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SINGLE REVIEW: Lucky Iris – ‘universal’

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Lucky Iris have this knack of combining classy alt-pop with words that address personal experiences and things that are happening or being felt now. And sometimes these are not happy and bright – if you get what I’m saving. And yet somehow they make this work.

The duo explain that ‘universal’, the second single released from their upcoming EP, “is about watching the world fall apart and wondering whether you’re the only one who can see it. Am I an empath? Or am I just human? Am I overly emotional? Or is everyone else feeling the same way? Is everyone just far better at hiding it?

“The issue is it’s really hard to know the answer. So instead I’ll take an online quiz to work out if I’m… going insane… decided by which kitchen and desert choice I think is most “me”. But, maybe it really is just me. I hope no one else feels this way. I hope it’s just me. Because it doesn’t feel good. But I have a feeling it might not be.”

This isn’t the happiest song topic is it? You certainly wouldn’t imagine that this would feature in an electro alt-pop track. So think again, people. The duo have done it brilliantly. They’ve slowed it down and added some distinctly ominous and on the edge of off-kilter 80s’ synthpop sounds under that sweet vocal of Maeve’s. It’s pop genius I tell you. And in the same way as Heaven 17’s ‘(We Don’t Need This) Fascist Groove Thang’ and ‘The Height Of The Fighting’ we can dance while the world falls apart. What this proves is that brilliant pop can address serious things as well as the next musical genre. All it takes is a pop artist with the skill to do it.

‘universal’ is yet another fabulous.release from Lucky Iris. The very epitome of classy contemporary intelligent pop Why Lucky Iris aren’t huge right now is a mystery to me.

EP REVIEW: Satnam Galsian – ‘Fragmented Truth’

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For those of you who are saying ‘I’m sure that name is ringing a bell’, I’ll deal with that right now. Satnam is in Leeds’ band Kinaara who play Punjabi and Celtic folk influenced music. This solo EP – her debut – is different. Rather than her band’s drums, guitar and vocal sound, the sound is based on drones – played on shruti box and electronic tanpura – and her voice. The songs explore, in a broad sense, women’s lives; past, now and future.

‘We Are Like Birds’ (‘Sadda Chiriya Da Chamba’) is our introduction to the EP’s sound and the arc of the songs on it. The combination of Satnam’s voice and the drone sound is completely mesmirising and hypnotic. The tone of her voice reflects the conversational form of the song.

To explain, the song is a ‘suhaag’; a Punjabi folk wedding song sung on the bride’s side of a wedding. A woman says ‘We are like birds, we will fly away. We have a long way to fly and we do not know where we will end up’. The verses are a conversation between daughter and father, she asks, ‘who will play with toys in your household now? He replies, ‘my granddaughters (son’s daughters) will play in my household, daughter go to your own home’. She asks ‘who will spin cotton in your house now?’ Again she receives the same answer. She says ‘the alleyway is too narrow for my palanquin (a covered litter for one passenger, consisting of a box carried on two poles by bearers) to go through’, he says ‘we will widen the alleyway, daughter go to your own home’.

The thing that struck me about this song is that both the words and the tone of her voice reflect the ‘sending away’ of a woman in a traditional wedding. There is an obvious plea for this not to happen. Having said this – and yes, I’m aware this is something of contradiction – there is a sad beauty to the song that has got under my skin.

In ‘Whispered Messages’ uses the melody of another suhaag over which Satnam ‘responds to themes of patriarchy and female submissiveness. Finding inspiration from her own lived experiences and from observing how the modern woman’s hopes and aspirations have changed since traditional songs were composed, The song invites new understandings of expectation and destiny through the lens of a modern feminist’.

Her voice quietly speaks messages to women and the world of change. These are strong messages that somehow gain power through her almost gentle delivery. It compels you to listen properly.

‘To Walk In Her Shoes’ is a Punjabi folk song, again one which is sung at a bride’s weddings.

In the song a woman tells the story of having to walk to her in-laws house after getting married whilst wearing shoes that don’t fit her properly, she says that she is walking on an unknown road, not knowing where is heading, she can’t say anything to her new groom as she is scared to. The words allude to fear of an uncertain future with the man who she has been married to, and a feeling of uncomfortableness and apprehension.

While I might not understand the words that tell the story, Satnam’s voice conveys the apprehension and fear of the woman whose story is told. So her vocal is ‘acting’ out the story not just singing the words. It is this that makes the song mesmerising.

