Showing posts with label alternative rock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alternative rock. Show all posts

Monday, 8 June 2026

POM live. Ekko, Utrecht, Friday 5 June 2026 with Fit

Photo: WdN-vdB
In my review of the new POM album last week I mentioned how much better and more consistent the band had become in the past two years. 'Enlightened, Baby' belies everything that "difficult second album" is often said to be. How does this translate into a live situation?

That answer is so easy to give as one word suffices: growth. Compared to the show in Rotown in December 2023 POM has gone from a band that played its debut record live in a convincing and entertaining way (plus some more chaotic but enthusiastic, perhaps unplanned encores) to a band that owned its repertoire and used it as a starting point. With new guitarist Rosa Kiki, who replaced Joy Kunst last year, in the line up, the band went for it. The set started off in a moderate way and song for song the sound was broader, louder, better, to explode towards the end into an orgiastic music fest. Without control over the songs and playing skills getting lost in the enthusiasm. Breaks were executed and harmonies sung perfectly.

One thing stood out in the mix. The bass was far more audible than at average shows and that dry, pumping sound made the show almost funky. Up front though Liza Kim van As has turned from the singer into the front lady of POM. There is no doubt who draws most of the attention to herself, who is living the role of singer. In a tight fitting dress, she was showing the world to be proud of who she is, pink hair and all. Focusing only on Van As would take away from the whole. Drummer Justin is great and a self-assured rhythm master, the two guitarists weave their parts perfectly, found weird guitar sounds to share with us and play attractive solo parts. The whole has blended perfectly and that is where it showed the band has set a perfect next step in its career. It is ready for a next step, just like the album already showed.

Besides, when a band can afford to not play the most energetic single from it debut album, 'Exoskeleton', and totally get away with that, it must know its on the right course.

Photo: WdN-vdB
Fit from Utrecht is also a band on Mattan Records and has released only a few songs so far. in a reviews I compared it for example to Maxïmo Park. Well, I was in for a surprise. The band on stage and what I had heard on record, somehow do not add up. The unleashed energy was enough to warm up a whole city and infect all present. The band has two guitarists, yet all the solos were played by the singer on a small synth in front of him. That made it very different from most bands I'd ever seen. Fit was happy to be on this stage and it showed. They were going for it and the audience started rooting for Fit more and more. At some point I was wondering if Fit would eclipse POM, as the headlining band still had to play. That fear was laid aside easily by POM.

Near the end of the set, I was struck by a feeling that I had never had before. Having grown up partly in a Noord-Brabant village, I had missed out on live music in small(er) venues entirely. Fit gave me the impression of what it could have been like to attend a the Undertones show in 1979 or something. It was a very authentic feeling and I guess a big compliment to a band, when all is said and done, I barely know in 2026.

That feeling of energy live and capturing it on record? When I played the POM LP today, I missed some of that energy as well. It will take some time to get used to the album again, I'm afraid.

POM and Fit both made a great impression on me. Bigger stages ought to be awaiting them.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght 

Sunday, 7 June 2026

2026, week 23, 10 singles (2)

With the weather switched to position erratic, sun, wind, rain, lots of rain, cloudy, back to sun, etc., it is easy to make amends and do two rounds of singles this week. You'll find no huge names this week but certainly some WoNoBlog favourites of the past few years and several new names. Musically, it is a nice mix as well, like open your ears widely to truly listen to softer songs, as cover your ears fast should you be partial to not liking postpunk. Either way it's here, and all in between, enjoy!

Alone EP. Carly Hann

Today, Carly Hann makes her debut on this blog with her EP Alone. She is a totally new name to me, so I looked a little beyond just listening to her beautiful dreampop songs. She was formerly known as Carly Holt until she married The 1975's guitarist Adam Hann, who also produced her debut EP. She hails from Canada. She musically first drew attention with her cover version of said band's 'About You' and now presents her own music. That music starts with an acoustic guitar. The songs on Alone can be played on the beach, in a living room or the front garden entertaining neighbours during the next pandemic. Around her soft, dreamy and relaxed voice and the guitar, other instruments join, creating a dreamy atmosphere. In the case of opening and title track 'Alone' that mood is slowly but surely expanded on and when in the bridge drums join the song, it turns into a wall of sound. Lana del Rey is not far off, but Carly Hann does keep it as her own song. 'Breathe' starts as someone trying to play piano but not really certain (s)he's capable of doing so, before it turns into a song anyway, shedding that uncertainty immediately. 'Can't Shake This Feeling' is built around the acoustic guitar once again. This time strings come in for accompaniment. 'She Got' is the game changer. An electric guitar plays fast notes and the drums play an erratic, somewhat unusual rhythm. Carly Hann remains herself and draws the song into a dreamy state anyway. Also pay attention to that violin that plays a distinctive role in the song, making it far beyond the average dreampop song. Carly Hann may have started her career piggybacking her husband's career, she's very much her own talent on Alone. 

De lytse oarloch fan Japie Ossefet. Zea

Een Rotterdams verhaal in het Fries. Het had het verhaal van mijn vader en zijn gezin kunnen zijn. Als ik goed reken is Max of zoals de bijnaam die zijn moeder hem gaf, Japie Ossefet, net zo oud als wijlen mijn oom Ben. Max is Max van Broekhoven een import Fries, zoals Max' vader of grootvader aan de achternaam te zien een import Rotterdammer uit Brabant was. Het verhaal is opgetekend in een bejaardentehuis in Heerenveen door toenmalig Dichter des Vaderlands Tsead Bruinja, muzikant Arnold de Boer a.k.a. Zea en fotografe Rosa van Ederen,.Samen tekenden zij in 2020 levensverhalen op. In totaal 11 in 11 verschillende tehuizen. Het oorlogsverhaal van Max werd op muziek gezet door Zea. Mijn vader was 7 tot 12 in de oorlog. Voor hem was het een groot avontuur, met allerlei spannende zaken die in normale tijden nooit hadden gemogen. De meer volwassen verhalen kwamen van mijn tantes en hun echtgenoten, nu allen overleden. Mijn oudste oom was bij een razzia opgepakt en in een cementfabriek in Leimen bij Heidelberg te werk gesteld, maar wel met een Duitse vrouw thuisgekomen. Dat werkte niet heel goed in net bevrijd Nederland. Al hun verhalen samen maken ongeveer het verhaal van Japie Ossefet, zonder hulp aan onderduikers, dat wel. Zea heeft het als een vroege Bob Dylan op muziek gezet en stelt het nummer nu beschikbaar voor een goed doel, ter ondersteuning van kunstenaars in Beiroet, genaamd Beit Aam (https://linktr.ee/Beit.aam). Het nummer kun je hier aanschaffen voor €1,50: https://zeamusic.bandcamp.com/track/de-lytse-oarloch-fan-japie-ossefet. Doen!

