-eEiQ

PureVolume:

http://www.purevolume.com/nightwolfhome

ReverbNation:

http://www.reverbnation.com/nightwolfuk

 

 

 

 

Emma Stevens- E.P./Track Reviews

Emma Stevens- E.P./Track Reviews

 

‘Heart on Hand’ (E.P.) & ‘Once’ (Single)

 

9.5/10 & 9.5/10

 

You can tell from the E.P.’s cover, that it is going to be mesmeric.

 

 

Availability: E.P. is available via https://itunes.apple.com/gb/album/heart-on-hand-ep/id567453391. The single ‘Once’ will be released in April.

___________________________________________________________________________

 

Gorgeous music; beautiful words; exceptional talent and an extremely striking young woman…

 

make for quite an extraordinary listen. Emma Stevens far exceeds any expectations. There is a bit of a split between female musical talent. There is the mainstream, which has a vast mixture of average pop fodder where you can delineate the moment their talent runs out and they are running on fumes. There is a smaller core of artists, such as Adele, Jessie Ware, Laura Marling and their ilk, whom have vast credibility and talent. Then there is miss Stevens. Here is a very young artist, who is her own words writes “haunting folk/pop with a twist and lots of sparkle”. She is a graduate of A.C.M, plays six instruments- including the cello- and is honest, beautiful and down-to-Earth. She tours prodigiously, and has an incredibly hardworking ethic.

 

‘Heart on Hand’ comes with a slightly sad back-story. The cover of the E.P. is a gorgeous design by Emma’s mother, who sadly died last year. The E.P. was released in October of last year, and her artwork is a permanent monument to her work and spirit. A song that is to be released shortly called ‘Dreaming Trees’, was written in her memory, and will feature on her upcoming 2nd E.P. I sat down to listen to her first E.P., and realised how brave and honest the music is.

 

The first thing you hear on ‘A Place Called You’ is a ukulele. It is instantly sunny and warm, and your mind and body are transported to sunny climbs, warm beaches and gorgeous landscapes. Accompanied by a harmonious whistle, the song puts you in a good mood, right from the off. “You’re my knight in shining armour” Emma sings, her voice smiling all the time. It is a much softer Lily Allen; a stronger Ellie Goulding, but purer and more beautiful than both. It is confident and manifests a huge range, able to switch from a whispered calm to an emotional and power rush. The song talks about all the guys who have come and never measured. In Emma’s words: “Why kiss another frog?/You’re the only one I want”. Through use of fairy tale metaphor and imagery, our heroine is aloft in a tower, waiting for our hero to rescue her. It is not mournful or downcast; instead multicoloured and joyous, where the message above it all is that she wants the man she really wants and not pretenders. “I’ve been cooped up in a tower/For hours and hours” gives the impression of longing and desire. There is a little hint of Eliza Doolittle, and Laura Marling, and Emma shows an eidetic musical talent, where she can draw instruments and sounds together to produce a luminous soundscape. Towards the 3 minute mark the pace quickens, and the vocal scats and skips and dances, showing shades of ‘Whoa Nelly!’-era Nelly Furtado in the upper registers. The song is the psychoacoustical embodiment of ‘be the change that you want to see in the world’ With a final chorus of whistling, percussion and ukulele, the sun sets, and we wonder whether our princess will ever kiss her prince.

 

With a slightly darker start, of guitar and percussion, ‘This Is For You’ doesn’t have a heavy heart, but tells of rain-lashed scenes where anyone can shelter from and meet the person of their dreams. The song has a more philosophical edge, and the lyrics are more in my focus this time; especially when Emma sings: “And I wish/I could help you to breathe”. As the chorus arrives, heralding a siren’s chorus and sensual breathlessness to it, I can’t help but wonder whether the subject of the song has a personal relevance. There are shades of Cocteau Twins in the vocals, as well as Gemma Hayes. The acoustic guitar and musical structure puts me in mind of Simon and Garfunkel and Ben Howard. It is gentle and sensitive but has light and hope to it. As the chorus repeats, there is a gorgeous acoustic guitar strum that puts me in mind of ‘Toxic Girl’ by Kings of Convenience. For those that can’t smile or feel happy, and are weighed down by the gravity of life, then this song is for them. It is there to cheer and to say that, no matter what, things can change when you least expect and a bad situation can be instantly made good. At just a little over 3 minutes long, it is the shortest song of the E.P. and leaves you wanting more. It is incredibly tight, as well as being memorable and spirit-lifting.

 

With an intro that has shades of country to it, as well as Bob Dylan, ‘How To Write A Love Song’, also nods to contemporary acts such as The Lumineers. The track begins by telling of a former beau, who, much to our heroine’s chagrin, kept asking “Hey, when you gonna write me that love song?”. Ironically for him, it is when he has walked out and taken the best from our protagonist, that the words came. The disgraced ex-sweetheart cheated and became needy, and through all of his actions, he taught Emma how to write a love song. It is a great title for a song, and a clever devise is employed. In a sense I guess it does have a large country influence. There are elements of The Dixie Chicks, and Taylor Swift, but will appeal much more to a wider audience, due to the touching and striking lyrics, and gorgeous vocal performance at its heart. Emma, in a way is trying to expurgate the sinner, because “Trying to find a melody/Is easy now you’re gone”. The track has a great, memorable and catchy chorus, and in spite of the fact that pain has been caused and there is an air of regret, there is no sad mood. The song has a sweetness to it. It is a gorgeously crafted song, with brilliant imagery and evocative spirit.

 

With a skipping heartbeat and its best clothes on, ‘The Simple Things’ is another bright and breezy number, designed to inspire the soul and put a smile on the stoniest of people. In a way it is similar to a Jack Johnson song. I was transported the sun, sea and sand and is a blissful number. Emma can’t stop smiling, and says that that is “all I need right now”. There is calm in her heart and the simple things are most important. It is a great and simple message and another track that will put a spring in your step, and smile on your face. Emma’s voice is luscious and strong throughout once more, and is full of conviction and passion. It is one of the highlights of the E.P. and shows what a range Emma has.

 

The final track is a pared-back piano version of ‘A Place Called You’. It has been stripped down and given a romantic and passionate. It is a remarkable version and the vocal is tender and tremulous. The piano is soft and warm and will bring a small tear to your eye. It is hard to believe that it is the same song, but shows the talent and interpretive skills Emma has that it works so well, and makes her own material brand new once more. It is a wonderful end to an assured, multifaceted and impressive E.P. It hits its stride with music, lyrics and vocals and tone. Emma is a skilled composer and exceptional musician, and has a maturity and lyrical eye that belies one so young. Her voice is brilliant throughout and shows herself as an awesome talent.

 

‘Once’ is being released in April. From the first few seconds, it is good business as usual. All of the key ingredients are in place. It is warm, embracing and sunny and is going to feature on the upcoming E.P. It is dreamy and uplifting and talks about how you only need to fall in love once, and that’s all it takes. She explained that she has been with guys before who seemed like they would be the one, but have gone: “But don’t forget when things are great/You only need to find love once”. There is a tangible and universal message conveyed in the song, and one that we can all relate to, which gives the song a winning edge straight away. Again there is a bit of a country flavour, together with an infectious musical and vocal blend, that makes you want to get up and sing along. It will appeal to a wide audience and is a tantalizing and intriguing sign as to what ‘Dreaming Trees’ will sound like.

 

Emma is going to be on Terry Wogan’s radio show this Sunday, and is going to be very busy indeed. If you haven’t already heard her debut E.P., then you should and learn from it. With a music scene where most of the participants would rather frown than smile, Stevens is a breathe of fresh air and shows a talent and maturity beyond her years. It is wonderful to see someone so talented make such an impression, but the great thing about music, is when this sort of thing happens, it inspires you to write, sing and perform. This is exactly what has happened to me, and you cannot ask for more than that. So, if you are stressed, lost, in need of direction and inspiration…

 

… listen to Emma Stevens, and make yourself happy.

 

 

Key Track: ‘A Place Called You’.

__________________________________________________________________________________

 

Official site:

http://www.emma-stevens.com/

Facebook:

http://www.facebook.com/estevensmusic

Soundcloud:

http://soundcloud.com/estevensmusic

Last FM:

http://www.last.fm/music/Emma+Stevens

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/estevensmusic

Tumblr:

http://emmastevensmusic.tumblr.com/

Casual Sex-Track Reviews- 'Stroh 80', 'National Unity' & 'North'

'Stroh 80', 'National Unity' &'North'

 

9/10, 10/10 & 9.5/10

 

Glasgow band of brothers, have plenty of spit and punch.

 

 

Availability: Stroh 80 is available via http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tJhIelkwrzg

___________________________________________________________________________

 

I suppose the band name gives an indication of what to expect; but nary a hint of what you actually experience...

