Sunday, 18 June 2023

2023. Week 24, 10 singles

When you read this, I've added another country to my list and am wandering the streets of the capitol city before travelling on to a conference. The longest day is upon us and it will never have been longer for me where I'm going. I love it here when you're out late and still see some light to the north west, still not really dark. What will it be like there? In other words summer. Enjoy it while it last but be sure to check out these great new songs.

Puppet Show. Beck Black

In the fall Beck Black debuted on this blog with her single "Gotta Get Back To My Baby'. Today she returns with a nice pop rocking song. The music as it were walks through the history of the at least 40 years of pop music. Beck Black plays the strings as if Depeche Mode and Howard Jones still need a push in the back, yet with an intenseness that comes with time. The pop element of the song has an 80s touch to it as well. Tears For Fears comes to mind here, but from there things become modern. The huge rhythm of the song is certainly 21st century. Drummer Adam Alt plays an important role on Puppet Show. The guitar slides in and out with long held notes and a huge sound in the oh-oh part of the chorus. The keyboard riff is not more than a few notes but nestle in the brain immediately. After 'Gotta Get Back To My Baby' Beck Black delivers another strong single. A singer to watch.

Who Do You Wanna Be. Dream Wife

Dream Wife can be found on this blog for quite some time. It's new album 'Social Lubrication' seems to be out already. It passed me by. I must have seen somewhere that there's a new single, as it is on this enormous list that keeps growing and growing. With Who Do You Wanna Be the U.K. band adds another nice punky rocker to its repertoire. The kind of song that simultaneously goes against the grain and pleases. It is not an immediately pleasing song, as nothing is smooth as in a traditional pop song. At the same time it has all the elements these smooth songs have, played in a different way with a combination of notes that move towards the less pleasant. Singer Rakel Mjöll does the same, singing in a punk style and purring like a cat on your lap, but digging in the nails softly but surely. It all falls totally to my good side. Who Do You Wanna Be rocks in a great way.

Fool For A Pretty Face 2023 remix. Genya Ravan

Fully paying respect where it is due but listening to Genya Ravan, it is like hearing my (long-diseased) grandmother punkrocking out. And not just rocking. The rhythm is like it is culled from an early Iggy record. add to that an Aretha backing vocals, all sung by Genya Ravan. Fool For A Pretty Face is the most convincing mix of punk with soul that I've ever heard. The mix of the song is at times as dark as 'Raw Power's'. The song sounds faintly familiar. On You Tube I ran into a mid 80s version of the song by Steve Marriot, ex-Small Faces and Humble Pie. A good one, but Genya is winning big time. I can't stop being amazed how successfully she manages to blend all these different influences into a successful mix. Fool For A Pretty face rocks big time yet is so extremely soulful and swinging. The funny thing is, I think this song could have been a 60s ska song. It has that feel as well. Was it? I just don't know. For now I have a version to really dig. Keep up the good work Ms. Ravan.

I Thought I Understood. The Underground Youth

Some songs start out sounding so fresh. I was all ears from the very first seconds to I Thought I Understood. Despite the fact that the singer starts singing with a doom and gloom kind of 80s voice, this is a fun song to listen to. The clear solo notes in combination with the rhythm guitar, bass and drums provide a fine bed for the noisy guitar meandering throughout the song and that dark voice. Founded in 2009 by Mancunian Craig Dyer, The Underground Youth now lives in Berlin. Its upcoming album, 'Nostalgia's Glass' will be its eleventh. All previous ten have passed me by. Not the first single of the new one. Reading up, it's clear that The Underground Youth is not so young any more but certainly has been underground as far as I was concerned. Fans of 80s doom will certainly find their way into this song.

The Narcissist. Blur

Who won in the mid 90s, Oasis or Blur? For me there was no contest: Oasis with a one second knock out. In 2023 there is no Oasis for a long time and off an on there is Blur. The band is back with a new single and an album soon to follow. At first encounter I had a very strong been-there-done-that feeling and not just in a Blur sense but also in connection to other artists. The build up of the song is, despite sounding familiar, strong. There is a little more going on all through the song, making it stronger and more impressive all the time. Not even by brilliant changes but by sheer power and might. Add another and another instrument or pound it harder, like the drums. The result is that I'm listening to The Narcissist with renewed interest the whole of the time.