Plovdiv. Tramhaus 

Tramhaus in 2026 is a band that has been around half the world, that is able to premiere its new single on a Seattle radio station and receives reviews from internationally renowned websites. So, what can I add to all this? To start a personal note. In 2025 I visited Plovdiv on a 43 degrees Celsius day and, reading the title, wondered how it is possible that Tramhaus first single release from its upcoming new album, Blister' (9 October), is called after the city. The band wrote the song there on a free day, touring Bulgaria and Turkey, in a rehearsal room. I hope they did get a peak at the Roman antiquities in Plovdiv. The song Plovdiv presents a louder and more direct Tramhaus. Through live shows, I was able to see the way the band gelled more and more through the years and Plovdiv is the result. There is less room for subtleties and more for a full band experience. The first verse is the group's community singing, recorded like a church choir in a church with the worst kind of acoustics, before singer Lucas Jansen takes over and explodes in the chorus together with the band. Getting better acquainted with Plovdiv, I notice better that the, lets call it the Nirvana, approach to a song, is still in tact. The erratic subtlety that characterised early Tramhaus songs, has been traded in for blasting. Live it will lead to even more enthusiasm is my guess. After a hesitant start, I'm sold.

Honeydripper. Ruby James

Ruby James returns to the blog with a dirty track that is somewhere between, what exactly? Certainly rock. The dirty guitar soloing gives the song its dirty vibe. There is something dancy in there as well, e.g. in the way of singing and rhythm. Except the song goes off of its rocker as in totally when it approaches the end. That guitar is really going for it. It is all very gritty in a blues kind of way. On top of it all, it's pure sex that is dripping from this record and it is intended that way so I understand. Ruby James wrote Honeydripper with songwriter Kate Vargas. Together they came up with this groove and built the song from there. It's convincing alright. Be on the look out for the album, 'Call It Rock & Roll', from 7 August onwards.

Punch Drunk Love. Personal Trainer

Punch Drunk Love is Personal Trainer as you've never heard it before. More than ever before the band sounds like a band that could be any regular band and it has dropped everything to do with loud electric guitars. In fact, Punch Drunk Love could have been, with a little imagination, a hit for The Kinks in the mid-60s. The band took an acoustic album and playing live in the studio together, as the starting points and that is what the single sounds like. A piano is the leading instrument for most of the song, playing its slow notes. You'll find a violin playing short solos with the guitars only playing accompanying riffs and soft chords. Over it all Willem Smit is singing softly. There's no need to shout at all. I fell in love slowly with album number 1, but in the end never truly found may way around number 2. Number 3, 'Human Assholes' is slated for 4 September. I'm sure we'll hear more in the meantime.

Magic In The Air, feat. Palmyra Delran. Dan Miraldi

"Sometimes you really have to wrestle with songs, but ‘Magic in the Air’ felt pretty effortless", says Dan Miraldi in the accompanying bio to his latest single on the writing process. This is exactly how the song sounds like. Magic In The Air combines pop, rock and a little punk attitude into a song that sounds somehow perfect. That relatively slow riff/solo guitar leading the listener into the song, followed by a mellow mood coming with a glorious, not too warm feel of a summer day. Miraldi manages to get this mood across without giving up on the firm body of the song. Palmyra Delran adds a nice female touch to the whole in both lead and harmony vocals. On top of it all comes this dreamy bridge, making a perfect song even better. Welcome to the blog!

Letting Go. Deardarkhead

An instrumental track somehow is the hardest to write about for me. Not that I analyse lyrics a lot, it is the layer of how vocal melodies interact with the music, where I often focus my attention on. Deardarkhead is a band from New Jersey, formed in 1988, that in 1998 released its only full length album to date, 'Unlock the Valves of Feeling'. Since several EPs saw the light of day, the last one being from 2016. Since its singer left, the band has become an instrumental outfit and listening to Letting Go focusing on extremely melodic instrumental tracks. Guitarist Kevin Harrington leads the pack with a very clear sound, while never overdoing the number of notes he can squeeze in. This is about melody and not about chops and prowess. He is supported by drummer Robert Weiss and bassist James Malizia, The mortar in between is played by guest keyboardist Joe McGinty (The Psychedelic Furs, Nada Surf, Ryan Adams and Deborah Harry), who adds just the right texture. It is this combination of musical facts that make me like Letting go. There will be a full length album, Deardarkhead's second, on 10 July called 'The Pendulum Swings'.

Still Here. High on Stress

In March you may have found High on Stress on this blog for the first time. In my few words on single Over/Through I compared the band to the likes of Gin Blossoms and The Jayhawks. Today, I will go a step further and compare it to a band that I liked a lot more around 1995, Slobberbone. High on Stress has that same level of intensity and just being who and what you are as musician and band. Of course, everything is well thought out and there is a lot of attention being paid to details, that make the song more interesting to listen to. "It goes on and on, on and on, and I'm still here", they sing. Unmistakably true, as Still Here sounds very much alive. This song rocks in a way only, for lack of a better word ,rootsrockers from the U.S. can. Album 'Still Here' is out there for a month already, I notice just now. It's time to take a listen. This title song hits all the right buttons.

Hard Evidence. Ringlets

Ringlets is on tour in Europe and celebrates with the release of this stand alone single. Hard Evidence is not an easy song to digest. Everything is just a little less normal than what is expected from a song. The vocal melody is monotonous in the verses and the accompaniment is stern. The mood is darker. It also is in the chorus, but the mood changes to playful because of the band accompaniment while still being somewhat stern, as the vocals do not join in the playfulness. They remain moody, sang in a deeper and subdued way. The New Zealanders show that their band has a few sides to it. Having listened to Hard Evidence a few times, I notice the song is growing on me. Ringlets reaches the bar it set for itself with the superb album 'The Lord Is My German Shepherd (Time for Walkies)' with ease.