 

Let me qualify that summation. For one thing they are an absolute bastard to search for via Google. My Internet history has had to be purged, and being a 29-year-old, thought I had seen a lot. After a quick cold shower, you get to the music. I have had the pleasure of experiencing a wide spectrum of music this week; everything from ska/reggae to dub-step, through to soulful pop. I was ready and prepared to hear what Casual Sex had to offer my ears.

 

Being a songwriter and singer myself, I feel quite adept at dissecting music and giving it a good analysis. It's what my brain loves to do, and I am always keen to experience strange and wonderful new sounds and sensations. Our heroes are Glasgow-based, and have recently been anointed by The Guardian in their 'New band of the day' segment. There, they were described as being purveyors of "spiky, tart pop music", and have a multi-faceted array of musical styles in their wardrobe from "glam to white reggae". The band, as it happens, were brought together by chance meetings, and thus created Casual Sex after congregating at Glasgow's Green Door Studio. To business, then...

 

I have a curious fascination with song titles. I performed a quick Internet search of what Stroh 80 was. Essentially it is an Austrian rum, used extensively in Austrian cuisine. The numerical value denotes the 'proof' of the rum. 80 is the strongest you can get, and presumably is used to fuel medium-sized planets. I would be remiss if I didn't at least approach the song with a certain imperiousness. I was expecting a cacophonous riot of a track. What was the come, was a lot more pleasing. It begins with a few seconds of distortion; a sound similar to an intergalactic phaser being fired. Following on its heels is a propulsive guitar strum, at first reminiscent of 'Coffee + TV', but mutating into a rawer beat altogether. When Sam Smith's vocals are introduced they have a warming familiarity to them. They are an amalgamation of Edwyn Collins, Jarvis Cocker, Lou Reed and David Bowie. If you could imagine such a mythical creature! It has great disco and glam element to it, the music inspires hand claps, hip moving and fist raising in equal measures. The song itself is about is being caught in the act with your girlfriend's pal, in the "aftermath of a drug party on the floor of a local occultist", according to Sam. With tones of Steve Harley, Suede and early-Bowie in its sound, the song is rousing, confident and alpha-male. There seems to be little regret; although when the words "swallow my pride"... "she/she feels so cold/on the doctor's sofa" paint vivid images of strange smells, magic, mystic, red faces and a whole lot of mess. Due to lack of pitch change in Smith's voice, it is hard to sense whether his Tommy Lee feat of sexual candour weighs heavy on his mind, or heavy on his genitals. The backing 'woahs and ohs' from his fraternal cohorts suggest that the party may not be over. The guitar and drums skiffle like strobe lighting; they are locomotive and surge the blood around the whole of your body. As the track fades, the protagonist collects his trousers, assesses the scene and has a whole lot of explaining to do. There is an aching world-weary cynicism to the vocals- Bob Dylan detoxing; and the band employ smart chord sequences and CBGBs-esque lasciviousness.

 

National Unity is a spikier, more swaggering animal. Beginning with an arpeggio of electric guitar, it opens the theme song to an '80s spy movie; all dark streets, bad hair and 80 BHP German sports cars. There is a little bit of The Libertines (Can't Stand Me Now, Last Post on the Bugle and Don't Look Back Into the Sun especially), and when the drumbeat curates a dizzying choppiness, it is intoxicating. The band let the music do the talking to begin with, employing an H-bomb of intrigue: a mix-breed of disco, white reggae and indie. It defies you to stay seated and within about 30 seconds is patronising your hips, and puts a scotch and cigarette in each hand. Sam is heard for a brief time, before the music pushes him under the waves. The guitar mutates between Magic and Medicine The Coral, Rubber Soul The Beatles and imbued with a pernicious stab and punch to it. The front man returns to the fray, unveiling a vocal which is slightly more composed than on 'Stroh 80'. There is a bit of an incestuous mix of Barat and Doherty; salaciousness whispered and drooled. The guitar work as well has a lot in common with the Libs boys too. At times too there is some early Bloc Party and a rhythmic testicular swagger that recalls the glory days of '90s Blur, Oasis and Pulp. The song only shares a collegial bond with anything you've ever heard from the band before. In fact the majority of the song is purely instrumental. It flexes its muscles and bares its skin. The recycled jive and sway of the music is infectious and injects lysergic acid into your brain. It's what Lewis Carroll would sound like if you let him loose in a recording studio, and it is bloody brilliant. The words "Can't you feel this unity?" are repeated like a mantra from a cult, interrupted briefly by a barked vocal interjection. Blur employed the same trick with 'We've Got A File On You', and like that song, you don't need to hear more. It is a disease that you will not want to medicate. As soon as he has returned, Smith departs and here we go again! It is a remarkably tight song, and I was begging for at least 7 minutes more. It is a track which will not leave your brain for many weeks to come, I promise you that.

The track was released on the WCSP label last year under 'Mao Disney Fluxing Up the Asethetic' complilation.

 

Completing our trio is a more raucous and name-worthy parable. Casual Sex are once more armed with plenty of ammunition and unleash a biblical in flagante delicto. As with 'National Unity', 'North' has a similar late-night attitude to it. Again there are flecks of The Coral, The Beatles, with bits of The Velvet Underground and Bloc Party. It sort of continues where 'National Unity' left off. Like The Beatles' 'Abbey Road' side 2 medley, you could imagine running the two tracks together seamlessly. Welll... until the vocal comes in. It is pure Jarvis Cocker, with a teaspoon of Elvis Costello. The music again is brilliant: twangy, coordinated and discontent. There is a terrific bass line that holds it in check, as around it there is a drunken chaos. Flashes of distortion and re-verb; bouncy twangs; and a sound that may be a synthesiser or a keyboard, I can't tell. The entire track twists and turns, builds up and goes down and is a collage of sounds and texture. There is a brief flash of 'Roxanne'; and a solid and muscular drumbeat that is solid and impressive. "We're still just the same, now", is one of the first lyrics that strikes my ear. The vocal changes to a Bowie-influenced register and is again vocal and lyrics take second place to the music around it. It is a bold choice for a band with such an impressive singer, who can give conviction to the band's novella's of sex, drugs and everything in-between. "We're still just the same now/honey, what we gonna do?" ('Honey' is replaced with 'baby' interchangeably), are more-or-less the only words you will hear; but is all you will need to. It has that beautiful '70s sound to it, and is a remarkable track again. One that will suck you in and brings to mind so many different scenes and scenarios. The lyrical sparsity and musical mosaic are a wonderful blend and put a huge smile on my face. This song was a split A-side with 'Wake The President'.

 

For a band that is almost Google-proof, they deserve a huge following and mass exposure. I would judge you harshly if you did not check out this band, as they are without pretension. Despite me hinting at their influences, they are their own band and are fresh, gutsy, talented and brilliant. The Guardian described them as "potentially the best Scottish indie band since Franz (Ferdinand)". I think they are being a bit myopic. I think they are the best indie band of the moment, and have the potential to overtake their countryman's achievements easily. So there you go; if you only listen to one band today, for God's sake...

 

... experience Casual Sex and make sure you keep their number close.

 

 

Key Track: National Unity

__________________________________________________________________________________

All quotes in this review taken from The Guradian's profile of the band:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2013/mar/11/new-band-day-casual-sex

 

 

Facebook:

http://www.facebook.com/casualsexmusic

Soundcloud:

http://soundcloud.com/casual-sex

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/CasualSexBand

Swimfest:

http://swnfest.com/lineup/casual-sex/

 

 

 

 

Bigtopp-Track Reviews- 'Boomerang/No Doubts/I Roam/Girl Called Melody'

'Boomerang/No Doubts/I Roam/Girl Called Melody'

 

9.5/10, 9.5/10, 9/10 & 9.5/10

 

Home-grown 'ska/reggae/rock band', trumpet their intentions with genre-contorting confidence.

 

 

Release date: The album 'Mischief', will be released on March 14th.

___________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 

They are a young outfit, but filled with confidence and talent that belies their combined years...

 

And the songs I have heard today have made me proud to be from Surrey. Don't get me wrong, I do not hate Guildford. It is pleasant and safe but doesn't spark, shine or intrigue you. The shopping facilities are generic and un-interesting; the people are nice enough but it is the history of the place that is its defining characteristic. Since the likes of The Stranglers, Guildford has not produced too many iconic or relevant groups. There is a lot of new talent bustling in the underground, and the A.C.M. has its fair share of emerging wonder. Bigtopp are an intriguing outfit that will put my hometown on the map, for the right reasons.

 

I have been a bit of a musical Chris Columbus as of late. In the sense that I have been searching the media for a certain type of band, but have stumbled upon others altogether. Bigtopp were a new name to my ears as recently as last year, but since hearing about them, I have been hooked. They have actually been around since 2006, and I noticed them when they entered, and subsequently won The Music League competition in 2012. Since then they have played summer festivals and adopted a large and loyal fan base. They are an 8-piece group but have an amazing fraternity to their bond and sound, and are also decidedly tight and focused. Having met in college, it is clear that this sense of friendship and shared influences enforces their sound and success and are going to be around for many years to come.

