Sunday, 18 February 2024

2024. Week 7, 10 singles

Nancy & Lee still record and release new songs, folks. Granted, under a different name. Yet such a beautiful song it is. The first song here is not the only one deserving the moniker beautiful you'll find. There's quite a few of them. In fact, the noisy stuff is the exception this week. Week 7's singles overview is one to relax and just listen to what is on offer, so, enjoy!

Aphrodite. Donna Blue

Yes, Donna Blue has done it once again. Aphrodite is a strong song of romance and beauty. I do not have to beat around the bush. Aphrodite is 2024's 'Some Velvet Morning' with Phaedra replaced by the goddess Aphrodite. Danique and Bart are Nancy and Lee more then ever before. Musically the song is totally psychedelic and 1960s. The twang guitar is propelling the song forward and the farfisa organ is totally out there. What is noticeable as well is the lush arrangement of the song. The usually rather straightforward production is certainly left behind here. This brings Donna Blue extremely close to the original if not on par. As far as I'm concerned the duo has a classic on its hands.

Blijf Voor Goed Bij Mij. Winston

Met Blijf Voor Goed Bij Mij geeft Winston, oftewel Simon Alice René, zichzelf helemaal bloot en komt, jaren na het schoolplein van zijn jeugd, uit de kast als Queen-fan. Raar om te bedenken dat het in de jaren 70 heel cool was om Queen fan te zijn. Toch is Blijf Voor Goed Bij Mij een raar geval. Het begint als een nummer dat ik eerder aan Will Tura of Clouseau zou toeschrijven dan aan Winston, of Queen wat dat betreft, maar dat verandert zeker. Van Vlaams naar Engels en later terug. De Bryan May stijl gitaar komt er bij en een enorme gelaagdheid aan samenzang. Het intro heeft dat al weggegeven natuurlijk. Dieper luisteren dan de eerste indruk, maakt meer duidelijk. Langzaam maar zeker komt het beeld naar voren van een grootse song, van een zanger die ver boven zijn league speelt en slaagt, zoals soms een sporter of muzikant op latere leeftijd toch doorbreekt. Welbeschouwd blijft dit een raar nummer, maar zo ontzettend goed om naar te luisteren. De samenzang is zonder meer prachtig. Queen, 'God Only Knows' en 'Because' all in one. Goed gedaan, Winston!

Big Love. Camera Obscura

"It was a big love she said. That's why it took her ten years to get her out off your head", singer Tracyanne Campbell sings at the start of the first song her band Camera Obscura released in over ten years. The song has a country flavour, some pop and some indie overtones. It's a kind of song that makes a person feel good, nearly instantly. It is in the positive way of singing, the great keyboard part, the pedal steel guitar and that little ah ha sequence near the end. Sometimes life itself is caught in a single of three minutes and Big Love is one of those songs. Although the song is about having to say goodbye, for good, it has caught the positive side of a new start and not the sad ending. There is some melancholy in the singing, surely, but what remains for the listener is a feeling of joy. I had never heard of this band before, as far as I'm aware, but this introduction certainly tastes like more. That more is released on 3 May, and is called 'Look to the East, Look to the West'.

Gadfly Groove. James Clarke Five

James Clarke Five is a solo project and surely a pun on 60s hitmakers Dave Clark Five. Musically the two have nothing in common. Gadfly Groove is an outing in the Madchester sound from around 1990. The rhythm is Rani all over. The music is less exciting but surely groovy. James Hughes, who makes up James Clarke Five, is from a generation of U.K. musicians before Madchester. He was in a Liverpool band called The Cherry Boys in the early 80s as keyboardist and singer at the time of bands like Echo and the Bunnymen. This dark doomladen music is not exactly missing on Gadfly Groove but not dominant. The groove reminds me of the Rolling Stones' 'Shattered' and as said the 1990 bands. In his aloof way of singing and that rhythm a little psychedelia slips in. This puts Gadfly Groove in a musical format that is from the past and that is exactly what James Hughes intends. At least, that is my best guest.

Hideous EP. Hideous

"Hideous Hideous Hideous" singer Guillaume Lamont signs underscoring the fact that his band put itself in a list of acts the managed to name a song, album and band name identically. The title song is the kind that is like a peat fire. It may seem to be extinguished but underground it can continue unnoticed, to surface somewhere else. That guitar is there as a bellwether playing its simple riff and rhythm. It lays down a mysterious groove that does not give anything away of what could happen further on. Except for the tempo that is. That under the surface tension explodes right in the face of the curious onlooker. All sorts of mysterious sounds move in and out during the song. This makes Hideous an extremely exciting song, no matter how hideous the person sung about may be. The changes give the alternative rocker a sympho/prog vibe, until we return to that ominous guitar. Hideous, the band, is a four piece of members who, of course, this is Belgium, play in at least two other bands. On this blog you may have encountered Tim Leyman of Ramkot. There are four more songs on this EP. Based on the opening song it must be worthwhile to continue listening.

The French Major. Broken Hearts Are Blue

Formed in Kalamazoo in 1995, disbanded somewhere and regrouped in 2018 as an online band, Broken Hearts Are Blue will release its third record since then soon, making up for lost time fast. The French Major is a dark and sluggish song. Every next beat seems to be made only after a major effort. The result is a song that is interesting to follow. Rocking loud it gives time for pause anyway. Ryan Gage sings just as slow, making up words, even individual syllables, no longer than strictly needed. The result is a massive song. The drums, bass and guitar all are spot on, but above all loud, with a lead guitar that can be placed in the Dinosaur Jr heritage. I do not need an album like this but as single, thank you!

Sweet Light. The Hanging Girls

I have no clue who The Hanging Stars are, nor how they made it to this list but here they are and sound like a million acts somewhere in between country, Americana, light rock and singer-songwriter. In the video we see a pub scene with the band playing to an uninterested but not unpleasant audience. A band that is invited to play on a Sunday afternoon while the visitors do their thing in the pub. In the meantime, almost sneaky, The Hanging Girls (all men) play the stars out of heaven. Sweet Light is a beautiful song, where the softly played instruments all go for pop perfection without being obtrusive and the singing certainly matches the best harmonies The Jayhawks went for on 'Hollywood Town Hall'. In short, this band knows exactly what it is doing, defying the easy-going circumstances of the video. The Hanging Girls will be able to fill venues with people who will listen with ease.

Jimmy. Brume

People from all around the world move to San Francisco and the Bay Area to work. (Where have all the flowers gone? Long time passing alright.) Some meet there and start making music. This is the story of Brume that started in 2014 when guitarist Jamie McCathie met bass player and vocalist Susie McMullan. Soon drummer Jordan Perkins-Lewis joined and the trio went on to record two records. For album number three, 'Marten' out on 3 May, Jackie Perez Gratz on cello and vocals was added to the trio and this changed the sound of the doom goths no little. Jimmy is a fairly slow song that changes between soft, almost power ballad vibes to a huge sound where all are pounding away on their instruments. Beware, in a melodic way, from a melody. McMullan lays down a big vocal over it all, sharing her anguish with the world. In the outro it is Perez Gratz who gets the spotlight on her playing, ending the song in sheer melancholy and perhaps even shock of what came before.

Gypsy Girl. Other Brother Darryl

You have just heard (or read about) The Hanging Girls. Other Brother Darryl from Boston is in that league. The band may have a warm Hammond organ instead of a pedal steel guitar in its line up, the idea and mood is certainly akin. In the fall of last year the band debuted on this blog with the beautiful single 'Drive'. And now there's an album in the making as well, called 'Roll Shine Roll'. Anyone loving songs like 'One Of These Nights' or 'Our House' will find their way to this song and band. There's no hurry of any kind. The band takes its time to make its point musically and vocally. The duo vocals are laid on even thicker in the places where extra points for vocality are found in the song. The same goes for an extra note on the instruments. Just listen to that acoustic slide part! Other Brother Darryl's music has nothing to do with 2024 but everything with the 1970s. We need new bands that continue and create new music at that level. Other Brother Darryl does, so cherish it.

Same Water. The Secret Sisters

I had all but forgotten The Secret Sisters. Somewhere before the pandemic I saw them play a nice and intimate show at the top floor venue of Paradiso in Amsterdam and certainly enjoyed their album 'Saturn Returns'. And then they disappeared in that huge vault of music from the past. On 29 March the sisters, Laura Rogers and Lydia Slagle, will release their new album 'Mind, Man, Medicine'. And judging Same Water it will be worthwhile to check it out. Same Water is the kind of singer-songwriter ballad that envelopes the listener like a bath filled with just right warmed water. Their voices weave themselves around each other, where Laura is in the lead and Lydia supporting. Around them a great band is playing that knows exactly how to create this mood, creating a song that is in essence a song that we have heard thousands of times and yet, this extra one is the one the world needs right now. Like I wrote, a warm bath this Same Water is.

Wout de Natris

 

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