Thursday, 21 March 2024

2024. Week 12, 10 singles

Week 12 of 2024 brings a lot of singles that I can not describe as your usual pop song. Actually, you will find quite some weird shit to explore, to put it mildly. The order of the singles presentation is random, as my inbox and other sources determine the order of this post. Coincidence has brought this lot together. Most names are, almost, new to this blog, giving you the opportunity to explore, so, enjoy!

Another Day Another Time. The Third Sound

On the day that Wet Leg debuted on this blog with 'Chaise Longue', The Third Sound also did with 'Your Love Is Evol'. Admittedly, I have less recollection of the latter single. What I read is that it is a psychedelic song with little patient for subtlety. This is totally different for the band's latest single, Another Day Another Time, a song from its upcoming album 'Most Perfect Solitude' (26 April). The sus4 and 2 chords are all over the place, creating those fine little melodies around chords, simply by adding or lifting a finger. The band from Berlin, led by Icelander Hakon Adalsteinsson, has a clear love for 60s psychedelic rock. The vocals are muted as it were. The keyboards have that floating feel over them. The song as a whole is totally trippy. At the same time the music has this pleasant pop feel. The singing could have been lifted from a postpunk doom band from the early 80s. The combination works in a most pleasant way.

Tejano Blues. Cigarettes After Sex

Cigarettes After Sex? No thank you, I stopped at least two decades ago. The band name rings the faintest of bells but not more than that. At the same time I read the band plays the Ziggo Dome, the largest indoor venue of this country, in October. So, it must be me. I am listening to a song that is so soft, modest, small, it is very easy to miss. Tejano Blues is an artist at his/her most vulnerable. Stop listening and it's no longer there, if people talk through it, it's gone and during shows with the Dutch disease, I don't even want to contemplate the effect on the music. The music and voice sound like they were recorded in a large hall with the vibes of the song returning through different mikes, creating an endless echo. The atmosphere of this vulnerable song is excellent, creating exactly the right mood.

Felt. Kee Avil

Do aliens exist? And if so, do they make music? While listening to Felt for the first time, I'm posed to answer: yes! Kee Avil seems to come from outer space. Felt does sound as strange as I've ever heard. Remember that episode from the original 'Star Trek' series, where they have a party and dance? The music was as strange as they could imagine circa 1968. Enter Kee Avil. This music can be put in the re-run of the series. This music is as strange as it gets. Her small guitar riff that opens Felt and returns throughout, borders beyond dissonant, the bass note is off. What sounds regular, is her voice that sings hesitantly, somewhere between a whisper and talking. The album 'Spine', which will be released on 3 May, is announced as "a stunner of a record that stands on its own, a bracing and thrilling listen". For one, on the basis of Felt I'm sure that as a minimum it will be an experience.

Mount Fuji. Sarah Julia

Sarah Julia is a duo, sisters Sarah and Julia Nauta from Amsterdam. They sing about the famous mountain near Tokyo, that I saw from several directions in October last year. This fact made me want to listen to the song already and I'm glad I did. The sisters present a beautiful and serious ballad. The acoustic guitar lays the bottom of the track, a cello is the lead instrument. There's more, but you can listen to that yourself. Over a sober orchestration the two sisters sing their tale. They take their time. It's like two old people climbing the mountain, slowly but surely getting to the top. In this same slow but sure style Sarah Julia delivers its song. I notice an association with Chantal Acda and the latest solo album of The Walkabouts' Chris Eckman. A story that has to be sung, no matter what. Mount Fuji is a part of the EP 'How Do We Go Back To Being Normal?', released on 10 April.

Ears Were Growing.  Dana Gavanski

Ears Were Growing is a weirder kind of pop single. Expect the unexpected in a pop song and you may hear what I hear. This is a weird but fun song, worth listening to, repeatedly and when I let go, like Dana Gavanski sings here, I may even start singing along at some point. Dana Gavanski was on this blog before, in 2020 when Erwin Zijleman wrote a post on her debut album 'Yesterday Is Gone'. He wrote that he was surprised by what he heard, after having read the bio. I wonder what he thinks of Ears Were Growing, as this has nothing to do with singer-songwriter music. Ears Were Growing is full of keyboards and a weird rhythm. It's almost like one of those extreme and small, yet fairly hard bouncing balls that once thrown could destroy anything in a living room. I hear a little Wet Leg in the song, yet slightly, only slightly, less exuberant. Will 'Late Slap', out on 5 April, be as surprising? In a few weeks we know.