 

'Boomerang' is first up. In the first of one pun-based commentaries from me, this is a track that you will not want to throw away. If you do it may come back to smack you in the head, because it means business from the off. Starting with a grand and precocious piano line, it has quite a classic edge to it. Part Beethoven, part Liszt; but not in a sardonic way. Muse perfected the same kind of flamboyance, most notably on Absolution. It is unexpected and stirring. The piano also has a '90s club stomp to it, and this is backed up by the war hammer of a drum that introduces itself like an avalanche. The vocal has a reaggae/ska edge to it; there are tinges of Paolo Nutino at first, but harder, more endearing and authentic. One of the most frequent adjectives levied at the band has been 'danceable', and this is obvious. It pulls you from the corner of the room and demands you move until you drop. They have elements of Mad Caddies, Madness and The Specials to their veracious bonhomie and jubilance, and it shines through on this track. "Like a boomerang/it all comes around/Like a boomerang/it's the same old sound" is sung during the chorus, and repeated to great effect. The song deals a lot with how similar a lot of music sounds, either as a metaphysical innuendo or as a direct commentary on modern music- I am not sure. The lyrics, and chorus especially are simple and effective and it is a lyrically economical track. It is a rebel-rousing rally cry, a euphonious sunshine smile. In all an incredibly pleasant and memorable song which updates the classic reggae/ska mantle and brings it into 2013.

 

With an immediate and commanding vocal performance, 'No Doubts' talks about (how doubt) is "like a shadow chasing me". The track has its trademark liturgical jubilance to it but is more reflective. It is a track that uses imagery beautiful: "Jury, judge and execution/they'll be with my elocution" is a savvy and intelligent lyric. Doubt is dragging Bigtopp down, and we sure as hell can't stand for that! In spite of any recriminations or deeper questions the band sure as hell no how to set the mood alight. The brass and drums crackle and set fire to the rain, washing the streets with colour and parade and bring joy to the isocratic citizens. The music stops, starts, jumps and teases, jives and swoons and although doubt is the "nasty word" that cannot be spoken of, it has an endearing positivity to it. The band will not let anything takes the smile from their lips. The band are fantastic and resplendence to proceedings, and add colour to the black and white dubiousness or some of the lyric's sentiments. It is plain to see why they are becoming a staple of the summer festival Lazy Susan. They are enjoyable to listen to, and no matter what mood you are in they make you smile. They make music that sticks in your head and contextualizes your negativity and makes you forget about it. It is another barnstorming track, and although possible moleculary superior to 'Boomerang'. Quite an emphatic 1-2. Strangely the song reminded me a little of Chris Cornell's theme to 'Casino Royale' in its melody. This is the type of number that could easily score a big movie; probably less Bond, and more Bondi Beach.

 

Music lovers and commentators aren't psychic (psychics aren't psychic either, but that's another matter); so predicting that a certain sense of mortality would enter the fray was unexpected. Don't misunderstand. The band have not gone all Ian Curtis and need Diazepam dropped in their tea, but they are in a slightly more pensive mood. The fireworks are still illuminating the view, but words such as "As I Roam/As I Roam/I ain't allows appreciated" suggest that there are some clowns at the Bigtopp party. The vocals have a pleasing urgency to them, delivered at a breakneck, almost rap-pace at times. It has many similarities to many traditional reggae songs in its D.N.A., as well as its execution. There is a sharp incongruousness to the music and vocal bi-play. Although some of the words paint a picture of a lonely tableaux: "I'm a one man and his dog", the music does not wallow or become morose as: "its detrimental to my health/don't want to be somebody else". Bigtopp's lieutenant is walking through the streets, through memories, and down dusty roads, but knows his friends will never leave him. There are delineated sermons of defiance throughout, and when the vocal chorus of 'ohs and woahs' arrive at the 2/3 mark; the bullish and island vibe feel starts to seep back in. The vocal becomes more whispered, there is some guitar feedback and a fantastic electronic storm is brewed, reminiscent of Bellamy, Van Halen and Santana. There is a glorious musical Technicolor throughout and a brilliant mix of sound. There is a greater rock element in this song, marked particularly by electric guitar- providing a sense of soucier shadow to the landscape. I suspect that when the album arrives it will be a remarkable corpus, but one that will clearly have a predominantly joyous and and celebratory vibe, with a frisson of despondency.

 

Truncating the joyride is 'A Girl Called Melody'. It has a symbiosis with the other three songs, but has a slight Pacific Coast feel to it. It has a tone to it, familiar to some of the songs of Steely Dan's album 'Countdown to Ecatsy' (I can hear 'My Old School' in the brass that plays just over the halfway mark). It also is another slight gear change. It has romance in its blood. The music has a repourposed emaciation to it, as not to clutter the sentiment and overall tone, which is one of positivity. The words "all-time/all-time/all-time high... I'm at an all-time/all-time/all-time high" provide a sweet coda, which is repeated frequently. The brass blasts metonymically and has splatters of Nutini and The Skints. There is a bit of Donald Fagen in the vocals which is an unexpected treat, and it is a confident and impassioned performance, once more. The seeming positivity of the chorus hides a secret pain. It appears that our hero will not end up with Melody, and won't "take on the world as two". Where as inferior modern acts would convey the break up of a relationship with hyperbole and assonance; here the words are direct and meaningful. The band back up their front-man staunchly, not allowing for any rhuemy, wallowy crap. Things happen, move on with it! The chorus is repweated again to the end, and one hopes that the 'all-time high' is biological, and not psychoactive. This is a track that will appeal to a wide field. It has a summary feelgood synecdoche to the music and the lyrics about changing love and circumstance do not detract from the force majeure that has been displayed throughput the four tracks. The song is fresh, open and busy, with an infectious joy to it. One can have their own interpretation of the song itself, and whether the author has any regrets. Maybe I have missed their point. I like to think, that in spite of it all, Bigtopp are going to smile their way through it.

 

This review has- I hope- surmised the key points of what is the be, the first four tracks from their upcoming album 'Mischief'. These tracks are only 2/5 of the story, and it is hard to say what the other tracks will focus on. The quartet I have heard are assimilate examples of a wider whole. I adored the tracks I have heard. I am a big fan of ska, reggae and rock, and Bigtopp have produced an iridescent blend. The brass, drums, guitar and every little musical ingredient compliment the vocals perfectly, and elevate and enforce the lyrics. The vocal performance is incredibly strong; imbued with authenticity and a great individuality to them. It is this combination that makes the band such a name to watch and love. I would implore you to rush out and buy their album on the 14th. It will be a perfect summation of a band who can traverse the musical quagmire with aplomb.

 

There is a Beyonce-sized but coming up... do not ignore them if reggae or ska 'isn't your thing' For those who think the genres are concubines of their favourite music, I would advise open-mindedness. I myself am not myself an aficionado or devotee of this 'type' of music. The band transcend misconceptions and doubt with charisma and good old-fashioned talent. They are superbly tight and cohesive and do not allow the standard or fun to stop or drop for even one second. As it is so goddamn cold and miserable, perhaps the album's release date is apropos. The music will put a huge smile on your face, make you want to get up and dance, and take your heart and soul to a Caribbean beach.

 

The 'Mischief' album, will be, according to the band's press-pack, a work that "tells the story of human fragility" but does so without tristesse. I am a fan after just one listen, and am sure you will be as well. Head over to their website and hear what they have produced already and if you aren't smiling by the first track I'll eat my hat...

 

... and I wear a Beefeater, so know I'm to be trusted.

 

 

Key Track: No Doubts

__________________________________________________________________________________

 

Official site:

http://www.bigtopp.co.uk/

Facebook:

http://www.facebook.com/bigtoppband

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/Bigtopp

Myspace:

http://www.myspace.com/bigtoppband

BandCamp:

http://bigtopp.bandcamp.com/

Songkick:

http://www.songkick.com/artists/1894879-bigtopp

SoundCloud:

http://soundcloud.com/bigtopp

 

 

 

 

Dead Social Club: 'Sunlight'- E.P. Review

 

'Sunlight'- E.P. Review- 8.5/10

 

Lush, jangly, campaign-winning and a perfect antidote to Winter

.

 

 

Release date: Available as a download via: http://www.facebook.com/deadsocialclub/app_204974879526524

___________________________________________________________________________

 

It will lift you up, make you smile, and forgot all of your woes...

 

This is my summation after a mere 10 seconds of listening to opening gambit, Sunlight. Dead Social Club are a London-based 6-piece 'alt indie' band, who have garnered many sumptuous reviews and won plaudits and fans alike. I know been aware of the band for a few weeks now, but was surprised I had not heard of them sooner. Upon studying their SoundCloud page, it attests that they have been played multiple times of BBC 6 Music and Absolute Radio and have attracted fan as far a field as the U.S. and Canada. The band have played numerous gigs and headlined summer festivals to boot. I am a little late to the party, it seems, and the fact that I have missed out on a citrus-cool, stunning band for so long, has caused discourse. I have often mooted the possibility of launching a website where it is easier to find out about new and established bands. Often, unless you are in the right place at the right time, you miss out completely. All I can say is, I am glad I have found them now!

