Tuesday, 2 April 2024

2024. Week 14, 10 singles

Easter weekend and there's rain and more rain, grey skies, so why bother to go outside? Family business, yes. In the meantime, I've taken it on me to listen to some more singles that were released over the past weeks. Impossible to keep up but who cares when there's such nice music to discover. This week we go all over the place once again. The really loud stuff is not there though, so sit back an enjoy!

Flotsam EP. Quiz Show

Quiz Show's Chris Matthews and bassist Jesse Krakow played in a band called Shudder To Think in the 1980s and have pursued a career in music through the decades and now return in a new band with a three song maxi single called Flotsam. Together with drummer Joe Billy they form Quiz Show. The trio plays what I opt to call alternative 80s rock. The music that influenced the likes of Billy Corgan when he started Smashing Pumpkins. With a long curve of time this music comes back in 2024 in the form of especially 'Packing 'Em In'. Who influenced who is a question that can be asked today. Quiz Show has a little bit of a playful element in its music and the harmony vocals. This makes all three songs come totally alive. I have played Flotsam several times through the past weeks and can't find fault with it. Quiz Show goes at it as if this is truly the musicians' first step into releasing music and not decades of being active in music. As a trio they may still have enough to prove to the world. With Flotsam that is now behind them.

A Way To Remember. Stars Like Ours

Album 'Better Every Day' did not make it to these pages and listening to A Way To Remember I can only wonder why? My guess is Japan 2023. There's a big gap in new music for about a month because of that (work) trip. Michelle Paulhus and her two colleagues show again how "simple" a great punk rock single can sound and be totally convincing. Paulhus has the right voice for the genre. She sings somewhere between tough and nice. The trio lays down rock in the form of loud guitars, a great driving bass and tough, dry drums in the Therapy? style of the mid 1990s. Add a melody that is easy to remember and again "simply" great. After the also very positive review of a previous single, 'High', in week 40 of 2022 and the album 'Stars Like Ours' soon after, it may be time to check out 'Better Every Day' anyway.

Dollar Slice. Bloomsday

Iris James Garrison (they/them) returns to this blog under the name Bloomsday. Working towards the release of their first full length album, 'Heart Of The Artichoke' (7 June). Dollar Slice is a big song, in a very modest way. Modest because Bloomsday keeps the song relatively small compared to what it could have been. I'm thinking Sinead's 'Troy' here, as that is what Dollar Slice does remind me of. That is exactly the reason why I call the song big. Bloomsday may have written the biggest thing of their relatively young career. Big also because Garrison shows more of their selves than on the debut mini album 'Place To Land' (2022). This is called growth and that is what a career should show for an artist to grow a fan base. In short, I can end my review of Dollar Slice in the same way as I ended ' Where I End And You Begin' at the start of this year: Dollar Slice "is better than all the songs on the debut mini album".

Big Swimmer. King Hannah feat. Sharon van Etten

King Hannah returns to the blog with an indierock kind of ballad. Just two chords are strummed over and over in the beginning. Chords that have been played in that order a million times by now and still singer Hannah Merrick found a new melody over them. A good swimmer can take on anything. The song has three parts. The soft intro lasting circa two minutes. Then an electric guitar comes in and the guest vocalist Sharon van Etten sings her part. The third part starts with a Big Muff pedal (in the video) and a second electric guitar playing a solo and lead guitar over the remainder of the song, that puffs itself up successfully more and more. The album with the same name will be released on 31 May. In the meantime I'll swim along for awhile.

Letter To Myself. The Wandering Hearts

Two singles I've found on this blog by The Wandering Hearts. Letter To Myself reminds me of having to listen the new album by The Secret Sisters that was released this week. (Note to self, indeed.) The Wandering Hearts has released a fantastic, beautiful single. I now read that there is an album already for a week called 'Mother'. Based on what I'm hearing here, it could well be musical haven on earth. The trio sings like a choir of angels over its renditions of CSN-style music. Letter To Myself is somewhere between pop, country, singer-songwriter and West Coast folk. It's a little of everything together and then the trio starts singing. The kind that makes me very quiet and a bit jealous of not having such a fine voice. The work put into finding the harmonies in the song obviously paid off very well. Letter To Myself is pure musical heaven.

