Monday, 10 March 2025

One More Trip Around The Sun. Cari Cari

Cari Cari entered this blog and my life with the fantastic and very energetic album 'Anaana' in 2018. The album was followed by 'Welcome To KooKoo Island' in 2022. An album that followed the same procedure but was just a little less than the official debut. That makes the third album more important. Is it a trend or a new take on the duo's music?

The first single of the album 'if u know u know' did not convince me, the second single and title song did. Add it together and the conclusion is that Cari Cari has left the musical path it was on and changed course in a dramatic way. On One More Trip Around The Sun there are at best some traces of the duo's energetic surfrock and reverb drenched music. The question is then of course, is the change successful?

Cleverly, the album opens with the title track. It has a trace of the surf guitar but also is extremely psychedelic, which brings memories of the previous two albums (and debut EP). The differences stand out a lot more, as the sound is very different and quiet, subdued. The male voice is dominant, where usually the female voice is. Two things jump at me. How psychedelic this song is, as in incorporating everything released since 1966 until today but also how mesmerising 'One More Trip Around The Sun' sounds. This is the kind of song that gets more under my skin with each listening session.

The song is the start of a musical trip Cari Cari takes me on. On two levels. The first is the makeover Cari Cari has undergone after the tour following 'Welcome To KooKoo Island' and the recording of One More Trip Around The Sun. This is simply not the same band from a musical point of view. The changes are so profound that I doubt if I had recognised the album to be Cari Cari's had I heard the album unexpectedly and without forewarning. There is more likeness to Dutch duo Donna Blue than ever before.

For level two, we get to the quality of One More Trip Around The Sun itself. I notice that with each spin I like the album better than the time before. Songs that at their primary level are not spectacular, are fantastic at the level above the chord changes. The arrangements, the inner tension Cari Cari creates, the elementary instruments that are all in their exact right place. Heck, in the final song 'Goodbye, Stranger', the duo even pulls off a successful Lana del Rey song.

The Vienna based duo Alexander Köck and Stephanie Widmer are at home in many places in the world, sucking up impressions and translating them into music. On One More Trip Around The Sun this led to a far more subtle blues / garage rock form, as in a The White Stripes and Blood Red Shoes style, then ever before. The volume is down and the band wants its fans to listen. In my 'Anaana' review I already pointed to Chris and Carla of The Walkabouts, that reference is more applicable to the duo's new album than ever before.

It is of course to early to tell, but I would be surprised if One More Trip Around The Sun would not turn out to be one of the important albums of 2025. At this point in time it's leading the pack alright.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght

 

You can listen to and order One More Trip Around The Sun here:

https://caricari.bandcamp.com/album/one-more-trip-around-the-world

Sunday, 9 March 2025

2025, week 10. 10 singles

At a time the world receives one big surprise after another, nearly on a daily basis, except for golf days, and the post 1945 world order is torn apart, it is time for new music. There are an exceptional number of new names in the singles' section this week. It cannot be more than a diversion from world politics unfortunately. The day that a respected, rather conservative magazine like 'The Economist' compares a president of a friendly(?) nation to Don Corleone, something is really, disturbingly wrong. Let's focus on the songs anyway. Enjoy this new selection.

AAAAH! POM

Until today the title 'AAAAH' was taken. The fantastic debut single of The Hague band Taymir, long since gone, had the exclusive rights as far as I was concerned. Luckily this can remain the case, as POM has only named its EP AAAH! and not one of the songs. The songs are about wanting to shout AAAAH! So, I do not have to choose and can simply praise the songs on the EP. POM can be found on this blog for several years. First with its singles and then with that great fun album 'We Were Girls Together' and then some more singles. The trend you find there is that POM is a band with a sound that is fairly unique due to the voice of singer Liza van As. She blends something girlish with maturity. The band provides her with a modern, alternative rock sound, while the vocal and musical melody provides the songs with a pop feel that makes the music irresistible. Take 'A Craving'. The songs rocks, loud even, contains almost more energy than anyone can handle, but creates the urge that makes me want to sing along for the whole of the way. The song is one of POM's best and it already has a few of those for a young band. With 'We Were Girls Together', my #5 album of 2023, POM set a standard for itself. The only thing to complain about concerning AAAAH! is that it's not a full album but only a four song EP. 'Nough said.