 

Dead Social Club have a hint of the austere to some of their work, but generally convey a positive mood. They are an adventurous and sweet-scented band with a proficient arsenal of memorable tracks and an extraordinary credibility that puts them at the vanguard of the indie scene. The indie scene is a rush hour tube train of congested at times. There are a lot of new bands that arrive on the scene who are labelled as an indie band, but are often never heard of again. Very few stick around for a long time. To my mind, Dead Social Club, will be a name on people's lips for many years to come.

 

The title track is the first track of the E.P. It is an instantly engaging, wunderkind of an intro. It begins with guitar. Sounding a little like a lighter version of Blur's 'No Distance Left To Run' it dances and insinuates itself with lustful sedition. The drums arrive to provide backing, displaying hints of The Libertines and The Cure. In my mind, it is soundtracking my summer road trip movie of a life. It is evocative of windswept highways, epic bar tales, and nubile bronzed goddesses. A lot of speculation and critique has been wavered towards the lineage of singer Paul's vocals. The most frequent comparison is to that of Robert Smith. I can hear a fleck of the old goth master, for sure. The vocal is less candid and more youthful. It has elements of Joe Strummer, but also a little of Maximo Park. Such comparisons may be seen as inauspicious, as the band have a unique sound all of their own; such lazy labelling would belie their mandate. The U.S.P. of the song is the link-up of guitar and vocal. When the lyrics: "I don't want to hear what you're thinking" are sung, the accompanying music does not over-enforce the sentiment, giving greater resonance to the words themselves. The track bubbles and at times sounds a little like a redux of 'Friday I'm In Love'. No that that's a bad thing; I can just hear some similarities in the track's progression and overall sound. Special kudos for the drumming in this track, which is solid and unregimented throughout. It is a brilliant introductory song. Although the lyrics have an anger, desire ("Just drag me back to London") and regret ("I've never felt so blue") to them, the mood is not repressed and downbeat. It is an honest and open song with a tight band performance that will definitely prick up your ears and spark your interest.

 

'Stockholm' arrives next. It begins with a bulletproof and rapid drumbeat, that reminds me of the likes of Inxs, Blondie, U2, and ABC. The ensuing vocal, however, is similar to none of them. It is strong, focused, and powerful. Little flecks of '80s Duran Duran come through in the guitar. It is an intoxicating and nascent mix, that is guaranteed to put a smile on your face. "Keeps me on this island" is a lyric that is repeated, and there is a sense of dislocation and "hostages call it innocence" adds a lemon twist, to the cocktail. Vocals, like Sunlight, are terrific. At once calm and measured, the next impassioned and frightened. There are suggestions of '80s front-men such as Tony Hadley, and to my mind, Paul could easily be on a level par, with regards to his semi-operatic tones. 'Stockholm' is the longest track of the E.P. It is not a track, mind, that outstays its welcome as it goes through a series of shifts and gear changes, and packs a lot of weight and punch in. Around about 3:00, the track slows, to leave guitar, bass and drum to give a metronomic cadence. Just when you think we are in calmer seas, the drums pound furiously and bare-chested; the mood becomes almost unbearably tense, to the point of explosion, before the front-man returns to the fray, to restore semblance of balance. There are little guitar spurts, indebted to Franz Ferdinand's 'Take Me Out', during the final hurdles, and I would give special mention to the band performance as a whole. It is an incredibly tight and homogeneous performance, but it is the guitar work in the track that compels me most. It is innovative, structured and unpredictable at the same time.

 

Completing our tour is a visit to the wonderfully-titled, and ambiguous 'This Painting Is Cursed'. It is a beautiful fenestration into the window of Dead Social Club's mindset. Beginning as it does with an introduction of deserted end-of-the-pier organ, and emerging from its cocoon, a variegated sabre-toothed butterfly, the song hooks you in. I hope the band won't mind me saying, but is has influences of The Cure to it, as well as Joy Division. As the lines 'Close your eyes/settle down now', the vocal is strong and authoritative, and the entire track is a compact, homunculus of a song, clocking in at under 3-and-a-half minutes long. The outro/coda as well is brilliant, containing a slight influence of Two Dancers-era 'Wild Beasts'.

 

Overall this is an impressive and dominant display of individual talent, and tight kinship. Influences and style icons are not employed for fashion or shock value, they are part of the band's upbringing but are not superior to their individual voice of originality. In fact it is due to such a melting pot of influences that such a fascinating progeny is born. The song titles are diverse and fascinating, and the band are tight and compelling throughout. I was impressed not only but the vocals on the E.P. but the entire band. The individual players are at the top of their game, and provide stunning backing. The lyrics are intelligent, sardonic, poetic, thought-provoking and deep, which contrasts perfectly with the music, which is often lighter and more stoic. The whole E.P. is focused and concentrated, with no wasted words or notes. It was a pleasure to listen to.

 

If I were to point at some suggestions, it would be that some of the lyrics were hard to hear. Sometimes it was hard to decipher what was being sung, whether the vocals need to be mixed higher into the final edit, or was for some other reason, I occasionally strained to understand what was being said. Also, I feel that the final track is a little welterweight, when compared to its predecessors. The instrumentation for me is king on that track and would have been great maybe to have heard a fourth track, as there would have been room for it.

 

Those are minor subjective quibbles, as it is a riveting and information E.P., and provides much needed rays of sun, light and warmth to many cold hands and cold hearts. 'Sunlight' has been out for a couple of months now, and I would recommend highly that you give it a listen, as I guarantee...

 

... Dead Social Club will brighten your day.

 

 

Key Track: 'Sunlight'

__________________________________________________________________________________

 

Official site:

http://www.deadsocialclub.com/

Facebook:

http://www.facebook.com/deadsocialclub

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/DeadSocialClub

BandCamp:

http://deadsocialclub.bandcamp.com/

iTunes:

https://itunes.apple.com/gb/artist/dead-social-club/id414360199

Last FM:

http://www.last.fm/music/Dead+Social+Club

SoundCloud:

http://soundcloud.com/deadsocialclub

 

 

 

 

Nadine Shah: 'Dreary Town' - Track Review

'Dreary Town' -Track Review

 

10/10.

 

With a mixed heritage of Pakistani and Norwegian, it is hard what to expect from Nadine's voice. Expect to be blown away...

 

 

Availability: 'Dreary Town' is available now via: http://soundcloud.com/140dbartists/1-dreary-town

___________________________________________________________________________

 

The title of the song may evocative grey nothingness; but don't be fooled...

 

Because the song itself is nothing short of astonishing. It is a blend of hypnotic vocals, stirring musical accompaniment, and the lyrics: personal and heart-rending.

 

I must admit, that I had not heard much about Nadine Shah before last week. I happened upon her interview conducted with The Line of Best Fit back in November, and was immediately intrigued. After listening to her E.P. 'Aching Bones', I was instantly blow away. Not just by her physical beauty, but by her enchanting voice and honesty and openness, and a vast majority that supersceeds her handful of years on the planet. Delving further into the aforementioned interview, she refutes claims that she is influenced by Nick Cave and P.J. Harvey, explaining 'the one person who really inspired me personally was Scott Walker'. Nadine went onto explain that she wanted to make it (Aching Bones) sound 'industrial'. This comes through as well on 'Dreary Town'. She pointed it that a lot of her songs aren't personal, and she has quite a blue-collar approach to songwriter. Like me, she suffers from anxiety, which similarly affects her ebb and flow.

 

The life of a solo artist is a curious one, especially if you are a female. Within the mainstream there are such diversity of quality. Take Adele for instance- rightfully heralded as a key figure. But for every artist like her comes such landfill-dwellers as Ke$ha, Katy Perry and Cher Lloyd. Emeli Sandé is near the forefront, but to my mind subject to the hyperbole and hype machine of many music publications. Her voice is impressive, but to my mind there is nothing about her that grabs you, drops you to your knees, and compels you to let people know what you have just heard. If you want to experience that sort of visceral reaction, you have to dig deep. You shouldn't, but you do. Although I guess the good thing about that is, you feel special. Like you've discovered something untainted by the messianic pomp of the tabloids. Nadine Shah has more in common with Jessie Ware and Laura Marling. Great young female songwriters, who can brilliantly write and sing, and care not for ephemera and soulless celebrity.