Gonna Be Alright. Chaser

A real 7". It's not exceptional but also far from normal in 2026. (And what bands like The Rolling Stones or Arctic Monkeys charge for one, € 17,99, borders on the absurd.) I don't know what Southern California skatepunkers Chaser charges for theirs. Based on what I'm hearing, things are going to be alright. 'My Promise' is a melodic punk track in the best form as Rancid and The Offspring are capable of. Deep dark and dry drum skins are leading the way for Chaser. This drummer truly leads the way with more rolls, fills and double bass fills than my ears can keep up with. Guitar lines and bass are all all over the place as well, supporting a golden vocal melody. Yes, of course, it all sounds very familiar but who cares when a song is this good. The other side of the 7" is a rendition of Bob Marley & the Wailers' 'Three Little Birds'. As that track was high jacked by 020's fans, I leave it you to find out for yourself. Greetings from 010 supporter,

Wout de Natris - van der Borght 


Thursday, 4 June 2026

2026, week 23. 10 singles

With some good old pop cum rock and roll on my earphones from one of the records below, WoNoBlog is back with a bunch of singles after having missed last Sunday. Too much going on and too beautiful weather. There is more in life than music. This week you find a very old name and a whole lot of debutants below, so more than enough to explore. Enjoy!

The Sky Isn't Falling. Strawberry Alarm Clock

About sixty years after releasing the songs that led them to be a part of the legendary 'Nuggets' box, Strawberry Alarm Clock is back and finds itself for the second time on this blog this year. The Sky Isn't Falling (but if it did, on a clear day, we'd all have a blue hat) is a very much alive poprock single in the best tradition of a band like Moody Blues, to name an example. What is perhaps striking, is that all five original members are present, not a normal thing for a 1960s psychedelic rock band. I like, again, the way the band lets the guitars go out of their pens but also the enthusiastic vocal melodies make The Sky Isn't Falling feel very much alive. There's an album in the making for later this year. Based on the three preceding singles, it's going to be special.

The Ghost Of Roky Erickson! EP Muck and the Mires

What are the chances that two artists are joined together by the order of chance, being the moment an email reaches my inbox announcing a new single or EP? In general close to 90% is my guess, but what if both artists are found on the 'Nuggets' box set released in the late 1990s and the LPS in 1972? Especially, as the artists are (from) bands from the second half of the 60s? In this case Strawberry Alarm Clock and The Eleventh Floor Elevators, the band of Roky Erickson (1947-2019). That chance must be extremely small. Muck and the Mires return to this blog with an EP called The Ghost Of Roky Erickson. Muck encounters his ghost after the elevator stops on the 13th floor. As always Muck and the Mires rock with the 1960s well in mind. Riffs fly around, fun is had by all, band and listeners. Of course, the band is part pastiche, as it successfully milks things that were successful once. This comes with a big but. Muck c.s. is a very good band, tight, bright and totally alive. On top there is often a layer of sheer fun. The title song attest to that best, with its extremely good riff and a touch of the madness that accumulated in Roky Erickson's head over the years, both caught in lyrics and the music. The other three songs are 60s rock, 60s pop and 60s poprock. It's instantly recognisable and yet fresh and new, exactly how I have come to love the music of Muck and the Mires over the past decade.

Call It In. Editors

Editors is a band I love and hate. Twenty years ago, I sort of liked it but also found the bombastic sound often too much of a not so good thin and the deep, pumped up voice of Tom Smith often too much to bear for long. Then some great singles came along anyway and somewhere in the mid 10s I even bought two records and then not with 'EBM', Editors' previous album. Four years later there's Call It In. The song is very up tempo, the sound is tough yet modest for Editors and Tom Smith's voice is different. Where is that deep resonance? There's also less of an effect put on it, as it sounds very natural. All bands of the age Editors have reached, can't escape from comparisons to all things that passed. Yes, Call It In reminds me of previous singles, but certainly has a right to exist. The tempo and urgency, the nice and smooth synth sound really works in the right spots. A strong single showing the right form.

Finally Arrived. Wooden Overcoat

Listening to Finally Arrived one song pops up in my head, The Everly Brothers' 'All I Have To Do Is Dream'. That is the state of mind the Portland, Oregon band the Wooden Overcoat brings in. Finally Arrived is the right title for this song, as it is slow. Don't get me wrong though, the song has an extremely slow psychedelic vibe to it that does bring me into an alterative reality. One where I'm totally relaxed and move with the softly lapping waves of Finally Arrived's instrumentation. Band leader Brant Hajek takes his time and so are bandmates Dillon Glusker (bass), Mac (guitar), and Brian Levin (drums and backing vocals). Listen deeper to the song and you will notice far more is happening than you thought after the first dose(ing off). This is a gem of slow psychedelia if I ever heard one. EP 'Hello Sunbeam' was released on 29 May. (And, a wooden overcoat is a euphemism for a coffin, so I've learned.)

Punching The Flowers. Death Cab For Cutie

This band is about to release its 11th album on 5 June, 'I Built You A Tower. I'm sure I have one from maybe 20 years ago, but do not have a strong recollection of it I'm afraid. So, I'm listening with a near open mind to Punching The Flowers. This is a strong alternative rock single. The pace is near relentless, while the drummer has found an original pattern that he is ramming home for the whole of the way. The song may be soft or hard, he's hitting dry and hard. The song reminds me of The Hold Steady and a little of R.E.M. Especially the former is a band that I cannot listen to for more than a few songs at a time. The singer's voice is the cause of that and my guess is, it will be the same for 'I Built You A Tower'. In the meantime, I'm enjoying Punching The Flowers.

We Need Some Love Today. The GrooveBuzz 

A new band, a first single. The band is active since 2023 and is a collective of seven singers and musicians. Drummer and producer Leon Klaase alerted me to the song and it is a very rich and swinging affair. In fact it sounds more like a ten piece band to me with voices and copper everywhere once the song has left its somewhat hesitant start. That is, compared to what follows. After the piano led intro, the strong and deep voice of Mieke de Jongh takes over, accompanied by Annabel Romijn and Fran Genis. The accompaniment changes towards a funky kind of soul music with a percussive guitar assisting the solid drumming of Klaase and the supportive bass played by Marcel van de Bas. The multilayered saxophones of Peter Romijn do the rest. The band is working on the release of its first album, 'Hit In The Heart', a line taken from this single.

Scattered Like Dust. Charlot

The band Charlot, Lotte Mulder, Hilde Luytjes, Boaz van Willegenburg and Alex Haak, makes its debut on this blog as well, with its third single from its upcoming second album, to be released in September. All that came before passed me by. Not Scattered By Dust, a pleasant mid-tempo dream- and synthpop song that has more than enough hooks in it to stick to my brain with ease. Lotte Mulder sings with a highish voice, close to breathy. The synths sound like a friendly pop version of the synth sound Gary Newman made famous with his Tubeway Army hit 'Are Friends Electric?' from 1979. The sound Pet Shop Boys turned that into a hit machine. Charlot uses it to make a song that crosses the bridges of decades and comes up with a song that fits nicely in 2026, with a great guitar part for those liking one.

