Sunday, 21 June 2026

2026, week 25. 5 singles (5)

On the longest day of 2026, again only five singles, again due to the same reason. Add extremely warm and humid conditions, making it impossible to collect my thoughts after a long day. There are more than enough singles to listen to and that seems to work better than whole albums at the moment. Because most singles come from (to be) released albums, they get the attention anyway. So, it's your turn to explore new music. Enjoy!

Nobody’s Coming To Save You. Gurriers

Somewhere last year My Love came home after seeing old friends from London after many years and asked me "do you know the band Gurriers"? Two days later she again said a friend or colleague had gone and seen the band, just like the Londoners had. I could answer "yes, I reviewed its album not that long ago". That album was 'Come And See' (2024). With Nobody’s Coming To Save You the Dublin based band has started its campaign to release its second album with the same title (25-9). Post punk is all over the single. With deep and dark sounding guitars Gurriers sets a mood for the song that is played out excellently. It plays with dynamics but don't expect too much light in this single. If the rest of the album is as good as this, Gurriers will be in direct competition with the bands that came before it, Shame, Fontaines DC, etc. and it might just be a must watch in the fall.

Building Fences. Trixie Whitley

With Building Fences Trixie Whitley, the Belgian - U.S. singer-songwriter, returns to the blog after seven years. Building Fences is an intriguing song. Somehow Whitley manages to combine the mood of David Bowie's 'Blackstar' album with the voices of modern pop singers. An acoustic guitar starts the song played in a bossa nova style but not much later is joined by saxophones that become the lead instruments together with Trixie Whitley's voice. With a higher register harmony voice, she moves into Mariah Carey territory, without the vocal acrobatics. Because she stays away from this type of singing the contrast between the darker horns and her voice becomes ever bigger. Building Fences as a whole is far lighter than anything on Bowie's swan song album. That she manages to capture it anyway, is all the more impressive. There will be more coming up later on this year.

Cheap Thrill. Yea-Ming and The Rumors

Another new name on this blog today, although with Cheap Thrill Yea-Ming and The Rumors announced its fourth album (12-6). The music is a form of shoegazing without the gravelly guitars. Yea-Ming sings with a soft, serrated voice, almost like the French sigh girls from the mid-1960s. The negative of the sigh girls was of course Nico in The Velvet Underground. Cheap Thrill does have a 'Sunday Morning' vibe also. A lead guitar accompanies her with a little reverb and delay on its tone, played in a slow version of Johnny Marr's style of playing in The Smiths. The outcome is an extremely dreamy song. From the very first second it had caught my attention and Cheap Thrill did not let go until the very end. The Bay Area band strikes the exact right tone and notes to get away with new music that could have been made in 1966 also.

A Song Called Sha La La. The Amplifier Heads

Speaking of the 1960s. Just listen to the intro of A Song Called Sha La La and tell me you don't think of 'I Can't Control Myself', one of The Troggs' big hits, immediately. Of course you do and if you are not familiar with the song, go check it and The Troggs out. The Amplifier Heads recreate a 1960s vibe quite convincingly. Of course, you can wonder is the world in need of a new song in a style that emulates the at thee time wild rockers The Troggs? Strictly speaking the answer is no, but why pass up on the obvious fun the Amplifier Heads has in making songs like A Song Called Sha La La? I can't see why I should. There's even a Clarence Clemons style saxophone solo in there. Sal Boglio and fellow musicians strike all the right chords here.