 

Returning to the vocal comparison well, what strikes me is how much she doesn't sound like anyone else. There are hints of Florence Welch (when she calms down and stops wailing incessantly); hints of Shara Worden, but generally, incomparable. 'Dreary Town' begins with almost arpeggio-like piano. It is romantic, brooding, still and scene-setting all at once. Your mind is transported to an empty street, the rain, a few streetlights and closed curtains. You stand alone, looking around and wait for the morning to come. After the brief introduction, Shah's vocals arrive to lead you off. It is a progeny of the greatest female singers of all time. Impossible to psychoanalyse, or to unravel. Her voice is soothing, romantic and without fan-fair. Throughout the song, she is backed by that magisterial piano line. And like Street Spirit (Fade Out) was elevated by guitar, the music achieves a similar distinction for 'Dreary Town'. As Nadine sings 'Darling, I'm leaving', the emotion breaks through. Her voice dips and glides. It draws you in, gives you a hug and places it's head on your shoulder. It is quite a beguiling effect. Nadine's E.P. was produced by Ben Hillier, who produced Nadine's favourite Blur album 'Think Tank' (personally I'd plump for '13'- I'm odd like that). I can hear that influence in the production and music. It has a sparsity that allows the lyrics and vocal to shine through and take effect. Caravan, Battery In Your Leg, and Out of Time are the best examples I can give when thinking of Think Tank. 'Dreary Town' has a waltz feel to it, and you can well imagine the song scoring a '40s film; the heroine leaving on a train to a land unknown, the cigarette-smoking hero looking wistfully on, the wind blowing the smoke into his face. Towards the 3:00 mark, Shah's vocal contorts into an anguished cry; what would happen if ever Ephialites put his heartache to words. It is an alarming vocal sea-change. It takes you by surprise and contorts your soul. There are shades of Pakistani singer Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan. There is a sense of sermonising in its wordlessness, and regret and when Shah sings: 'I'm not going to follow', there is an audible lip quiver. Although her voice is incomparable, there is a little bit of Antony Hegarty within the latter stages. Just when you are dewy-eyed with compassion, the voice fades and the piano is in the spotlight once more. The daylight arrives as we walk into the sunrise; our heroine has her cheek pressed against the train window, and our hero holds a black and white photograph of the love he's lost.

 

I would be uncertain to say where Shah fits in, in terms of attempting a gradation amongst her peers. She is so far ahead of most of her contemporaries in most respects. I guess she shares many similarities with Jessie Ware in terms of her approach, her mannerism and music but her achievements are greater, even than hers. It is a faulty syllogism to say that the higher up the charts you are the better you are. She should not concern herself with such trivialities. If 'Dreary Town', is anything to go by, she will be acquiring a legion of new fans, myself included. As a songwriter myself, she has inspired a great deal in my right now. Not just as an artist but as a person. In interviews she is open about her anxiety, how important it is to talk about mental illness- not to simply ignore it or speak of it in hushed abstractions. For someone similarly afflicted and at times, alone, hearing her music and her words has made me feel less isolated and unworthy; I hope my candour and appropriation of her music, is suitable reciprocity. 'Dreary Town' is a song to cherish, to study and to be inspired by. Do not thing of it as a bleak tableau or lost love and depression; more of a tale of a young woman opening her heart and soul. She is someone I would kill to collaborate with in the future!

 

Nadine is releasing her debut album, the gloriously-titled spoonerism 'Love Your Dum and Mad'. She explains: "the first five songs are with a full band"; perhaps adding credence to her childhood ambitions of becoming a jazz singer. She goes to explain that some of the tracks will also have a personal relevance. Do not expect a 'Pink Moon'-style album. Judging from her previous work, there will be light as well as dark. It is impossible to know exactly what is to come on the album, but I cannot wait. Maybe a dissertation on love and longing; possibly a dissection of modern culture- who knows. In the meantime, I implore you to listen to 'Dreary Town', and then go back and absorb 'Aching Bones'. The song is phenomenal and will be pressed against my heart for a time to come. In the words of Blur's 'Sweet Song'': "You switch off and try to sleep/people get so lonely". Nadine Shah is gorgeous, humble, open and possessed of a golden voice of song. Turn an upside down smile upside down...

... and find out why.

 

__________________________________________________________________________________

 

All quotes in this review are taken from

http://www.thelineofbestfit.com/new-music/introducing/nadine-shah-112286

 

Facebook:

http://www.facebook.com/#!/Nadineshah

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/nadineshah

Myspace:

http://www.myspace.com/nadineshah

SoundCloud:

http://soundcloud.com/nadineshah

 

 

 

 

Shades of Jade: 'Roll Up Your Dreams/Slipstreams'- Track Reviews

'Roll Up Your Dreams/Slipstreams'- Track Reviews

 

9/10 & 8/10

 

London-based 'Soul Rock' band follow up 'Her Soul' with an intriguing duo of tracks, that will have you hooked.

 

 

Release date: Later this year.

___________________________________________________________________________

 

It has its sleeves rolled up, and fists of concrete.

 

New music is a curious beast. I've never been a huge fan of the critical lists which announce the '10 acts to watch' or 'sounds of the year'. Out of the 10 or so acts that are listed, there may be perhaps 1 or 2 that are genuinely noteworthy. Everybody has their own tastes and will try to find their own paramour and new music which fits into their comfort zone. Over recent weeks I have reviewed acts specialising in pop, country rock, and dub-step, and have been staggered by the wealth of talent and diversity amongst them. It was a few weeks ago, that I came across Shades of Jade.

 

I have been listening to their E.P. 'Her Soul' and have been impressed by their sound. It has an authentic rock sound, and has a deep soul and a stinging scorpion's tale. The band itself,. like all of the greatest rock acts (Radiohead, Queens of the Stone Age, Judas Priest, The Spice Girls etc.) are a 5-piece. Unlike the aforementioned bands they are fronted by a woman with a voice somewhere between Alison Mosshart, Samantha Sprakling and a young Patti Smith. It is a pleasing combination that has venom, maturity, youth and vulnerability all in one. (Front woman) Jade Barnett is also in possession of a raw sexuality and supermodel stunning looks as well, which makes for a uniquely disarming witches' brew. She is backed by an exceptionally tight and talented band. I relaxed my body, tightened my belt, and opened my mind, and prepared for what was to come.

 

The first track to bless my ears was 'Roll Up Your Dreams'. The first thing you notice is the idiosyncratic and intriguing title. You are not entirely sure just what is in store. The intro has many of the hallmarks of early '90s grunge. I was instantly reminded of Nirvana's 'Polly'; perhaps one of the key tracks off of one of the most quintessential albums in history. It is a reverent and a Trojan Horse of an intro, with guitar and drum beating Strum und Drang. Barnett's vocal arrives into the mix. It is seductive and sensuous, proclaiming: 'I don't know where to begin...'. A brilliant opening line, which circumvents expectations. The band keep time brilliantly, and provide a great backing to Barnett, who's voice has edges of Kate Nash, but with much greater range and credibility. 'What do you make of me?' is a question posed. It is hard to say. Around half way through the track, there is an explosion of sound and anger, the mood intensifies and the scruff of the neck is well and truly seized upon. The sonic elevation is alarming and gripping, and has hints of Nirvana, Queens of the Stone Age as well as The Pretty Reckless. It bubbles and taunts; rocks and rolls; kicks and screams. 'Roll up your dreams and smoke them away' is chanted over an army of guitars, drum and bass, and is a song that demands you listen, and you listen up good. It also employs an effective quiet-loud paradigm, which at once lulls and beckons you in, before kicking you out of bed. It is a tight and concentrated track and one that is original and fresh. You can hear influences here and there, but there is no mimicry, parody or reinvention. It is a first class track and second to no one.

 

The second song is Slipstreams. If you are waiting for a grunge/punk/metal intro, then you will be disappointed. Well, until you actually hear the into, which is softer and more law-abiding. It begins like a swim through a cosmic ocean: entrancing, light-headed and dilated. Soon enough it is replaced by guitar and drum. At first listen there are flavours of Travis and The Stereophonics, but after several repeats I detect 'The Bends'-era Radiohead in the music itself. 'Dreams slip away/In light of me' is one of the track's line. There seems to be an abiding constant between the tracks, of dreams relinquishment or having to let go of them. Maybe not, it just seems to be one of the first things that struck me. There are elements of Paramore and Patti Smith to the vocals throughout the choruses, and when they become multitracked before the chorus, they seem bigger and more breathless. The chorus itself is pleading, impassioned and portentous and is powerful and 'give me just a taste of what it's like in your world' is delivered in the midst of this, with Barnett's proclamation that she is going down for miles 'chasing slipstreams'.

 

Having journeyed through the band's catalogue on Myspace and Soundcloud, it is true that they have a hell of a varied range, and a multifaceted nature to their songwriting and delivery. Neither song in isolation would be wholly representative of Shades of Jade as a band. Both of the tracks I have listened to are varied and incredibly impressive. I would say that 'Roll Up My Dreams' is my favourite of the duo. It has a harder edge and is more memorable. Both tracks are very tight and focused, and the band's performance is exemplary. They compliment the vocals perfectly, and I was particularly struck by the drumming throughout. The guitar and bass are at once dark and acne-ridden, and the next sedate and honed. The biggest positives, aside from the range of sounds and mood switches, is the originality of the tracks. The titles are perfectly fitting and memorable, and although there are similarities to other acts, Shades of Jade supersede many of their contemporaries and by no means inferior to the classic acts of music past. I like the fact that the band has a woman at the front. There are some bands like Blood Red Shoes, Paramore, and The Pretty Reckless who are in a similar boat, but it is quite a rarity as a whole. In male hands, I don't think many of the lines would have been so meaningful, and it is the bi-gender interplay that makes the songs so memorable. The group are the vanguard of London Soul Rock, and hopefully when these songs are released to a wider sphere, rightful credit will be theirs.

