Sunday 13 October 2024

2024, week 41. 10 singles

Is there any nice news left in the world? Yesterday I got the question whether the situation in NL and much of the rest of the world was bringing me down. Luckily, I could answer that I'm not that kind of person but yes, I'm seriously worried about many things (They all came together in this evening's 8 PM news: politics, war, weather/climate change.) Then we are going to make some music tonight, was the response, as we were on route to band practice last night. We rammed the hell out of 'Radar Love'! In the mean time life is made a little prettier by the 10 songs in this post. With a lot of new names as well, so enjoy!

Are You Live Here? EP. Iskander Moon

When does an EP stop being an EP? An interesting question, because with seven songs, each, minus the intro, clocking (well) above the four minutes I would opt for mini album. That said, Iskander Moon presents itself as an atmospheric live act. The songs were recorded live in the Funkhause studio in Berlin. A live album that is not a live show. Iskander Moon is the moniker Belgian (Ghent) singer-songwriter Iskander Moens releases his work under. Start listening to Are You Live Here? and you will be sucked into an atmospheric musical work, that will make you recall albums by the likes of Patrick Watson and City + Colour, all artists that work somewhere in between pop, ballads, atmospherics and mystery. You will hear traditional instruments for pop bands, but at some point a trumpet can come in like it does in a song like Soft Cell's 'Torch'. The instruments are played in a way that can mesmerise a listener, dreamy, floating, tense, yet relaxed. Iskander Moon is also not afraid to give a song body, like it happens in 'Berlin'. The tempo goes up. Drums and bass gain prominence and a guitar starts shredding. In 'Saturday Silence' the mood is brought down immediately, but as you will notice a spine in a song can return in a totally different way. There's no need for tempo or noise to do so. This band masters that expertly. For six songs Iskander Moon plays with the mood and responses of the listener and succeeds to do so with ease.

Library Girl. The Dogmatics

The Dogmatics, so I'm told, played in the Boston area in the 1980s before folding, after which members played in a host of other bands. Some recordings have surfaced recently on Rum Bar Records. Now decades later the band is back and shows that it hasn't lost any of its tricks. Library Girl starts with the kind of chord-riff that started 1000s of great rock songs. Library Girl is no exception. It's the kind of song that sounds almost familiar, one you want to sing along to, beer in one hand and fist in the air with the other hand. While your head is going up and down as if there's no tomorrow. Library Girl is the kind of rock song any fan of this kind of music should get to know to draw The Dogmatics out of the Boston circuit. Yes, Library Girl is that good, believe me.

First Time. Greg Mendez

What a story. A guitarist unable to use his right hand, turns to an electric organ and only plays it with his left hand. It results in one of the most bare songs I have heard for some time. It's just Greg Mendez' downcast, melancholy voice and the chords played on the organ. The only embellishment is literally a few single notes in the outro. Greg Mendez had released his debut album, that received good reviews and then fate struck. Mendez needed surgery on his wrist and could not play and preform for four months. The result is an upcoming EP, 'First Time / Alone' to be released on 18 October. An EP the world might never have heard, as it rose from a forced break from performing and guitar playing. The mood of the single reflects the down side of life Greg Mendez will have felt, after the twist of fate. The result is an intens, yet sweet single.

Summer Breeze. Black Doldrums

In the week before 'In Limerence' is released Black Doldrums is found on the blog for the third time. Summer Breeze is a song that combines the darkness of Joy Division with the light side of The Cure in its new single. And in a successful way. Singer (and guitarist) Kevin Gibbard has a dark voice with which he is able to return to the doom and gloom of the early to mid 80s with ease. When around him the rhythm guitar has this light sound, the sun starts to shine a little as well. There's a host of guitar overdubs and a synth adding to the atmosphere. The London trio, besides Gibbard, Sophie Landers on drums and new bassist Daniel Armstrong, creates a sound that is impossible to recreate on stage as a trio. That is for them to figure out. On Summer Breeze the band does a lot right, if not all. Black Doldrums manages to weave a little pop into its early 80s new wave sound. This makes Summer Breeze a very attractive song to listen to.

Orange Background. Crash Harmony

Orange Background is a nostalgic song in a few ways. To explain, I have to point out that Crash Harmony reformed after more than three decades after calling it a day in 1988, during the bandmembers' college days in New Haven, CT. The song is on the one hand a message from the then young men to their older selves today and it is musically a trip down memory lane to the music that was emerging on the U.S.' east coast at the time. Think The Lemonheads, Buffalo Tom, etc. Crash Harmony obviously liked the bands at the time and still does. It brings good memories back for me as well and adds a song very much worthwhile hearing to a well-liked and known roster. Note also how Crash Harmony plays with the tempo within the song and its mood by adding an organ. Well done. So, Dave Derby, who can also be found on this blog as a member of Gramercy Arms, Nils Nadeau, Jon Nighswander and Mike Potenza came back together and now did record an album, so it may be the band with the longest wait for a debut album ever, 38 years. No One Asked For This' is out on 18 October.