(You Won’t) See Me. Speedfossil

With (You Won't) See Me some more nostalgic feelings for music from long ago enters the blog this week. Speedfossil, recently presented a compilation album of the first ten years of its career called 'Time Flies: 10 Years of Speedfossil'. Searching for this song on You Tube, I found that it is eleven years old. In 2015 nobody had ever told me about the band, but thanks to people in Boston pushing the local bands around the globe, I have been able to catch up, to become a fan of many Boston bands, besides the world famous Dropkick Murphies. (You Won’t) See Me brings bands to mind that for me start with The Kinks right after they left behind the powerchords of its first two hitsingle and started releasing songs like 'See My Friend'. Speedfossil takes that mood and adds a little more power. The outcome is a powerpop ballad with a nice melancholy edge that is the signature of an artist like Ray Davies.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght 


Saturday, 20 June 2026

Een onverwacht klassiek huisconcert

Ik heb totaal geen verstand van klassieke muziek. Natuurlijk, door de jaren heen komen er bij allerlei gelegenheden klassieke muziek voorbij. Enkele stukken zelfs zo vaak dat ik het herken en ook de componist kan noemen. Een ander voorbeeld is popbands die klassieke muziek ombouwen tot rock. Het eerste voorbeeld uit mijn leven dat ik kan noemen, is Ekseption, een Nederlandse rock band die rond 1970 een aantal hitsingles scoorde met bewerkingen van klassieke stukken. Hun eerste hit 'The 5th' maakte grote indruk op me en ook de derde single. 'Air', is nog steeds van grote schoonheid. Ik ging voor de power in die songs, de vette drums en de enorm aangezette orgelklanken van Rick van der Linden. Tegenwoordig wordt Ekseption onder symfonische rock geschaard, neem ik aan, maar die term bestond in 1969 nog niet. Later leerde ik dat de orgelpartij in het twee jaar oudere 'A Whiter Shade Of Pale' op een stuk van Bach is gebaseerd. Ik had toen geen idee.

Waarom deze inleiding? Omdat Mijn Lief en ik vandaag op een verjaardagsfeest van een vriendin waren. Haar man gaf haar als cadeau een klassiek huisconcert cadeau. Ik heb de achternaam van de dame in kwestie niet opgevangen, Diane of Diana is haar voornaam. Zij speelde een stuk van Bach en een late variatie van Haydn. De triolen vlogen over de toetsen van de vleugel die in huis staat en allerlei andere stukjes die mij als van een ongelofelijke complexiteit voor kwamen. Het is gewoon mooi om daar zo dicht bij te staan. Bij een huisconcert maakt het bijna niet uit wie er speelt of wat, zo dichtbij de artiest kunnen staan, is altijd indrukwekkend.

Deze vrouw moet er duizenden uren oefenen op hebben zetten, als het niet meer is. En toch zie en hoor je het verschil tussen heel competent en goed zijn en virtuoos. Kleine haperingen, een foute aanslag of half aangeraakte toets. Tegelijkertijd komt het stuk volledig tot leven en weet zij de schoonheid die in de noten voor haar neus verscholen liggen naar boven te brengen en de mensen die gezellig stonden te kletsen geheel stil te krijgen (op een paar cultuurbarbaren achter in de tuin, die niet de moeite namen om te komen luisteren. Lokale politiek gaat altijd voor heb ik door de jaren heen geleerd.) Het zet mij niet aan om naar klassiek te gaan luisteren. Meestal raak ik verveeld na enige tijd.

 Zo had ik een totaal onverwachte, maar mooie muzikale ervaring en wat een mooi verjaardagscadeau, lijkt me. De jarige zat te glunderen op haar stoel voor de vleugel.

 Wout de Natris - van der Borght 

Friday, 19 June 2026

These Frightening Machines. Katherine Priddy

De Britse muzikante Katherine Priddy maakte met The Eternal Rocks Beneath en The Pendulum Swing al twee sensationeel goede albums, maar het deze week verschenen These Frightening Machines is nog wat mooier en indrukwekkender.

