zondag 16 april 2023

2023 Week 15, 10 singles

The weeks fly by. The sun is out, pollen fly on the breeze making eyes water and noses run. The music business goes on no matter what. This week we have some nice, brooding, dark songs, some unrelentless loudness and end with the smallest of them all, a traditional folk song. Rock on where you can and enjoy the silent, intricate moments!

My Way Of Thinking. Beebe Gallini

Beebe Gallini returns to the blog with a raucous rock and roll track in the best 'You Really Got Me' and 'All Day And All Of The Night' tradition. The spirit of 60s garage rock and the original punk scene is very much alive in 2023. Playing for the fun of it and making it sound as good as you can. This attitude and approach to the song oozes out of my speakers. The fun extends to the video as well, where the band members keep swapping roles with obvious fun. My Way Of Thinking is a song written by Donna Weiss and recorded by a band called Randy and The Radiants in 1965. Is it on my 'Nuggets' box? If not, that would seem a serious omission. Beebe Gallini takes the bull by the horns and literally drags the track from the obscurity where it was hiding. Anyone looking for three chords and the truth, can stop looking. It's staring you straight in the face here.

Your Mind Is Not Your Friend (feat. Phoebe Bridgers). The National

Yes, I skipped 'Eucalyptus' that stood in line for today. There's a more recent single and it's beautiful. Your Mind Is Not Your Friend is a dark, brooding song full of compassion. Matt Berninger sings in his slow way, accompanied by one of the indie darling singers of the day, who sings harmonies, not a duet. She adds another layer to a song that is already so fully layered. Music is everywhere I am able to pay attention to at the same time. Listening to this song is musical multitasking! So much is going on that it is impossible to keep up with all the small and bigger parts of the arrangement. It makes Your Mind Is Not Your Friend a rich listening experience. Very much like Berninger's solo record, which may prove to become my way into The National. Two of the recent singles all go down well. 'First Two Pages Of Frankenstein' is slated for 28 April. It is one to watch out for.

Honey I Do. Josh Ritter

It appears Josh Ritter is a bit tired of his former self. Too bad, in my case, as I think he never made a better song then 'Man Burning At Both Ends', from 200-what, 4? (Sorry, Mr. Ritter.) Soon he is to release a new album and single Honey I Do precedes it. It is a song that does not sparkle in any way, like The National's dark and brooding song does. Honey I Do's atmosphere is not in line with its title. It is downcast and muddied over. And yet, the song obviously has something going for it. Because it is an almost happy song, as close as Ritter wants to get to a happy song. Because of the fine details that he worked into the arrangement. Also here the comparison to 'Your Mind Is Not Your Friend' works. Not that rich but certainly rich. As if little flowers are allowed to come out of the ground before being cut off immediately to be placed into an unseen vase. You can only smell the flowers as it were. The song may be be called Honey I Do, the message is not so nice: "No one's ever going to love you, again". Whoever the honey is, he/she will have to deal with it.

Froide Et Méchante. Caprice

Me and French? It never really got off the ground. Even when I tried hard, somehow it just did not stick. Mostly words remain from my efforts. Not enough to understand lyrics, let alone speak it beyond ordering something and hoping not to get an answer. Recently in my inbox a single from France reached me and I like it. Froide Et Méchante (cold and mean) is a modern pop song and chanson in one. Caprice is a new name for me but she has released several singles in the past few years. Froide Et Méchante has a mysteriousness in it, created by the electronics accompanying Caprice. The mood explodes in a rap part where she appears to let it all come out. The modern pop feel works against the more traditional way Claire Gibeaud sings. Fans of Sophie Hunger, Belgian singer Lizzy and Dutch Pitou should gives this singer/band? a chance.

Divinity. High Priest

Sometimes just trying something out works like a storm. As that is what Divinity is. High Priest decided to try out one more song and came up with a high roller and rocker of a song, based on an iPhone recording by guitarist Josh Regan. Divinity starts with a warped guitar riff before the band goes off full force. In the best standard set by Deep Purple and all that followed after, riffs and fast, loud chord changes jump up and down in my room. I am not a metal fan but when it comes in this mix with classic hard rock, I come a long way and Divinity is definitely up my alley. Two singles in a row on WoNoBlog for Chicago band Hip Priest. 'Invocation' is scheduled for late June.