See You Again. Jon Chesbro

Another new name to the blog Jon Chesbro is. See You Again is the lead single from his latest EP, 'Outta State Outta Mind', released on 25 September. See You Again is a dreamy single of the kind that allows you to travel in your mind, in the way Chesbro travelled around the United States, to come back to New England with a bunch of new songs in his bag. He starts the song with a lot of oohhs over the solid music, providing a dreamy vibe to See You Again from the start. I have reached the 0.50 second mark before the vocals starts. All the time there is a prominent drum part. Whoever is playing, Jon Chesbro is promoted as a multi-instrumentalist, he's having a great time. Even if it's a machine it obviously is. The musicality Chesbro is capable of, shows in the many guitar parts that both adorn and solidify See You Again. Beware, a new guitar part can come in any second. It makes for great listening.

Stay Strange. Then Comes Silence (with Goth Dad)

Now what can I call the music presented by Then Comes Silence on Stay Strange? It's rock, it has a metal edge, it is postpunk in the style of Killing Joke et al, maybe even goth. So, have your choice. What is clear that Stay Strange contains loads of energy that Then Comes Silence was able to capture in the studio and share with its fans and other listeners. On the single the Swedes are joined by Vision Video's frontman Dusty Gannon a.k.a. Goth Dad. The two singers really go for it but in the background it is guitarist Hugo Zombie and drummer Jonas Fransson that kick life into the song. That is not all though. There's a wild guitar intro and a bit mysterious interlude that gives the rock song a little psychedelic edge, before the song is kicked towards its end in full rock swing. On an average day a song like Stay Strange will be a bit much for me. On the right day it is all I need.

Motoroller. Pixies

I will probably have written this before but Pixies totally passed me by around 1990. It was a few years later before I became interested again in music  by new bands. That did not stop right up to today. Not so though in 1987 or 1988 when Pixies broke in the alternative rock world. In 2024 I am again listening to a new single by the band and I like it. Where fans of old may not like it at all, I love the way this single develops. The little darkness, the voice of new bassist Emma Richardson of (or ex?) Band of Skulls. Boy did I love that band's 'Diamonds and Pearls'! The chorus of Motoroller is simply so great. The lead guitar underneath it. Black Francis taking his voice down and Emma Richardson challenging him for the whole of the way. There's an album announced for 25 October, 'The Night The Zombies Came'. It may well be that for the first time I have to check a Pixies album out.

If God Is A Woman. Larkin Poe

Time for some dirty, low down electric blues. Larking Poe returns to the blog with a great blues rock song. The sisters Rebecca and Megan Lovell are on route to release their ninth album, 'Bloom' on 25 January since 2014. With If God Was A Woman the tone is set for some dirty blues rock. Dark distortion and a wining, even darker slide guitar say it all. God help us men if Larking Poe is right that if God is a woman, the devil is too, turns out to be true. "I will pray for you", Rebecca sings. It's better to be an atheist, just to be sure. Musically you will have heard it all before, from artists and bands like Stevie Ray Vaughan or Heart, but who cares when it sounds as good as If God Is A Woman does. Larking Poe, the name of the sisters' great-great-great-great-grandfather and cousin of Edgar Allan Poe, is smoking on this song and I have no doubt 'Bloom' will as well.

I Don’t Know What To Save. Sophie Jameson

We end this week's singles post with a very serious song by British singer Sophie Jamieson. You can find her on this blog with her album 'Choosing' in a review written by Erwin Zijleman. For me she is a new name though. I have to say that I'm impressed by the way she builds up I Don’t Know What To Save. With her voice that is somewhere between deep and higher, she commands listening. Jamieson sings with a lot of emphasis stemming from the use of her voice. Always in full control of the words. Musically, the song contains great dynamics, including beautiful details. In the small parts, the music is very elementary. Like in the intro, where only an electric guitar accompanies her voice. A short interlude brings solo notes from a second guitar. After the second verse slowly but surely more instruments come in, including a string section. Then drums and bass kick in, giving the song a boost, that is reflected by the singing. Beautiful melodies adorn the music and I Don’t Know What To Save just grows and grows. The album ' I Still Want To Share' will be released on 17 January.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght

 

No comments:

Post a Comment