Song reviews


  The Elvis Hour by Susie Scurry


The Elvis Hour cover art


Wistful

Armed with the kind of wistful melancholy that lesser singer songwriters may only dream of possessing, Susie Scurry strolls with eloquent style through her song “The Elvis Hour” but, let’s face it, any song about Elvis will always be fine with me.


Review date: 
  susiescurry.com

  Frontier by Young Galaxy


Frontier cover art


Laconic

I like a bit of minimalist synth pop yet, with that said, even I was unprepared for the laconic glory that the voice of Catherine McCandless brought to “Frontier”. I will now be steering my spaceship towards Young Galaxy.


Review date: 
  www.facebook.com/younggalaxy

  Getting Closer by New City


Getting Closer cover art


Modern

New City make a brave attempt to inject some soul in to what is a perfect example of the synthetic pop song so beloved of the iTunes generation and “Getting Closer” will no doubt find its three and a half minutes of fame on iPhone playlists throughout the land.


  Earthquakes by BARQ


Earthquakes cover art


Purposeful

Now this one is interesting. BARQ had all the hallmarks of a modern urban/jazz funk hybrid band yet manage to stand out from the crowd with “Earthquakes” by throwing in a sense of emotional scale and a hard edged, almost oblique, musical style. Fresh, as they used to say back in the day.


Review date: 
  www.facebook.com/BARQmusic

  Take Arms by La Bête Blooms


Take Arms cover art


Stand tall

It says here that La Bête Blooms are a post punk band from Hull but their song “Take Arms” is a muscular mix of political commentary and dark days attitude that is more old school punk than a product of today. The revolution is back!


Review date: 
  www.facebook.com/labeteblooms

  Captain of The Rugby Team by Sweaty Palms


Captain of The Rugby Team cover art


Weegie magic

“Captain of The Rugby Team” has the twisted splendour of a song that is forever destined to forever orbit the art house crowd which is a shame for Sweaty Palms are a band that should surely own all the shadows of the city streets.


  Good Ol’ Boys by Meg Cavanaugh


Good Ol’ Boys cover art


Classy

Jazz ain’t my thing yet Meg Cavanaugh had no trouble convincing me that her song “Good Ol’ Boys” was a thing of uptown elegance and supper club sophistication. Make no mistake about it - this kitten has class.


Review date: 
  www.megcavanaugh.com

  Show Me The Way by Suzi Island


Show Me The Way cover art


Chartbound

Suzi Island have tried harder than most do to make their song “Show Me The Way” interesting to the ear and, if you like modern day pop music, you will no doubt judge them to have succeeded with this one.


Review date: 
  www.facebook.com/suziisland

  Pleasure by Dead Man’s Knee


Pleasure cover art


Solid

A bit of time travelling here from London band Dead Man’s Knees with all the right seventies rock moves – right down to the guitar solo - being added to their song “Pleasure”. This is loud. This macho. This is fun.


Review date: 
  www.facebook.com/deadmansknee

  Mountain Song by Crooked Teeth


Mountain Song cover art


Retro

Crooked Teeth may well have excised all those retro analogue synth sounds from the demons of the past but, fortunately, they have also added a healthy dose of modern day misanthropy to keep things bleakly topical.


  Ceto by Scarlet Drive


Ceto cover art


Indie rock

Energetic indie rock from Scarlet Drive with “Ceto” indicating that this is the kind of band that can play within the clichés of the genre and still impress with their sheer enthusiasm for the task in their capable hands.


  Road Less Travelled by Atlas Wynd


Road Less Travelled cover art


Loud

“Road Less Travelled” by Atlas Wynd is the kind of song that would get banned in the more pious parts of the world as its raucous appeal would undoubtedly cause the youth of today to exceed the speed limit and drink vast quantities of beer.


Review date: 
  atlaswynd.com


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