Song reviews


  Wasteland by Five of the Eyes


Wasteland cover art


Dramatic

Ploughing the fertile fields of rock history once more are Maine band Five of the Eyes but, fortunately, they have learned that it is all in the drama with “Wasteland” ticking all the riffing guitars, pounding drums and intense vocal boxes that the fans of the genre demand.


Review date: 
  www.fiveoftheeyes.com

  White Wing Dove by Priest


White Wing Dove cover art


Word up

Upbeat synthpop from Florida’s Priest with a rock solid sequenced beat making your feet pay attention as she plunders the pop thesaurus for lyrical motivation. A pleasingly commercial song, in other words.


Review date: 
  www.facebook.com/xpriestxofficial

  Breathe by Club 8


Breathe cover art


Nordic cool

It’s calm before the storm time as the drifting vocals of Karolina Komstedt cast a spell over the post-midnight crowd with the melancholy Sakamoto style electronic ambience providing them with another, near hypnotic, reason to pay attention.


Review date: 
  www.facebook.com/Club8music

  Blackberry Whiskey by The Darlins


Blackberry Whiskey cover art


Country girls

A nicely polished midrange and mid-tempo modern day country song, “Blackberry Whiskey” provides The Darlins with the perfect opportunity to highlight their vocal harmonies and thus lift the song towards radio airplay.


Review date: 
  www.thedarlins.com

  I Can Make You Disappear by Seasonal Beast


I Can Make You Disappear cover art


Distracted

Maybe it is a sign of the times but Seasonal Beast’s song “I Can Make You Disappear” seems deliberately disconnected with Yuli Beeri’s voice meandering through an electronic soundscape as if in search of something never to be found.


  B-Child by The White Russian


B-Child cover art


Intelligent

It’s been a week of offbeat indie pop with The White Russian throwing their hat into the ring with “B-Child” and making their mark by making far more effort than most do. One for the beard scratchers who favour a deeper lyric to savour.


  My Body by Saunas


My Body cover art


Popster poppers

I’m not sure if there is should be something robust about indie pop yet “My Body” by Saunas – from Nashville surprisingly – is just that with everything you might want in such a song hiding in there somewhere.


  LTF by Frøkedal


LTF cover art


Warm

Sonorous as if dreaming of better times, “LTF” effectively demonstrates that not everything Nordic is super cool electro pop with Frøkedal’s wanton intent weaving neatly amongst all sorts of ear pleasing folk rock influences. This is bigger than a song of these times should be.


Review date: 
  www.facebook.com/frokedalmusic

  Child by Dog in the Snow


Child cover art


Earnest

Distinctly earnest, which is itself unusual in these times of corporate conformity, Dog in the Snow snarls like a Mother Earther protecting her brood as she flies the flag of hope throughout her song “Child”. The song is more purpose than melody but the message is nonetheless commendable.


Review date: 
  www.doginthesnow.com

  Anywhere But Here by Tristn


Anywhere But Here cover art


Deep

I’m quite sure that, being a supra-urban style setter, I shouldn’t like “Anywhere But Here” yet the concentrated electro angst that Tristn used to season the song proved surprisingly addictive. Time to stroke the beard again methinks.


Review date: 
  www.facebook.com/tristnmusic

  Flying by Jackie Venson


Flying cover art


Classy

She’s from Texas so is therefore of to a flying start and duly Jackie Venson casts a spell of fret friendly blues and soul that illustrates that “Flying” high is what she should be doing if there is any justice left in this world.


Review date: 
  www.jackievenson.com

  The Past Is Like a Foreign Country by Star Parks


The Past Is Like a Foreign Country cover art


Warping

Splendidly dramatic in both approach and scope, “The Past Is A Foreign Country” sounds like a seventies pop-rock epic – and it would be that if there were such a thing as a time machine – with Star Parks making all the right stylistic moves to take the song from the tripped out past to the present.


Review date: 
  www.facebook.com/StarParksBand


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