In ‘A Butterfly Emerges’, she responds to the words of another suhaag, ‘For today, keep my palanquin here, I’ll even stay here as my father’s slave’. Satnam’s response is a song about leaving home to follow your own path and feeling hopeful about the future.

The drone based sound here mixes both the Punjabi folk sound and a Celtic folk feel. In places it reminds me of The Incredible String Band (one of my favourite bands) who frequently mixed these genres. The music and her voice somehow reflect the mix of joy and apprehension that setting out your own path can bring you.

‘Lagan Love’ is an Irish Air, where Satnam weaves Eastern and Western vocal styles into something uniquely beautiful.

Closing the EP, ‘If We Are Like The Birds’, is a response to track one. Satnam uses the bird metaphor as a symbol of freedom and choice. It sounds, simply, wonderful.

The songs on this EP, taken as a whole, address the need for traditional values to change, or go, to reflect the changing and developing values of now. The choice of traditional songs and Satnam’s own songs convey that message in both words and music. The choice of traditional songs tells of the experience of women. While the music, crossing as it does from Punjabi folk to Satnam’s mixing of that sound with Celtic folk, tells a story of traditions evolving and changing.

The thing we need to address here – because this is a musical work – is whether the stories and the messages overwhelm the music or indeed the music overwhelms the story and the messages. The answer is an overwhelming no. The EP works because the music and words complement each other; and do this wonderfully.

‘Fragmented Truth’ is a beautiful thing. It makes you think AND sounds wonderful. I can’t recommend this highly enough.

CONCERT REVIEW: Antony and Friends – Central Methodist Church, Todmorden – 15th June 2024

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As well as Antony Brannick on piano, this concert featured wind instrument players, with Tamsin Curror on clarinet, Diana Doherty on oboe, Bob Shaw on horn and David Buck on bassoon. Their abilities and the scope of their instruments came over.

The concert opened with a solo by Antony Brannick, Mozart’s energetic piano concerto in C minor (K457). The same composer’s horn concerto no 2 (K417) was lively and rousing. It was followed by film music from “The Mission” by Morricone, the haunting “Gabriel’s Oboe” and the atmospheric “The Watermill” by Ronald Binge, both oboe and piano. The clarinet featured in Pierne’s quirky “Canzonetta”. The first half finished with two pieces for bassoon, Ord Hume’s cheerful “Carnaval” and Ashlyn’s comic song “The Bassoon” in which the listener’s imagination fills in whenever the bassoon substitutes for a word,

In the second half all the musicians united for Mozart’s harmonious quintet for piano and winds in E flat (K452).

SINGLE REVIEW: Crooked Revival – ‘Moth To A Dying Flame’

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Crooked Revival could be considered to play what has become known as classic rock. The thing is that in the days of my youth there was nothing classic about it, it was just called heavy rock. Calling it ‘classic’ gives the impression that it’s an entirely retro or revivalist music form. It isn’t. There’s just no way that the rock through the time since hasn’t influenced the sound of these bands,

So I’m going to start again, Crooked Revival play heavy rock, and in the case of ‘Moth To A Dying Flame’ heavy heavy rock. We are talking big; big guitars, big vocals, big everything. Everything turned up to 11. It’s brutal. And while there are riffs to die for, the key here is that this has a tune, a tune you can hum. And yeah, there is more than a hint of that classic blues based Metal sound, there’s also the breakneck speed of the NWOBHM sound, and the dynamics of alt-rock.

There is just nothing I can criticise about this track. It has all you need in a heavy rock track. Faultless thrilling guitar, a solo that brings tears to my eyes as I relive my youth. Keyboards that rock hard. Drumming that could demolish houses. And a vocal that brings to mind all those classic heavy rock singers while having its own sound. This track makes me want to stand up, punch the air, and revive my headbanging days. Air guitar included, as well as air drumming (sorry, I was strange like that).

And while this has everything a heavy rock fan of old could want; it’s of now, it couldn’t exist without the music that has been played since the days of classic heavy rock.

‘Moth To A Dying Flame’ is a fucking brilliant track. It’s an object lesson in how heavy rock should be played. Crank this up as loud as you dare, and rock out people.

SINGLE REVIEW: Darren Ellis – ‘Nobody Comes Close’

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Darren writes songs that have that ring of coming from a real place, time or situation. And then he puts carefully crafted music with his words, and sings those words with real emotion. This release doesn’t break that recipe, and that’s a very good thing.

