The song might well be called the “Train To Nowhere” but The Sound of Ghosts don't just stop at the Americana station like most do and instead head off into the distance in search of the future. Kudos to the trumpet player for adding a dash of theatrical quirkiness too.
Wryly wringing the past for inspiration, Kainalu loops up all that old school jazz funk vibe and resprays it as a sequenced sound for today. “Love Nebula” might be mistaken for background music by some but those in the know will recognise that this one is for chilling.
With a pronounced downbeat laconicism much to the fore, Austrian duo Leyya head further up to the road to fame with their song “Oh Wow” leading the way. There is nihilism inherent in Sophie Lindinger’s vocal style and the sequenced beats highlight that Leyya can write songs that even a robot could appreciate.
I came across this song by accident and can’t quite manage to get it out of my mind. Mirage casts a spell of timeless persuasion with “Mirage” mixes past and present together and takes you on a journey of the heart.
Sometimes I forget what the mainstream sounds like today and then along comes The Dirty Youth with their song “Hurricane” and, within its bounds, is all the female fronted drama and manly guitar riffs that a band on the march to radio play might need.
There is class aplenty to be found in Megan Henwood’s song “Seventh” with a certain, and rather appealing, maturity distinguishing her from your average modern day singer songwriter. One for the more discerning ear, I would guess.
More super cool Scandinavian electro pop from Felin but “21st Century” stands out from the crowd thanks to the addition of a generous amount of post punk style and the pleasing inclusion of some sharper than you might expect lyrics. That’s good enough for me.
And now for something completely different with Canadian band Brenda taking all the usual arthouse indie moves and twisting them all out of shape to thus make “Children” a whole lot more disturbing than such a song should be.
It must be the musical disease of choice in Glasgow as The Animal Mothers seem to have caught the hard edged no surrender fuzz guitar led lurgy and “A Rain will Come” will make you want to get infected too. Play loud until you feel better.
Sounding like a throwback to the days when indie rock crawled out from under the rock, “Now” is still way fresher than most with Dead Nude – aka Mike Magoo – putting plenty of old school style into the mix.
There is not much on the way of melody to be found in Emma Jensen’s glacial electro pop song “Make You Mine” but her rather offbeat voice does have the stamp of originality all over it.
This is something quintessentially Scottish about “Dreams” with twee boy-girl harmonies, sugary sentimentality and a generous sprinkling of that Glasgow style jangly guitars sound giving Ewan Cruickshanks a guaranteed spot on the soundtrack to some never filmed Bill Forsyth film.
Facebook Twitter Album and single reviews RSS feed