 

I could think of no criticism at all. Certainly not with the songs themselves. The lyrics are effective and not untrite at all. The vocals are constantly engaging and strong and the band tight and committed. If I would lean towards one suggestion, it would be the desire for a an intensification of the polygamous nature of the music. Especially on 'Roll Up Your Dreams' they go from quiet to loud and back again very effectively, and would be good to have heard that similar affect on 'Slipstreams'. At the end of that track there is a tremulous and very beautiful vocal piece from Barnett. Perhaps as a tease, or a sign of things to come, but recollections of Jessie Ware came to mind. Maybe if more of this kind of serene vocalisation were mixed with the intensive rushes that are commonplace on both tracks, it would create an even grander sound. I don't know. It is clear there is a distinct band ethic and desire to be the very best band in town. I think they can achieve this easily and I am looking forward to hearing a lot more. For anyone with a curious desire to seek out exciting and incredible bands, check them out on Myspace and Soundcloud, and keep up-to-date with their happenings, gigs and news via Facebook and Twitter, because you won't be disappointed. They have inspired me to pick up a pen and write new material. Now...

 

... What rhymes with 'jealous'?

 

 

Key Track: 'Roll Up Your Dreams'.

__________________________________________________________________________________

Shade of Jade's E.P. 'Her Soul' is available via:

http://www.facebook.com/#!/shadesofjadeband/app_190322544333196

 

Facebook:

http://www.facebook.com/#!/shadesofjadeband?fref=ts

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/shadesofjadeuk

Myspace:

http://www.myspace.com/shadesjade

SoundCloud:

http://soundcloud.com/shades-of-jade

 

 

 

 

Night Wolf, ft. Centrist: 'What's The Time Mr. Wolf'- E.P. Review

'What's The Time Mr. Wolf'-E.P. Review

 8.5/10

 

(Fly Productionz Ltd./Cygnus Music)

 

Tormented, dark, daring, and spoiling for a fight...

 

Release date: March 18th.

___________________________________________________________________________

 

If you go out tonight, beware of the Night Wolf...

 

because they have teeth, and aren't afraid to bite. I suppose in the sense the name is appropriate. It does give a perfect sense of the mood of uncertainty and discourse, lurking within the E.P. 'What's The Time Mr. Wolf'.

 

Ryan Wilcox is the man behind the wolf. It would be axiomatic to point out that what lurks within the E.P. contains a certain venemous bite to it. Together with Mike Ziegler, A.K.A. Centrist, a taunting mysticism has been unleashed. On Wilcox's ReverbNation page, Night Wolf is described as 'taking simple melodies and building them up to mesmeric proportions'. It goes on to say that if dub-step is not necessarily your thing, to give them a listen.

 

To be honest, dub-step is not my thing at all. It is down to the current crop to shape your opinion of the genre. My first real exposure to it, was Muse's disastrous attempt to 'experiment' with the form, on their underwhelming album 'The 2nd Law'. Here was a band who hit their peak around the end of 'Black Holes and Revelations', and immediately hit a depressing nadir from which they have not been able to wake from. Bands are entitled to experiment, but in the case of dub-step, it is a tricky thing to get right. I have recently been in communication with Alex Larkham (Katsuo), and was refreshingly surprised by his track 'Stereo Jesus'. This was the first time I had really sat down to listen to a dub-step track, and many of my preconceptions were eradicated. It was assured, bold, experimental, but above all: brilliant. So it was with a dissipated air of caution that I took into the Night Wolf experience.

 

The first pleasant thing that strikes me when delving into the 5 tracks, is the titles. Many acts go for overused and unambiguous names for song titles, but was instantly compelled by Amor Vincit Omnia. The title actually refers to a painting by the Italian post-mannerist artist Caravaggio, translating to 'love conquers all'. The painting is, a somewhat... controversial piece, and luckily the track is more mannered and incontrovertible. It is instantly insinuating, strings swaying and constricting, a distance beat lurking in the shadows. The teeth marks are already present; as it explodes and trickles, the beat pervading like a metronome, before a brief explosion heralds the transition from classical to dub-step. The strings, sounds and loops weave and merge with one another. It has all the hallmarks of a theme song to a gangster/spy film: brooding, violent and sweating from every pore. The emphasis is on the build-up; the repetition of the sounds, making sure that it is lodged in your head. The track does just that, creating a hypnotic effect that has you drifting off into some rain-lashed fantasy, sirens, streetlights and the smell of smoke in the air. And just like that it ends. The overall effect is one of exhilaration and also quiet reverence. If you are expecting a Skrillex-style romp you may be disappointed. It is more adventurous and cosmopolitan. It does what Muse forgot to do 'Unsustainable': keep it subtle and intelligent, don't bludgeon the audience and be overly heavy-handed, and, crucially, leave you wanting more.

 

I Fade is next up and leaves no time in punching every single one of your teeth clean out. Apologies to return once more to the Muse well, but this track bears similarities with 'Plug In Baby' 'Assasin' and 'Take A Bow'. The guitar in this track changes from an arpeggio to flamenco style, creating a measured counterpoint to the pulsing electronic beat behind it. There is barely time to absorb this before swooning strings herald Leah's arrival. She puts her powerful range to work, switching between a gorgeous whisper, to swaying modulation, to breathy siren, effortlessly skipping between them. As she repeatedly sings 'in that dance of the fading flame', the tempo and temperature rises as she goes on to add, 'I fade'. Her voice reminds me very much of Aailyah, and has a similar soulful tone to it. It is a brief but memorable turn, and has left me wanting more. The sign of any great track. Aside from the superlative vocal turn, the success of the song lies in the way the sounds are mixed. There is fantastic orchestral passages. The strings are romantic and dramatic, and never overwhelm the senses. The guitar work is impressive and creates moods all by itself. At times it aches, and at others builds up the tension. Everything else, from the electronic sounds to the drums, plays its part. They take you by the scruff of the neck, create the build up, and when Leah is introduced, they accompany and emphasis her voice beautifully. As she departs the guitars come back in and ease us gently down. It is a brilliant track, which provides the second half of a testosterone-fuelled 1-2.

 

As the light has faded, the moon glows ripe, and the stars stand in line, Hurricane whips up and disturbs the brief calm. It begins with a woozy electronic heartbeat, contracting and deflating like a wave. Just then a vocal arrives. It sounds like the disguised voice of a caller, informing you they have your wife held for ransom. It is Darth Vader in a mood. There is a plunking, before the sound of a feral drum beat. It appears hollow and savage, and accompanied by the oscillating electronic blood flow, creates a darkly vivid sound scape. Strings arrive to quicken the pulse, and create a real sense of a real hurricane. The track relies on effective repetition. The sound arrives, it goes around, and it comes back round again; drawing you in and pulling you back out. Just when you think you are in rough seas, the tempo shifts and all is calm, before once again the trees sway and the rain lashes. The strings are back again, ramping up the volume and producing the metaphysical storm. At under 4 minutes it is quite a short and focused song, and provides just enough tension to exhaust. There are elements of Chase and Status and Skrillex to be found, but also shades of The Chemical Brothers as well. Although not the strongest track, it is probably the most atmospheric and the strongest indication that spectacular things are around the corner.

 

We're somewhere in the early hours of the morning, and the calming sound of strings, once again arrive to soothe the soul. They creep and trip quietly as a steady beat eases forward. Once again we are then sucked into a riptide, as the atmosphere is smoke-filled and on fire. If you thought you were in for a respite, then thing again. In a way Shallow is a similar, and slightly longer track than Hurricane. Both are infused with a heady blend of orchestra and electronics, using them to great effect to stir, sucker-punch and pull you down. There are again nods to contemporary dub-step in its execution and plot line, but more dramatic and unexpected than all of them put together. I admire the way Night Wolf infuse and blend snatches of sounds. There is a little hip hop here, a teaspoon of rap there, and an aftertaste of classic ambiance. It is also another anthemic song, and could easily be used to score a taut drama, or a commercial.