‘Nobody Comes Close’ is a smooth as you like ballad – a touch of soul, a hint of RnB, a whole heap of classic pop. It oozes class.

Darren keeps his vocals simple while still conveying emotion. This is not simple, it’s a skill, a craft. The music emphasises the tune but it’s complex in a subtle way. A subtle guitar runs through the song; sometimes upfront, sometimes shifted back in the mix. The variety of sounds in this guitar ‘line’ is amazing, and the more times you listen the more you hear.

Look, this isn’t loud, it doesn’t sound flash and it doesn’t employ layers and layers of clever synths. It doesn’t fit into a fashionable niche. It’s a song that’s written really well, and sung and played with skill and emotion. Basically, that’s all you really need, isn’t it?

‘Nobody Comes Close’ is classic timeless music that you can drift away to. This, my friends, is a lovely thing.

EP NEWS: Pop Vulture release debut EP ‘Another Success’

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Pop Vulture have released their debut EP ‘Another Success’ via Come Play With Me Records / EMI North.

Emerging from the Leeds’ DIY scene, Pop Vulture wield influences from the dissonance of the No-Wave movement and the unconventionality of post-punk and drape them over tightly-wound grooves. All of this simmers away underneath stream-of-consciousness themes, often of mental health and the relentlessness of living…

Beginning their journey experimenting with noise-rock before meandering through kraut and post-rock detours, they’ve now arrived at a new-wave inspired post-punk hybrid. Spilling over with fractious guitars, rhythmic percussion and sour melodies, Pop Vulture have created a sonic atmosphere that has heads twisting and bodies contorting.

The debut EP sees PV pushing the boundaries of guitar music and culminating musical taste. From the rowdy, driving nature of punk and its commentary on social issues, to the pulsing flirtatiousness of electronic music, and experimental edges of alternative rock.

EP Stream/Download https://lnk.to/PV-AS

SINGLE REVIEW: Runa – ‘Can’t Talk’

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I adored the last release I reviewed from Runa – ‘Are You Lost’ (read the review) – I feel the same way about ‘Can’t Talk’.

The first thing I’m drawn to is her voice; going from alt-pop breathlessness to full blown rock torch song. If that’s confusing you, I’ll get back to that in a bit. The way she delivers a lyric is so compelling; it’s a voice full of emotion and character. It’s a voice that tells a story.

So, the surprise in this song is that while it may start out as sinuous Nu-Souly alt-pop, you are going to be hit by a chorus that employs fuzz guitar and it’s loud, people. In a way, and you understand that this is an attempt to describe something that’s hard to describe, this track is a cross between Nu-Souly alt-pop and alt-rock. It does that quiet loud thing for sure. On the other hand it does sound rather retro in a kind of 70s huge ballad way; not that those would use fuzz guitar. Later, I have to admit that that guitar does something way way 70s. While this may sound all rather confusing the reality is that it sounds absolutely bloody fantastic, I don’t really care that it’s not easy to describe to slot into a reviewer’s musical niche; in fact that’s something of a joy.

Runa makes music that connects with your heart and soul. ‘Can’t Talk’ is compelling, dramatic, spell-binding and absolutely fabulous. This is so so good.

LABEL NEWS: Huddersfield musician Leo Brazil has launched Birds and Beasts Records

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The label releases music written and recorded by him; distributing digital and physical releases, selling merchandise and promoting live events

Leo is celebrating the launch of his new record label by releasing a collaboration with the band Wadcutter Blues. ‘Tiger Inside’ was recorded entirely live in Leo’s studio.

Leo explains why this song was chosen as the first release ”’Tiger Inside’ is a fun song that I wrote twenty years ago and was a crowd favourite from my early years gigging solo and with my old band The Twitch. It seems fitting to revisit it all these years later at this crossroads in my life. Collaborations are something I plan to explore a lot more, it was a great honour performing this song with Wadcutter Blues…not to mention we had an absolute blast in the studio!”

Wadcutter Blues are a band with a stellar line-up of well known players from Huddersfield. After Leo supported them at Holmfirth Picturedrome last year, he suggested that they pay a visit to his studio and record a few tracks together.

Read our review of the release

Leo on the origins of the label’s name “Birds and Beasts was a band I started with my ex wife, it was my primary focus for almost a decade. We parted company amicably but I’m an emotional guy and it took some time to come to terms with that. I knew I was really proud of all the hard work and I still believe the songs are powerful. I knew I couldn’t entirely say goodbye to that chapter of my life. I’m currently writing and recording some of the best music I’ve ever created and working in a few different styles with different outfits. Uniting all this music under the Birds and Beasts Records umbrella seems a great way of looking to the future and acknowledging the past”.

