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FESTIVAL NEWS: lkley Jazz Festival 2018

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This year is the 5th year of the jazz festival in Ilkley, it started from humble beginnings as a day of Jazz at the Summer festival. To celebrate the festival are commissioning a piece of music from well known jazz composer Jamil Sheriff, called the Ilkley Suite, based on Ilkley and the surrounding landscape, which will be performed for the first time on 18th August this year.

This year the festival has 30 events, 13 more than last year, across 11 venues of which 4 are new to the festival, with free events, ticketed events and events combined with meals. The headline acts this year are performing in the winter gardens and unusually both headliners are female this year, Jazz Singer Anita Wardell has recently moved back to Australia so this will be one her few performances in the UK this year and Jazz Harpist Alinia Bzhezhinska who is now based in London and has been wowing the southern jazz fans makes her first visit to Yorkshire.

The festival starts on 15th August with performances around town and ends on Sunday 19th August, here is the full listing:

Wednesday 15th
5.30 – 7 pm Ilkley Cinema, Sam Watts solo performance and film – £11
6 – 8 pm The Gin Lounge, Julie Edwards – Duo Jazz vocals – Free
7 – 9pm Monkmans, James Birkett duo – Guitar duo – Meal
7 – 9pm Quinta, Nikki Allen duo – Jazz vocals – Meal
8 – 10pm Martinez, Dave Smith duo – Blues – £5

Thursday 16th
6.30 – 8.30pm The Black Hat, Zoe Gilby quartet – Jazz vocals – Meal
7 – 9pm Monkmans, Esther Bennet duo – Jazz vocals – Meal
7 – 9pm Quinta, Kate Peters duo – Jazz vocals – Meal
8 – 9pm Friends of ham, Nik Svarc trio – Fusion – Free
9 – 10pm Friends of ham, Beverley Beirne and Nik Svarc trio – Directors jam – Free

Friday 17th
4 – 6pm Ticket office, Backchat Brass – New Orleans – Free
6 – 8pm Monkmans, Rod Mason duo – Sax duo – Meal
6.30 – 7.30pm The Winter Gardens, Ronnie Bottomley trio -Piano trio – Free
8 – 10pm The Winter Gardens, Anita Wardell quartet – Jazz Vocals – £18

Saturday 18th
10 – 12am The Winter Gardens, Jazz Workshop- Workshop Free
1 – 2pm The Winter Gardens, The Paradise Trio – Trumpet led – £6
2.30 – 3.30pm The Winter Gardens, Paul Edis octet – Instrumental -£6
4 – 5pm The Winter Gardens, Perpetual Motion Machine – Rock Fusion – £6
5.30 – 7pm Ticket Office, Bare Brass Band – New Orleans – Free
7 – 8pm The Winter Gardens, The Ilkley Suite – Instrumental with vocals – £6
8.30– 10.30pm The Winter Gardens, Alina Bzhezhinska – Instrumental – £15
Throughout The Winter Gardens, Darren Dunston Bromley – Solo Guitar – Free
11 – 1am The Black Hat, Jazz Jam – Jam – Free

Sunday 19th
10 – 11.30am The Black Hat, Jamil Sheriff – Masterclass – Free
12.30 – 2.30pm The Black Hat, Matt Holborn – Gypsy Jazz – Free
12.30 – 2.30 Broadleys,James Mainwarring – Instrumental – Meal
1 – 2pm Bandstand, Steph Atkinson 2 Rivers 4tet – Instrumental – Free
2 – 4pm Bandstand, The Dales Jam – Instrumental – Free
3 – 5pm The Black Hat, Swing Manouche – Gypsy Jazz – Free
4 – 6pm The Ticket Office, Sontuno – Latin – Free

More details at http://ilkleyjazzfest.blogspot.co.uk/

Weekend Tickets including all events in the winter Gardens are £50 and Saturday Tickets are £35. Tickets from Ilkley visitor information centre – 01943 60231

TOUR NEWS: RAYE announces UK headline tour for Autumn 2018

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RnB sensation Raye has announced the details of her debut UK headline tour for October 2018, and is ready to show eager fans her array of new material.

Raye has just released her feisty new single ‘Friends’ on 6 July; a tropical pop tune that promotes female solidarity while introducing Latin pop beats to her RnB sound. This is her first release since May’s EP Side Tape, which sees her collaborate with artists such as Mabel, Maleek Berry and Ray Blk.