5 Year Plan. BERTHAJU

5 Year Plan? I remember from my history lessons that they tend to fail after a while because the goal becomes more important than the result. The best example is the bridge that was built parallel to a river because the building specs showed it that way and no one dared to call higher up and ask questions. Dutch-German band Berthaju is not bothered by the hesitation of lessons history can bring and signed to Rotterdam label Shai Records after a successful stint during the Popronde 2025. 5 Year Plan is the first sign of this collaboration and listening to the single that was a good decision. Bethaju plays music that is somewhere between postpunk, alternative rock and Wet Leg, but most of all very alive and energetic. There will be an EP in September. Keep up the good work and Bethaju's 5 year plan will lead to great results.

Grenadine. Sorcha Richardson

After all the poing-poing energy of the previous bands, it's time for some introspection and that is exactly what Grenadine brings. Sorcha Richardson may sing "I push the peddle" and something with metal at the start of the chorus, musically she certainly does not. The song sets a slow chugging pace with minor accents in the guitar progression she plays over and over. With her style of music she fits in nicely with the likes of Aldous Harding. Listen more closely and you will notice that just this little more is happening in the background, making Grenadine more exciting that you'd  think at first listen. Sorcha Richardson, another first timer on this blog, is from Northern Ireland. An album is underway somewhere in the future.

The Head Tree feat. The New Eves. Opus Kink

What to make of The Head Tree? My first thought is De Kift on acid singing in English. It isn't though but there is quite some likenesses in the way the horns come in upending a song totally and partly the way of singing. But also a song like 'Pappa's Got A Brand New Pigbag' comes to mind, as well as totally freaked out psychedelia. In other words, what is not happening in The Head Tree? Opus Kink is a collective from Brighton in the U.K. that collaborates here with The New Eves, a British folk punk band from Brighton with clothing like The Last Dinner Party. The start of the first verse made me think of circa 1970 folk like Fairport Convention but after that all anchors are away setting Opus Kink adrift wherever a musical whim takes it and believe you me, the song is full of them. Believe it or not, it works, just like De Kift works. Check that band out Opus Kink fans! and I promise to keep my ears open for more coming out of this Brighton collective.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght 


Tuesday, 2 June 2026

Enlightened, Baby. POM

Amsterdam band POM can be found on this blog for well over four years and many times at that. Calling myself a fan may be overstating it a bit; there are no posters above my bed or things like that. Where the music is concerned though, debut album 'We Were Girls Together', now 2,5 years old, still comes by regularly. And here is album number two.

To fall with the door into the room, as we call it here, Enlightened, Baby is an album that is at least as good as 'We Were Girls Together' and may well prove to be better. In opening song 'Rover' POM immediately touches on the quality level The Beths has a tradition to start its albums with. That rock and alternative pop blend that many bands go for but seldom touch upon. 'Rover' does and sets the expectation level for Enlightened, Baby quite high.

My overall view comes up with one word only: growth. POM's debut album was one full of enthusiasm and a few very good songs, as in really, really good. Enlightenment, Baby knows the same level of enthusiasm and joins that with better songs on average. The album was produced by POM's guitarist Luc Siegers, who seemed to have not only make the band's sound deeper but broader as well. Keyboards and an endless level of additional melodies can be heard, that make the album not just good but also a joy to listen to. The sheer fun of discovering all the extras that went into a song!

Speaking of joy, guitarist Joy Kunst left the band and was replaced by a new guitarist, Kiki. That is all I currently know, though. Up front, if course, is Liza van As. She's, if possible, even more present than before. Liza is the front woman with a voice that will reach all corners of the world, need be. POM deserves this by the way, as the band is that good in 2026. I hope that after this release the band is able to move up a notch in the venues and play abroad some shows. Ekko should be my last time in a smaller venue with POM.

Promo photo
Liza van As went through a dark streak after losing her father. When she decided to write about her deep mourning, what came out were pop songs. Most likely to everyone's surprise. Listen to the title song, deeper into the album. The lyrics are serious, the music is full of spunk, inventiveness and synth sounds. For the first time POM must be laid against my Veruca Salt meter and succeeds. I wrote about growth and this is what 'Enlightenment, Baby' shows.

Having played Enlightenment, Baby several times, I notice I find the album better than the listening session before that, with obviously still more to enjoy in the future. On the basis what I've heard, this album should bring the breakthrough.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght

 

You can listen to and order Enlightenment, Baby here:

https://pomtheband.bandcamp.com/album/enlightened-baby 

Sunday, 24 May 2026

2026, week 21. 10 singles

"Summer's here and the time is right to" eat in the garden, to walk on sunshine and what have you. Cloudless skies, 25 degrees plus temperatures. It's going to be a lovely day with ten new singles/EPs for you to explore, so I'd say enjoy the weather and the music!

Daughters EP. The Sour

We kick off this week with a new name on the blog. The four women from Tāmaki Makaurau or Auckland as we know it over here, that form The Sour present themselves on their EP with a dirty grunge/alternative rock sound that contrasts nicely with the female voices. The avid readers of this blog will know by now I have one benchmark album for this combination, 'Eight Arms To Hold You" by Veruca Salt. The Sour scores well in this benchmark. The Sour hovers somewhere between wanting to sound cool and hey, look at what we've made. All four songs have that combination, because the band made the most of the chance it was offered. The songs all have well thought out arrangements, allowing rays of light in and even a pop element in the vocal arrangements. On the other side there is the darkness in the deep sounding rhythm guitars and the coolness of the lead singer. All four songs have this quality and although there are some subtle differences between them, it's not necessary to pick out individual songs on the four song EP. They're all good, making The Sour another promising young act from New Zealand.

Sand. Swapmeat

We are going Down Under some more on this blog, but to Adelaide in Southern Australia this time. Swapmeet in part presents a softer kind of slacker rock, only to give a kick to both my ears when it feels like it, with me going, please, kick me some more. Swapmeet consists of Venus O’Broin (guitar, vocals), Joshua Doherty (bass), Maxwell Elphick (guitar, drums, vocals), and Jack Medlyn (guitar, drums, vocals). The four met in their teens and released an EP in 2024, making their upcoming album, 'Mount Zero' (17 June), their debut. Just like this single finds Swapmeet on this blog for the first time. In the part that Jack Medlyn sings lead, the band kicks in the pedals, while Venus O'Broin keeps things calm and tranquil. The combination really works on Sand and makes me certainly curious to hear more next month.