Haircut. Finom

Ohmme is no more, welcome Finom. Do not ask me why, because Haircut would have been welcome under the name Ohmme as far as I'm concerned. Finom is Sima Cunningham and Macie Stewart (with drummer Matt Carroll). Like the music on 'Fantasize Your Ghost' Haircut is up beat, jumpy, adding a bit of nerves caught in a straitjacket rhythm. The rhythm makes Haircut a danceable song but one where the dancer has to keep track of the rhythm for the whole of the time because of that jumpiness. In that sense this song is rather weird, also because of the high voices with which it is sung. Estranging solo's make the song more detached from traditional dance songs. It only makes Haircut more attractive to listen to though. Ohmme may be no more, Finom is here, in that same sort of musical mix between eclectic and scientific and somewhere between seriousness and irony. On 24 May the album 'Not God' sees the light of day. In the meantime I may have to acquaint myself with the album 'Ohmme' from 2023 that I seem to have missed.

Euphoria. Boeckner

With all the post-post punkwave bands around in super abundant numbers, one would almost forget how popular the 1980s are in general. Canadian Daniel Boeckner on his debut solo album explores the bigger bands' sound of the time like Simple Minds et al. And very successfully at that. The song starts small with the synth sounds of The Human League or Heaven 17. His singing matches the way some singers at the time sang as well. The electronic undertow brings the 80s in even more significantly. It almost makes me forget to listen what a song is really about: the melodies and the vocal delivery. Daniel Boeckner sounds like a young Chuck Prophet, while Euphoria explodes moving into the stratosphere. Drummer Matt Chamberlain takes a bigger and bigger role for himself. The drums almost become the lead instrument with all the rolls and fills going around. Euphoria has two sides to itself, showing different angles of 1980s music, the more wave one and the big stadiumrocking songs. Both halves work though. Album 'Boeckner' is around for two weeks already.

All in Good Time (feat. Fiona Apple). Iron & Wine

In the old days a duet was credited to who were singing it. Nowadays it is called featuring. In my view this is wrong for All In Good Time. This is a real duet and not a guest appearance. Sam Beam and Fiona Apple both have equal parts here in the call and response style of old. Irony has it that I'm not a fan of either artist. And now they sing together in this country style ballad and everything seems to fall into place. I will even go as far as to call this an alternative 'Islands In The Stream', the famous Kenny Rodgers - Dolly Parton duet from the 1980s. Strings come in, just like a grand piano, all underscoring the mood of soft resignation to whatever has come before, the good, the bad and the storms. The two lay down a perfect delivery of a song that is not even that special melodically but made special by the interaction of the voices of Sam Beam and Fiona Apple.

Wild God. Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds

Having come late to Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds, although by now over 10 years, I have gone through a period of grief and sadness with him. This is behind him now for some years. We know the pain never truly goes away but that life does move on. So what to expect after 'Ghosteen'? The answer comes with Wild God the first single from the same titled album. And it is all that I did not expect. What to call this music? Gospel for the non-believer? Cave is singing differently, behind him the band has a full role, as has a (gospel?) choir. The song starts much smaller though. I do not mind hearing a full band, after the synth intro, guitar, bass, drums, keys. All playing in service of Cave who is telling his story. "Jubilee Street" returns to his vocal, but only to mention a girl who had died there in 1993. Slowly but surely the song grows and expands, to fall back into itself. After 'Ghosteen' I had the feeling that, no matter how impressive the album was (is), Cave had reached the end of this musical road withWarren Ellis and needed to reinvent himself to remain as relevant as he had become in the 10s. If Wild God is anything to go by, I'd say mission accomplished. We will know more at the end of the summer.

Some Don't Dance. Why Bother?

Anyone remember 'The Safety Dance', that fairly obscure song by Men Without Hats? Some Don't Dance could be the answer to that song. Why Bother? makes it easy for those who don't, as this is not an easy song to dance to. With elements of post new wave and punk and some extra weirdness thrown in there. Why Bother? lives up to its band name. Some Don't Dance doesn't directly please. Look through it all and you may discover a lot you might find interesting anyway. Singer Terry has that kind of voice that postpunk bands used to have, reflected in the well let's call it chaos that is created within the confines of the song. Guitarist Speck has that Gang of Four dry sound, while the bass puts on an effect making it sound really dirty. It's the drums that keep it all together. Towards the end the band really lets it all hang down and chaos ensues. It appears fun was had by all, including me listening. Album 'Serenading Unwanted Ballads' is out already and is available for "name your price" on Why Bother?'s Bandcamp page.

Wout de Natris

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