The former Brit School attendee has made a big name for herself in the last three years, having written songs for the likes of Charli XCX (‘After The Afterparty’), Little Mix (‘If I Get My Way’) and John Legend (‘A Good Night’) which propelled her into becoming the skilled songwriter she is today. Raye has also topped charts with Jax Jones for bold banger ‘You Don’t Know Me’ and Jonas Blue’s dance anthem ‘By Your Side’, while her own track ‘Confidence’ has just hit 4 million plays on Spotify.

Raye has performed with some of music’s biggest stars such as Rita Ora, Jess Glynne and Years & Years whom she has previously supported, while also playing festivals such as Glastonbury, Parklife and The Great Escape to name a few.

Tickets on sale via www.gigsandtours.com / www.ticketmaster.co.uk

Mon 29 October Nottingham Rescue Rooms
Tue 30 October Manchester Gorilla
Thu 01 November Birmingham O2 Academy 2
Fri 02 November Leeds The Wardrobe
Sat 03 November Newcastle Cluny
Mon 05 November Bristol Thekla
Tue 06 November London KOKO

TOUR NEWS: Fontaines D.C. announce Summer 2018 dates

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Following their recent signing to Partisan Records and the announcement of their support slot on the forthcoming Shame tour in the UK and Ireland, Dublin’s Fontaines D.C. have now announced a new set of summer live dates and festival appearances to take place over the coming months.

The last year has seen Fontaines D.C. release three hotly received double A-side singles, all of which were named as singles of the week by Rough Trade, and garnered early support from the likes of Steve Lamacq and others on BBC 6 Music, as well as earning plaudits from DIY, Stereogum, KEXP, Fred Perry Subculture, London in Stereo, So Young and every major Irish publication.

They will play the following dates across the rest of 2018:

27th July – Sunflowerfest, Hillsborough (NI)
4th August – Indiependence Festival, Cork (IE)
5th August – Castlepalooza Festival, Waterford (IE)
11th August – Dolan’s Warehouse, Limerick (IE)
2nd September – Electric Picnic, Stradbally (IE)
20th October – Simple Things Festival, Bristol
20th October – Ritual Union, Oxford

15th Nov – SWX, Bristol *
16th Nov – Pyramids, Portsmouth *
17th Nov – Academy 1 , Leicester *
18th Nov – The Leadmill, Sheffield *
20th Nov – LUU Stylus, Leeds *
21st Nov – Tivoli Theatre, Dublin *
23rd Nov – University, Newcastle *
24th Nov – SWG3 , Glasgow *
26th Nov – The Waterfront, Norwich *
27th Nov – Academy, Oxford *
28th Nov – o2 Insitute, Birmingham *
30th Nov – Forum, London *

5th Dec – The Lexington, London
6th Dec – The Prince Albert, Brighton
7th Dec – Eagle Inn, Manchester

* = supporting Shame

ALBUM REVIEW: Vukovar – ‘i n f i n i t u m’

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Usually a release from Vukovar is accompanied by some sort of text that hints at what has shaped the work on the release. In this case – and most intriguingly – ‘i n f i n i t u m’ is described as ‘an audacious alchemy between a kind of ethereal and aristocratic Synthwave, Military Pop and a ‘fasci-nating’ Post-Folk’. What this seems to indicate, at least to me, is that musically (or should that be sonically?) the tracks continue on from the last album ‘Puritan’. And indeed my first ‘scan listen’ seemed to confirm that.

The other thing is that that ‘scan listen’ left me frankly quite disturbed, I’m honestly not sure that for everyone this stuff is best listened to late at night when you are on your own and the house you are in is making those sort of end of day creaks and cracks. But, and it’s a big but, I really like music that leaves me feeling unsettled and disturbed, I’m like that. If you’re not like me then perhaps try listening when the sun’s out. However for me Vukovar’s music is best listened to in a darkened room with headphones on, or loud so that it wraps itself around you.

So for the purposes of this review I want you to imagine me late at night, typing only by the light coming from my laptop screen, listening to the album played loud (for this is indeed what I am doing).

The opening track ‘Rites’ starts with a pounding, a pounding that fades into something that sounds quite, and I’m not entirely the band would thank me for this, prog. It’s all keyboard ethereal washes. However then the ‘vocals’ – look it’s this spoken, indistinct words – come in and it becomes disturbingly gothic. It reminds me strangely of church music at points.