Out Of Context. Library Card

With its previous single Days Of Clay Library Card found itself on these pages for the first time. With Out Of Context the band is back. The context of Out Of Context is post punk. This is a song of contained fury about the downsides of capitalism. "You will love what you do" it is declaimed as a given; wherever one works and whatever one does there. Taken out of context of the song carrying that title, it's clear Library Card follows its own rule. Singer Lot van Teylingen talks more than sings, while the rhythm section of the band plays an incredibly fast pace, the guitarist play accents the whole time. And then it happens, with a few notes the band takes us to a postpunk version of psychedelia. Van Teylingen starts to sing changing the mood of Out Of Context completely. That is not the end. The band explodes in something we could call a solo section, before strongly accented notes brings us to the end of this impressive single. There is a cure though. Just listen to Jefferson Starship's 'Out Of Control'.

Guardrail EP. CAITLIN

With two singles from Guardrail CAITLIN (Bradley) from Christchurch, New Zealand already had drawn some attention to her EP. It deserves attention as a whole as well. Simply because the songs are so good to listen to. No, nothing spectacular may be happening on Guardrail and you will have heard singer-songwriters like CAITLIN before. Those are the very last things that you should let prevent you from taking a listen. It all starts with the voice of the New Zealand singer. She's able to settle right into the middle of your head, like she does in 'Outline', with the instruments mixed all around her voice, so that the quiet and almost modest song fills your whole head, leaving space for nothing else. All songs are at heart singer-songwriter based, I imagine having started on an acoustic guitar. From there she worked with producer Will McGillivray to find out what extra's would work best for the song. I leave you to find out about the details added to the individual songs. Believe me, they all make CAITLIN's voice shine a little bit more.

War On War. Frenchy and the Punk

In a period that the U.S. has actually gone to war, Frenchy and the Punk releases its new single War On War. In the meantime singer Samantha Stevenson has her own battle to fight, breast cancer. As a result the band has to cancel all shows for 2026, losing its revenues and livelihood. You can help the duo by supporting it. You can do so here: https://gofund.me/24f28df11. That makes two musicians I've reviewed this week battling the same disease. Back to music. War On War is the sort of anthem you'd expect with a title like that. War On War is a huge song in a 1980s style but with a rock element of all the past decades put together. Samantha Stevenson has a voice that can alert other boats in the thickest fog imaginable. It's deep and loud but above all totally convincing in a song like this. Scott Heiland creates the music around her that makes her look extremely good. If this song can't convince belligerent parties to get to their senses, I do not know what else can.

I Smell. My Purse

More postpunk from the Low Lands. My Purse is a new band consisting of Una Jongenelis, Keetje Voogd, Igor Jongenelis en Sara Elzinga. If anything, the single reminds me Tramhaus' 'I Don't Sweat', one of its first songs. My Purse is a tad less confrontational than its Rotterdam based colleagues. Slowly but surely Dutch postpunk is becoming its own genre. Always confrontational, with guitars that play parts that are not exactly the notes you’d expect to hear yet work. They always go (a bit) against the grain, yet all together make a good melody, just like the vocal melody does. My Purse has found all the right notes to convince me. Yes, there's room for one more band in the Dutch postpunk basket.

Tambourine. Lenny Kravitz, eh Lenny Lenny

With Tambourine Lenny Kravitz taps into the vein that brought him a string of hits in the second half of the 80s and very early 90s. Tambourine has that mix of swing and robustness with which he created these crossover songs that made him stand out from others at the time. It's decades ago since I stopped following him. More or less after the single 'Are You Gonna Go My Way', still my favourite Lenny Kravitz song, by far. Tambourine will most likely not change that, but I like what I'm hearing. Kravitz is singing with a highish voice, the music underneath his voice is part suave, part soul, part rock. In fact it's attractive. The kind of song I do not mind hearing more than just once...... And then I find the joke's on me. This isn't Lenny Kravitz at all. It is a Belgian artist Lenny Coorevitz working under the name Lenny Lenny. He tricked me alright. The rest of my comments do not change because of this.

Dandelions. Bonnie Kemplay

In his single 'Incantations' Ed O'Brien (Radiohead) plays the same two notes for minutes on end and did not make it here because of this endless repetition. To my surprise the next single on my list starts the same. It made me notice how much of a difference a female voice can make. Bonnie Kempley sings in a way that many 2020s female singers on the verge between folk and indie do. Ms. Kempley does not need a lot of embellishments to make Dandelion come alive, where O'Brien never managed to do so for me with his song. In all its modesty Dandelion lets in a clarinet and a piano and it is enough. Mysterious and mesmerising this single is.

Split. Horace Pinker / The Raging Nathans

A four song EP split evenly between the two bands. A horror for the true audiophile, for where to put a song by two different artists in your discotheque? Under compilations I suppose, but who ever thinks of playing a record form under that? Usually compilations get lost in translation. Anyway, Split deserves a mention here. Both bands are around for about two decades and have a host of records to their name. If you like punkrock the American way, i.e. fast, aggressive with loud and impressive guitars, with a drummer who must have numb arms and legs after each song, that are all anthems you can shout along to, this split single is your thing. Don't expect any subtlety. Just four songs that kick off and end in the exact same way. The bands from Chicago, respectively Dayton blend well together on a side by side divided split single. Punkrock on, I'd say.

The Burden. Oddfellows

In 1994 Chris Pulliam, Mark Ryan, and Mike Throneberry formed a band called Oddfellows in Denton, Texas. That must be at the same time that Slobberbone for a short while tried to conquer international stages. The effort (of both bands) was short lived. In the 32 years that followed the ex-Oddfellows formed "hundreds of bands you will have heard from", or so the bio says. And now they are back, with an extra guitarist Peter Salisbury for those who remember the first period that is. The Burden is a song that propels itself forward from the very first second. It has a 1980s vibe played with guitars. There's no stopping The Burden. The singer is singing with a voice that reminds me a little of David Bowie at his least expressionless. Come to think of it, it's more Iggy Pop is his best Bowie co-penned songs. Oddfellows plays and sings everything on one emotional level and that is a huge part of the attraction of the song. A little synth sound (or guitar effect?) is the only thing escaping it. In December 2024 Oddfellows reformed, to write and record a whole album that will see the light of day somewhere this year.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght 


Wednesday, 20 May 2026

Painted Sea, Painted Stars. Steve French

Cees Paris was once a part of the Canshaker Pi and Personal Trainer entourage around Willem Smit, but he found his own vehicle with Steve French, assisted by some friends of old. In the past seven years I wrote reviews of 'Lightning Tiger Running' (2019) and 'Dogs' (2022). And then I sort of overlooked the latest effort released in March of this year. Time to make amends, as with Painted Sea, Painted Stars, Paris shows to be home from many markets.

