Song reviews


  Easy by Burn The Louvre


Easy cover art


Jangly

Jangly and offbeat in the same stanza, Burn The Louvre nudge themselves further towards country rock territory with their song “Easy.” The lyrics aren’t as casual as the tune, however, and you can tell that the best is yet to come.


Review date: 
  burnthelouvre.com

  Ghost by Glass Bandit


Ghost cover art


Solid

Putting together something resembling a funk beat isn’t common these days but Glass Bandit – from Austin Texas – do a very decent job of sounding like they have just stepped out of a time machine and “Ghost” stomps with both style and a guitar solo.


Review date: 
  www.glassbanditmusic.com

  All Behind by Dr Fabola


All Behind cover art


Seriousness

Sone fey folk stylings give “All Behind” by Dr Fabola a bit of ear candiness and yet the lasting impression is of one of several minutes of seriousness and social commentary. It’s an acoustic singer songwriter thing at the end of the day.


Review date: 
  www.facebook.com/drfabola

  The World’s Gone Still Now by Hannah Schneider


The World’s Gone Still Now cover art


Serious

There is plenty of reverb to tease the ear in “The World’s Gone Still Now” and Hannah Schneider has no problem navigating this downbeat song. Not the kind of song that makes you smile, “The World’s Gone Still Now” nonetheless has a hypnotic appeal.


  One Minus One by Cornelis Gerard


One Minus One cover art


Self

Both robotically powered and delivered in a deadpan style, “One Minus One” makes you feel like you have stumbled into somebody else’s misery. The lyrics seem superficially uplifting but Cornelis Gerard clearly knows the meaning of counterpoint.


Review date: 
  www.cornelisgerard.com

  Step by Step by L Y S


Step by Step cover art


City

Smelling sweetly of bedroom compression and sequencer fascism, L Y S plunder the urban genre for inspiration and glue their song together with disjointed vocals and discordant synths. There a dancefloor remix in there somewhere.


Review date: 
  www.instagram.com/lysmusic_off/

  What I Gotta Do by RÓQA x SENA


What I Gotta Do cover art


Smooth

One more for the nu soul crew. RÓQA and SENA – from Hungary no less – hit the smooth road for a trip back to the days when urban was still young and fresh. The groove is right and this song makes you feel all warm and sentimental about those bygone days.


Review date: 
  www.facebook.com/roqamusic

  Beyond Repair by Mad Meg


Beyond Repair cover art


Massive

Now you’re talking. Simultaneously ridiculous and nearly drowning in irony. “Beyond Repair” takes you on a theatrical, almost camp, four and a half minute journey into a parallel world full of posh city festival audiences and quirky existentialism. Mad Meg are the bomb!


Review date: 
  www.facebook.com/madmegtheband

  Our God by Ruth Campbell


Our God cover art


Gospel

Not much gospel music this way comes. Yet, “Our God” by Ruth Campbell did and her song is, as you might expect, wholesome in content and, perhaps surprisingly, elegantly sung and easy on even these decidedly secular ears.


  Crush on You by Jen Ash


Crush on You cover art


Ear candy

Jen Ash revs up her nineties’ style engine and takes her song “Crush On You” for a drive down to the kind of cool clubs where only the best people get in. The ghost of the dancefloor comes along for the ride but she is the one that takes control your ears.


Review date: 
  www.jenashmusic.com

  Let Go Of Boredom by Gold Bonds


Let Go Of Boredom cover art


Retro

Full of synthetic goodness, “Let Go Of Boredom” pumps itself up with strong vocals, loops and a solidly reverential approach to the art of song writing. You might be thinking nineties’ AM radio but I know the past is the present and this song is the proof.


Review date: 
  Let Go Of Boredom

  Piece by Piece by The Tropicanas


Piece by Piece cover art


Charming

Bouncy in that nineties’ pop way, The Tropicanas will bring a smile to the faces of many with “Piece by Piece”. Whilst being a lightweight and even sugary song, The Tropicanas have more than enough charm to pull their song off the shelf and put it into your heart.


Review date: 
  www.facebook.com/TheTropicanas


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