‘In The Overgarden’ reminds me faintly of early Human League, it’s sparse, a simple synth line, an uncomplicated rhythm track. A fragile sounding vocal. There are some spoken sections – your guess is as good as mine as to whether they are found sounds or performed by the band – although it matters not one jot to be honest which of these they are ultimately. As a whole this thing is hypnotic, it’s disturbing, there’s a sense of dread, a sense that something is happening or perhaps better put will happen.

Warped sounds open ‘The Skin Is New, The Skin Is Ours’, joined by a voice, and then a crash. There’s a warped synth, a spoken lyric. Look it’s at this point that I got scared, this track is scary. It gave me this strange disturbed feeling somewhere at the front and middle of my head. I was so disturbed by this that I really really wanted it to end. It actually became painful emotionally to listen to. But sticking with it is worth it, honestly. It’s worth sticking with for what comes afterwards.

‘An Invisible Prison’ is one of those things that makes me smile, because it’s just so strange. The opening synth is just so gloriously weird and warped that it filled me with joy. And there is just the most wonderful noise towards the end of this.

In some ways ‘The House Of Thirteen Scenes’ reminded me of some the tracks from ‘Puritan’ at least initially. But this is disturbing because it decays into something else, something filled with this sense of foreboding, a sense that the thirteen scenes are not going to be good. The synth becomes more and more decayed, stray random noises creep in. Random words stick in your head – ‘torture’, ‘bravery into sin’. The phrases ‘I will tear your mortal coil apart, I will tear your mortal coil in half’ repeat and repeat. There are random organ sounds, cracks, buzzes

Left feeling scared and desolate ‘Dead Pressed Flowers‘ feels like light relief. Although made up of things that may not sound like much – a bass line that almost hits a groove but jerks, a drum sound, a spoken vocal, synth noises. The whole is something else. It’s something that if you were so inclined you could dance to. It’s actually quite groovy in a disjointed jerky sort of way.

And so to ‘Small Acts Of Mercy’. Opening in a vaguely military sounding way, it becomes something quite disturbingly beautifully sweet sounding. It’s layers of simple synth lines, a spoken vocal, a sung vocal. A restrained drum pattern.

‘The Destroying Place’ has this most fantastic contrast between the music and the vocal. The vocal almost sounds quite poppy, the music is dark. My friend, and every music reviewer has to have a friend they can play stuff to, said it sounded like ‘a gothic New Order’. I know what they meant by that.

And so to the nine minutes of ‘Remains’. It starts with children’s voices, a drum sounding out. And then this organ-y sounding synth comes in, it’s all almost church music sounding with a hint of military. It builds, there is sung vocal buried in the middle of the mix, a spoken voice. It stops, a voice speaks, it starts again. Musical phrases repeat. It’s not a song as such but it isn’t a sound piece. It’s a piece of music, it’s almost classical in construction, it’s those repeating themes. It ends with this whirling synth sound. And as it ends you are left feeling sad it has ended. This piece creeps up on you, it latches into something in your head. It’s disturbing but in a good way.

As a whole, and I’d recommend that Vukovar albums need to be listened to as a whole, this is something that leaves me feeling several things – to some extent relieved that it’s over so disturbing are some of the tracks, sad that it’s over because there is a beauty in this ‘music’ that is hugely compelling, disturbed both by the music and the lyrics, and frankly quite scared about having to move away from my pool of light, and go to bed because it’s going to be bouncing around in my head, keeping me awake and giving me bad dreams if I manage to fall asleep.

There is one thing I need to say here. And this is that the ‘listening experience’ of this, and indeed the band’s other albums, is different when you hear it with other people around. Listened to with others you sink less far into the dark and the beauty of the ‘music’ is more to the fore. When I listened to the whole album in one go with my friend, nice glass of red wine to hand, it felt like an event. We didn’t speak until it had finished, and then we spoke quietly about our ‘favourite’ tracks, how it left us feeling. That isn’t what usually happens when we listen to music together, usually we talk over the music, play stuff on repeat, pause things to say ‘well that was great’ or ‘just listen closely to the next bit’, but this album somehow made us feel like we should listen to it in one hit. It’s that compelling and absorbing.