Rereading my 2019 review, the following sentences struck me:

"What I notice in the nine song album is that Steve French is able to create a few moods. First there is the ramshackle vagueness. Secondly, very direct songs. Finally there is an alternative ballad, just one man and one guitar, no matter how short the song is".

Come 2026, Steve French is still very good at that mix and even adds an Hawaiian influenced track to boot.

The new album shows a far more mature and serious Steve French. This is no longer a young exuberant man bouncing around, showing off his musical prowess. A lot of thought has gone into the new album. It sounds far more mapped out, but without losing the open-mindedness of a fresh sound.

Like I wrote, Painted Sea, Painted Stars is a varied album. Indie rock can be found in abundance, but also an alternative ballad, 'Shallow Glow', with just Cees Paris and his guitar and a little embellishments. Then take the way the album ends. 'Arid Plains' is a full hybrid song. It is an alternative ballad, with a band. It includes an interesting electrical piano part, great riffs and an exploding electric guitar in a very short interlude (solo?). Because of the alternative approach, it is hard to call it beautiful, yet, in its own way it is. Constantly tugging at my pleasing and at my prickly pear side, manoeuvring itself between pop and alternative.

As a small boy, I was allowed to go to a radio studio with my mother and grandmother to record a programme for the ship my dad sailed on at the time. All I got to say was "dag pappa". There was a band performing, The Kilima Hawaiians. I had totally forgotten about this event and here's Steve French with the track 'Blue Hawaii' bringing back the memory. Thank you for that.

The indierock side of Steve French with some postpunk flavours dominates the biggest parts of Painted Sea, Pained Stars. No song is just straightforward, there's always a twist here, a turn there, the curve ball thrown in to prick up the ears or to give a jolt. It remains melodic but never in expected ways. Exactly what makes the Dutch alternative / postpunk rock scene so good. Steve French claims its position here no little.

Summing up, the more mature approach suits Steve French really well. The band fits right in with what is happening in this country and found its own voice along the way.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght

 

You can order Painted Sea, Painted Stars here:

https://excelsior-recordings.com/products/steve-french-painted-sea-painted-stars 

Sunday, 17 May 2026

made it!. lucky break

When lucky break made its debut on this blog with a review of the single 'Camp Song', I wrote:

"Believe it or not, I can, as it were, hear Tammy Wynette sing Camp Song, but also R.E.M. Now that is what I call a hybrid".

Having familiarised myself with her album made it! I can state that this feeling of listening to a hybrid album has not leave me. Despite rocking out as well, the mood at times switches between country and indie, especially because she is able to sing in an indie and a country kind of way. I will not go as far and write that this artist cannot make up her mind on what it is she wants to be, that she's comfortable somewhere in between seems obvious.

lucky break is Emma Gerson who has an East and West Coast background. After a short stint in the music industry, she felt she wanted to be a musician first and that resulted in the EP 'Biggest Thing' and now in her debut album made it!. On the album, she worked with Elliott Woodbridge, friend and co-producer. Gerson played the acoustic guitar and Woodbridge all other instruments.

That country feel aside, it's obvious that Emma Gerson grew up with a solid dose of indierock. This music form is the bedrock of made it!. lucky break is not afraid to rock and move from the light to the shade and back. Take Darklight for example. The soft toned verses are painted over in dark overtones when the chorus gets there. Listen to the two opening songs and you hear she's pretty convincing in songs that may alienate pure pop lovers but please the more alternative pop-rock fans.

Promo photo
A third element in lucky break's music that struck me, is her closeness to the indie female singers coming out of New Zealand like Vera Ellen, Aldous Harding and Ernie Ball. On made it! the indie, alternative rock and folk elements are mingled just as easily. It makes made it! stand out for me just a little bit more. And, makes the album so much more varied. The playfulness of 'Red Balloon' is a good example of such another tone compared to most other songs on made it!.

made it! is a debut album, but as a whole it is a mature album by an artist who seems to have a clear view of where she wants to go. So don't take my primary observation too serious. lucky break is indie/alternative enough to be taken seriously and allows in other elements that may make her attractive to a lot more music fans. Time will tell if she will make a choice or is able to keep walking on that thin line in the middle. In the meantime let's enjoy this good debut album.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght 

 

Saturday, 16 May 2026

2026, week 20. 10 singles

Today you will find a bunch of octogenarians in the singles section and all with songs that are vibrant and full of life totally belying their age. At that age one can know what will be the last you'll do. If this over time will be proven to be the last, all can be tremendously pleased with these efforts. To compensate there a few very new names as well, some even debut records. In other words, more than enough to explore and enjoy!

Rome. Brook Fox

And yet another debut on the blog. He is an indie-pop/rock artist from South-West Wales who knows exactly how the light and the shade works in his music. My take is that his main influences come from the post-grunge era with bands like Creed and that band with the hit 'Outside' that I keep forgetting the name of, Staind? Brook Fox' own contribution is the pop element he throws into the mix, making Rome far less darker than the bands I mentioned. That said, he knows how to make his band rock and handles the light and the shade to perfection, giving an audience a moment to rest before everyone can explode into the song once again. Rome is aimed for festival fields in the way it is set up and it is working as far as I'm concerned.

Still In The Race EP. RubinCarter

RubinCarter is Queen's Pleasure drummer Sal Rubinstein turned singer-songwriter. After the release of singles announcing his debut EP, we can listen to the whole work. The songs started in his bedroom playing an acoustic guitar just for his own pleasure. Slowly but surely he realised these songs should be heard by more people. With help from his friends the songs and RubinCarter took shape. Ruben Carter became a famous name because of the Bob Dylan - Jacques Levy composition 'Hurricane', more than because of his boxing career and trial. Do not expect Bob Dylan style music here. The EP kicks off with the alternative rock track 'Unentertained'. A song that goes for the big sound, with a huge lead guitar and background vocals. The exact right song to put on pole position, because it is the kind of song that can define a career. In theory 'Unentertained' is a song to play in a stadium and to have that as your first song on your first EP is an asset. With 'Frame' the mood goes down, but again RubinCarter shows to know what it takes to arrange a song in such a way that it catches the ear. Going deeper into the EP, it becomes clear Sal Rubinstein is showing us what he is capable of. His goal was not to create a musically consistent EP. 'April' is a ballad with a fingerpicked acoustic guitar. It is not my favourite song on the EP but it certainly shows courage to present such a different song. 'Still In The Race' is also a ballad but of a different sort. The slide guitar gives the song a distinct rock feel as does the main riff. So is the final song, 'Money Machine'. Setting the easy scoring opening rock track apart, 'Money Machine' is the song that impresses me most. It has this easy going vibe, while at the same time being able to make a great impression on me. Without making a grand effort during the first impression, 'Money Machine' is the kind of song that slowly but surely turns into a anthem.  A modest one but an anthem nonetheless."Lalala" sometimes is enough to do the trick. RubinCarter is a name to watch alright.