Katherine Priddy is in een paar jaar tijd van een veelbelovende folkie uitgegroeid tot een van de meest aansprekende Britse singer-songwriters van het moment. Ze maakt nog altijd makkelijk indruk met haar wonderschone en veelzijdige stem, maar ook in muzikaal opzicht is het deze week verschenen These Frightening Machines een imponerend album. Katherine Priddy laat op haar derde album ook nog eens horen dat ze is gegroeid als songwriter en het is een songwriter die zich niet meer laat beperken door de kaders van de Britse folk. These Frightening Machines is absoluut een prachtig Brits folkalbum, maar het is door de grote variëteit aan stijlen ook veel meer dan dat.

Aan het begin van 2021 werd Katherine Priddy door een aantal aansprekende Britse muziektijdschriften geschaard onder de grote beloften van de Britse folk. We zijn inmiddels vijf jaar verder en ik kan alleen maar concluderen dat de Britse muzikante de belofte inmiddels meer dan waar heeft gemaakt. 

Dat deed ze eigenlijk direct al in de zomer van 2021 met haar debuutalbum The Eternal Rocks Beneath, dat dankzij de prachtige stem van Katherine Priddy, maar ook door de muziek op het album uitgroeide tot een van de mooiste albums van dat jaar. The Eternal Rocks Beneath ademde Britse folk, maar Katherine Priddy zocht ook op fraaie wijze de grenzen van het genre op. 

Dat deed ze op nog wat indrukwekkendere wijze op het aan het begin van 2024 verschenen The Pendulum Swing, dat was voorzien van een voller en veelzijdiger geluid. Op haar tweede album maakte de muzikante uit Birmingham nog wat meer indruk met haar prachtige stem en was ze de drie jaar eerder voorspelde belofte inmiddels ver voorbij. 

Katherine Priddy werkte op haar eerste twee albums samen met producer Simon Weever, die twee bijzonder mooi klinkende albums afleverde. Voor haar deze week verschenen derde album heeft Katherine Priddy gekozen voor een producer van naam en faam. These Frightening Machines is immers geproduceerd door de vooral van PJ Harvey bekende Rob Ellis, die het geluid van Katherine Priddy nog wat verder optilt. 

Op These Frightening Machines zet de Britse muzikante de lijn van The Pendulum Swing door. Invloeden uit de Britse folk spelen nog altijd een belangrijke rol op haar derde album, maar nog meer dan op haar vorige albums zoekt Katherine Priddy de grenzen van het genre op en begeeft ze zich ook met grote regelmaat buiten de grenzen van de Britse folk. 

These Frightening Machines werd gemaakt met een flink aantal muzikanten, onder wie multi-instrumentalist Ben Cristophers, en klinkt nog wat mooier en veelzijdiger dan de vorige twee albums. In de openingstrack Matches hoor je een flirt met de spookachtige Keltische folk van een band als Lankum, maar de titeltrack die volgt is juist weer ontspannen en oorstrelend mooi. 

Katherine Priddy probeerde zich op haar debuutalbum al te ontworstelen aan het strakke keurslijf van de Britse folk, maar heeft zichzelf hier inmiddels echt volledig van bevrijd, waardoor folk, pop, Amerikaanse rootsmuziek en tijdloze singer-songwriter muziek op fraaie wijze samen komen op het album. 

Het was de stem van Katherine Priddy die uiteindelijk de meeste indruk maakte op haar eerste twee albums en die stem is alleen maar mooier en rijker geworden. Hier en daar hoor je nog een typische Britse folkie, met echo’s van grote folkzangeressen uit het verleden, maar de stem van de Britse muzikante kan op These Frightening Machines meerdere kanten op en klinkt nog rijker en warmer dan op haar vorige albums. Katherine Priddy is de dertig inmiddels gepasseerd en dat zorgt ook nog eens voor net wat meer doorleving in haar stem. 

Na twee prachtige albums lag de lat al heel hoog voor Katherine Priddy, maar met These Frightening Machines weet ze me met een serie prachtige en fantasierijke songs toch weer te verrassen en behoort ze niet alleen tot het beste dat de Britse folk momenteel te bieden heeft, maar ook tot het beste dat de Britse popmuziek momenteel voor ons in petto heeft. Dit gaat een van de mooiste albums van 2026 worden, let maar op.