‘i n f i n i t u m’ is deeply darkly beautiful, that’s not to say that some of the sounds in the music are not jarring or ugly or frankly horrible, but it’s the way they are put together that is beautiful. There is a restraint here, things go just far enough to make a point, to drive a feeling into your head, but they never go too far. It’s disturbing and scary but in a good way, a way that makes you want to go back and experience it again. It isn’t, and this should be fairly obvious from my track by track review, an easy album to listen to. there’s no obvious ‘easy’ track that gives you an ‘in’, you just need to start from the beginning. It’s easier if you’ve listened to the previous two albums because you get the progression to this, but if this is your first experience of the band you just need to stick with it, really listen to it and let it take it where it takes you.

‘infinitum’ is released through Solar Asceticists Productions/Le Recours Aux Forets on two different cassette editions – the Vukovar Ultras ‘Totenpop’ Edition and an ‘Ordinary’ Edition – and in digital format, and is available from:

S.A.P – https://solar-asceticists-productions.bandcamp.com/album/i-n-f-i-n-i-t-u-m
L.R.A.F – https://lerecoursauxforets.bandcamp.com/album/i-n-f-i-n-i-t-u-m
Brutalist House – https://vukovarbrutalisthouse.bandcamp.com/album/infinitum

SINGLE REVIEW: MUFFIN – ‘swim.float.drown’

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I have come to expect something slightly different with each release from MUFFIN and ‘swim.float.drown’ doesn’t change that. What I don’t mean is that it doesn’t have that MUFFIN sound thing going on, it does, but it wasn’t quite what I expected to hear. And I like that, I really like that.

The twist is that MUFFIN has taken the route of something that initially sounds more alternative rock than their previous releases and less off-kilter musically, although as it progresses you’ll find it’s not quite as straight forward as the start may sound.

This thing builds people, from an intro that sounds as though it could explode into some sort of post-hardcore track, but doesn’t. It is, as I’ve said, something alternative rock like.. And then, what the hell is going on here, there is this frankly scary section – I guess we could call it a drop-out – with that ‘radio’ vocal thing going on, and then, people, it fucking explodes. It gets loud, it gets real loud, it gets Sabbath grind out riff loud.

But, this being MUFFIN, are the band happy with something that sounds as a whole as simple as my description, are they hell. Let’s start with the vocals, because the first thing you’re going to notice is Matt’s vocals. The verses are delivered in this sneering style, they remind me vaguely of something, something I’ve heard at some stage in my like, can’t exactly say what. And then those vocals soar. Boy can that guy sing. But we’re not done with the vocals yet, there are chanted backing vocals, And in that ‘drop-out section’ Matt deploys something vocally that reminds me slightly of the spoken vocals in a Hawkwind track I use to test out my stereo set-up, and then just before it explodes he loses it, he loses it big time.

Musically, it would be the easy way out to just say ‘well it’s up to the usual high MUFFIN standard’, it is but there are things that I just have to highlight. In my repeated listens I’ve grown particularly attached to the bass playing on this track, it’s incredibly relentless. The guitar, well that is just fantastic.. And the drums are wonderfully musical, they’re not just providing a rhythm.

This is yet another hugely impressive release from MUFFIN. This thing rocks.

‘swim.float.drown’ is available on all online platforms

The info

MUFFIN are:

Matt Bond – Vocals
Jacob Tresidder – Guitar
Jamie Prescott – Guitar
Barry Mageean – Bass
Sam Heffer – Drums

https://www.facebook.com/whatismuffn

ALBUM & TOUR NEWS: Spring King ‘A Better Life out’ 31st August 31, upcoming festival dates, upcoming September 2018 tour

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Spring King have shared ‘The Hum’, the massive new single from their forthcoming album ‘A Better Life’. Taking the bands trademark choruses to the next level, ‘The Hum’ is a raucous chant-along roar of fight-for-your life invincibility.

Of the track, Spring King’s James Green says: “”The Hum’ is a song about returning to old haunts and old memories, and attempting to relive those visceral experiences and emotions, whilst realising that you’ve allowed yourself to slip into a life that wasn’t necessarily what you’d planned. It also came to encompass all the broader themes that the album touches on – self-reflection, overcoming adversity and negativity, and a constant striving for something better.”

Stream/download ‘The Hum’

‘A Better Life’ is released August 31 via Island Records. A stunning evolution from their 2016 debut, ‘Tell Me If You Like To’, the new album is a primal, joyous demand for no less than a better world.

A Better Life can be pre-ordered now.