Cocaine Footprints. These Beasts

Yes, things can get even louder on this blog. The blood from the bass players throat is on the inside of my desktop's screen. Grunted screams all over the place. Usually, I'm turned off immediately. This grunting only takes place in the second part of the near 8 minutes long video single. Dark is a word that passed by several times today already and it befits Cocaine Footprints. These Beasts, also from Chicago, making the Windy City feature prominently on this blog today, is a trio in the classic rock trio formation.  The drummer is pounding away in a truly impressive manner. A huge bass drum that comes through the whole of the way in a super prominent way, dry skins and cymbals are all over the song. The guitar is hugely in overdrive, playing mostly power chords. It is the bass that surprises me. Looking at the video the instrument in played in such a slow way, while the sound is huge as well. I doubt whether I will be able to undergo a whole album, 'Cares, Wills, Wants' out on 21 April, this single is sure impressive.

Inside Outside. This Is The Kit

No, it does not get any louder still. This Is The Kit (in Dutch a nickname for the police when I was young) Inside Outside is a nice indie folkish rock song. Based on a somewhat unusual rhythm, the song slowly but surely plays itself out. This Is The Kit is Kate Stables' brainchild. Together with her band mates Rozi Plain (bass/voice), Neil Smith (guitar) and Jamie Whitby-Coles (drums) she presents new work on route to album 'Careful of Your Keepers', planned on 9 June. Inside Outside has a dark layer over it. It is in the way Kate Stables sings, that some light and optimism is provided by the song. The vocals become more layered the longer the singles last, just like more and more guitar parts are added. Whitby-Coles keeps that rhythm going giving Inside Outside a playful appearance as well. There are several links to music coming out of Australia and New Zealand in recent years, where this song easily stands its ground. I'm not certain, but I suppose the Rozi Plain that was on this blog recently with her latest album, is the same woman. A nice introduction this song is to This Is The Kit.

Insatiable. Jody and The Jerms

A second single by Jody and The Jerms on WoNoBlog. With a 'Last Train To Clarkville' kind of riff and a Kirsty MacColl flavoured tune Insatiable is irresistible. Singer Jody Jeger sings with this bittersweet voice that simply makes listening to her compulsory. The Jerms are behind her but the song is mixed in such a way that it is all about Jody. She carries the song and leads the band here. What does happen behind her is an attempt at pop perfection though. Listen closely and you will hear that everything falls into its right place. That nice riff, the little organ that comes forward a little a few times, the drum fills and bass runs. It all spells perfect pop. Insatiable is a beautiful song. No more words are needed here.

Tiger. Pip Blom

There must have been something in the water in the Blom - Smit home during the pandemic as both have come up with so different music afterwards. First Willem Smit with his tremendously good Personal Trainer album, 'Big Love Blanket' and now Pip Blom with the first new single Tiger. This is a daring move, because when even a New Zealand record store cum record label announces your new album as a must order, that tells you something. Tiger is a pop-short single with loads of electronics, far removed from the alternative pop/rock Pip Blom played. The guitar is still there in the intro but drops away for electronic beats and synths. I do not really know yet make what to make of the new course. Context will definitely be provided soon but I am willing to give the band the benefit of the doubt for now. The band is evolving and as such that is a good thing.

Come Fare Away With Me, The Jean Ritchie Experience. Kate MacLeod

The third single from Kate MacLeod's project of exploring the songs of Jean Ritchie is here. The second on this blog. Kate MacLeod plays all the instruments you hear, all to do with strings in one form or another. On vocals she is accompanied by Morgan Morrison, Paul Hammerton and Stephanie Thompson. Together they create an atmosphere of what I have learned to call British folk. As all involved, including Jean Ritchie, are from the U.S. this seems a bit awkward to write down. It shows how far music transcends borders and imagination. Influences come from many sources, as the title to the song already indicates. Who knows what Jean Ritchie's grandparents were singing to her in her youth, inspiring her to make her own music? Come Fare Away With Me is song of intricate and inner beauty that radiates through Kate MacLeod's version. The kind that touches. The contrast with some songs above here could not be bigger, yet its effect drives home to me in a clear and pleasant way.

Wout de Natris

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