Word Eaters. Yosa Peit

Can we go weirder than Kee Evil? I did not expect so, at least today. Yosa Peit is competing though. Is World Eaters a song? Let me answer that question first. I do tend to answer yes. There is a melody and a vocal melody. Underneath are totally broken rhythms, that are replaced later in the song by a loud distorted guitar that plays huge notes and power chords. The rest suggests that there may have been more but was cut out of the mix, to escape for the flimsiest of moments, in unexpected moments. Broken music could be a sufficient description. The whole does take getting used to but certainly is intriguing. Yosa Peit manages to capture my attention with the weirdest of sounds, almost beyond what I call a song. Her worldview may be as bleak as the Earth's future may be, she has enriched the lives of people who want to listen to World Eaters no little. The album, 'Gut Buster', is out on 26 April.

the mould. mui zyu

mui zyu, a Hong Kong artist living in London, like some artists preceding her in this post, plays an alternative form of pop music, that reminds me most of an album I bought in 2016 by duo Carol Cleveland Sings. Sounds that seem to have been made on children's version of synthesizers, as if it is not truly serious that is on offer. mui zyu's song is though. You can hear it in her somewhat aloofly sung vocals and the oomph in the rhythm that is added her and there to underscore the singing and music. Underneath it all, she lets all sorts of sounds meander in a playful way. Little melodies come from everywhere, the whole of the time. Nothing remains as it is, the whole of the time. In the outro, it all seems to come together and then spins out of control, totally. Before it truly can, the plug is pulled on all instruments, including the recording device it seems. the mould may be an electronic song, the pop feel is there and mui zyu manages to wrap it all into a layer of mystery. The mysteriously named album 'nothing or something to die for' is slated for 24 May.

Bodies Dissolve Tonight. Earth Tongue

It's been quiet for a few weeks where New Zealand was concerned. Earth Tongue shatters that silence with its fuzz infused rock song Bodies Dissolve Tonight. Blood Red Shoes was my first thought. The second as well, but like the girl witch Tiffany Aching, from Terry Pratchett's inimitable 'Disc World' series, taught me, always beware of that third thought whispering in the back of your head. That thought told me that Earth Tongue is more theatrical in its expression. Earth Tongue, Ezra Simons, drums and vocals & Gussie Larkin, guitar and vocals, play psych-infused rock primarily, but listen a bit more closely and what I hear is symphonic rock from the 70s and punkrock, spanning decades to make a loud landing in 2024. Bodies Dissolve Tonight is an exciting song, sizzling like the car in the video is. Quite some introduction to the upcoming album, 'Great Haunting', 24 June, this single is.

Coffee. Hinds

Coffee is not and has never been for me, but this coffee I can take every day. Hinds presents its new single as if it has never been away for four years. The atmosphere is not unlike that other song with coffee in its title, 'Coffee And TV', one my favourite Blur songs. It has this great alternative pop feel, while having credibility as an indie rock band. The Madrid duo, Carlotta Cosials and Ana Perrote, have shed the other two members somewhere during the Covid period. Musically it does not seem to make a lot of difference. Coffee sounds like it takes Hinds no effort at all to produce a great song. The fun the video shows is also the fun that shines through the music. It is so incredibly light, in both ways. Both previous albums can be found on this blog, so thanks to Coffee I'm looking forward to number three alright.

Time. EELS

Next year it is 30 years ago Mark Oliver Everett or 'E' and his band EELS entered my life with that famous single 'Novocaine For The Soul'. Come 2024 and this ultimately small song Time is released. Playing a resonator guitar in the video, with its steely sound, the same few notes are repeated over and over and over, until there's a minor chord progression. A few instruments come in, a bass, strings, but that underscores the resigned atmosphere of Time more than enhance it. EELS is at its smallest here and yet every note is in its right place, with a maximum impact. Some songs do not need anything else of more. The only disconcerting thing is that after in the video having shown photo's of himself with his child, he sings that he has the ones he loves near but "maybe there's just some way, dear God, I can stay". Is this an ultimate message to his fans? If so, what a way to do so. In the meantime, let me share with you that the album 'EELS TIME!' is slated for 7 June.

Wout de Natris

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