Spring King festival dates

22nd July Tramlines Festival, Sheffield
18th August RiZe Festival, Cheltenham
25th August Reading Festival, Reading
26th August Leeds Festival, Bramham Park
1st September Bingley Music Live, Bingley

Headline tour dates

19th September St Lukes, Glasgow
20th September The Cluny, Newcastle
21st September Plug 2, Sheffield
22nd September O2 Academy 2, Liverpool
25th September Thekla, Bristol
26th September Rescue Rooms, Nottingham
27th September O2 Institute 2, Birmingham
28th September O2 Forum Kentish Town, London
29th September O2 Ritz, Manchester

LIVE REVIEW: Three Valleys Gospel Choir Summer Concert, Todmorden Central Methodist Church, 14th July 2018

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This energetic and expressive choir, with new conductor Marie-Claire Breen, gave their summer concert of gospel and world music in Todmorden. In between two halves of the show there were some solo and small group songs, including favourites like “Penny Lane” and “Dirty old town”. Rita Frayne gave us “Let us never forget”. New choir member Syed Faiz sang a beautiful and heartfelt durbari rag, a traditional Indian song form, and Maggie Kirwan read her own entertaining, child-themed poetry.

The choir gave us some new work and some old favourites, like “May you see diamonds”. There was a South African song about Nelson Mandela and “Say a little prayer for you”. “People get ready” showed the choir’s strengths, an effective mixture of technical skill and emotional warmth.

TOUR NEWS: Pussy Riot Riot Days Tour August 2018

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Following a ten night run at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, the show will be touring the UK, stopping in Newcastle, Leeds, Liverpool, Cardiff, and Exeter. Punk, electronica, theatre, activism, and protest merge in Pussy Riot: Riot Days — the accompaniment to Maria Alyokhina’s memoir of the same name.

Pussy Riot need little to no introduction. Ever since 2012 when Alyokhina, along with Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Yekaterina Samutsevich, were imprisoned for “hooliganism motivated by religious hatred” for their performance inside Moscow’s Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, the collective have been synonymous with protest and performance art the world over.

With fevered monologues underpinned by real footage and frenetic noise-punk, Riot Days takes us back to 2012 as Alyokhina and Pussy Riot ascend the altar of Moscow’s Cathedral of Christ the Saviour for a guerilla performance protesting the Orthodox Church’s support for Putin during his election campaign. Alyokhina then takes us with her as she’s bundled into the back of an autozak – a Russian acronym meaning ‘automobile for the incarcerated’ – recounting strip searches and solitary confinement during her stint in a Siberian penal colony. It’s disturbing but defiant, courageous and energising – a testament to the power of resistance and activism.

Riot Days gives you the whole story. How the group stood up against Vladimir Putin and the Russian Church in their support of LGBT rights, and how they became transformed into martyrs for a growing worldwide wave of feminism.

10-19 August – Summerhall, Edinburgh
20 August – The Riverside, Newcastle
21 August – Leeds University Stylus, Leeds
22 August – Arts Club, Liverpool
23 August – Tramshed, Cardiff
24 August – Exeter Phoenix, Exeter

TOUR NEWS: Tom Robinson announces October 2018 tour performing ‘Power In The Darkness’ debut LP

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The TOM ROBINSON BAND’s debut album Power In The Darkness was first performed 40 years ago in Victoria Park, London in front of 80,000 people at Rock Against Racism’s Carnival Against The Nazis alongside Steel Pulse, The Clash and X-Ray Spex.

The album was certified gold in the UK and Japan resulting in a major 28-date UK tour supported by Stiff Little Fingers in the Autumn of 1978

When Tom performed the entire Power In The Darkness LP at London’s 100 Club in 2017, all three shows sold out almost instantly. In October, to mark the album’s 40th anniversary, Tom will once again perform it live on tour in the UK – culminating in a special headline show at Shepherd’s Bush Empire on Saturday October 27. As ever his incendiary band features Faithless drummer Andy Treacey, guitarist Adam Phillips (Richard Ashcroft Band), keyboard virtuoso Jim Simmons and Tom himself on bass and vocals.

Tom Robinson first became known in 1977 as a musician, LGBT activist and anti-racist campaigner with the Tom Robinson Band (TRB) whose debut release 2-4-6-8 Motorway became one of the landmark singles of the UK punk era. Other well-known songs at the time included Glad To Be Gay, Up Against The Wall and Too Good To Be True.

