Friday, July 23, 2021

Fryars, God Melodies

Fryars, God Melodies
Dubbed 'the Mad professor of pop' by Fader,  English musician Benjamin Garret, who records under the moniker Fryars, has been slinging his own brand of musical pop art for more than a decade. But like with so many artists, while he is well known in some musical circles, he is not in many others. I'm hoping that this changes with his latest album God Melodies

"People often talk about music being cathartic, that we use it to work through our sadnesses. But it can also be used as a preservative for joy and the small things that pass us by. We don’t acknowledge happiness enough because it’s really hard to admit when you’re happy and it often doesn’t make other people that happy either! But joy translated well into music has an inflationary effect. That’s what the record is all about really.” Benjamin Garret

Listening to Garret's first album in seven years, you can hear that joy along with his imagination. God Melodies is sonic pop art with 'whimsical flights of fancy' (Music OMH) and heart.



Friday, July 16, 2021

Kings Of Convenience, Peace Or Love

Kings of Convenience, Peace Or Love
For many years, I had accepted the fact that Norwegian indie duo Eirik Glambek Bøe and Erlend Øye had hung up their 
Kings of Convenience cloak and called it a day. After three quiet and special albums, they were done making new music together and had moved on. So imagine my surprise when I learned that after twelve years, they were back with a new, forth album. 

Arriving last month, Peace Or Love is quintessential Kings Of Convenience and a welcomed return. The duo break no new ground here, but perfectly recapture what has made them so special. Warm and inviting, song after song, Bøe and Øye's music draws you into their world of navigating love and relationships in a way that is so disarming, relaxing and comforting while expressing their realities in a very human way. This is captured beautifully on Love Is A Lonely Thing as the duo along with Feist sing over their two guitars: 

"If you want someone to enter in your life, show a part of your world they can dream about. It will seem a fair idea if you make it their idea. Go back to your corner. Let them come to you. Patience is the hardest thing to have to learn. Hours seem like oceans when desire burns. Rushing in will ruin all, you must bide your time. Sow a seed in water, wait for love to grow. Love, to you, is given, love is gifted you. No love can be taken, that love is not true. Love is pain and suffering, love can bе a lonely thing. Once you've known that magic, who can livе without it?"

Peace and Love is another lovely, elegant, and nuanced album by Kings of Convenient. Welcome back!



Friday, June 25, 2021

Mad Foxes, Ashamed

Post-Punk music got a jolt of electricity a few years back when Idols came onto the scene. They were, and are, an unconventional band by most accounts. And their music brought a new level of brashness, thoughtfulness, and urgency to the genre. Since then other bands have followed, carving out new spaces for themselves to do what they want to do. None has measured to up to Idols in my opinion..until now.

French trio Mad Foxes sophomore album, Ashamed, has struck a nerve with many including myself. As a band, Mad Foxes are as 'brutish and committed as Idols, but with more self-mockery and complexity.' (Side B). They are also more playful, mixing in other musical genres, such as Garage, Punk, Grunge, and even Indie Folk, as they see fit. What really struck me with Ashamed was the band's cleverness and dynamic sound which features 'clanging guitars, pounding rhythms, often-shouted vocals, angst-fueled lyrics and anthemic song hooks.' (KEXP). 

This is a band carving out a new music space for themselves and it's a space where I definitely want to be hanging out and listening to Ashamed.



Friday, June 18, 2021

Japanese Breakfast, Jubilee

Japanese Breakfast
Michelle Zauner and her band Little Big League had finished their second album when she learned that her mother had stage four cancer. Zauner immediately moved back home to Eugene, Oregon to care for her. During that time, she made a few lo-fi recordings under the name Japanese Breakfast. Zauner also started writing a memoir about her life as a half white, half Korean American and whether she could lay claim to that identity anymore.

Following her mother's passing in 2014, Zauner took on the Japanese Breakfast moniker in earnest and released two albums over the next few years. Both centered around  grief, loss, and identity. Both received wide spread attention and praise. For me, I appreciated them both, but never returned to them after a listen or two. 

Earlier this year, Zauner's memoir, Crying In H Mart, was published. It became a New York Times best seller. A few months later, Zauner followed it up with the release of her third album, Jubilee. And as the title implies, things are feeling quite different for Zauner these days. And you can sense it from the opener Paprika as the synthesizer kicks things off and then, as the song builds and the chorus rises, the horn section comes in. It's an '80's inspired synth-pop delight that Kate Bush would love. And then there's her lyrics. Drawing inspiration from sci-fi film maker Satoshi Kon's movie of the same name and its opening psychotic parade dream sequence, Zauner's lyrics paint a surreal world where real life and dreams blend together. Itruly feels like a different artist at work here.

Jubilee is by far Zauner's best work to date and an album that should be celebrated.



Friday, June 11, 2021

Charlie Marie, Ramble On

The first time I heard Charlie Marie's debut album Rambling On, it just blew my socks off. This does not happen that often with me. But right from the beginning I knew that I was discovering and experiencing something special. 

"I wanted the record to sound like if Patsy Cline and Dwight Yoakam had a child...It doesn't just symbolize everything I'm working toward: it symbolizes where I come from, too."

Marie, who grew up in Rhode Island, fell in love with country music at a young age. By her mid-teens she was fronting a band and playing fairs and festivals in New England...a far cry from the heart of country music land. That all changes when she made her way to Nashville for college. There, Marie honed her songwriting skills. Writing songs about her own experiences, Marie portrayed herself not as some 'guitar-strumming southern belle, but as a proud outsider who had fallen in love with country while living far from the genre's Bible Belt headquarters.' 

You can hear Nashville by way of Rhode Island in Marie's songwriting. While she no doubt pays homage to her musical idols and influences, she is not afraid to step outside their very traditional country lanes. It is how she so perfectly balances the two that sets her songwriting and songs apart from so many others. 

I will say that Marie's debut album is simply a stunner. It's a classic country affair for the times that we are living in today and by far one of best albums that I have heard so far this year.


Friday, June 4, 2021

Birdy, Young Heart

Birdy, Young Heart
It's a bit wild to think that Birdy is now..and only 24. Since she won the open Mic Uk competition in 2008, at the very young age of 12, Jasmine Lucilla Elizabeth Jennifer van den Bogaerde  has been a tremendously successful singer-songwriter who seems to have no limits to her talents....or success. Yet in 2016, after finishing her Beautiful Lies tour, Birdy hit her own limits in terms of energy, creativity, and feelings of authenticity with her music.

Three years, and a personal breakup later, Birdy escaped to a cabin in Topanga, CA. With it's"kind of Laurel Canyon, seventies-like feel," Birdy found herself listening to Joni Mitchell's album Blue and finding new inspiration. With it came Young Heart, what Birdy describes as a "heartbreak Album" which she used to navigate and work through her own failed relationship. It's a beautiful and mature piece of work and seemingly well beyond Birdy's young age. It once again shows the talent or I should say gift, that Birdy possesses. And I'm thankful that she is sharing it with the rest of us.