 

As it begins to get lighter, and the worst seems to be over, Crossing Europe is here to make everything better. It begins quite curiously. I was immediately reminded of Radiohead's 'Kid A'. It has the same sort of beginning as 'Treenfingers' and 'In Limbo'. It almost has the effect of a lullaby. It is calming and strokes your hair softly. Well... for a few seconds at least. Seems like we may not be on dry land quite yet. There is, what sounds like a sample from an interview by Night Wolf. Before you can squint enough to hear what is being said, a ghostly vocal arrives, backed by a pulverising drumbeat. The vocal is wordless and ululating, articulating itself almost like a theremin, but soon departs, to be usurped by electronics and a lighter drum pattern as the song comes to an end. It is a brilliant and fascinating end to a terrific E.P. and I could easily have listened to 6 minutes more of Crossing Europe. It has a great conglomeration of samples, that in lesser hands, would not have worked, It is less intense than the previous two tracks and turns out to be an appropriate bookend to Amor Vincit Omnia. The track has hints of Cibo Matto's 'Sugar Water'. Similar sort of vocal effect and atmosphere. This song could well be a feature hit, and deserves a lot wider recognition as it is to my mind, the strongest track of the E.P.

 

How would I sum up 'What's The Time Mr. Wolf' then? Any preconceptions I have of dub-step have been dispelled. I think what elevates Night Wolf above the current stable is that fearless experimentation. It is not simply the same track repeated five times. There is a great shift of moods and sounds, sometimes within the same song. You are never sure what is going to happen next, or how you will react. That is the key strength. Particularly on tracks such as Crossing Europe and I Fade is this clearest. They are very reminiscent of acts such as The Beastie Boys, Fatboy Slim and Moby, who can blend sounds, vocal snatches, genres and loops effortlessly. Night Wolf could easily match them all for daring and innovation and the net profit is a triumphant release. On these tracks as well I was reminded of The Avalanches, and their songs Since I Left You and Frontier Psychiatrist. The latter, I was particularly reminded of on the final track. The balance of the songs is perfect as well. Armor Vincit Omnia is tender and swelling, I Fade is epic and diverse, whilst Hurricane and Shallow are intense and nightmarish. The track listing is spot on, too. The key to perfect track order is to have one of the strongest tracks leading the pack, to get you hooked and keep you listening, and finish with the strongest number to leave the listener wanting more. Night Wolf have achieved this and I am already looking forward to the next E.P. Special mention goes to co-conspirator Centrist, who does a sterling job throughout. The production and sound is slick but not hollow or plastic; the samples and loops and mixed flawlessly and the overall listening experience is joyous, exhilarating and unpredictable.

 

I cannot find any real critical weaknesses. If I were to hint at suggestions, then maybe feature more vocal power. I was thoroughly impressed by Leah, and her turn. She made I Fade what it is, and perhaps more of her voice, or similarly strong singer, would add texture and substance to tracks. Hurricane and Shallow are both great but the semblance is strong. Maybe parlaying the tracks into one another? I felt that they seemed to be kissing cousins and maybe, at times, indistinguishable. On a similar note, I am not entirely converted to, what we could call 'pure dub-step'. I have always been very much an ardent fan of indie, classic rock, metal and '60s psychedelia, and credit to Night Wolf for a slight re appropriation. I feel that I may never quite be turned, though. That said, I liked both of these tracks and they were necessary and provided an impressive scene change. These criticisms, then, may be rendered moot. It is very much a subjective view, and I'm sure one not shared by many. There was not a lot to fault, as I think it is a terrific effort, and one which will be playing in my head for many weeks to come and infesting my dreams suitably.

 

Night Wolf have pulled off a neat trick. They have managed to stay true to dub-step and keep its pure elements in tack, but have seamlessly integrated classical music, hip hop, rap and electronic music into the boiling pot and created quite a heady nectar. There is enough range and diversity to appeal to rock lovers, dance floor dwellers and rapper-wannabes alike. The fact that this is pulled off over the course of just 5 tracks is an admirable feat, and kudos must be given accordingly. Although the test is in the tasting, so dive in. There are few people in the world who were more apprehensive about embracing dub-step than me, and I am recommending it. Give 'What's The Time Mr. Wolf', and promise me one thing:

 

Sleep now, because you may never get a full night's sleep again.

 

Key Tracks: 'I Fade', 'Crossing Europe'.

__________________________________________________________________________________

Check out the E.P. via:

http://soundcloud.com/flyproductionzltd/sets/watts-the-time-mr-wolf?utm_source=soundcloud&utm_campaign=share&utm_medium=facebook&utm_content=https%3A%2F%2Fsoundcloud.com%2Fflyproductionzltd%2Fsets%2Fwatts-the-time-mr-wolf

 

SoundCloud:

http://soundcloud.com/nightwolfuk

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/ryanwilcox6

YouTube:

http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdicASr89xZUiCQdNF-eEiQ

PureVolume:

http://www.purevolume.com/nightwolfhome

ReverbNation:

http://www.reverbnation.com/nightwolfuk

 

 

 

 

Hannah Dorman: 'Words'- E.P. Review- 9.5/10

'Words'-E.P. Review- 9.5/10

 

Attitude, passion, beauty, and a wonderful voice, make for an intoxicating blend...

 

E.P. available now via:

https://itunes.apple.com/gb/album/words-ep/id592718261

___________________________________________________________________________

 

She has the talent, voice and ability to turn guts into glory...

and 'Words' is certainly capable of helping Hannah achieve this. It boasts a range of sounds, styles, and vocals, and will keep you gripped from start to finish. It is a powerful edict, from a musician who shows innovation and a restless desire to make engaging and relatable music. The E.P. is the summation of this, and a brilliant testimony from a bold new artist.

 

Hannah Dorman is currently studying at Guildford's A.C.M., but has been making and releasing music for a little while now. She has garnered glowing reviews from publications such as Under The Radar, and Surge, and rightly so. Her influences and style is mainly American-influenced, infused with shades of The Pretty Reckless and Shania Twain. However, she is so much more than the sum of her parts, and has produced an E.P. that far surpasses the aforementioned U.S. talent.

 

New music; and especially good new music, seems to be part of a wider entropy within the industry. The vast majority of memorable releases tend to derive from exisiting and established acts. Young artists such as Ke$ha and One Direction seem to be 90% marketing and image, with a perilous lack of teeth, talent and sustainability. For those who are seeking credibility beyond their ken, a prudent starting block would be 'Words'.

 

I have recently had the pleasure of reviewing a fellow A.C.M. alum, Chess (Fran Galea), and have been refreshed by her unique talent, and originality. Like Chess, Hannah shares many similar qualities: original songs, incredible vocal range and a redolent, incredible beauty too. I was excited to listen to 'Words' to see whether another gem was nestling within A.C.M.'s walls. I was not disapointed!

 

The title track is first up on the block, and my it begins with a bang. It is an anthem of the vicissitudes of love and life, and the perils of a difficult paramour. Boasting an impressive and tattoo-covered guitar introduction, the song swaggers into view, fetlocks gleaming. As it ends and graduates into a softer strum, Hannah's voice pervades; resembling a mix of The Pretty Reckless and a young Patti Smith- smoky, and bold. Her voice rises and growls, before drums and guitar kick up into top gear. It is a fist-pumping and rebellious shift that allows Hannah to show off her razor edge tones. It is a song that plays about the quiet-loud principle, used by bands such as Pixies. Just when you think the pace is softening and relaxed, the chorus explodes and tips you over the edge. It is not a device employed a lot in modern music, especially in country rock. If anything, it would have been nice for perhaps more volume. The track has such a sense of purpose and edge, perhaps multi-layered guitars or a bigger rush would have added even more tension and spirit. It ends with a Feel Good Hit of the Summer-esque distortion, and walks away, waiting for you to clean the blood, sweat and tears from the floor. The song deals a lot with transformation: 'Things aren't the same/you know it's all changed' and recrimination: 'you'll never listen'. During the choruses, and in places, the song ressembles early Nirvana, circa 'Nevermind' (Lithium, Come As You Are. In fact the intro sounds more akin to In Bloom). I can hear shades of early Muse too. It swings and punches, and allows not only Hannah to impress, but also her band to do so, who are tight, and do great justice to the song. 'Words' is a rally cry, and mission statement- one which kicks the E.P. off in brilliant, definant fashion.

 

With a rumbling, and twangy intro, which reminds me very much of The Libertines' tracks 'Narcissist' 'The Ha Ha Wall' and 'I Get Along'; 'In My Place' introduces itself with a certain enigmatic majesty. 'It doesn't feel real/It doesn't feel right' Hannah intones, backed by a propulsive drum roll (similar to that of a marching band). Again, it is a track that flowers from rock roots, and although Hannah's voice has clear country overtones, it also shares similarities with modern artists such as Rhianna. The track is more relaxed and luscious than 'Words', and the combination of soulful vocals and a propellant, yet unobtrusive drum beat, work splendidly. This song also is the closest thing to country rock. It has a whisp of Nashville, but its heart and soul is firmly rooted in Blighty. The song demonstrates a presageful message, and 'the thought at me at my happiest/makes me know I'm going to miss this' is a reoccurring coda. Towards the 3 minute mark the chorus is brought more into focus. Hannah's vocal sparks as the drum beat behind her tees her up into the stratosphere. You can hear an audible dropping to the knees, as she declares that things will not be the same 'with somebody else in my place'. The spirit of Taylor Swift watches over the song, except on this song the tone and decleration is more grown-up, and the effect more profound. It does not descend into commercialism or crassness; just pure and honest. For anyone who even has a passing interest in effective and simple storytelling, this is the de facto frontrunner.