Gratitude feat. Robin Lane. Adam Sherman

There are times that a song is just nice to listen to. Gratitude is one of them. Adam Sherman knows how to write a song somewhere between different genres, not unlike Tom Petty could and The Beatles set the standard for. Not to forget where it all came together in a brilliant mix: The Traveling Willburies! Gratitude has a nice rhythm and the electric guitars provide some nice licks, strokes and twangs at the right moment. Over the music Adam Sherman sings with a somewhat aged voice. The song is a 100% duet with Robin Lane, who we met on this blog exactly two years ago with her own album 'Dirt Road To Heaven'. Sometimes a song is just nice to listen to. Let me leave it at that.

Sweat. King Garcia

King Garcia is from the original Athens in Greece, a town that can look back on thousands of years of history and the place where a form of democracy started about 2500 years ago. The band consists of Alex Orfanos – Trumpet & Clarinet, Kamil Kamieniecki – Drums, Kornilios Kiriakidis – Bass and Kostas Konstantinidis – Guitar. Yes, you've read right, it starts with a trumpet and clarinet player. There's no singer and you may hear a more traditional Greek instrument along the way as well. King Garcia formed in 2019 with all members bringing in a lot of experience from their respective musical past. They play their own brand of progrock with several musical climaxes in one song. Sweat starts off with a dry drum sound, not unlike Therapy's in the 1990s after which a dark riff kicks in and the song develops from there into highs and lows, light and dark, but often with traditional Greek rebetico elements woven into the hardrock. Very much worthwhile the listen to Sweat is. I love how important the drums are in this song. And you can guess what the lead instrument is, right? Album 'Hamelin' is out on 18 April.

Left Of The Dealer. Ocean Alley

From the Northern Beaches of Sydney comes another new name to this blog, Ocean Alley. This six member surfer dudes band seems even more popular in New Zealand than in Australia, its home country. To me the band is totally new, despite it started in 2011 already and releasing records since 2013. Left Of The Dealer is a super relaxed song with a lot of Creedence Clearwater Revival influences seeping into the rhythm and rhythm guitar. In the singing a little psychedelia seeps in. On the one hand the song is upbeat but due to the singing of Baden Donegal the song has a downbeat element as well. But then listen to that ooh ooh in the chorus and the sun comes from behind the clouds immediately. Left Of The Dealer may not be the best song I've ever heard but it provides Ocean Alley with a great introduction to this listener for whatever comes next.

Bardo or Heaven? Will Stratton

Will Stratton released his album Points Of Origin two days ago on this day of posting. Bardo Or Heaven? is one of the singles coming from the album. The song is a sophisticated singer-songwriter song aimed at the more serious music lover. Where the song starts with a fairly straightforward arrangement, Stratton allows for more and more instruments to come in, until there is a near cacophony of woodwinds, and horns when the song, abruptly, ends. The start is drums, bass, guitar and a piano that is the most present instrument, there. It gives Stratton the option to sing with his soft voice over it all. Slowly but surely other instruments come in. At first, accompanying but in the end they kick Will Stratton out of the song. We don't need you any more, singer, they seem to say. Bardo Or heaven? is a listening experience in more than one sense.

Sanctuary.  Rebekka Karijord & Roomful of Teeth

How to describe Sanctuary? My musical ear and experience tell me new age. As the music is more a composition, a modern composition than a song, but at the same time the song has some resemblance to Enya's 'Orinico Flow'. Where that was a song with atmospherics, Sanctuary is atmospherics with the rudimental traces of a song hidden in it. Rebekka Karijord is a Norwegian composer, living in Stockholm, Sweden's capital. She has composed numerous filmscores and music for performances, but also solo records. Her upcoming record, 'The Bell Tower' (25 April), is a collaboration with the vocal group Roomful of Teeth. The singing takes place over swaths of electronic music and a crackling sound, in which the song disappears and comes back to. The melody is carried by the voices. This is straight 'Kairos' material. If I have to compare it to anyone else, Norwegian singer Susanna is the only one coming to mind, besides the already mentioned Enya. Intriguing is the right word to describe Sanctuary.

Anywhere The Wind. Supersister

A new song by Supersister? That ought to be a surprise but with its drummer living down my street, it's not. (My band Sweetwood even performed once with Léon Klaasse at our local street party.) So much for me thumping my chest. Supersister and I go back for over half a century, when I got a compilation album with Dutch artists containing 'She Was Naked', that outrageous single for more than the title only. By the time I had money to buy albums Supersister was long something of the past. For a few years the band is back on the road, with songwriter, singer and keyboardist Robert Jan Stips as the only original member, former Golden Earring bassist Rinus Gerritsen and Klaasse on drums. Anywhere The Wind is a dreamy song. Stips sounds as if he is still in the early 1970s where his singing is concerned. The most distinguishing instruments is the grand piano he plays, letting wide ranging notes escape from it. A dark synth takes care of the bottom line. What to expect from a band over fifty years down the line? Well, a song like Anywhere The Wind is the right answer.

Back To Your Heart. Robin Jackson

Another new name on the blog this week is Robin Jackson. The Portland, Oregon singer-songwriter had to make up with someone and came up with Back To Your Heart. It doesn't say whether he succeeded but a person could be quite pleasantly surprised when someone writes a song like Back To Your Heart. Jackson sings with a modest tone striking the right tone when asking for forgiveness. The song has two parts, the quiet first three quarters and the more upbeat final quarter where the beat comes in and lyrics are superfluous. "li-li-li" seems enough here, suggesting a happy ending? I guess so. This song is for fans of e.g. James Blunt's hit 'You're Beautiful'. Album 'Silver Lining' is out already.

Spades. Vundabar

And, yes, another new name on the blog. How is it possible to have so many on one day? Vundabar is a Boston band that has not reached me through one of the three record companies or pr agencies from that town/region. Even that is possible. Brandon Hagen (guitar, vocals), Drew McDonald (drums) and Zack Abramo (bass) form Vundabar, which is a take on the German word Wunderbar I suppose. (Remember that great Tenpole Tudor single from the early 80s?) Spades is an alternative rock song, with a little of the doom and gloom sound of the early 80s because of the way Brandon Hagen sings. The music is far more eclectic though, if dark. Where the early 80 postpunk bands were afraid of the bomb, Vundabar musical sets it off. There's postpunk galore here but with an energy and big sound bands then could not even dream of. Album 'Surgery And Pleasure' is out.

Dime. Serebii

How else can we end this week then with another new name. New Zealander Serebii (Callum Mower) presents a track that any lover of singer-songwriter music will recognise as Nick Drake influenced. The bio speaks of a jazzy track and that is the sort of arrangement Nick Drake's producer Joe Boyd laid underneath his voice and acoustic guitar. Serebii does not just copy. For that the sound of Dime is far too modern. The basis of the single is Mower and his (I presume) acoustic guitar. From there the story starts. His voice is treated, unlike the live version on You Tube which is more organic. All through the song other instruments join in, only to disappear again just as abruptly, while that guitar is plucked all throughout. Album 'Díme' is out on 28 March.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght

 

Saturday, 8 March 2025

Bowie for Dummies #38

Two and a half months after the previous incarnation of the best read post by far on the blog, it's time for a new version. Chances are that there is a lot of new stuff to be discovered there. This is the 38th version since we published the first one on 8 January 2017. In this post you find all Tineke Guise's explorations on Bowie on the Internet with the links to music, clips, news, and what not.

Here is the link to the original but updated post where all is revealed:

http://wonomagazine.blogspot.com/2017/01/bowie-for-dummies.html


Friday, 7 March 2025

Buyer Beware. The Men

How dirty can a record be? The Men on their latest, tenth, album sound too dirty to handle. The needles are in the red and not just a little. Eardrums will have bled in the studio while recording. My best guess is that all knobs available were switched to 10, the signals sent straight to tape. The album sounds like it and is totally convincing as a great piece of (garage)punk work.

The Men started in the year 2008 and still know the same line up: Nick Chiericozzi (guitar/vocals), Kevin Faulkner (bass), Mark Perro (guitar/vocals), and Rich Samis (drums). After releasing 'Immaculada' in 2010, the band kept up a good output throughout the years. Some of the albums can be found on this blog. Three in fact, with a hole of ten years between 2013 and 2023.

Thanks to the Fuzz Club label, I was reintroduced and not regretting it for one second. Buyer Beware is all about the energy, the songs and cranking them out without any polish or veneer. The Men decided to go for it and pretend that it's still a band in a rehearsal room or parents' garage practising and learning to play (together). Anyone listening more closely, hears that The Men got that all down.

Promo photo
Listening to the album once again, I can't help wondering when it was last I heard an album with such a dirty sound? My mind tells me the debut album of Portland, Oregon's The Thermals, whatever it was called. A quick relisten tells me Buyer Beware is so much better. Here's where the experience of playing together for 17 years comes through. Musically, U.K.'s The Troggs come to mind as well. 'Wild Thing', must have been one of the wildest singles released at the time. Where The Troggs were novel and exciting, The Men are exciting but far from novel.

I'll admit that towards the end Buyer Beware becomes a little too uniform. On the basis of the storm that came before, all is forgiven though. This album is really tough and most songs dirty and good. More than enough to convince me.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght

 

You can listen to and order Buyer Beware here:

https://themen.bandcamp.com/album/buyer-beware

Thursday, 6 March 2025

Hot Shock. HotWax

And so it happens again, three short posts on one day, so as to give credit where it is due. This is the third of the three.

You will find HotWax once before on this blog, with the single and opening song of Hot Shock, 'She's Got A Problem'. The song is a fantastic opening song, as it is a declaration of intent. HotWax promises to rock out in an alternative and punky way, and does. From Transvision Vamp in the 90s to a host of women fronted punkrock bands up to today, like Wolf Alice, fans need to know of Hastings based HotWax. In The Netherlands the band POM, that is releasing its new EP tomorrow, is a very good match. HotWax and POM should go on tour together for a prefect alternative / punkrock evening.

The trio, Tallulah Sim-Savage (vocals/guitar), Lola Sam (bass) and Alfie Sayers (drums), worked with an all female production team Catherine Marks (Boygenius, Wolf Alice), Steph Marziano (Hayley Williams, Let’s Eat Grandma), as well as additional recording with Stella Mozgawa (Warpaint). Touring in the past took place with the all male Royal Blood and Frank Carter. With an album like Hot Shock the band should be headliner soon and make festival audiences go crazy.

Photo: Louise Mason
Tallulah Sim-Savage has a voice that is capable of singing totally normal and can go into that screaming way of singing that make female punkrock singers extremely good. When done the right way and Sim-Savage has that voice alright. The album opens is such a convincing way. I'm sold long before the rest comes.

What a difference with the other all female punkrock band on the blog this year, The Lambrini Girls. I got away from listening to its record with the impression everything was more about anger and indignation and less about writing a good song. HotWax plays with anger as well but all within the context of making the best song possible. It's exactly where HotWax succeeds. This album is one filled with golden melodies and lots and lots of noise.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght

 

You can listen to and order Hot Shock here:

https://hotwax2.bandcamp.com/album/hot-shock