Old Summers. Melle

With Old Summers Melle is slowly becoming an old hand on this blog. Three singles in a row have made it to the singles section this year. Old Summers can be qualified under Adult Oriented Rock, like e.g. Fleetwood Mac  or Don Henley were producing in the 1980s, when the record industry still could not perceive that rock was really here to stay. Even 40 years later. So the sound of this single sounds familiar to an older hand like me and at the same time the song holds more modern pop elements that a band like Son Mieux is tapping into as well. In the lyrics Melle looks back on holidays in France of his youth, shown in the video as well. When things were simpler and taken as they came. Melle caught this feeling really well, in very nice and melodic song. More and more I'm convinced Melle is an artist to watch.

Closer To Me. Stella

There's a lot to like, listening to Closer To Me, the second single of Amsterdam band Stella, but the description soft grunge? I don't mind going with it, but to me this is a great pop rock single I'm listening to. To me Stella is a new name but not so for one of the band's members. Guitarist Jasmine van der Waals featured on this blog for the first time because I was present at her graduation party from the Amsterdam conservatory where she performed twice in fact. I was there because Roeland Scherff, formally Elenne May's guitarist, graduated also. Stella is musically totally different from Jasmine's other band, Loupe. The dreampop is not present here. Stella taps into some Britpop and some American pop with enough of a rock element to make it a great combination. The similarity is in the inventive guitar parts that Van der Waals excels in. The second great feature is the singing, especially when there is a full choir going at it. There's an EP under way and I'm curious alright.

The Long Train. Lusitanian Ghosts

Making a band photo could be a challenge for Lusitanian Ghost. With band members from and/or living in Canada, Sweden and Portugal, it is a costly affair. Making music across continents is no longer thanks to email and online and offline software. The song starts with the line "thinking about life" followed by a lines of associations that I did not see coming nor could have thought up. Very free mind expansion of, at least seemingly, unconnected topics. The music reminds me of The Waterboys from a long time ago. The use of more exotic string instruments from different countries gives The Long Train a folky feel like Mike Scott's band around 1990. (I have no idea what he sounds like today.) The rock element in the chorus, "let it all out", is exactly what happens. In the verse the band is holding back, creating a nice difference of feel within the song. Come to think of it, in the verse it's more World Party, but then did Karl Wallinger not start in The Waterboys?

The Flowers Of Joy. The Jean Richie Experience. Kate MacLeod

The fourth single released by Kate MacLeod as part of her Jean Richie project and the third to make it to this blog. The Flowers Of Joy is a song that I associate with music I know from the British folk era around 1970. At the same time it sounds like it could have been written at the time of Henry XIII or something like it. The song sounds very traditional, as if against all odds a recording from before the technique to capture sound existed surfaced. Whether Kate MacLeod does right to Jean Richie's music, I have no way of telling, I haven't checked it out, yet. If anything, I can share that The Flowers Of Joy sounds like it was treated in a totally revered way. It is an extremely serious song in this rendition, while sparkling deeply within the restraints of that seriousness. This is beauty caught in digits.

Can't Help Falling In Love. Naomi SV feat. Jane Willow

Jane Willow can be found on this blog many, many times by now but never being accompanied by a harp. Actually, it is the other way around. Naomi SV asked Jane to sing on her rendition of the famous song Can't Help Falling In Love. The duo does the song totally right. There are no extras to be found in any way. The description voice and harp is what you get. Jane's voice fits the song, where Naomi plays very economically. There are no frills or fancy runs. She plays the chords or notes and even stops playing at all, giving full attention to Jane Willow's voice. The song, originally recorded by Elvis Presley in 1961 for his movie 'Blue Hawaii', has received many covers. Another worthy one has been added to a long list. (And no it was not written by Burt Bacharach, to my surprise.) It all leaves me with one question: Naomi, what is it you are doing on the top of harp during the song? I would guess changing the pitch of the string. Is that correct?

Wout de Natris

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