 

'Bring It Back' gets to the races straight away. Hannah's vocals are more rapid-fire in the opening stages; syncopated and flowing, it is backed by staccato guitar. The lyrics, 'Bring it back to me/Bring it back to you/Don't bring it back to her/'cause you know what she'll do', is the framework for the chorus, and is a strong-headed request, countered with a controlled and composed vocal. As the chorus departs, Hannah's vocals again show hints of Rhianna but with greater grit, passion and range. There is a pleasing mix of vocal mitosis, sweet wordlessness and a barb wired drawl. There is no ululation; just a measured and self-assured performance. The song itself deals with trust and wondering whether an unnamed suitor can be trusted. The track has a catchiness to it, and the chorus will lodge itself in your brain, and not shift. The band again is right on it, and superb, but the star of the show is the vocal, which goes from a delicate whisper to powerful belt within the space of mere seconds; and makes 'Bring It Back' a contender for best song of the quartet. Clocking in at just over 3 minutes long, it is very businesslike and does not allow for any wasted words or breath.

 

As we come to land, 'Maybe' is the E.P.'s swansong, and is altogether a more laid-back and gentle beast. It will be very much pleasing to the conservatoire in you. Beginning with an acoustic strum and a delicate and breathy vocal from Hannah, the song seems to deal with longing, with a hint of regret. She proclaims that she never lets go, and wonders: 'Maybe you are here/...just maybe you're still near'. The lyrics talk of how her beau looked at her like she was 'one in a million', but now he does not feel that way, with the question posed: 'Is there something I should know?' The underlying message is that, in spite of it all: all doubts, mystery and changes, she will never give in, and keep holding on. In a sense 'Maybe' shares a lot in common with artists such as K.T. Tunstall and Jessie Ware. It has the same sort of stripped back sound, and yet is more accomplished and compelling than the former, and an equal of the latter, too. It is a great track and leaves questions posed and unanswered, perhaps opening the door for answers to be revealed in E.P. number 2...?

 

Overall there are many strengths on display. From such a young artist, the material is exceptionally mature and accomplished. Hannah has not simply done what others do or expect from her. She is forging her own path, and although her influences are clear, she has great originality and her words, her voice and her style are hers alone. The title of the E.P. is apropos wholly indicative of the overall theme. Each song seems to deal with words: how they are used, words that should and should not have been said, and what could be said later. It holds everything together brilliantly. Special mention goes firstly to the band. During the first 3 tracks they are a tight and galvanised rock group, helping to elevate lyrics and vocals alike, but never intrusive or overbearing. Similarly to Jeff Buckley, the figurehead and voice is king, but the band accompanying that are by no means inferior. The production is also impressive and not overly done. The sounds are mixed brilliantly and the whole E.P. has a professional and slick feel to it, without feeling fake or lacking in any area. The track order is perfect and well balanced too, and the songs focused- they do not allow themselves to wallow or outstay their welcome. The music is full of vivid imagery, as well as straightforward emotional impact, and wears its heart firmly on its sleeves.

 

I honestly can't think of any negatives, to be fair. I was truly impressive right from the first few seconds. I hope that in the coming months there will be more to hear, as I think that Hannah has a lot of ideas, and has a clear desire to stick around for many, many years to come. As a singer-songwriter myself, I was very impressed by her composition skills as well as her vocal range. She has a brilliant girl-next-door image: gorgeous but obtainable, which lends an authentic air of conviction to the proceedings. For all the plastic pop and hernia-inducing spew brought forth by many artists floating listlessly around the charts fishbowl, Hannah deserves to supersede them and show how it is done. If I had to conjure a suggestion, I would love to hear more tracks like Maybe. The E.P. reminds me of Queens of the Stone Age's magnum opus, 'Rated R'. That album could skip from head-exploding rock thrash, to acoustic relaxing, to twisted metal disco. You never know what was coming next, and the experience was all the more unadulterated for it. 'Words' shifts in the same manner, and were there another track like 'Maybe', sandwiched between tracks 1 and 2, it would have created the same spellbinding effect. You have to draw the line though, but if a full album were a possibility, I would definitely love to hear a similar bait-and-switch agenda. Also, I was extremely impressed by the guitar work throughout, and if there was a way of hearing more of this in a future release, I would be a happy fan, indeed.

 

Hannah Dorman is a name you won't, and shouldn't forget any time soon. She has been promoting this E.P. since its release a few months ago, and has been touring staunchly. Unlike many of her contemporaries, she has the talent, voice and image to make it very big indeed. If you're a fan of strong female talent, and in fact, music itself, check out 'Words'...

 

... because this kind of music comes around very rarely, indeed.

 

Key Tracks: 'Words', 'Bring It Back'.

__________________________________________________________________________________

Tour dates:

March 12th:

The Star, Guildford as part of ACM Fringe Festival.

March 14th:

The Boileroom, Guildford (supporting Marc Moriss of The Bluetones).

March 15h:

The Bench Bar, Surrey Sports Park, Guildford.

March 16th:

Guildford Fringe Festival (outside New Look).

 

Official site:

http://www.hannahdorman.com/

Facebook:

http://www.facebook.com/HannahDormanUK

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/HannahDorman

YouTube:

http://www.youtube.com/user/HannahDorman

Ustream:

http://www.ustream.tv/channel/the-hannah-dorman-show

ReverbNation:

http://www.reverbnation.com/hannahdorman

 

 

 

 

Chess: 'Happy End'- Track Review

'Happy End'- Track Review

 

 

Fran Galea, A.K.A Chess, has been very busy as of late. Nary weeks after the release of her eponymous debut E.P. 'Babygirl', comes a bonus track release. And, like the E.P., it means serious business...

 

Release date: Now: available online via http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2-FtvKhmhI0

___________________________________________________________________________

 

SINCE NOVEMBER, CHESS HAS BEEN TAKING MUSIC BY 'STORM'...

 

if you'll excuse the pun. I was amazed by the 'Babygirl' E.P. for a number of reasons; chief amongst them, the maturity of the material displayed. The songs were brilliantly realised, empassioned and very much, I'd say, 'dance-able'. If there was any minute criticism, it was a lack of halcyon, down-tempo numbers. But now...

 

Don't let the title seduce you, firstly. In a slight sense of misnomer, 'Happy End' (written with Yulia Hauer) is only half of the full story.

 

Beginning with an emotive, pizzicato piano line and a gorgeous, swooning coo, the track sets the scene right from the off. It tells the story of failed love, with Chess telling her unnamed former flame: 'I had your back/but all you did was tear me apart". The vocal during the verses reminds me of Eva Cassidy's renditions of 'Waly Waly' and 'Autumn Leaves', and has the same spellbinding stillness to it. The track testifies how her one-time beau had a chance to be with her ("sorry, but you had your chance"). The chorus is quite enraptured and delivered passionately. It is used didactically and repeated fairly frequently, which adds potency, as its key line explains: 'we don't have a happy end'. The vocals here are harder and more forceful and bring to mind Leona Lewis, Jessie Ware and Christina Aguilera. At just over three and a half minutes, it is also a tight and concise song, as well and is a terrific number to add to Chess's cannon.

 

Overall the number has hints of female blues legends, as well as modern pop icons. Unlike many of her peers- complete with distended egos- Chess is not going out of her way to model herself to conform to a status quo, or fit into a mould. She is doing what she wants to do, not what she has to. Her voice has elements also of male counterparts such as Matt Corby and Ben Howard; her songwriting ability is incredibly impressive and developed for one so young, and her passion and conviction nods to some of her idols such as Freddie Mercury and Prince. Special mention to the production as well. The track is polished but not overly produced, and lets Chess's vocals do the talking, whilst blending the music around them. 'Happy End' is more than a bonus track, and reminds me a lot of her E.P. track Things Take Time.

 

It is an intriguing sign as to what her next E.P. may sound like; or maybe not. With such a range and diversity in her armoury, it is anyone's guess what happens next, whether it is soul, blues or snarling rock. The wait will be an exciting one! One thing is for sure:

 

...

CATCH HER ON TOUR NOW, AND SEE WHAT ALL THE FUSS IS ABOUT.

__________________________________________________________________________________

Tour dates:

16th March at The Camden Head, London
22nd March at The Star, Guildford
22nd April at The Bedford, Balham

Official site:

www.chessmusic.co.uk

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/chessofficial

Facebook:

www.facebook.com/?ref=logo#!/chessofficial?fref=ts

YouTube:

http://www.youtube.com/user/Chess4Music

Babygirl is available online at: www.youtube.com/watch?v=hrtK7-eE4do&feature=youtu.be