Website: https://www.birdsandbeastsrecords.com

SINGLE REVIEW: Leo Brazil – ‘Tiger Inside’

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Recorded ‘live in studio’ with the band Wadcutter Blues Leo’s first release on his label Birds and Beasts Records is a storming slab of blues rock. Now before you write off the track as only being of interest to roots music fans (who will love this) there’s something extra to this track that will appeal to anyone who’s partial to guitar based rock or anyone interested in somewhat off the wall music.

It’s blues rock but it has a twist that makes it something more than that. This thing really lets go, people – it’s raw and bloody raucous – and it has just an edge of psychedelic madness. It’s completely musically groovy, sinuous as fuck and for anyone who’s a fan of guitar played on the edge of rock chaos; that’s here. The ‘off the wall’ness comes from Leo’s vocal and the words. The words are guaranteed to leave you grinning. Leo and Wadcutter Blues are letting it rip, guitars, piano, organ and drums providing a wall of gorgeous sound that will leave you breathless.

This thing is a bloody joy. Go listen. Turn it up loud and groove hard friends.

EP REVIEW: Zero Cost – ‘Mouths To Feed’

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What I really like about Hull punk band Zero Cost is that they write great original style punk songs; songs that are about things, about social issues and modern life. This wouldn’t mean anything if they didn’t make some damn music and they do.

Charging straight in, the EP title track, ‘Mouths To Feed’ is all raucous hard guitar and breakneck vocals. If I hear it properly – something not 100% guaranteed – it lyrically addresses the ‘mouths’ of the capitalist system against the mouths of the workers. The system eating up and spitting out the workers, while the working people are forced into working for the system. In short, the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. What I need to highlight here is whilst it is all raucous guitar there’s a lot of subtle musical touches going on here. Powerful stuff.

‘The Test’ is another breakneck track. But here the band show off their ability to chang e it up. While you may feel the track is going to be all frantically paced, sudden;y they throw in a melodic bit (for want of better phrase). And it’s this that does it for me; it’s the fact that they step out of what you may have expected. Musical surprise is always good,

‘No Way Home’ changes it up. It majors in tunes without, and this is the key, losing the raucous feel. And bloody hell there’s a brillant guitar solo – short and very sweet.

‘Red or Blue’ tackles the upcoming UK and US elections. you might be asking yourself ‘ is this a protest song, a commentary or a call for action?’ It’s actually all three of these. It – if I’m hearing it right – basically calls out both the Left and Right for being ‘the same old same old. And the sound? In a phrase old style punk; breakneck speed, fast throbbing bass, spiky guitars. But it’s clever you see, this is no overwhelming wall of sound, you can hear ALL the instruments, there’s space in the sound. And this gives it power. It sounds fantastic, you got that. Spot on in topic and music, couldn’t ask for anything better.

‘Fidem Ludum’. Well first an explanation, ‘finem ludum’ means end game in Latin (yes, I said Latin) and the song addresses how close we are to a global catastrophic disaster – war and global warning for example. The line ‘100 seconds to midnight’ refers to the time set on the Doomsday Clock – the less time to midnight it is the closer the world is to a possible end. Although originally based on the chances of nuclear conflict, the setting of the Doomsday Clock now includes other factors such as global warning. So this is very much a song for our time. Musically, when I reviewed this as a single I called it out and out mekodic punk, but on a relisten I’m going to change my mind. Yep, there is melodic punk but what makes this track is the touches of punky post-punk – here that scratchy guitar, that big backing vocal, that rolling bass and the searing ringing guitar. An utterly fantastic thing.

And to conclude ‘Eviction Notice’. Oh fuck what they doing to me. They’ve taken their punk sound and melded it with metal. what I can only describe as distopia soundscapes. And made something musically mind blowing. My mind is in bits. Two words to the wise – one this isn’t about what you may have have assumed and two, it doesn’t end when you think it had.

‘Mouths To Feed’ is a set of songs that make a powerful statement. Musically it stretches the envelope of what punk and melodic punk can be; it’s inventive, unexpected and takes your breath away. If you’re a fan of raw, raucous guitars, words with a message and bands who make their own sound; listen to this, listen to this right now.

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