ESO. The Bernadette Maries

The Bernadette Maries from Brussels return with its second single. ESO is a song with two faces. It all starts out as an alternative rock song. In fact I can call it grunge without any qualms. Nirvana is all over the intro. The light and the shade between verse and chorus? Check. The two guitar line up is used to create a lighter mood and a darker one. Before the two minutes mark things change. Let's call it psychedelic, that interlude. Not that the world becomes all wobbly and out of focus, it still qualifies. The drums come in with a high and fast rhythm after which singer/bassist Daria takes over the lead vocals. By then the song has been totally set on its head. I have to admit, I like the first part better, yet surprising it is. Two singles down, upcoming album 'Soft' is an album to look out for. We have a, hopefully, glorious summer in front of us first, as the release date is set for 18 September.

Ride. The Chelsea Curve

Click The Chelsea Curve in this blog's search engine and one single after the other pops up. Promoted by the late Justine Covault, the band came into my life thanks to her and I liked the band better by the single. Come 2026 and here's the band once again with single Ride from the already released album 'The Rideout'. Like a song with a title like it should, it is about riding, a motorcycle in this case. Linda Pardee (bass, vocals, keys) and Tim Gillis (guitars, vocals, keys) are joined by their new drummer Bruce Caporal. The trio rocks in a very familiar way, more U.K. than the U.S. A band like The Who comes to mind from the time when they were able to blend pop and rock in a perfect way. Mixed a little into the background is the warm sound of a Hammond organ, but mostly the guitars, bass and drums are rocking no little. The Chelsea Curve adds some delicious pop elements in the background vocals and packs Ride with some great rock riffs as well. Do things come much better than this? I doubt it. Brilliant single.

Home To Us. Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr

It's 2026 and 50% of The Beatles release a single together. In the year Paul turns 84 and Ringo 86, the two present a song that is simply great fun. You won't hear me saying this is their best work, but it is good. In the lyrics they look back at their youth, when where you lived was simply called home, no matter how you might look at the house or you think of the circumstances today. The song has a strong pop vibe with some Status Quo light overtones. The two alternate on vocals, with Ringo singing in a slightly different voice than normal, fitting Home To Us perfectly. Just close your eyes for two seconds and imagine that all four were still alive and working together. That  would have made a very decent single, ranking there with George's 'Handle Me With Care' by The Travelling Wilburys for example. In fact, I haven't heard a better song by Paul than Home To Us since I don't know when. There's a new album in the stars, ‘The Boys O f Dungeon Lane’ and its release date is 29 May.

In The Stars. The Rolling Stones

Yes, I'm a fan since like forever. No not from the beginning. I'm not that old. But let's face it, In The Stars is a tossaway kind of Stones song. Sure, it's nice and the "ooooooo" part does give it a little extra. Yet, I have 'Undercover Of The Night', 'She Was Hot', 'One Hit To The Body' and 'Rock And A Hard Place', to name a few of the average Stones singles already in my collection. In The Stars does not add a lot more. On the positive side. There is a new Stones single and yes, it sounds energetic. Andrew Watt does get the best out of the Jagger-Richard material of the 2020s and Jagger is a 82 year old force of nature. The man must be so fit that not even his voice wears down. The hard life seems to be catching up with Keith Richards. To give the song some credit, the way the song plays out, with the piano coming in, I may take a shine to it any way. The details are nicer than I thought at first. Only two more months and we'll know more about 'Foreign Tongues', including, once again, Paul McCartney.

Arrogant Boy. Deep Purple 

Established in 1968, also Deep Purple is releasing a new album in 2026, 'Splat!' and listening to Arrogant Boy, the band is in top form. The song goes off in classic hard rock, metal, symphonic rock directions as if its the most normal thing in the world. The three from the Mach II line up and most famous one, Gillan, Glover, Paice and keyboard player Don Airey around for the whole of this century, are joined by new guitarist Simon McBride. Together the rock like it is 1970 something. The guitar playing in the verses wasn't invented then though. Think Metallica or something like it. Next, Marillion comes in and a little Bowie in the singing in the "Billy" interlude part. There's so much energy here that it is inconceivable that I'm listening to older senior citizens of around 80. Arrogant Boy is pure power and more importantly, a great song.

Only Free When Sleeping. Big Special

With two records in two years and one stand alone single, the announcement of a new EP by Big Special shows that the band is in a hurry to show more of itself. 'O'Joy' will be out on 5 June. It is said to contain the songs that did not fit on both albums. Those following the band will not be surprised by Only Free When Sleeping. Vocalist Joe Hicklin does his mix of rapping/talking singing in his Midlands accent, while drummer Callum Moloney points the direction of the song through his relentless rhythm. Who does all else that we hear, I don't know. Only Free When Your Sleeping is a strong song, like the best songs of the duo are. There's always urgency that is brought across and not only because of the vocal delivery. The whole song wants its listeners to move and move some more. Yes, it's undeniable, I like Big Special, even if it is a bit outside of my usual musical habitat.

Mess. Tape Toy

Tape Toy debuted on this blog with a single of its EP 'Launch The Rocket' in January 2025. Today the band is back with the up tempo, almost creating a hunted down kind of tempo of Mess. Don't expect originality, as I've heard a song like this so many times before. What Mess does present is a truckload of positive energy, fun and little surprises all throughout the song. The song announces an as yet unnamed album to be released in September. Based on what I'm hearing here, it should be great fun. The mix of a modern sounding lo-fi song with all the modernity electronics and samples can add, presents a song that is simply filled with inventions, additions, weirdness, to return to the kind of art rock bands like The Mo and The Kewi University of Swing were already making around 1980. Then add that tempo and you have Mess. Tape Toy, a band to be on the lookout for.

Just Love. Reluctant Bob & The Lonely Lovers

Just Love is the kind of pure pop that came into fashion a long time ago and somewhere in the 1970s went out again, after bubblegum bands like The Rubettes and Showaddywaddy, who rehashed the feel from the decade before, went out of fashion. I never hear these two examples anymore. The originals from the 1960s still seem to come by and may forever come by when new generations take a look a their grandparents' records collection (or Tik Tok or Spotify of course). That makes Just Love pure nostalgia for a time long gone, but no less fun. Just listen to those guitar notes, the sweet harmony vocals, the way the piano adds to the fun. In a way the song reminds me most of The Rutles, Eric Idle's The Beatles parody. Just Love would have fit perfectly on the album, without parodying a The Beatles song in a superb way. Well done, Reluctant Bob & The Lonely Lovers.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght 


Wednesday, 13 May 2026

Gaze At The Raisin. The Slow Clock

Is it three years already since 'Interpretative Dancing'? Time flies when life happens and often is fun. A new The Slow Clock album is always something to look forward to. Harmen Kuiper's home project, a modern form of lo-fi, i.e. the concept of recording DIY at home with a far better sound, has a fifth iteration and once again takes me through a whole range of styles, emotions and voices. Once again he works with singer-songwriter Amarins Romkema who assists on co- and background vocals, making the album even more varied in sound.

With Gaze At The Raisin, a pointer to raisin therapy no less, The Slow Clock presents itself as an alternative pop band. No one loving modern acts like Raye or Olivia Rodrigo will recognise the pop in this music, yet it is there. Built up from the rhythm of a drum computer, different kind of songs are presented. Some can be compared to the likes of, here they are once again, Pickle Darling and Carol Cleveland Sings, others have a more pop feel as soon as more estranging elements are left behind in the recording bedroom.

Things on this album start with 1960s (psychedelic) pop. Kuiper is an obvious fan of psychedelic pop tracks of the age. He plays elements from this music over the electronic rhythms. He may turn them inside out and/or upside down, connaisseurs like me recognise these elements immediately. The next level The Slow Clock adds is a more alternative feel. One that makes a pop tune less recognisable. Treat a voice a little electronically, use notes that will make the listener listen again to truly understand what is happening here (or turn them off immediately), bring in electronics. The result is songs that do not bring instant satisfaction but are far more fun to listen to.

At the same time it is clear that a lot of work went into the arrangements of the songs. They all work, have surprising elements or turns and satisfy in the end. Melodies and counter melodies can be found. Elements that usually are not associated with lo-fi music. A laptop and a recording programme offer infinite options just like the most expensive recording studios do. Harmen Kuiper uses all the options modern technique offers him, successfully.

I will refrain from singling out individual songs. It is not so relevant if one songs has a great guitar riff or has a corny synth sound and another seems inspired by Personal Trainer, etc. What the main message is, that Gaze At The Raisin has this pop feel that makes me feel good, while listening to the album. That message should be enough to make you take a listen right now. Too bad though that The Slow Clock only play live shows in Los Angeles.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght

 

You can listen to and order Gaze At The Raisin here:

https://chinup.bandcamp.com/album/gaze-at-the-raisin 

Monday, 11 May 2026

Slow Death Of A Good Girl. Hiqpy

Why this exactly happened is not clear, what happened is. The anecdote is too good to pass up on. A few days ago, I read the review of Slow Death Of A Good Girl in 'Oor'. It was not an undividedly positive review. Hester Aalberts thought many songs on the album to be too long, unnecessarily blown up, etc. It came across a little bit like hype bashing to me, like happened often in the early 1980s in 'Oor', the reason I stopped reading it back then, to return circa ten years later. Up front I have to admit that during the experience below, I was writing a text and not really paying attention to the music most of the time.

Soon after turning on Slow Death Of A Good Girl, I had to agree with Ms. Aalberts for more than 100%. There were these noise eruptions drowning Hiqpy singer Abir Hamam out totally and why every time a song seemed to be over did this male singer come in? For a second I thought: are there two albums playing at the same time? But somehow it seemed to fit and I was intrigued by the way this music unfolded (while not paying true attention). There would definitely not be a review, that much was certain.

When I had finished writing the text, I wanted to go downstairs to have lunch and switched off Spotify. The aggressive music and singer continued and I still have no clue what it was and why it was playing. I must have clicked on a link or something that started playing by itself. Listening to Hiqpy alone later that same day, gave me a totally different experience and left me wondering about Hester Aalberts' review, as under the current circumstances, I'm not hearing what she heard.

But what do I hear? Hiqpy became a hype because the band was gathering positive reviews, interviews in newspapers and magazines before a single song was released, all based on live shows and a few songs played lived on radio shows. That period was expanded way beyond what any other band would consider commercially smart. Well into 2026 that album is finally there, with a fear of having waited too long, expectations rising too high. Not for me, as I managed to forget about the band with ease and then read the album is there, so started listening.

Based on a first impression, it's clear the wait was well worthwhile. Slow Death Of A Good Girl is a solid, at times even huge album. There was time and finances involved that allowed the album to be as big as it is. With a producer, Danton Supple, of name and fame (Coldplay, U2, Elbow) on board, nothing was left to circumstance and luck. The sound is of a stadium performing band. Hiqpy will not have the routine for that yet and will have to build its name further.

Hiqpy is, besides singer Abir Hamam, guitarist/singer Vincent ter Velde, bassist Tom Radsma and drummer Kasper de Boer. The first three started the band during their student days at the Amsterdam conservatorium. Drummer Kasper joined later. From there things went fast and slow.

The band that springs to mind most for me, is Wolf Alice. The music is quite compatible, as is the singing of the two ladies involved. This U.K. band could be a nice example for Hiqpy. Build a fan base and make each next album one step up the ladder and with each tour move into a bigger venue. Hopefully, Abir Hamam is able to grow with the venues, where Ellie Rowsell appears to have a hard time adapting. Based on what I'm hearing now this could be a feasible scenario.

Where I have a harder time, is that after several listening sessions, still not a single song has stuck in my brain. Don't get me wrong, I like what I'm hearing but where is the recognition that usually is there after two, three listening sessions? And I'm far further than that. This makes me wonder if Slow Death Of A Good Girl is a must have album for me. I will give it some more time, but have not bought the album yet.

So, at the end of the day, I am somewhere in between. Hiqpy has produced a huge album, that as far as I'm concerned is not bothered by an unnecessary "peacock tail", to quote Ms. Aalberts. In its genre it is a great sounding album, but are the songs as good as they seem? Time will tell, but there is reason for a slight doubt. On the other side. Despite liking Wolf Alice's first two albums, including a great live show in Melkweg, I only became a real fan with album three and four. I still cannot sing a single song from the first two. In other words, there is more than just hope for Hiqpy.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght