Wednesday, 20 May 2026

Painted Sea, Painted Stars. Steve French

Cees Paris was once a part of the Canshaker Pi and Personal Trainer entourage around Willem Smit, but he found his own vehicle with Steve French, assisted by some friends of old. In the past seven years I wrote reviews of 'Lightning Tiger Running' (2019) and 'Dogs' (2022). And then I sort of overlooked the latest effort released in March of this year. Time to make amends, as with Painted Sea, Painted Stars, Paris shows to be home from many markets.

Rereading my 2019 review, the following sentences struck me:

"What I notice in the nine song album is that Steve French is able to create a few moods. First there is the ramshackle vagueness. Secondly, very direct songs. Finally there is an alternative ballad, just one man and one guitar, no matter how short the song is".

Come 2026, Steve French is still very good at that mix and even adds an Hawaiian influenced track to boot.

The new album shows a far more mature and serious Steve French. This is no longer a young exuberant man bouncing around, showing off his musical prowess. A lot of thought has gone into the new album. It sounds far more mapped out, but without losing the open-mindedness of a fresh sound.

Like I wrote, Painted Sea, Painted Stars is a varied album. Indie rock can be found in abundance, but also an alternative ballad, 'Shallow Glow', with just Cees Paris and his guitar and a little embellishments. Then take the way the album ends. 'Arid Plains' is a full hybrid song. It is an alternative ballad, with a band. It includes an interesting electrical piano part, great riffs and an exploding electric guitar in a very short interlude (solo?). Because of the alternative approach, it is hard to call it beautiful, yet, in its own way it is. Constantly tugging at my pleasing and at my prickly pear side, manoeuvring itself between pop and alternative.

As a small boy, I was allowed to go to a radio studio with my mother and grandmother to record a programme for the ship my dad sailed on at the time. All I got to say was "dag pappa". There was a band performing, The Kilima Hawaiians. I had totally forgotten about this event and here's Steve French with the track 'Blue Hawaii' bringing back the memory. Thank you for that.

The indierock side of Steve French with some postpunk flavours dominates the biggest parts of Painted Sea, Pained Stars. No song is just straightforward, there's always a twist here, a turn there, the curve ball thrown in to prick up the ears or to give a jolt. It remains melodic but never in expected ways. Exactly what makes the Dutch alternative / postpunk rock scene so good. Steve French claims its position here no little.

Summing up, the more mature approach suits Steve French really well. The band fits right in with what is happening in this country and found its own voice along the way.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght

 

You can order Painted Sea, Painted Stars here:

https://excelsior-recordings.com/products/steve-french-painted-sea-painted-stars 

Tuesday, 19 May 2026

The Rideout. The Chelsea Curve

With the avalanche of albums reaching me every week, it is extremely hard to catch up on albums that are released during a holiday and other periods of time where listening and writing are hard to do. Based on listening to the single 'Ride' by The Chelsea Curve, I knew it was time to make the extra effort.

'Ride' is a such an energetic song. The Boston band is rocking in a serious way, without forgetting that a golden vocal melody is the thing of miracles where hit songs are concerned. Whatever the influence of The Radio Indie Alliance Top 100 is I can't tell you, the fact that 'Ride' recently was its number 1 does tell you something. 'Ride' is the kind of song that deserves being a number 1. Most likely the current number 1 in our Top 40 doesn't, as far as I'm concerned.

Like me, The Chelsea Curve is a remnant of the past. From the time when Blondie managed to top the charts with 'Denis' and the albums 'Plastic Letters' and 'Parallel Lines'. Listen to 'Kindawanna' and 'Out Of My Head' and you know more than enough. Both are songs that deserve to be hits in that parallel universe of mine and The Chelsea Curve's and that Indie Alliance Top 100.

Photo: Trebmal Photography
The Chelsea Curve is from Boston and consists of Linda Pardee (bass, vocals, keys), Tim Gillis (guitars, vocals, keys), and Bruce Caporal (drums and percussion). The Rideout is the band's second album after 'All The Things' (2021), that was released after eight single releases in just as many months. You'll find many reviewed in the singles' section but not the album as a whole. With The Rideout WoNoBlog makes its amends. The Rideout deserves your full attention.

Despite being a mini album of just seven songs, the energy shared with you by the band will last you for the rest of the day. In the first seconds of the album The Chelsea Curve grabs me and, the trio does not let go of me before the final note has faded away, leaving me totally fulfilled. The Rideout is one explosion of energy, contending for the Blondie crown. If you plan to listen to one powerpop/rock album this year, The Rideout should be your record of choice.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght

 

You can listen to and order The Rideout here:

https://thechelseacurve.bandcamp.com/album/the-rideout 

Monday, 18 May 2026

Path Of Totality. The Montvales

Het Amerikaanse duo The Montvales doet op het derde album Path Of Totality alles goed en overtuigt met een mooi rootsgeluid, lekker in het gehoor liggende songs en prachtig bij elkaar kleurende stemmen.

Ik had Path Of Totality van The Montvales bijna over het hoofd gezien, maar het nieuwe album van Sally Buice en Molly Rochelson is me inmiddels heel dierbaar. Path Of Totality van The Montvales klinkt op het eerste gehoor als een wat traditioneler aandoend rootsalbum, maar de songs van het tweetal uit Tennessee hebben ook iets lichtvoetigs en een randje pop. Het zijn songs die zijn ingekleurd met vooral snareninstrumenten, wat een aangenaam en smaakvol geluid oplevert. Het is een geluid dat verder wordt opgetild door de mooie stemmen van Sally Buice en Molly Rochelson, die elkaar prachtig versterken. De prima songs op het album maken het helemaal af. Topalbum.

The Euro Americana Chart, een maandelijkse lijst met de beste rootsalbums van de maand volgens een stuk of 70 reporters, biedt absoluut ruimte aan vrouwelijke muzikanten, maar wordt het grootste deel van de tijd aangevoerd door mannelijke muzikanten. In april was het anders en stond het nieuwe album van The Montvales bovenaan de lijst. 

Het is wat zuur dat ik als groot liefhebber van vrouwenstemmen juist dit album heb gemist in de week van de release, maar dankzij The Euro Americana Chart heb ik het album gelukkig toch nog redelijk op tijd ontdekt. The Montvales is een duo uit Knoxville, Tennessee, dat bestaat uit Sally Buice en Molly Rochelson. Path Of Totality is het derde album van het tweetal, maar ik was de naam The Montvales tot de publicatie van The Euro Americana Chart van april volgens mij nog niet eerder tegengekomen. 

Ik ga Sally Buice en Molly Rochelson vanaf nu wel in de gaten houden, want Path Of Totality is een erg goed album. Dat is voor een belangrijk deel de verdienste van de stemmen van Sally Buice en Molly Rochelson, want zeker bij eerste beluistering springen die het meest in het oor. Het zijn stemmen die elkaar prachtig ondersteunen, maar die elkaar ook versterken. 

Het zijn stemmen die duidelijk van elkaar verschillen, maar ze kleuren echt heel mooi bij elkaar. Ook wanneer Sally Buice en Molly Rochelson niet tegelijk zingen is de zang op hun album echt bijzonder mooi, maar als de stemmen samensmelten gebeurt er iets bijzonders. Bij het soort harmonieën dat is te horen op het album van The Montvales gaat de zang vaak voluit, maar Sally Buice en Molly Rochelson zingen ook fraai ingetogen, wat de schoonheid van de zang ten goede komt. 

Het nieuwe album van het duo uit Tennessee moet het niet alleen hebben van de vocale kracht van de twee, want ook de muziek op hun nieuwe album is heel mooi. Sally Buice speelt zelf banjo, terwijl Molly Rochelson zorgt voor een deel van het gitaarwerk. Het snarenwerk van de twee wordt aangevuld door een handvol extra muzikanten, die onder andere bijdragen van de pedal steel, mandoline, viool, bas, drums en nog wat extra impulsen van gitaren en de banjo toevoegen aan het verzorgd klinkende geluid op Path Of Totality. 

Het is een geluid dat goed past in het hokje Amerikaanse rootsmuziek met vooral invloeden uit de folk en de country, maar veel songs van het tweetal hebben ook iets lichts door ook een vleugje pop toe te voegen aan het geluid. Ik werd in eerste instantie vooral gegrepen door de zang van Sally Buice en Molly Rochelson, maar wat klinkt het nieuwe album van The Montvales lekker. 

Dat ligt niet alleen aan het fraai snarenwerk dat domineert in de muziek op het album, maar ook aan de lekker in het gehoor liggende maar ook aansprekende en vaak voorzichtig aanstekelijke songs van The Montvales. Het duo uit Knoxville heeft een album gemaakt dat in de smaak zal vallen bij liefhebbers van wat traditioneler klinkende Amerikaanse rootsmuziek, maar Path Of Totality is ook een album dat een breder publiek aan moet kunnen spreken, wat misschien ook wel blijkt uit de hoge notering in The Euro Americana Chart van deze maand. 

Ik heb het album zelf ontdekt via deze lijst en wat ben ik daar blij mee. Path Of Totality van The Montvales heeft immers alles wat nodig is om uit te groeien tot een van mijn favoriete albums van 2026, al is het jaar nog lang natuurlijk.

Erwin Zijleman

 

Je kunt The Path Of Totality hier luisteren en bestellen:

https://themontvales.bandcamp.com/album/path-of-totality 

Sunday, 17 May 2026

made it!. lucky break

When lucky break made its debut on this blog with a review of the single 'Camp Song', I wrote:

"Believe it or not, I can, as it were, hear Tammy Wynette sing Camp Song, but also R.E.M. Now that is what I call a hybrid".

Having familiarised myself with her album made it! I can state that this feeling of listening to a hybrid album has not leave me. Despite rocking out as well, the mood at times switches between country and indie, especially because she is able to sing in an indie and a country kind of way. I will not go as far and write that this artist cannot make up her mind on what it is she wants to be, that she's comfortable somewhere in between seems obvious.

lucky break is Emma Gerson who has an East and West Coast background. After a short stint in the music industry, she felt she wanted to be a musician first and that resulted in the EP 'Biggest Thing' and now in her debut album made it!. On the album, she worked with Elliott Woodbridge, friend and co-producer. Gerson played the acoustic guitar and Woodbridge all other instruments.

That country feel aside, it's obvious that Emma Gerson grew up with a solid dose of indierock. This music form is the bedrock of made it!. lucky break is not afraid to rock and move from the light to the shade and back. Take Darklight for example. The soft toned verses are painted over in dark overtones when the chorus gets there. Listen to the two opening songs and you hear she's pretty convincing in songs that may alienate pure pop lovers but please the more alternative pop-rock fans.

Promo photo
A third element in lucky break's music that struck me, is her closeness to the indie female singers coming out of New Zealand like Vera Ellen, Aldous Harding and Ernie Ball. On made it! the indie, alternative rock and folk elements are mingled just as easily. It makes made it! stand out for me just a little bit more. And, makes the album so much more varied. The playfulness of 'Red Balloon' is a good example of such another tone compared to most other songs on made it!.

made it! is a debut album, but as a whole it is a mature album by an artist who seems to have a clear view of where she wants to go. So don't take my primary observation too serious. lucky break is indie/alternative enough to be taken seriously and allows in other elements that may make her attractive to a lot more music fans. Time will tell if she will make a choice or is able to keep walking on that thin line in the middle. In the meantime let's enjoy this good debut album.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght 

 

Saturday, 16 May 2026

2026, week 20. 10 singles

Today you will find a bunch of octogenarians in the singles section and all with songs that are vibrant and full of life totally belying their age. At that age one can know what will be the last you'll do. If this over time will be proven to be the last, all can be tremendously pleased with these efforts. To compensate there a few very new names as well, some even debut records. In other words, more than enough to explore and enjoy!

Rome. Brook Fox

And yet another debut on the blog. He is an indie-pop/rock artist from South-West Wales who knows exactly how the light and the shade works in his music. My take is that his main influences come from the post-grunge era with bands like Creed and that band with the hit 'Outside' that I keep forgetting the name of, Staind? Brook Fox' own contribution is the pop element he throws into the mix, making Rome far less darker than the bands I mentioned. That said, he knows how to make his band rock and handles the light and the shade to perfection, giving an audience a moment to rest before everyone can explode into the song once again. Rome is aimed for festival fields in the way it is set up and it is working as far as I'm concerned.

Still In The Race EP. RubinCarter

RubinCarter is Queen's Pleasure drummer Sal Rubinstein turned singer-songwriter. After the release of singles announcing his debut EP, we can listen to the whole work. The songs started in his bedroom playing an acoustic guitar just for his own pleasure. Slowly but surely he realised these songs should be heard by more people. With help from his friends the songs and RubinCarter took shape. Ruben Carter became a famous name because of the Bob Dylan - Jacques Levy composition 'Hurricane', more than because of his boxing career and trial. Do not expect Bob Dylan style music here. The EP kicks off with the alternative rock track 'Unentertained'. A song that goes for the big sound, with a huge lead guitar and background vocals. The exact right song to put on pole position, because it is the kind of song that can define a career. In theory 'Unentertained' is a song to play in a stadium and to have that as your first song on your first EP is an asset. With 'Frame' the mood goes down, but again RubinCarter shows to know what it takes to arrange a song in such a way that it catches the ear. Going deeper into the EP, it becomes clear Sal Rubinstein is showing us what he is capable of. His goal was not to create a musically consistent EP. 'April' is a ballad with a fingerpicked acoustic guitar. It is not my favourite song on the EP but it certainly shows courage to present such a different song. 'Still In The Race' is also a ballad but of a different sort. The slide guitar gives the song a distinct rock feel as does the main riff. So is the final song, 'Money Machine'. Setting the easy scoring opening rock track apart, 'Money Machine' is the song that impresses me most. It has this easy going vibe, while at the same time being able to make a great impression on me. Without making a grand effort during the first impression, 'Money Machine' is the kind of song that slowly but surely turns into a anthem.  A modest one but an anthem nonetheless."Lalala" sometimes is enough to do the trick. RubinCarter is a name to watch alright.

ESO. The Bernadette Maries

The Bernadette Maries from Brussels return with its second single. ESO is a song with two faces. It all starts out as an alternative rock song. In fact I can call it grunge without any qualms. Nirvana is all over the intro. The light and the shade between verse and chorus? Check. The two guitar line up is used to create a lighter mood and a darker one. Before the two minutes mark things change. Let's call it psychedelic, that interlude. Not that the world becomes all wobbly and out of focus, it still qualifies. The drums come in with a high and fast rhythm after which singer/bassist Daria takes over the lead vocals. By then the song has been totally set on its head. I have to admit, I like the first part better, yet surprising it is. Two singles down, upcoming album 'Soft' is an album to look out for. We have a, hopefully, glorious summer in front of us first, as the release date is set for 18 September.

Ride. The Chelsea Curve

Click The Chelsea Curve in this blog's search engine and one single after the other pops up. Promoted by the late Justine Covault, the band came into my life thanks to her and I liked the band better by the single. Come 2026 and here's the band once again with single Ride from the already released album 'The Rideout'. Like a song with a title like it should, it is about riding, a motorcycle in this case. Linda Pardee (bass, vocals, keys) and Tim Gillis (guitars, vocals, keys) are joined by their new drummer Bruce Caporal. The trio rocks in a very familiar way, more U.K. than the U.S. A band like The Who comes to mind from the time when they were able to blend pop and rock in a perfect way. Mixed a little into the background is the warm sound of a Hammond organ, but mostly the guitars, bass and drums are rocking no little. The Chelsea Curve adds some delicious pop elements in the background vocals and packs Ride with some great rock riffs as well. Do things come much better than this? I doubt it. Brilliant single.

Home To Us. Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr

It's 2026 and 50% of The Beatles release a single together. In the year Paul turns 84 and Ringo 86, the two present a song that is simply great fun. You won't hear me saying this is their best work, but it is good. In the lyrics they look back at their youth, when where you lived was simply called home, no matter how you might look at the house or you think of the circumstances today. The song has a strong pop vibe with some Status Quo light overtones. The two alternate on vocals, with Ringo singing in a slightly different voice than normal, fitting Home To Us perfectly. Just close your eyes for two seconds and imagine that all four were still alive and working together. That  would have made a very decent single, ranking there with George's 'Handle Me With Care' by The Travelling Wilburys for example. In fact, I haven't heard a better song by Paul than Home To Us since I don't know when. There's a new album in the stars, ‘The Boys O f Dungeon Lane’ and its release date is 29 May.

In The Stars. The Rolling Stones

Yes, I'm a fan since like forever. No not from the beginning. I'm not that old. But let's face it, In The Stars is a tossaway kind of Stones song. Sure, it's nice and the "ooooooo" part does give it a little extra. Yet, I have 'Undercover Of The Night', 'She Was Hot', 'One Hit To The Body' and 'Rock And A Hard Place', to name a few of the average Stones singles already in my collection. In The Stars does not add a lot more. On the positive side. There is a new Stones single and yes, it sounds energetic. Andrew Watt does get the best out of the Jagger-Richard material of the 2020s and Jagger is a 82 year old force of nature. The man must be so fit that not even his voice wears down. The hard life seems to be catching up with Keith Richards. To give the song some credit, the way the song plays out, with the piano coming in, I may take a shine to it any way. The details are nicer than I thought at first. Only two more months and we'll know more about 'Foreign Tongues', including, once again, Paul McCartney.

Arrogant Boy. Deep Purple 

Established in 1968, also Deep Purple is releasing a new album in 2026, 'Splat!' and listening to Arrogant Boy, the band is in top form. The song goes off in classic hard rock, metal, symphonic rock directions as if its the most normal thing in the world. The three from the Mach II line up and most famous one, Gillan, Glover, Paice and keyboard player Don Airey around for the whole of this century, are joined by new guitarist Simon McBride. Together the rock like it is 1970 something. The guitar playing in the verses wasn't invented then though. Think Metallica or something like it. Next, Marillion comes in and a little Bowie in the singing in the "Billy" interlude part. There's so much energy here that it is inconceivable that I'm listening to older senior citizens of around 80. Arrogant Boy is pure power and more importantly, a great song.

Only Free When Sleeping. Big Special

With two records in two years and one stand alone single, the announcement of a new EP by Big Special shows that the band is in a hurry to show more of itself. 'O'Joy' will be out on 5 June. It is said to contain the songs that did not fit on both albums. Those following the band will not be surprised by Only Free When Sleeping. Vocalist Joe Hicklin does his mix of rapping/talking singing in his Midlands accent, while drummer Callum Moloney points the direction of the song through his relentless rhythm. Who does all else that we hear, I don't know. Only Free When Your Sleeping is a strong song, like the best songs of the duo are. There's always urgency that is brought across and not only because of the vocal delivery. The whole song wants its listeners to move and move some more. Yes, it's undeniable, I like Big Special, even if it is a bit outside of my usual musical habitat.

Mess. Tape Toy

Tape Toy debuted on this blog with a single of its EP 'Launch The Rocket' in January 2025. Today the band is back with the up tempo, almost creating a hunted down kind of tempo of Mess. Don't expect originality, as I've heard a song like this so many times before. What Mess does present is a truckload of positive energy, fun and little surprises all throughout the song. The song announces an as yet unnamed album to be released in September. Based on what I'm hearing here, it should be great fun. The mix of a modern sounding lo-fi song with all the modernity electronics and samples can add, presents a song that is simply filled with inventions, additions, weirdness, to return to the kind of art rock bands like The Mo and The Kewi University of Swing were already making around 1980. Then add that tempo and you have Mess. Tape Toy, a band to be on the lookout for.

Just Love. Reluctant Bob & The Lonely Lovers

Just Love is the kind of pure pop that came into fashion a long time ago and somewhere in the 1970s went out again, after bubblegum bands like The Rubettes and Showaddywaddy, who rehashed the feel from the decade before, went out of fashion. I never hear these two examples anymore. The originals from the 1960s still seem to come by and may forever come by when new generations take a look a their grandparents' records collection (or Tik Tok or Spotify of course). That makes Just Love pure nostalgia for a time long gone, but no less fun. Just listen to those guitar notes, the sweet harmony vocals, the way the piano adds to the fun. In a way the song reminds me most of The Rutles, Eric Idle's The Beatles parody. Just Love would have fit perfectly on the album, without parodying a The Beatles song in a superb way. Well done, Reluctant Bob & The Lonely Lovers.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght