Today’s Track: Lip Filler – ‘Followup’

You may be hooked as quickly as you can say “Dermatologic Surgery”. New post time!

The summer days are upon us! I’m Jacob Braybrooke and it was previously my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day before adulthood got in my way, so now I post more sporadically about special sounds. Lip Filler are an exciting, emerging indie rock band from London who weave elements of Electronic music and Post-Punk together like a Bunsen burner and a cylindrical tub of Helium in your school’s chemistry class. The West London-based 5-piece started their project with humble beginnings, having resided in a flat above a chicken shop in Shepherds Bush where their synergy and influences began to boil as hard as an egg in a saucepan. This has led to the evolving reputation of the band as a caustic capital force in London’s live scene to be created and, most importantly, they have now been able to buy a pet tortoise for their flat because why wouldn’t you? They have received some airplay from BBC Radio 6 Music since, along with just finishing up their first UK headline tour run. Having already supported the likes of Pit Pony, Gene Pool, XVOTO, Alfie Templeman and Picture Parlour and worked with producer St Francis Hotel (Little Simz, Michael Kiwanuka, Greentea Peng) on their debut single, Lip Filler are focusing their attention on tapping into a vast pool of creative collaborators and tidily transitioning to studio production practices to maintain their arresting momentum. ‘Witchescrew’ is their second EP – out now via Chess Club Records – and ‘Followup’ is the remarkable lead single, despite what its title may imply. Let’s give it a spin below!

Diving deep into their psyche, Lip Filler says, “Time is a precious thing; when we are told to wait for something sometimes we feel as though we’re not making any progress. We push ourselves to ensure we’re occupying our time efficently”, as they expose their emotional vulnerabilities in a press release regarding ‘Followup’, adding, “Taking this to the extreme would mean avoiding sleep altogether, or sleepwalking. I think that’s how this song began to adopt more paranormal themes”, says vocalist George Tucker. Absolute sense is made by Tucker’s comments on time management and relative frustrations because patience shines strongly as a key theme of their shape-shifting song. We start with a glossy yet melodic lead guitar riff that sounds akin to a shiny 90’s Alternative Rock crossover hit by a band like Placebo or The Smashing Pumpkins, as the blatant lyric of “I’m so sad” begins to reverberate throughout the disillusioned tone of the track. At this point, you may expect an Emo track to unfold alike the ‘Scuzz Sundays’ feature that we used to own in this blog’s heyday, but a change of direction takes course and the angularity grow sharper. Lyrics like “Motion sickness in your sleep/I’ve been underneath the tyres” are given a rhythmic scheme akin to a Rap-Metal track, while the guitars grow more bitter in substance and the Grunge mentality runs thicker. “You turned oh shit/I get my creature on”, delivered with a static effect, proves to be an imaginative detour that suggests a larger mental health issue at play due to its contorted nature. The band continue to dynamically cut together their influences of Pop-Punk, Nu-Metal and Shoegaze with a cut-and-paste collage effect as stop-start electronic instrumentals with a distorted tone and up-tempo vocal loops continue to add a psychedelic haze to the mix. Overall, while the volume on ‘Followup’ can be high at times, the technical musicianship finds its place to shine as the band continue to subvert expectations throughout the explorational track and stitch together a vibrant library of late 90’s and early 00’s rock sounds at a towering level of creativity. Less so of “I’m so sad” and more like “I’m so excited” about the future in store for this daring, experimental crew.

That’s all for now! Thank you for joining me for a few minutes on One Track At A Time today and if you’re always on the look-out for more new music suggestions beyond the mainstream, please follow me on my other channels that you can seek out below.

Connect with One Track At A Time

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jbraybrookerecords/

Eclectic & Electric (Radio Show): https://www.mixcloud.com/jacob-braybrooke/

Today’s Track: Modern Silent Cinema – ‘A Life Of Constant Abberation’

Wish to fill your life with good music rather than constant abberation? New post time!

Warm greetings to you! I’m Jacob Braybrooke, a Cambridgeshire-based music lover and radio presenter, and I’m very grateful that you decided to join me for another post on One Track At A Time as we broaden our horizons when it comes to active music discovery. It was previously my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day before adulthood got in the way, so now I post sporadically about something special. I’ve got music to share from Modern Silent Cinema today, which is the moniker of Brooklyn-based independent musician Cullen Gallagher. His music encompasses elements of Lo-Fi, Instrumental Rock and Post-Rock developed by a variety of Electro-Acoustic instrumentation and Experimental guitar melodies. This year, he is celebrating a whole two decades of activity with a frequent string of six releases that evoke the history and impact of his alias. Half of these releases are comprised of fresh material while the other half of his issues are compilations of unreleased archival content. Three of these have been released including January’s ‘Passages X-XXI’ (a collection of relaxing solo piano recordings), March’s ‘The Cinema Detective’ (A dystopic sci-fi meets film theory detective study inspired by an essay from Baltimore-based clever clogs Matt Berry) and May’s ‘The Cabinet Of Modern Silent Cinema’, a rich album boasting a 13-track voyage through tracks that went astray over the years only to be revitalised by guitar duets with his brother, unearthed demo tapes and micro-cassette sketches. The next release to drop is July’s ‘Anemic Music’ – out on July 5th – which collates more tracks that are finally seeing the light of day. Give the opener ‘A Life Of Constant Abberation’ a whirl below.

All of these albums have been mastered by Caleb Mulkerin (of Big Blood notability) and Gallagher, under the instrumental guise of Modern Silent Cinema, has recently received airtime on radio stations like WRUW FM91.1 (Cleveland, Ohio) and WFMU (Jersey City, New Jersey) who have all showcased the Bad Channels Records label founder’s innate ability to play a strong diversity of instruments including the piano, lap steel, trombone, trumpet and the drums. “Sometimes there is a feeling this is a lost Fahey or Basho recording, low-fi and a wanderer of tempos and styles“, compliments Lost In A Sea Of Sound about his work. It’s not tricky to see how the comparison has been made since, on the above track, ‘A Life Of Constant Abberation‘, he playfully navigates a consistent set of instrumentation with an edged Rock ‘N’ Roll influence polished with warped Americana vibes and shaded Folk mastery. He creates a vague narrative with elements of rock opera through curved genre constructs modified by instrumental sounds alone. ‘A Life Of Constant Abberation‘ begins with a pure, 7-note guitar riff that is unphased by delay effects or auto-tuned procession with a rumbling sound that feels weighty. The volume is not overly loud, but the evident echo mixed with the simplicity of the guitar skills makes for a dramatic combo, a journey that suggests turmoil and difficulty with no spoken lyrics. The drums are equally steady but robust, this punchy combo being a second verse addition to the thumping guitar melodies. Together, the recoiling drums and the harsh lead guitar hook build up an expansive level of tension heading into the rich chorus that makes it easier for the listeners to fill in the gaps with their own stories that are open to interpretation as the strained moods continue to develop. The settled, yet uneasy groove changes when we reach a fever pitch – an agitated crescendo forms as Gallagher doubles down on the drums and puts some extra activeness on the harsh guitar melodies. However, it all gradually fades into a more calming combination of level-headed Drums marked by some lenient shredding on the bass in the later stages of the song. This dynamism between the heavy push and the retracting pull keeps things interesting, whereby it’s clear that stress is overwhelming our narrator at one point before he starts to see a more serene state of mind further afield. To conclude, ‘A Life Of Constant Abberation’ is not quite as sombre as you may be led to believe in the opening because, as the world often does, the circumstances change around our narrator and a light sense of tranqulity is up ahead with production beautifully built to enhance yet not contradict.

That’s all I’ve got for now! I want to say a huge thank you for giving me your time and attention today and thank you for giving me hope rather than constant abberation for doing so. Join me in the subsequent weeks on One Track At A Time for more new posts about the music that’s getting my creative soul flowing including tunes by bold, emerging artists like Julia-Sophie, Bad With Phones, Ebbb, Lip Filler and some others.

Connect with One Track At A Time

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jbraybrookerecords/

Eclectic & Electric (Radio Show): https://www.mixcloud.com/jacob-braybrooke/

Today’s Track: Machinedrum (feat. Mick Jenkins & Jesse Boykins III) – ‘Weary’

When I had more free time, I posted each day and it never grew weary. New post time!

A warm welcome to you – music lover – if you are new to One Track At A Time, where we broaden our horizons by streaming songs of all styles and sizes. I am Jacob Braybrooke and it was previously my pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day, but adult responsibilities are now in the way. Fear not, as I still have a small slab of leisure to post something special. Today, I am going to tell you about an excellent new release by a North Carolina-based electronic producer who goes by the name of Machinedrum. This is one of many monikers used by Travis Stewart, who fell in love with IDM and Glitch Hop sounds in the 2000’s. Syndrome and TStewart are two of his other aliases. He is also 1/2 of Sepalcure, 1/2 of JETS and 1/2 of Dream Continuum alongside Om Unit. His list of production credits and guest features are second to none – having worked with (*deep breath*) Flohio, Tkay Maidza, Freddie Gibbs, Sub Focus, Dawn Richard, Mykki Blanco and more. ‘3FOR82’ is his new LP out on Ninja Tune (The home of acts like Bicep, Yaeji and Park Hye Jin). Themed around childhood, Stewart made a unique request to his collaborators by asking them to write their segments as if they were writing to their younger selves. Some of his beats on the 12-track drum ‘n’ bass adventure were even lifted from some of his oldest teenager experiments, resulting in a low-quality fizz that artfully acknowledges the insecurities and inexperience that comes with being younger. One of the most ballsy experiments is the Hip Hop-oriented track ‘Weary’. Let’s give that record a spin below.

Stewart’s follow-up LP to 2020’s critically acclaimed album ‘A View Of U’ was crafted during a pilgrimage to Joshua Tree (a national park in California) and it finds him tapping into his network to recruit eclectic artists like Tinashe, Duckwrth, Topaz Jones, Deem Spencer and Aja Monet into his ranks as guest vocalists on the record. He explains, “I’ve been to Joshua Tree many times and I’ve always felt a great sense of clarity every time I visit“, in a press statement, adding, “and I knew that I should, at some point in my life, go out there to work on something creatively” to further establish the central theme of reconnecting with adolescence and harnessing nostalgia into your adult brand on the album. ‘Weary‘, which features rapper Mick Jenkins and Jamaican-born producer Jesse Boykins III as collaborators, is the perfect example of using childhood influences to kick a boost to a present product because it sounds so reminiscent of melodic and sample-driven 90’s Hip Hop records by artists such as The Jungle Brothers and Missy Elliot while maintaining a soft, futuristic Glitch element. A chopped drum beat kicks us off, reminiscent of a heavy Bhangra beat, before an arrangement containing a stretched vocal sample and a propulsive bass riff elevates the tension to another level. Fast and politically charged lyrics encouraging healing for people of disadvantaged, crime-ridden backgrounds are relentlessly recited at this stage, before a more soulful assortment of tender strings add a more hopeful element in the next verse. The chorus is more akin to a Thundercat or Blood Orange track due to the soulful vocal delivery by Boykins, but the momentum of the Hip Hop backing beat is still prominent due to the pace at which the framework of the melodic bass and the sharp drum rhythms are exposed. The sequencing by Machinedrum is, perhaps, the star of the show in this jam because the chopped element of the drums and samples add a specific seethe to proceedings. The slightly wonky rhythms veer noticeably into Hyper-Pop and Trap territory due to their irregular shaping, but the contorting production style keeps the foot on the gas for the connective tissue of Hip-Hop and Neo-Soul combined with electronic sounds. It all feels consistent enough, overall, without feeling too breezy as to dilute the aggressive edge of its impact. To conclude, ‘Weary‘ is a deeper cut on the album that you might read less coverage pushing as opposed to singles like ‘Rise’, but its a tough textbook example of twisting various elements of your production to meet your own needs while keeping your sound identifiable. A master of bending influences to his will, Machinedrum thrives in bringing the 90’s through the doors to modern clubs and encouraging you to make the past count by bridging the self-doubt of those times into a more motivated future.

That’s all for today! I want to say an enormous thank you for spending your time and attention with me. I will be back in a few days time with another new post regarding a Lo-Fi and Instrumental Rock singer-songwriter from an artist based in Brooklyn who has been releasing various projects throughout 2024 to celebrate his 20th anniversary of his music career since 2004. He was the founder of the Bad Channels Records label.

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jbraybrookerecords/

Eclectic & Electric (Radio Show): https://www.mixcloud.com/jacob-braybrooke/

Today’s Track: Hinds (feat. Beck) – ‘Boom Boom Back’

After a few weeks away from you – I’m making a BIG boom back. Time for a new post!

Get your headphones ready! Feel the crunching beats with me, Jacob Braybrooke, as I return to One Track At A Time once again to bring another recommendation into the life of yours as a fellow music lover. It used to be my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day before peak adulthood got right in my way! ‘Boom Boom Back’ ushers in a new era for the Madrid-based indie rock duo Hinds, who have experienced a tumultous time of troubles in the time leading up to their current comeback. Hinds have been around since 2011, originally as a 4-piece of ferocious female creatives, but they now exist as a dynamic duo comprised of original members Ana García Perrote and Carlotta Cosials who share the lead vocal and guitar duties amongst themselves. They have supported The Libertines, The Vaccines and Black Lips on tour in addition to designing their own clothing line in 2017 with Urban Outfitters that was sold alongside an exclusive limited edition 7-inch of their single ‘Holograma’ with 50% of the proceeds going towards an Austin-based not-for-profit organisation – Attendance Records – that provides students at public schools a platform to produce their own music, websites and magazines. Besides the recent single ‘Coffee’, it has been since the pandemic of 2020 that we’ve heard much from Hinds following ‘The Prettiest Curse’ LP being issued that year. A blow has been dealt because they have lost a drummer, a bassist and a management company. However, Perrote and Cosials are carrying the baton of Hinds as a duo, having spent the past decade touring across the globe and sharing their unique fusion of Garage Rock-infused pop with Psychedelic elements with the world. They’ve also gained a friend in Beck, who they met at a film screening in LA by chance. Their fourth studio album – ‘Viva Hinds’ – is now set to release on September 6th on Lucky Number Records. UK tour dates in Brighton’s Prince Albert and London’s The Lower Third are taking place at the end of this month. Check out the raucous new track ‘Boom Boom Back’ below.

Recorded in rural France with Pete Robertson (Beabadoobee, Orla Gartland, Chloe Moriondo) as their producer, Hinds are breaking new ground in light of vowing to continue their passionate Lo-Fi oriented explorations in substance as a pair instead of a quartet by including their first tracks to be entirely sung in Spanish on their new record, which also boasts a collaboration with Fontaines D.C. frontman Grian Chatten. The playful energy of the music video is matched by the rhythmic aggression of the melodies on ‘Boom Boom Back’, an infectious intro to the upbeat and beautifully braggadocious slab of 80’s-inspired Rock ‘N’ Roll that I can’t wait to hear on the rest of ‘Viva Hinds’ in September. Nonchalant ambience of the girls laughing is followed by a thumping drum riff and a swirling guitar riff, filling the air with stadium-sized rock sounds as we build up to the catchy chorus of “Do you want to fall in love in a bar tonight?/Do you wanna fall in love with a broken heart?” backed by gritty, non auto-tuned vocals sung above crisp, crunchy chords. It’s not very romantic at all, as Hinds settle for sexual pleasure instead and carry their quirky personalities into the rest of the track. Beck hops on for his own verse at one time, joined by lyrics like “Faking laughs, melted ice, throwing dollars and dice/Do you want to step aside a hologram of your life” that showcase his penchant for obscure hooks and mesh tidily with the rebellious attitude of Hinds, who fill the empty space with Spanish vocals and chatty ambience reminiscent of an irresponsible adult’s dream of a youthful teen party at various points yet the alternative rock spirit of the chorus packs a punch and keeps the tone balanced well. The result is a delighfully charming, wonderfully catchy and affectionately 90’s tune that is sure to generate excitement for the long-awaited new album. It feels like the perfect summer anthem, with Hinds delivering an accessible yet specific vocal performance and it’s nice to hear Beck getting to do what he does best after a string of more conventional pop-oriented releases. I don’t need to be in a bar to fall in love with ‘Boom Boom Back’ since hearing it at home offers many thrills.

That’s all for now! Thank you for joining me for another musical musing today and I want to say a huge thank you for your support at this time where my posts are more sporadic. I will be back soon with another heartfelt recommendation of a new track, this time coming from a North Carolina-based Electronic producer who adds a unique touch of IDM and Glitch Hop to his House music explorations. He has produced tracks for Azaelia Banks and he’s performed a live set at the Sydney Opera House. You may also know him for releasing music under the names of Tstewart and Syndrome. He’s also 1/2 of the experimental duo Dream Continuum alongside Jim Coles aka OM Unit.

Connect with One Track At A Time

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jbraybrookerecords/

Eclectic & Electric (Radio Show): https://www.mixcloud.com/jacob-braybrooke/

Today’s Track: Mindchatter – ‘Brain Pills’

You need some brain pills to fuel your desire to seek new music. Time for a new post!

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke and it always used to be my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day. That’s before my adulthood got right in the way! Somewhere deep in the suburban situation of New York City is where you’ll be able to find Bryce Connolly, a multi-instrumentalist and EDM producer who was recently featured on KCRW’s Today’s Top Tune podcast. That’s how I caught wind of ‘Brain Pills’, a rather silly yet relatable track dripped in irony regarding the current “Ask My GP” crisis that rages across the world. Finding a curious intersection between a genre-less approach to beats and blatant anecdotal lyricism on ‘Brain Pills’, he reflects on the experience of being prescribed his medication by a psychiatrist on an application via video call. Speaking about the humour and irony that he found in the experience, he says, “The whole process is extremely goofy. I was diagnosed by a woman wearing a hoodie… I’m pretty sure I was older than her, too. Anyways, it seems like this has become the new normal because a lot of people are relating to the song”, in a press release. Sample the track – which is taken from his EP ‘This Is A Reminder That You Are Not Behind Your Face’ released in February – below.

The eccentric appeal of Mindchatter’s mental health-themed music stands out for seeing the lighter side of the overwhelming aspects of life that can haunt us. It has taken him to the stages of popular festivals like Coachella, Lightning In A Bottle and Okeechobee as well as leading to support slots with artists like Polo & Pan and SG Lewis. There’s little time for grief and sadness because ‘Brain Pills’ gets to an immediate start by establishing the floaty, bubbling percussion from the opening. “Brain pills, from a doctor, on the internet” repeats as the new layers of more weighty drums and hazy, psychedelic synths progress the chords. The verse reveals more about his perception of his appointment as odd and unbelievable, as he used lyrics like “She asked questions from a PDF/I can see her apartment/It was a mess” to emphasize the careless approach of the online medical help and the fact that his mind wandered down the route of satire at the sight of her apartment seeming messier than Bryce’s own life. Effects add reverb to his vocals, giving the lyrics a trippy vibe to complement the chatter about ADHD medication. The synths have a free-wheeling effect to accentuate the psychedelia-leaning tone too, with “My chakras was not aligned” being repeated at the top of a sturdy drum beat and high frequency-aligned synths during the bridge of the track before the punchy chorus returns to take us through the journey of his imagination as his mind wanders down a different path again. Overall, I love how satire and irony are woven into the fabric of this dance track that emphasises the hillarity of an online meeting with meaningful consequences being hosted by an unprofessionally-behaved authority while feeling serious enough to surpass the stage of novelty. In a world of love songs and vengeful protest jams, it is refreshing to hear the experience of a good old anecdote being replicated in this fearless Electro-Pop track which is sharp enough to match its quirks.

Connect with One Track At A Time

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jbraybrookerecords/

Eclectic & Electric (Radio Show – Mixcloud): https://www.mixcloud.com/jacob-braybrooke/

Today’s Track: Bolis Pupul – ‘Kowloon’

A fish not out of water, but thriving in their natural habitat for once. New post time!

Good Afternoon to you! I’m Jacob Braybrooke and it used to be my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day before my adulthood got right in the way! Attempting to pinpoint the ancestry of today’s artist, Bolis Pupul, may provide enough for a full blog post on its own. Born in Belgium and raised in Ghent by a Belgian cartoonist father and a mother who was born in Hong Kong but lived in China, Pupul lived in a household that kept shlves full of vinyl records. After falling in love with Beck’s weird and wonderful 90’s LP’s such as ‘Mellow Gold’ and ‘Odelay’, he cut his teeth in a Synth-Pop project with his sister and brother-in-law that nurtured his love for eight-track Foxtex recorders and the Japanese Shibuya-key star Cornelius during the late 2000’s and early 2010’s. Fast forward to 2024 and Bolis is best known for releasing the critically-beloved ‘Topical Dancer’ LP which was a joint venture with Charlotte Adigery. As a solo artist, he is now signed to Soulwax’s label Deewee that is also the home of artists like James Righton, Marie Davidson and EMS Synthi 100 who are known for exploring futuristic 70’s Funk-driven Pop sounds. The long road to releasing his first solo full-length ‘Letter To Yu’ was full of pot holes and diversions though, like using a rail replacement bus service to travel from Littleport to Liverpool. The main cause of heartbreak was the loss of his mother, who died in a car accident during June 2008 at age 49. She was a huge inspiration for the LP, which is centered around a trip that Pupul took to Hong Kong in 2008. He visited the street where she was born and he wrote her a letter which became “the coat rack on which the entire record was hung“, as Pupul notes. Sample his sound with ‘Kowloon’ below.

The sounds of frogs, the voice of a doctor that Pupul visited and the sounds of a train platform are all recordings of Pupul’s adventure to Hong Kong that all crop up throughout the 11 tracks and the near 46-minute duration of the aromatic album that paints a picture of the Kowloon urban district that Pupul visited with an intimate touch. In fact, the seventh track on the final product is named after Mau Tau Wei Road in which the maternity clinic that his mother was actually born within. Having read all of this information on Pupul without my description of the sound, you would probably expect ‘Kowloon’ to sound like a spiritual jazz record with steady drones and a larger prioritisation on rhythm instead of melody. However, the element of suprise arrives at full throttle as the East-Asian take on the Kraftwerkian Alt-Pop of the 80’s quckly begins to reveal itself. Nostalgia and celebration are steeped in equal measure on ‘Kowloon’ which begins and ends with a stabbing, highly compressed key sound but he fills the space of sound with a gradually sauntering drum melody that swiftly evolves into a charming dance track akin to a late-90’s French House workout. The technicolour and futuristic aesthetic never dismisses the slow, hypnotic start to the track but embraces the repetition instead by incorporating East Asian touches to the European Motorik sound. There’s a characteristic that is incredibly inviting about finding release on the dancefloor given the very heavy events that set the album’s narrative in motion as well as the sense of ever-present joy that Pupul provokes so enthusiastically. His personality, soul and sense of fun is communicated through the playful composition of the track and the ambience of the vocals that almost sound intelligible, but retain the effect of being in a room with others and not being able to make out the words which happens often in life. It gives this track a sense of place, making us feel like a part of Kowloon as we listen to his martial stomp of a Synth-driven track. Overall, this is a wonderful ode to the widely believed notion that an album should provide a snapshot of the artists’ life. It feels intimate enough to retain some mystique for Pupul personally, but it feels inviting enough to give us a glimpse of his life story. A tour-de-force of euphoria, ancestry and – most importantly – cheer.

That’s all for today! Thank you for joining me on my journey as I find my place in the music industry after a few years of hiatus due to personal issues and please join me again next week as I spotlight another example of the fantastic music which 2024 has provided since beginning 15 weeks ago. I look forward to writing to you again shortly.

Connect with One Track At A Time

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jbraybrookerecords/

Eclectic & Electric (Radio Show – Mixcloud): https://www.mixcloud.com/jacob-braybrooke/

Today’s Track: Elkka – ‘Make Me’

Femme Fatale is for the artists with more than just a pretty face. Time for a new post!

Pleasure. Sexuality. The glare of desire that blurs out everybody else in the room. The look of love at first sight that paints an immediate picture of that one you want to be with regardless of a physical connection. These are all common human themes that feel relatable within the results of Ellka’s latest track ‘Make Me’ which has, over the past couple of weeks, grown on this exhausted music journalist like the wings slowly forming on a caterpillar which turn it into a beautiful butterfly as it manifests over the course of approximately 4 weeks on average. Elkka is the release name for the Cardiff-born DJ/Producer Emma Kirby who is currently making a name for herself on the EDM scene in London. Following years of being widely supported by peers including Four Tet, Caribou, Sofia Kourtesis, Jon Hopkins, SHERELLE and Floating Points, Kirby is set to unleash her first full-length album record ‘Prism Of Pleasure’ onto the public on May 3rd via Ninja Tune. She also won an AIM Award for Best Remix for her work on a ‘Megapunk’ remix, a track which was originally produced by one-woman Emo/Punk orchestra Ela Minus. A 10-track project written over the course of 18 months, ‘Prism Of Pleasure’ is a bold, vibrantly textured exploration of intimacy and identity within the LGBTQ+ community that explores her gradual rise to day-to-day music production as a lucrative career. The cover artwork is rooted in this concept, which features a photograph of Elkka taken by her wife Alex Lambert who is also an artistic collborator that represents the ideology of the female gaze that has always been prevalent in the media. ‘Make Me’ is the sensual and ambitious lead single of the long-awaited album that promises to stand as a token of her personal evolution as an artist. Spin it below.

“Make me love you, make me love you, make me love you” is a hypnotic refrain that reverbarates through the four-to-the-floor rhythmic pattern of the track and, in its straightforward essence, gets the pure pleasure that has rested in Elkka’s mind across to the listener as an emphatic statement of lust and attraction. “Make me is one of the first tracks I wrote for this project. It really sums up the album for me. Its about connection and vulnerability you feel with someone whilst laced with this uncontrollable intensity and pattern“, Kirby has told the press about the single in her promotional materials which makes it clear to her fans that ‘Make Me’ is an emblematic assertion of the album’s main drive. The hefty, continous drum beats and the opaque, substantial synth notes mesh beautifully with the straightforward, fleshy vocals to create the substantial amount of intensity that can be heard in the new, glistening track. At one point, the dense crescendo is relaxed and the vocals have a more disco-esque feel to them that allow a flirtatious quality to merge through the foundations. By the end, it’s clear that a mixture of warm intentions and simple sexuality are rubbing against each other to create a beautiful dance anthem that is so sonically varied that it pulls you in unexpected directions while remaining consistent to its core of displaying pure passion in a romantic situation. Overall, I love ‘Make Me’ due to this zealous and excitable style and while it isn’t hitting you around the head with its LGBTQ+ themes, they feel integral and necessary to the tune in a natural way.

That’s all for now! Thank you for joining me on the recent reunion tour for One Track At A Time after I went on a hiatus and please join me again next week where I will be showcasing another one of my favourite recent releases. Next time, it is coming from a Belgian electronic music producer who has been stepping out of the shadows of a Charlotte Adigery collaboration to shine in his own solo spotlight. I look forward to it!

Connect with One Track At A Time

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jbraybrookerecords/

Eclectic & Electric (Radio Show – Mixcloud): https://www.mixcloud.com/jacob-braybrooke/

Today’s Track: Ibibio Sound Machine – ‘Got To Be Who U Are’

Whether you’re reading in Surulere, Isale Eko or Ikoyi to Yaba – its time for a new post!

Good Morning to you! I’m Jacob Braybrooke and it used to be my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day before my adulthood got right in the way! I’ve got a multi-culturally appealing new release to share with you today from an 8-piece group called Ibibio Sound Machine, a contemporary Jazz project that was formed in 2010 by vocalist Eno Williams alongside producers Max Grunhard, Leon Brichard and Benji Bouton with the idea of fusing elements of 70’s jazz, traditional 80’s Afrobeat and modern Drum ‘N’ Bass together. After the first sessions were in the can, they diverted their attention to successfully completing the line-up by adding live musicians to form their initial live band. Since releasing their debut single on Soundway in 2014, the band have released four albums, performed at events such as KEXP’s commemorative World Clash Day in 2019 and collaborated with Alexis Doyle, the frontman of Hot Chip. Their new album – ‘Pull The Rope’ – has been set for a May 3rd release on Merge Records and a live tour in cities such as Cambridge, Birkenhead, Norwich, Leeds, Dublin, Brighton, London, Edinburgh, Nottingham and others will take place during the rest of the year. Seek identity with ‘Got To Be Who U Are’ below.

One signature element of Ibibio’s Sound Machine is how vocalist Eno Williams often sings in different languages because her mother’s native tongue was Ibibio. While she was born in London, she spent most of her childhood in Nigeria with her family. Her mother, in particular, would recount numerous stories concerning folklore to her and Williams has taken inspiration from these memories by crafting lyrics from these sources to use in her music with a modern twist. ‘Got To Be Who U Are’ gets off to a rapturous start by quickly pacing itself through the steps of emphasising the message of the songwriting to incorporating a percussive African mbira chord to the mix and introducing a more uplifting electronic dance tone to the track as the washing synths establish another groovy element. There’s a breakdown in the middle that gets the nightlife vibe across, before repeating the groove to the point of irresistance from the listener. Lyrics like “Down in London to Africa” and “From Surulere to Isale Eko” revolve around the point of how music connects us regardless of location as a result of a simple hook or a tasty instrumental. These name drops are here for a reason too because Surulere, Isale Eko, Ikoyi and Yaba are areas of Nigeria, thus symbolizing the childhood of Williams again as the band have done so articulately across four albums now. Overall, this is a highly enjoyable new release that truly kicks off the marketing machine for the new LP in fine, fiery style by connecting the dots between the band’s diverse music influences and by symbolizing how musical movements unite people across the world and deliver a fundamental connection between these parties with no concern about where they may be. All of the above and a catchy chorus helps too.

Connect With One Track At A Time

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jbraybrookerecords/

Eclectic & Electric (Radio Show – Mixcloud): https://www.mixcloud.com/jacob-braybrooke/

Today’s Track: Lime Garden – ‘Pop Star’

When life gives you limes, make guacamole. I would if I liked avocado. New post time!

Good Morning to you! I’m Jacob Braybrooke and it used to be my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day before my adulthood got right in the way! It has been a few weeks since I last found the time to write on the blog so, first of all, thank you once again for waiting for me to return so patiently. Secondly, it allowed the space for plenty of emerging artists to grow and nurture in my favour since the last time that we interacted. One of my favourite bands that I discovered in that meantime was Lime Garden. Not only are they an all-female alternative pop 4-piece from Brighton, but they also specialise in their own brand of “Wonk Pop” which the ladies describe as an exotic combination of Disco, Pop and Surf Rock blended together. I would add that their sound takes me back to the 00’s where bands like Hard-Fi and Caesars scored chart hits with jams that were mainstream indie boom music in essence but they also had a slight urban twist to them where Dance and Psychedelic elements came into the fold rather subtly. Of course, “Wonk Pop” may imply that it’s cheap like Wonky Veg in the supermarket, but I like to think it’s as fresh as the cucumbers that you can buy straight from the greengrocers. Awful analogies aside, check out ‘Pop Star’ before reading my thoughts on the charming track below.

Reading & Leeds, Green Man and Standon Calling are just three of the festivals which Lime Garden have played since forming in 2017 leading to support slots with Yard Act and Sunflower Bean on tour. ‘One More Thing’ is the debut album out recently on So Young Records, which is a really confident first full-length effort. Lyrics reflecting on the modern strong woman stereotypes and the lengths that a creative is willing to go to get noticed are just a few of the core themes that speak to me and I feel that both their musical influences and their honest lyricism come to pass strongly in ‘Pop Star’. The opening synth riff is an interesting sonic choice that sets the scene for the sporadic lifestyle that vocalist Chloe Howard sings about with its upbeat yet slightly imperfect nature in how the pattern is a tad unsettled. The drums rattle on at a percussive, improv Jazz-like pace as Howard lays bare the highs and lows of navigating the music industry as a struggling artist with low name value. “I don’t want to work my job, cause life is short and this is long” during the chorus and “I’m finding it hard to breathe and I’m finding it hard to believe/Is this what its like for you or is this just what its like for me” in the verses details the realities of feeling stuck in a job which the powers that be have laid out for you and the curse of comparison to others on social media, respectively. Although the blind pursuit of an exciting dream that feels destined for depression is a personal reflection on these everyday issues for musicians, I also feel there’s something wider that Howard and pals are getting at here. There’s a thematic sense of rebellion to the record in which they feel defiant against the overexposure of generic music by established names being given all of the airplay and support in the modern media. The last lyric that I mentioned, especially, makes this clear to me in a subtle fashion. Overall, I really like how intelligence and dexterity are quite specific attributes to Lime Garden as a band here that can’t be heard on just any record and they offer a deep conversation on ‘Pop Star’ that, as well as the tune being quite a lively and eccentric one to groove to, there’s an attitude to it that feels totally Punk buried beneath the more obvious influences. I absolutely love the sense of specifity to them and if you haven’t heard of Lime Garden before but you are a fan of bands like Warpaint, The Strokes and The Last Dinner Party, I think that you will find their solid LP as fresh as a lime straight from the most tender source too.

That’s all for now! Thank you for your time today and keep your eyes peeled on the blog because, later in the week, I will be posting about a groovy new track by a funk, Jazz and Afrobeat-inflicted band who have recorded music with Hot Chip frontman Alexis Taylor and they have performed at KEXP’s World Clash Day back in April 2019.

Connect With One Track At A Time

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jbraybrookerecords/

Eclectic & Electric (Radio Show – Mixcloud): https://www.mixcloud.com/jacob-braybrooke/

Today’s Track: Bien Et Toi – ‘Haiku’

“Some heat for anyone to play when they get the aux” is all you need. New post time!

Good Afternoon! I’m Jacob Braybrooke and it was previously my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day before my adulthood got right in the way! If you like music that personifies the statement that you saw in my intro above, more pleasure awaits you when you check out the ‘Voici’ EP by the LA-based producer who said it! The man in question is Gianluca Buccellati, an electronic music producer who has enjoyed the opportunity to collaborate with well-liked artists like Hazel English, Biig Piig, Terry Presume and Declan McKenna. Most notably, he fulfilled production work on Arlo Parks’ blockbuster release ‘Collapsed In Sunbeams’ which won the Mercury Prize, also receiving some album of the year nominations at the BRIT Awards and the Grammy Awards following its release in January 2021. As a solo musician, he started out as a member of White China during a run in New York and he has represented artists as an A&R scout operating from mini studios that he set up in Air BnB’s dotted around the globe. His music is recorded and released under the alias of Bien Et Toi which translates to “Well, and you” from French to English. Therefore, his answer must be very predictable if you were to ask how he’s doing. Bright and aestival are two words which accurately describe the sumptous sounds of his six-track EP ‘Voici’ released last year. I feel particularly cold today and his EP makes for a perfect antidote for dull weather in winter. Therefore, why not sample ‘Haiku’ below?

“This collection of songs was created when I was in a completely care-free state of flow”, the emerging producer tells us about his six-track EP ‘Voici’ in a revealing press statement, finishing off his sentence with, “After my last EP [2022’s ‘London Safari] I wanted to create a body of work that had less features and felt more personal. This EP is for people to let loose to, a soundtrack for pool parties or warmer nights” as he describes the production process of the release. It traverses through the chillout music sounds of 00’s compilation albums that have been lost to the domination of the internet and deviates into downtempo Electronica that cleanses the palette of the listener after a long hard day’s on shift at work, inviting you to build a fantasy in your mind that feels as kind as the “Well, and you” translation of his recording name. ‘Haiku’ is never afraid to showcase Gianluca’s work with many Hip-Hop producers by opening with a basic drum beat set above some auto-tuned vocals that feel obscured as to create a sense of intrigue around the track’s meaning. The textured Synths enter the fray promptly, raising the tempo and wrapping layers around the cryptic vocals while conveying a comforting space that puts a hand on your shoulder. A buzzing sound keeps the pace going even while the synths are retreating, before the winning crescendo rewards your attention once again. While the track never veers into hugely melodic and Pop-oriented territory, it maintains your focus by giving its electronic instrumentation a more human quality. There’s an emotive feel in how the multi-layered Synths control the pace of the track and feel like a cohesive pairing with the mechanical vocals in terms of drawing you in with its sense of invitation. Overall, this is one that fits whatever suit you need it to whether that’s a moment of reflection late at night or a trip to view a midsummer sunrise with the roof of your convertible down.

Connect With One Track At A Time:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jbraybrookerecords/

Eclectic & Electric (Radio Show – Mixcloud): https://www.mixcloud.com/jacob-braybrooke/

Today’s Track: YĪN YĪN – ‘Takahashi Timing’

A three week gap between posts is a new record in recent times. Time for a new post!

Good Afternoon! I’m Jacob Braybrooke and it was previously my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day before my adulthood got right in the way! January is always a difficult time to find new music because we’re gearing up for the festival season where more opportunities for promotions at live festivals are greater and the mood of the globe is generally low. However, the mantle has been adopted by Bill Ryder-Jones, Marika Hackman, Sleater-Kinney, The Vaccines, Patricia Taxxon, Sprints (See my previous post for more on that) and a few others to fulfill this year’s lineup of take-whatever-you-can-get lineup of the bleak midwinter supplies. My favourite LP release of the month was from Yin Yin, a 4-piece from Maastricht (The Netherlands) who pitch their rich, comforting sound as Khruangbin meets Kraftwerk.

If you are enticed by a vibrant concoction of Psychedelic Funk, vintage-leaning Disco and East Asian-influenced Soul as the gin connected by a colourful blend of Surf Rock and Japanese instrumental sounds as the mixer, I feel you would enjoy their vibe too. I have been aware of Yin Yin’s flair for a few years, having seen their performance on KEXP’s YouTube channel and vaguely dipping into their space travel inspired record ‘The Age Of Aquarius’ (2022) and the Samurai Cinema-enhanced ‘The Rabbit That Hunts Tigers’ (2019) debut LP in the past, both of which make for nimble, curious and rewarding listens. For their latest album, they have democratically replaced founding member Yves Lennertz (Organ, Stylophone and Percussion) with new lead guitarist Erik Bandt. ‘Mount Matsu’ (out Jan 19th via Glitterbeat Records) was produced in their studio-turned-home in Belgium with the dynamic quartet combining traditional synthesizers with conventional Chinese instruments, most notably a Guzheng, which is known for its spacious flow between melodies. My sampler is ‘Takahashi Timing’, a single which Yin Yin calls an ode to their tour manager who ensures their punctuality.

“Art and ideas are personal and precious and the process of doing this truly together has been about more than just making an album, it was also a study of how collectives work”, the Dutch band say about their most recent full-length, adding, “We have decided to only use vocals sparsely, which leaves plenty of room for the listener’s imagination: you can really let your fantasy run wild as you listen and dance to it”, in an article for Ebb Music, as they visualise the process of creation like the ascension of the fictional mountain of the album’s namesake, hence the title’s theme.

A real sense of bond strikes through on ‘Takahashi Timing’, which kicks off with a groovy, percussive intro which brings the evocation of warmth to the dancefloor – or my headphones. The guitarist strums away at an uptempo pace before the glistening qualities of the bell-type percussion creates a groove that seems reminiscent of La Roux’s ‘Supervision’ album tracks. “Never too late” is the recurring vocal refrain that suggests a positive and uplifting tone, while the decent collection of disparate Disco and soulful Funk elements drive the beat forwards. New elements get added to the mix at their respective intersections, with some particularly refreshing Synth chords towards the end that modernises the experience of hearing the track. The track feels quite busy, admittedly, but it never sounds too chaotic for its own right. Instead, the sound is one that feels characterised by a passionate bunch of musicians cheerfully jamming away at real-time in a studio. Overall, it’s a hands-in-the-air style of track that manages to channel an alternative spirit while remaining accessible and radio-friendly enough to pick up potential listeners along the way because the mood is straightforward but the influences are more complex and niche. It appeals to a fairly general audience but its worthy of the credibility of any crate-digging vinyl fans’ shelf.

Connect With One Track At A Time:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jbraybrookerecords/

Eclectic & Electric (Radio Show – Mixcloud): https://www.mixcloud.com/jacob-braybrooke/

Today’s Track: SPRINTS – ‘Up and Comer’

Jacob to Planet Earth. Surprisingly, this is not a false drill. I respond with a new post!

It gives me – Jacob Braybrooke – great pleasure to wish you a very happy new year as I have finally returned to address you as the writer of One Track At A Time, a website that was previously a diary of discovery when it came to finding new music and exposing the dynamic duo (known as your eyes and ears) to a range of unique bands that I would never wish to fly under your radar otherwise. If you are following the blog and, of course, reading this – I want to say a huge thank you. The main reason why I’ve been on hiatus for so long is the ‘D’ word – and I’m not talking about ‘Drums’ or ‘Drill & Bass’, or whatever basic innuendo that your mind conjures up, but the ‘D’ that worms into your brain and lies to you. Telling you about your inadequacy and lack of worth. Conveniently timed at a period where I was leaving the ‘Cocoon’ known as university life. I began working a stop-gap job in retail and I’m accepting that I’m becoming older and that, to be honest, I absolutely hate said stop-gap job. Therefore, I’ve decided to pick myself up off the canvas and search for career opportunities in the music industry. Although, however armed with excitement and nostalgia that I am to be writing about a fantastic new band once again that I am, I have to face the facts that my writing is very rusty now. Therefore, I’ve decided to start posting again. Not everyday – maintaining my own radio show, job applications, stop-gap job and writing every single day, like I used to back in the peak day, is going to be a little overwhelming. As a result of this, I will simply post a few times over the upcoming weeks, maybe not even publicise it so much, treat you like the old friend that you are and sharpen my skills for the mountain of impending cover letters and personal statements that are inevitably on my way while creating a platform for emerging artists to thrive because my mission, as an individual, is to combat the generic that you hear everywhere from the mainstream media trying to mass market. It’s been about that all along not just holding the fort for a company solely interested in profit.

In my first comeback post of 2024 – although ‘Love Myself’ by Hailee Steinfeld or ‘Fight Song’ by Rachel Platten’ may be a little more fitting of my current mindset – I present to you the Dublin-based indie punk-rock band who are called SPRINTS. It’s always difficult to find new music in the dustbin grounds of January, but these Clash-supported rockers are taking the alternative rock scene in the UK by storm all of a sudden. They were formed in 2019 when they went to see Savages and they were inspired by how deaf the gig was slowly making them. This past weekend, the 4-piece released their debut studio album ‘Letter To Self’ to positive reviews by The Guardian, DIY, Dork and Loud & Quiet. Bolstered by powerfully intimate tracks which explore the self-image of frontwoman Karla Chubb as an independent Punk pioneer of the new wave of futuristic Post-Punk acts in the UK, it’s definitely one that appeals to fans of Paramore and Catatonia. Check out the single that says it all, ‘Up and Comer’, below.

I understand that women should have access to abortion, and I understand that mental health services are not adequate to stop people from committing suicide, so yeah, I don’t know exactly how much money is being spent on it but I don’t need to in order to tell you that it’s not enough“, Karla passionately writes in the band’s bio on the City Slang Records website, adding, “It’s just a class barrier to make people feel like, if they’re not educated enough, then they can’t be involved in the conversation. But you don’t have to be Usain Bolt to run a race, and you don’t have to understand the theory of everything to understand that, morally, someone’s an asshole.” to her speech on what inspires the political aspects of her band’s songwriting on their label’s page.

These themes of how mental health affects feminimity are abundantly clear on ‘Up and Comer’ – today’s track – which begins with a barrelling power-pop guitar riff that steadily builds to create a crescendo of anger when the bass and drums kick in. “I swim the seas between paranoia and disbelief/I reach the surface but the air is hard to breathe” and “Wear a smile like it’s a runner/Your despise like a badge of honour”. she croons, as the swelling guitar chords and the upbeat yet controlled drum beats push and pull the rhythm. There’s a seething quality to the mood of the track, where the rage boils like a kettle as the chorus kicks in and gently retreats as the verses appear. The pace is smooth and clear, however, with the rhythm retreating at a more subtle rate than you may expect. It keeps the fiesty emotion of the track in relevance but it allows the chorus to stand out by increasing the intensity that is maintained to a lesser degree of abrasion. I love the lyrics of the chorus too, where Karla croons, “They say she’s good for an up and comer”, in response to how she feels patronised by those who are commenting on her level of prominence as an emerging artist despite feeling that she’s as experienced as those other artists who have already made an impact. Overall, ‘Up and Comer’ is an effective Punk tune that sounds accessible and catchy, but they personally establishe a truthful quality that leans into the aggressive edge of the quartet’s sound. In this case of finding success on the long and winding road of sustaining yourself as an indie musician, it’s easy to see why the press have quickly encouraged a SPRINT and not a marathon for this promising band.

That’s all for now! I hugely appreciate your time and attention that you have given the post that you have just read. The next one won’t take 10 months to complete – you’ll be pleased to know. I currently run a weekly podcast titled Eclectic & Electric that fulfills a similar purpose of challenging the “generic” that the powers be love so deeply which you can find here: https://www.mixcloud.com/jacob-braybrooke/eclectic-electric-first-show-of-2024-january-8th-2024-spotted-in-ely-radio/. You can also find me on the social media accounts below to stay in touch and discover new music.

X (Formerly Twitter): https://twitter.com/JacobBraybrook2

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jbraybrookerecords/?hl=en

Today’s Track: Andy Shauf – ‘Halloween Store’

Sending a signal from the outer reaches of the planet. Yes – I’m back with a new post!

Good Afternoon to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and, after a year and a half of going through an existential crisis, I have returned to my directing chair as I finally bring you a new post on One Track At A Time – because even though we have been apart for a while, it will always be my day-to-day pleasure to showcase the greatest emerging artists who deserve to be played more on the radio! If you were previously a long-term reader of One Track At A Time (First of all, thank you very much for your kindness and patience), you may recall how I used to adore writing about an artist called Jens Lekman – a Swedish indie pop/folk singer-songwriter – who really stands out for me due to his strong ability to tell engaging stories with an equal measure of melancholy and subtle appreciation for the profound moments in life. Well, Andy Shauf is an artist who I’ve been loving recently because they offer a very similar USP but their music is a little more gritty in its textures. With his origins rooted firmly in Saskatchewan in Canada – Andy Shauf later moved to Biennfait and Regina where he developed an interest in playing Christian music with his parents, a time where he learned how to play various instruments including the Clarinet. Today, I’m going to be telling you about ‘Halloween Store’ – so take a few to check it out and join me below.