Tom later co-wrote songs with both Peter Gabriel and Elton John and had further solo hits in 1983 with War Baby and Atmospherics: Listen To The Radio. His 15th studio album Only The Now (2015) included guest appearances by Billy Bragg, Nadine Shah, John Grant, Ian McKellen, TV Smith, Lisa Knapp and Martin Carthy.

As a radio broadcaster Tom hosts three shows a week on BBC Radio 6 Music, served for 10 years on the Ivor Novello Awards committee and was awarded a fellowship of LIPA in recognition of his support for new music with BBC Introducing.

Support on all shows is Mancunian soul singer Lee Forsyth Griffiths, whose first two albums were produced by Trevor Horn and Ian Grimble.

http://tomrobinson.com/gigs
http://twitter.com/freshnet
http://youtube.com/bothways
https://www.facebook.com/tomrobinsonmusic
https://www.instagram.com/freshonthenet

Dates

Wed 03 NORWICH: Epic
https://bit.ly/PITD2018Norwich

Thu 04 Oct GREAT TORRINGTON: Plough Arts
https://bit.ly/PITD2018Torrington

Fri 05 Oct LYME REGIS: Marine Theatre
https://bit.ly/PITD2018LymeRegis

Sat 06 Oct BRIGHTON: Brighthelm Centre
https://bit.ly/PITD2018Brighton

Tue 09 Oct HUMBERSIDE: Ropery Hall
https://bit.ly/PITD2018Barton

Wed 10 Oct BIRMINGHAM: Glee Club
https://bit.ly/PITD2018Birmingham

Thu 11 Oct MANCHESTER: Band On The Wall
https://bit.ly/PITD2018Manchester

Fri 12 Oct DUBLIN: Whelan’s
https://bit.ly/PITD2018Dublin

Sat 13 Oct BELFAST: Elmwood Hall
https://bit.ly/PITD2018Belfast

Tue 16 Oct LEEDS: Brudenell
https://bit.ly/PITD2018Leeds

Wed 17 Oct GATESHEAD: Sage
https://bit.ly/PITD2018Gateshead

Thu 18 Oct GLASGOW: King Tut’s
https://bit.ly/PITD2018Glasgow

Fri 19 Oct LIVERPOOL: Philharmonic
https://bit.ly/PITD2018Liverpool

Sat 20 Oct SOUTHAMPTON: The 1865
https://bit.ly/PITD2018Southampton

Tue 23 Oct CANTERBURY – Festival
https://bit.ly/PITD2018Canterbury

Wed 24 Oct BRISTOL: The Fleece
https://bit.ly/PITD2018Bristol

Thu 25 Oct CARDIFF: The Globe
https://bit.ly/PITD2018Cardiff

Fri 26 Oct OXFORD: Bullingdon
https://bit.ly/PITD2018Oxford

Sat 27 Oct LONDON: 02 Shepherds Bush Empire
https://bit.ly/PITD2018London

SINGLE REVIEW: Silver Wilson – ‘Close Enough’

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I was rather impressed by the last Silver Wilson single I reviewed, ‘Let You Go’, so when the band asked LSF whether we’d like to review their new release I said yes in a heartbeat.

‘Close Enough’ isn’t exactly what I expected to hear, I sort of expected some rather gorgeous piece of indie-pop, but what I heard was a something I can only describe as out and out pop. Pop that reminded me somewhat slightly of 80s’ possibly even 90s’, summer hits. And that isn’t a criticism, honest. Even I, lover of fuzzed out psych acid rock and music that just seems to come out of nowhere, am rather partial to a lovely slice of bouncy summer pop as the sun comes out and the days grow longer. Although this may come as a bit of a surprise to even close friends of mine. My secret is out.

And to pass the ‘Frank Summer Hit’ test a song has to be good, well put together, well played and it’s an added bonus if there’s a good vocal. ‘Close Enough’ passes the test with flying colours. The production on this thing is close to perfect, it has this rather nice bouncy rhythm that just doesn’t let up. And while the lyrics are pretty simple, this just makes it horribly horribly catchy, and the vocals are perfect for the track.

I’d recommend adding ‘Close Enough’ to your Summer playlist. Let’s get out in the sun and party people.

The info

Leeds/Nottingham indie band Silver Wilson started life in late 2015 and using fresh ideas they began making indie music with an original twist. Incorporating new technology with a mix of indie of guitars, bass, and drums, the band have organically built a loyal following for their summery danceable guitar-indie-pop.

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/silverwilsonuk/
Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/silver-wilsonuk

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