Erwin Zijleman

 

Je kunt These Frightening Machines hier luisteren en bestellen:

https://katherinepriddy.bandcamp.com/album/these-frightening-machines 

Wednesday, 17 June 2026

2026, week 25. 5 singles

Yes, you've read right, only five singles this time and no album on a Thursday. Too much work, too much football, too much playing with my own band Sweetwood, too much summer days and what not? There are only 24 hours in a day. Still, here is a nice subset of songs that were presented to me in the past weeks. Old and new, so enjoy!

Brothers. Garlands 

It has been quiet around Garlands for a while. I'm glad to announce the band from Glasgow is back with a psychedelic pop rock song called Brothers. The trio around singer-guitarist Gordon Harrow excels in songs that always have a foot firmly in the past, while certainly keeping an eye on what is going on today in the more alternative forms of pop music, only to plant its second foot right there. Brothers is no exception. The song starts with just Harrow and his guitar doing his take on an earlier George Harrison in The Beatles kind of song, while the rest of The Beatles were out doing something else. When the band joins in, the song gets far more solid (of course) but is also fleshed out. The vocals are doubled, harmonies come in, making the song open up. With Brothers Garlands has done it again.

La femme qui s’était faite toute seule. Prisoner

"The woman who made herself" is the title translated into English. As a Dutchman, "God created the world, the Dutch created The Netherlands", I can relate to the title. More importantly, the French band from Bordeaux is playing a great form of garage rock, including punky guitar and a Farfisa kind of organ that gives the song its 60s vibe. Of course not a band from the 1960s played its chords with a sound like this, but the origins are totally obvious. Singer Susanne Pemmerl brings French sigh girls to mind but just as easily Debbie Harry and a host of singers from U.S. female fronted punk bands. The addition of a deep and dark saxophone gives the song an extra layer to chew on while rocking out. Great single. On 7 august there's an album as well, the self-titled 'Prisoner'. Based on La femme qui s’était faite toute seule, it may well be great fun.

Sometimes The Sea. Julia Greenberg

With Julia Greenberg this week's post already has its second new name to the blog. The indie-folk singer from New York presents an introspective song like generations before her have done both as recording artists and from the days before songs could be recorded. Despite this enormous legacy, Julia Goldberg manages to capture my attention with ease. Both with her voice, that has a typical folk edge to it but also with the music. At heart you will hear Ms. Goldberg and her acoustic guitar like she would play it at home or at a campfire. It is enough to make the song interesting already. When all is said and done, Sometimes The Sea is as good as its basis is. What is added, is an accordion (Will Holshouser), playing as an accompanying instrument and some lead notes in between. The bass strings on the acoustic guitar are recorded so well, that it is hard to tell whether there is a bass guitar or not. There is absolutely no need for anything more. Recently, an EP was released called 'Born Sentimental'.

Wasn't It Just Yesterday. Girl With A Hawk

With Wasn't It Just Yesterday Boston band Girl With A Hawk returns to this blog with a song that immediately landed well with me. From the very first second somehow it is clear that the song is going to be just fine. It starts with an intro of a lead guitar, the band is there and then an organ enters putting the cherry on the already delicious cake. Linda S. Viens once again leads the band through a song of significance. With influences from both sides of the ocean shining through, Girl With A Hawk creates a hybrid song that should work for both fans of U.S. rock and U.K. Britpop and older (Bowie!). "I've got the looks and I've got the tunes", she sings and then she looks in the mirror and realises that "time is running out" and there's even a political statement in there, as she moves from the personal to the more general before she proclaims her love of the rock and roll life. She sounds like she does for the whole of the way. It shows in every single second of Wasn't It Just Yesterday. Album 'Renegades' is there on the 19th!

Hard Luck. Hoaxxers

With Hoaxxers we have another new name on the blog but not a new kind of music. The upbeat power/punkpop of the band will resonate with fans of a host of bands playing this genre of music since the 1990s, and mostly from the U.S. or influenced by such bands. Hoaxxers is a band from Austin, Texas and holds members of the band Joe Jitsu in it. Hard Luck is the title track of a six song EP with the same name that was released on 29 May. The song is a punkrock song that at the same time strives to be a perfect pop song. Loud and punky, but with harmonies that work while at the same time sounding very familiar. Dynamics are used successfully, in other words a textbook song and still it works. Not the best I've ever heard but certainly plain good. No more words are necessary, except rock on!

Wout de Natris - van der Borght

 

Tuesday, 16 June 2026

Don't Give Up. The Maureens

Listening to my new The Maureens LP for the first time, I had the impression it was business as usual for me and The Maureens. Great pop songs that go down really well, but no different from what I had heard before. And then things changed with each spin I took Don't Give Up on. The title of the album became true in more than one sense.

The Maureens can be found on this blog for more than ten years. It all started with a live show at Q-Bus in Leiden in 2015, where I bought the band's then two year old debut album. This was followed by the single 'Heartbreak' announcing the album 'Bang The Drum' (2015) and me reviewing 'The Maureens'. All through past ten years, the band, with several changes to the line up, went out in search of the perfect pop song and found it multiple times.

Come 2026 and the band released its fifth album and yes, a lot of it sounds familiar, of course once again of great beauty. Don't Give Up though kicks off as if the band has to catch the last bus of the evening. Electric guitars lead the way, bass and especially the drums are prominently present. The raucous lead guitar parts are almost un-The Maureens like and regularly return throughout the album. Bands like The Posies and Teenage Fanclub from 25-30 years ago come by in my mind. Bands blending pop and 90s rock to perfection with Big Star always in the back of its mind. 'Oceans Apart' brings the Rickenbacker back into the band's sound as well. This album is, partly, a wilder sounding album and that is the development I missed in my first listening session. Yes, the most obvious in the sound of Don't Give Up.

The same happens on the up tempo pop-rock song 'Seventeen'. Here Johan has to be added as an influence on the sound. Nothing new, as in 2015 I wrote "Johan is dead, long live The Maureens". Except that in 2026 Johan has been revived for some years already, the quote still stands. The Maureens are the contenders for the crown, as a song like 'Seventeen' is so good. Despite the tempo it is pop perfection.

After the two opening songs, the tempo and intensity go down and are replaced by a different kind of intensity. The harmony vocals become more accented and enter the spotlights. 'Talking In My Sleep' is the kind of song that comes into full bloom when given half the chance. The "aah-aahs" at the end will sound familiar to The Maureens fans, but they still are very effective over the outro. The Maureens are capable of producing spine-tingling moments with very familiar components, yet reaching a maximum effect.

With 'Crying For The Moon' the tempo goes down even further. It starts with just an acoustic guitar, followed by a violin and a double tracked vocal. Hendrik-Jan de Wolff is totally in his balladry element here. The song also provides the album with its title. 'Crying For The Moon' comes closest here to another Dutch band that is one of my favourites, Mountaineer. Both have played twice in my living room. It may well soon become three times as far as I'm concerned. A regular attendee apped me writing, "I'm listening to the new album here in Umbria on holiday and looking forward to the next show". Living room shows are small in size but provide a band a small but loyal following as the emotional impact of the music is so direct and intense.

Don't Give Up meanders between these four type of songs. From loud to soft, the band excels in them all. The album is still growing on me and I have no doubt that just like the previous ones, it will wind up in my albums of the year list. To return to my opening lines. For a band producing albums at such a high musical level, it becomes possible to take that level for granted. Never fall for your first impression! The Maureens belongs to the best pop-rock bands coming out of The Netherlands.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght

 

You can listen to and order Don't Give Up here:

https://themaureens.bandcamp.com/album/dont-give-up