If you are new to Andy Shauf, then you share the same story as me. I only managed to catch glimpses of his most recent music on BBC Radio 6 Music through various shows including The New Music Fix playlist and Tom Ravenscroft’s weekend show. ‘Norm’ is his latest album, having been released on February 10th, 2023 via Anti- Records. The full-length album is built around a fictional character of the same name, with Shauf commenting, “The character of Norm is introduced in a really nice way, but the closer you pay attention to the record, the more you’re going to realize that it’s sinister”, in press releases building up to the release date. If you have an ear for the softer side of music, you’re going to be quite pleased to know that ‘Halloween Store’ is a sparkling highlight of warm substance, and not a terrifying descent into chaos. Starting off the summer-friendly, concise indie pop/rocker with a raw acoustic guitar strum and an embellishment of drum cymbals, Shauf starts with a light rhythm as he tells an amusing anecdote about seeking a Halloween costume before a surreal encounter with an old flame. You can hear gentle sweeps of electronic Synths and a gentle Hi-Hat groove that creates more upbeat rhythms, soundtracking the butterflies in his stomach as he delivers lovely lyrics like “As my fog cleared/I realized, That you were sitting in your car/Smiling at me in the Halloween store” with a youthful bombast as the near Classical-like crescendo picks up. While his voice feels a little brittle and nervous, the twee nature of his anecdote fits the mood of the character with expert precision. The track feels like one of those dreams you experience where you wake up feeling cheerful and amused, but you’re never quite sure why because the positivity that you just felt was a half-remembered entity. It’s perhaps not a track that will tip the world on its axis commercially – which is exactly my type of music – but I find it gripping and enjoyable how Shauf manages to balance mundanity and drama in a way that feels warm and nostalgic simultanouesly due to his softly simple-but-effective approach. We just had Valentine’s – but this is as autumnul as late October.

Thanks so much for checking out my latest post! I may have lost my music mojo, but my dedication has always been to bring you my thoughts some emerging artists that simply take my breath away! I would love it if you would give me a follow on Twitter at @JacobBraybrook2 and I may help you to discover your next favourite artist there!

Site Announcement: An Important Message For You…

1,0001 posts.

That is how many times that I’ve done this. Dozens upon dozens of research pages about the various music artists that have been covered on the blog since my first handful of posts were produced in 2019. Hours spent researching the latest trends and, simply, playing loads of music to discover as many diverse artists as possible to appear on the site. In that time, I graduated with a Masters degree, I graduated with a Bachelor’s degree, I developed my personal skills in actively seeking so much music and learning the terminology of the industry, and I learned about the greats of the music industry using the Way Back Wednesdays feature. I found so many artists that will stick with me for the rest of my life, and I gave myself a challenge every day to keep me motivated in the lowest of my emotions. I, therefore, feel a sentiment in the air as I announce to you today that it is drawing to a close – for the foreseeable future.

Ever since I decided to be bold and make it my “day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day” in the summer months of 2019, a lot of things about the world have changed and, with it, many of the wheels that are turning in my personal life continue to change. I now find myself in a position where I am working most days, and yet I still don’t feel entirely satisfied until I’m doing what I really love from a professional standpoint, as I continue to find my place as a unique individual in the modern world. It has simply become a little too straining for me to complete the blog every single day when there are more important matters to be dealt with. It is not to say that I won’t be around at all anymore – as I will continue to find work (Or create my own) in the writing and music industries. There’s also no real reason why one-off specials couldn’t exist, but I’ve simply come to terms with ending my little “passion project” as they say – for the time being – to pursue other creative interests and the things that matter to me on a more vital scale. Although it is a little sad, I’m incredibly proud of the work that I have put into continually maintaining the site on a week-to-week basis and how far my writing has come since I started blogging in 2019.

If you’ve been following or subscribing to the blog at any point over the years, I really want to thank you for supporting me. To see that many music artists have re-tweeted and interacted with my own posts online – with The Chemical Brothers being a really memorable household name to do so – has been very encouraging. I am very grateful for your kind words and be it a podcast, or a radio programme, or a television screen, or a different music website with another profile, I look forward to us meeting again. I simply no longer need the blog anymore – but it has certainly been a fun journey that has reached the end of its poignant destination. Don’t ever forget that music has a healing power – and it is way more than a simple emission of noise. Have a lovely day!

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

New Album Release Fridays: Soccer 96 (feat. Salami Rose Joe Louis) – ‘Yesterday Knows Me’

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has finally arrived for us to enjoy some celestial analog Synths and lumbering Hi-Hat Drums with yet another daily track on the blog, since it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Sharon Van Etten, Belle and Sebastian, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Sunflower Bean, Peaness and – as my mother just informed me earlier this morning – Emeli Sande are all taking advantage of the warm weather (and a gap in the release schedule before Kendrick Lamar unleashes his new cryptic juggernaut next week) with new albums this week. Another LP release worth keeping an eye on is the latest album by the London-based Prog-Jazz duo Soccer96, which is comprised of keyboardist Dan Leavers (Danalogue) and drummer Max Hallett (Betamax) who are also members of The Comet Is Coming. The two musicians like to keep busy in their separate careers as well. Leavers has performed alongside Scratcha DVA and Henry Lu, and he has produced albums for Ibibio Sound Machine, Snapped Ankles and Flamingods. Meanwhile, Hallett is also a member of Hot Head Show and Super Best Friends Club – and he’s also played the live drums with Sons Of Kemet, Yussef Kamal and Melt Yourself Down. They have become a regular addition to my digital library with their ethereal blend of Sci Fi-leaning Electronica, post-apocalyptic Ambient and poly-rhythmic Grime-Jazz. For their live sets, the diverse duo also pride themselves on using no laptops, sequencers or software when they perform, instead opting to play each of their parts in the moment. ‘Inner Worlds’ is the follow-up to last year’s ‘Dopamine’, an ambitious record based loosely on a narrative centered around a corrupt AI system that landed a spot on my very own ‘Top 25 Best Albums Of The Year’ 2021-end list that was published back in January on the blog. It releases today digitally, but it won’t be available to purchase on physical formats until May 27th via Moshi Moshi Records. The leading single – ‘Yesterday Knows Me’ – enlists the aid of Salami Rose Joe Louis, who previously provided the vocals for ‘Sitting On A Satellite’ that was taken off 2021’s ‘Dopamine’. Check out the music video for the single below.

Rozi Plain, Simbad, Tom Herbert and The Colours That Rise also appear on the new release, and Soccer96 pitch it for your pleasure by noting, “We’ve been reflecting on the relationship between our inner worlds and outer worlds, how our minds shape our experience and our experience shapes our mind“, in the LP’s product description on their Bandcamp profile, concluding, “How caring and nurturing our inner worlds can improve our relationship with our outer experiences. We see the creation of music as the bridge between these two worlds“, in their own words. Building off the unorthodox time signatures and Space-Pop synths of ‘Dopamine’, Soccer96 invite us all into the alluring and deliberately mechanical tone of ‘Inner Worlds’ with a typically whimsical arrangement of multi-layered vocals and gently Trip Hop-leaning instrumentals. Their beats feel ‘broken’ and ‘wonky’ to a characteristic degree, and they are tuned well to the sounds of the Soul-tinged vocals by Joe Louis that feel slow-burning and almost robotic in delivery. Instrumentally, it’s all about the texture for Soccer96 as always, as the duo continue to lay out their formula of intense textures and rather meticulous compositions that straddle the line between chaos and order like a well-balanced walk on a tight rope, while giving off the hazy and psychedelic vibes that distort the vocals and loop the drums in a sense of propulsion that slowly ascends and descends gradually. The crunching break-beat plays catch up to the more upbeat keyboard work for the most part, while the sequences bass ostinato provides subtle hints to 70’s Psych-Funk and 90’s New-Age recordings at differing points. Towards the end, there’s also a squelching solo where the electronics are really turned up to eleven and replace the wide-eyed mood of the verses with an extra angle being added between the melee of the drums and keyboard where the cut is more focused on brute sonic impact. Musically, the lead single feels very varied while the barely audible lyrics add another dimension to the light grooves. The cohesion is solid though, and there’s certainly the creativity here to warrant the genre-fluid variety of styles feeling suitable together. It’s not really a major departure in sound for the duo, but it shows the experimental and independent duo doing what they do best and embracing their creative freedom to deliver a fascinating and imaginative tapestry of textures, moods and functions. This is bound to be another Soccer96 record that you should not miss.

Looking for more where that came from? Check out my previous Soccer96 post here:

‘Sitting On A Satellite’ (feat. Salami Rose Joe Louis) (2021) – https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2021/09/24/new-album-release-fridays-soccer96-feat-salami-rose-joe-louis-sitting-on-a-satellite/

That brings us to the bottom of the page once again, and I thank you very much for your support today and over the years. Remarkably, I have just reached the milestone of 1,000 posts being published on the site, as of yesterday. There will be no new daily post tomorrow in the traditional sense, but please stay tuned to the homepage and the social media profiles for an important announcement arriving in the coming days.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: Jitwam – ‘Brooklyn Ballers’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has come for me to give a shout-out to the Broolyn Ballers and each of the readers from elsewhere as we get prepared for yet another daily track on the blog, since it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! A self-described “Psychedelic Soul Savant” who was born in North-East India, now based between New York and Sydney, moved to New Zealand and Australia to spend his formative years there, later living in monasteries in Thailand and washed-out apartments in London, Jitwam is the co-founder of Chalo, an ambitious creative project alongside Dhruva Balram that supports up-and-coming Indian, Pakistani and Kashmiri artists, with a full-length self-titled album being released via The Jazz Diaries in 2020 that had its proceeds donated to the Human Rights Law Network and the Zindagi Trust. As a solo artist, however, he’s released a string of EP’s and a few albums, with 2019’s ‘Honeycomb’ serving as his latest LP. Jitwam has also collaborated with numerous artists including Dam Swindle, Mike Bloom and renowned Broken Beat maestro Kaidi Tatham. Other career highlights include his placements on Moodyman’s DJ-Kicks compilation series, embarking on a national NTS Radio tour in India, touring across the US and Europe, and opening a show for the acclaimed Funk virtuoso Roy Ayers with his full live backing band. His brand new single – ‘Brooklyn Ballers’ – is a one-off release from what I gather, but it offers an energetic ode to his passion for (just) one of the area’s that he has lived in throughout his eventful lifetime. Give it a spin below.

Brooklyn Ballers is a homage to the city in all its hustle and bustle“, Jitwam explains about the far-reaching notes of the track which are delivered below the soulful and radiant instrumentation, adding, “The magic in the air, that can make dreams come true and can turn your fears into your worst nightmares“, in his own single’s product description on the Bleep website. The opening reminds me of one of Skule Toyama or Night Tempo’s modern Chillwave records, where the summer atmosphere shines right through thanks to the raucous sampled guitar hook that induce the nostalgia of the 70’s Disco-Rock era, before the track soon evolves into more of a Detroit House style of record with additional elements of Hip-Hop and World Fusion music. The lead vocals have a spoken, but catchy and rhythmic, delivery to them where subtle nods to Guns ‘N’ Roses ‘Paradise City’ and Joe Smooth’s ‘Promised Land’ creep in due to the lyrics and the key song structure. A myriad of styles, including Psychedelic Soul and Vaporwave, make their way into the instrumental-driven sections of the track. Jitwam melds together the Gospel-esque backing vocals, some Madlib-style sampling and some Maribou State-style cues of World-Funk and Dub into the mix too to finalise the package, which plays out as a chilled soundtrack to his simple love for the location and a very deep, percussive groover that acts as an ode to some of New York’s most respected producers. The area’s energy is almost embodied by the Jazz inflections and the Detroit House influences, creating a laid back shuffle that gradually builds and draws upon various elements to expand it beyond the original state. A chef’s kiss.

That’s all for now! Thank you for checking out my latest blog post, and I’ll be ready to take you through a new entry of ‘New Album Release Fridays’ tomorrow as we take a quick preview of one of the weekend’s new and notable album releases. The record in question comes from the Prog-Jazz and Electronica sides of the Alternative Music spectrum by a duo made up of two members from The Comet Is Coming. The duo’s drummer has also toured with Sons Of Kemet, Melt Yourself Down, and Yussef Kamal.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Way Back Wednesdays: Beryl Marsden (feat. Gospel Garden) – ‘Hello, Stranger’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has come for us to go ‘Retro’ with another old-school edition of ‘Way Back Wednesdays’ on One Track At A Time, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! The latest favourite of Cherry Red Records to grace the feature, Beryl Marsden’s story began in the Merseyside boom of the 60’s where she found fame on the Liverpool club circuit after singing with local groups like Howie Casey and The Crew, after she won a talent competition at the age of 14. One child in a family of ten, she would start performing at the Star Club in Hamburg, re-locate to London and subsequently sign with Decca Records as a solo artist with Tony Stratton-Smith as a manager. In her career since then, Marsden supported The Beatles on their final UK tour in 1965 and participate in projects like Shotgun Express (Which Rod Stewart, Mick Fleetwood and guitarist Peter Green were also all members of), The She Trinity, Simbad, Gambler and The Beryl Marsden band. Her material was mostly centered around a then-contemporary Pop and soulful R&B style, although her solo records unfortunately gained little commercial success. Nevertheless, she has built up a reputation as an undeservedly neglected talent praised by sites like AllMusic and The Liverpool Echo. She has also been remembered in recent times with a theatrical musical – ‘One Dream: The Beryl Marsden Story’ – that was performed at the Cavern Club for two nights, which Beryl Marsden would close with a live performance. She was also portrayed by actress Gemma Sutton in 2013’s ‘Cilla’, a three-part TV drama series about Cilla Black. Her lack of success commercially was mostly contributed to how her singles were never released in a traditional album format, and this notion did not change until January 2012 when her first compilation – ‘Changes: The Story Of Beryl Marsden’ – was finally made available. Check out ‘Hello Stranger’ from it below.

‘Hello Stranger’ is likely one of Beryl Marsden’s more well-known original recordings because it was used in the 1997 film ‘Another 9 1/2 Weeks’ (Which was also released as ‘Love In Paris’ in certain markets) which starred Mickey Rourke and Angie Everhart, which features the clips that you just saw in the video above. It was also credited to “Gospel Garden (feat. Beryl Marsden)” in some territories too, but it was nonetheless one of her more radio pop chart-friendly works. Gospel Garden’s blueprints are also clear, as the track gets off to a start with some ethereal Synths and ambient washings of Bass that conjure up an atmosphere that, to fit the title, feels strange yet familiar. Marsden’s lyrics are more emotionally driven, as she waxes nostalgic with sustained refrains like “Have you had a good time?/It makes me smile when you look at me that way” that leads melodically into the bridge, where she questions the interest of a former lover with lyrics like “Can I come home with you tonight?/Is that what you’re asking?” and “You say you’re gonna treat me right/A stranger’s touch is what I need tonight” as the bassline builds up to some playful keys that lead nicely into the heightened pace of the chorus, where catchy hooks such as “It’s a strange kind of magic/When we touch” and “Strangers you and I will always be” play out above the soulful combination of keys and drums, which feels different to the slow-burning energy and gradual progression of the main verses that establish a slightly more gritty and subdued quality. The track is still quite lushly produced, and it demonstrates how richly her voice has aged throughout the decades too as her darkened vocals are conveying a decent variety of emotive qualities during the verses before the more formulaic Dance-Pop song structure creeps in around the halfway mark, but these elements still work cohesively together because of her uncertain presence. Her voice was enough to give you a light tingle down the spine, and that’s executed clearly here.

That’s all for now! Thank you for checking out my latest post on the blog, and I will be back tomorrow to review a recent, eclectic single by a self-described “Globetrotting Psychedelic Soul Savant” who is one of the co-founders of the Chalo project. I can’t wait to bring his exciting new single ‘Brooklyn Ballers’ to your notice and it follows variable collaborations with artists such as Dam Swindle, Mike Bloom & Kaidi Tatham.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: Ciel – ‘Fine Everything’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has come for you to perk up your ears in preparation for yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! If I told you on the radio that I was going to play you a new track by an artist with a name (Ciel – Pronounced: Ceal) just like that, you’d be forgiven for expecting to hear some kind of 00’s-leaning Pop, R&B and Soul record. However, you’d be confusing them for Seal. On the other hand, Ciel are an emerging indie rock trio led by vocalist-guitarist Michelle Hindriks drawing from diverse influences such as Sheogaze, Dream-Pop, Prog-Rock, 90’s Grunge, Symphonic Rock and Psychedelic Rock. With members hailing from The Netherlands and Spain in addition to the UK, Ciel have recently captured my imagination when ‘Fine Everything’ gained positive reviews from the panel on last week’s episode of Steve Lamacq’s Roundtable on BBC Radio 6 Music. Ciel have also been praised by sites like KEXP, WFW, BBC Introducing, Amazing Radio, Clash Magazine, Earmilk and Under The Radar too. In recent times, Ciel have been preparing for their upcoming EP by working with Steven Ansell (of Blood Red Shoes fame) as their producer and mixer. The trio have also been supporting She Drew The Gun, Sasami and Penelope Isles across sold out live shows in London and Brighton (Where they are currently based) too. I also read that Ciel have been long-listed for this year’s Emerging Talent Competition at Glastonbury Festival as well, which should continue to shine a spotlight on the band as a valuable commodity within the music industry. On that note, let’s check out their fresh new single, ‘Fine Everything’, below.

Talking passionately about the melodic new offering of Shoegaze-inflicted Indie Rock, frontwoman Michelle Hindriks notes, “It’s about coming of age, and not really knowing how to navigate life. The doubts and difficulties that involve life-changing decisions, yet maybe not being ready growing up, when all your friends are. I was thinking of how so many people lost touch with their inner gut feeling and instincts, and how all the possibilities in life can feel so overwhelming sometimes. It’s almost kind of easier to stay oblivious to it instead of digging deep into your mind“, in her own words. The single oozes charisma with an insistent groove created by the fuzzy walls of anthemic guitar sound and driving drums from the get-go, while lyrics like “Ignorant to the shame, It evoked/Threatened by the drought, caught up in doubt” and “Don’t you know, I am longing for/To be told how to live my life” break down the decision making processes that we all face, punctuated by the Shoegaze guitars and the angsty, classic Punk attitude that gives the tempo a more brooding personality. They unleash a fun and chaotic guitar solo towards the end, while the chorus introduces a more accessible Pop sensibility into the mix due to its rhythmic pulse, while the verses feel more gritty and determined in texture. There’s some hook-filled melodies in here, but it retains a sharp Post-Punk feel overall because the Brighton-based band aren’t afraid to hit you with a distorted wall of sound, but they tie it in with a melodic style and some familiar Pop-driven songwriting. It doesn’t feel shrouded in borderline territory between Dream-Pop and Post-Rock, but it instead feels like it has a more direct punch to its sound that makes it feel memorable when it digs into your brain. It works nicely as a companion for the lyrics, which are all about tacking the uncertainty of thoughts that linger in your brain about your future as a young adult and how these unsettling noises in our minds invade our lifestyle, backed by an edgy Garage feel that resonates with the modern indie production clearly. While it is nothing too innovative and I’ve probably heard most of their ideas before, it is still a solid track that is very catchy and noisy, in the best way possible, that still leaves me thirsting for more content from Ciel soon. It is not re-inventing the wheel, but the wheel keeps spinning without fault.

That’s all for me today, but I hope that your day turns out to go just fine. I’ll be back for a new edition of ‘Way Back Wednesdays’ tomorrow where will be remembering the work of a Lancashire-born R&B and Pop singer who was a member of groups like Shotgun Express, The She Trinity, Sinbad and Gambler in the 1970’s, and she has been described as “undeservedly neglected” by Bruce Eder, a respected writer for AllMusic.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: Sondre Lerche (feat. CHAI) – ‘Summer In Reverse’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has come for us to wish for warmer weather as we get settled down for the Bank Holiday with yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! A Norweigan singer, songwriter and guitarist now based in Los Angeles, Sondre Lerche grew up in a Bergen suburb where he became fascinated by 1980’s Pop, Bossa Nova and Neo-Psychedelia, captivated by bands like The Beach Boys and Prefab Sprout. He began formal guitar instruction at the age of 8, played regular acoustic gigs at the club where his sister worked as a teenager, wrote his first track at the age of 14, and got scouted by eventual mentor H.P. Gunderson. Since that time, Lerche has released eight full-length studio albums, signed up to a lucrative record deal with Virgin Norway, and he’s gained praise from various sources including Brooklyn Vegan and Stereogum, additionally earning the award for ‘Best New Act’ at the Norweigan Grammy’s within his first year of writing and producing music. Lerche’s been busier than ever lately, having released ‘Avatars Of Love’ – a double album featuring 14 tracks that run past 90 minutes in total – on April 1st, 2022. The project was created at home in Norway following what Lerche thought would be a temporary move from Los Angeles in March 2020, but it was completed in a brief yet intense period of a year. Rather than letting his material pile up, Lerche decided to just simply record each track as soon as it had been written, working with a variety of musicians and producers in-person in Bergen as well as reaching out to a variety of international collaborators over the internet. Among the guest list are AURORA, Mary Littlemore, Dirty Projectors’ Felicia Douglass, Anne Mülle and Rodrigo Alarcon. A melancholic but sweet new single from it, ‘Summer In Reverse’ features the Japanese Alternative Pop outfit CHAI, who admittedly seem to be cropping up on everything nowadays – having worked with Gorillaz, Superorganism, Mondo Grosso, JPEGMafia, MNDSGN & Ric Wilson in recent times. Let’s check out the official music video below.

This song was written on January 1, 2021, so it’s a bit of a hangover song really. A hangover jam about trying to unhook and ready yourself for a new year through facing some brutal truths“, Sondre Lerche says about the soulful single, adding, “I wanted someone else to sing the pre-choruses, kind of like a soft Greek chorus and I had just heard and loved ‘Donuts Mind If I Do’ by CHAI, so I reached out. I’ve been immensely inspired by Japanese city Pop and ambient New Age, and I love how the two go hand in hand somehow. I was thrilled to have some company on the song, so it didn’t feel so pathetic and sad“, to amusingly describe his collaborative experiences with CHAI. The jumping ramp for the single starts with a glitched drum beat and a looped, light Samba-inflicted guitar melody. The playful combination introduces a slightly twisted, widescreen splashing of Synths after the opening verse, as Lerche’s radiant crooning blends together with the dream-like qualities of CHAI’s backing vocals to create a breezy groove that doesn’t cool down and lets up for the occasional sampled String crescendo, adding a virtuosic feel to the section that reminds me of Jens Lekman or The Avalanches from a production standpoint. I like how there’s a melancholy and a bitterness to the instrumentation, but it still retains a warm feeling due to the soulful and Prog Jazz-leaning influences. I really like a lot of the lyrics here too, with refrains like “We should get together every summer/and make each other miserable all fall” and “Or can you only love me in the summer?/Or, never at all?” managing to convey a wide spread of emotions while also seeming endlessly quotable at the same time. In conclusion, this is a fantastic single that really took me by surprise in how it feels both aesthetically pleasing and dynamically rich in texture, unleashing a tapestry of moods that feel like the definition of bittersweet. Clever, playful and elegant. A total package.

That leaves me with little else to say today, other than to thank you for supporting the site today. I’ll be back at it again tomorrow with an exciting in-depth review for ‘Fine Everything’, which is probably the most well-known single by an emerging indie rock band that I discovered on a recent episode of Steve Lamacq’s ‘Roundtable’ on BBC Radio 6 Music, where it gained positive reviews from the show’s panel. This trio have worked with Blood Red Shoes’ Steven Ansell as a producer. They have also supported the likes of Sasami, Penelope Isles & She Drew The Gun for live gigs across the UK too.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Scuzz Sundays: Papa Roach – ‘Between Angels and Insects’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has come for us to pay a visit to one of the ghosts of Pop-Punk’s past with a new weekly edition of ‘Scuzz Sundays’ on the blog, given how it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! In the past few weeks, we’ve tied our weekly throwbacks into some form of current affairs, such as this autumn’s re-union gig for Hard-Fi or the almost exact 20th anniversary of The Caesar’s ‘Love For The Streets’ album, and we’re continuing the same trend today. The Vacaville-formed Alternative Metal band Papa Roach released their eleventh studio album, ‘Ego Trip’, on April 8th to a fairly positive reception from critics. Therefore, we’re going to remind ourselves of one of their classic tracks today to fit the theme of ‘Scuzz Sundays’. Released in 2000 as the third single taken from their Triple Platinum-certified second LP ‘Infest’, ‘Between Angels and Insects’ reached #17 on the UK Singles Charts and it enjoyed a nice run on the radio airplay circuit in late Spring of 2001 after the music video had released. The album itself ventured into the buzz of the Nu-Metal and Rap-Rock genre elements of the time, and it debuted at #5 on the US Billboard 200 chart, additionally earning Papa Roach a Grammy Awards nomination for ‘Best New Artist’ to reflect this success. Find the Joseph Khan-directed video for ‘Between Angels and Insects’ below.

In a SongFacts interview with Papa Roach’s Tobin Esperance, it was revealed how the track took inspiration from ‘Fight Club’, as he noted, “The lyric in the bridge section was taken from the conversation that Brad Pitt was having with Edward Norton on the airplane“, in the piece. ‘Between Angels and Insects’ remains a live favourite for Papa Roach too, as Esperance also told SongFacts it was “Definitely still a really fun song to play live. That song definitely goes off“, in 2011 as well. The title of ‘Between Angels and Insects’ doesn’t appear lyrically, but there’s an implication that human morality sits between angel and insect – the divine and the primitive – in other words. Lyrics like “There’s no money, there’s no possession, only obsession” and “You can find a conclusion, lifestyle and obsession/Diamond rings get you nothing but a life long lesson” are centered around greed, implying that money just can’t solve your deeper psychological issues, with the verses and the chorus commenting on how the base desires like possessions bring us further from angels and closer to insects. The steady drums, the Rap-Rock rhythms of the vocals and the thunderous guitar riffs, with a heavy but largely melodic Pop-Punk skew, feel rather typical of the time and the instrumentation does not feel different to many of the Grunge-inflicted rock songs of the album’s era, but it feels quite nostalgic twenty years later and it can remind you of how your life may have been at the time. While the chords feel rather unoriginal, there is still some decently thought through commentary here on how we value our possessions and how striving for things we feel are positive can lead to negative impacts like addiction, and these themes never really overstay their welcome despite seeming quite universal. The band’s accompanying melodies for the lead vocals push the metaphorical boat into stormier seas, while the main bulk of the instrumentation adds just enough differentiation from other Papa Roach tracks such as ‘Last Resort’ or ‘…To Be Loved’ without affecting the formula that has been laid out for it. Overall, I don’t feel this is a masterpiece, as the lyrics and progression feel a little bland and generic, but there are elements of greatness here. The songwriting works well, and the instrumentation is solid. This is probably not a Last Resort for your Papa Roach fix.

You can check out some of my previously published Papa Roach-related posts below:

‘Last Resort’ (2020) – https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/07/26/scuzz-sundays-papa-roach-last-resort/

…To Be Loved‘ (2021) – https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2021/11/21/scuzz-sundays-papa-roach-to-be-loved/

That brings us to the end of the page for another day! Thank you for joining me, and we’ll be kicking off a new week’s worth of posts as well as the new month’s worth of posts – you lucky reader. It begins with a fun and chilled summer-themed new single by a Norwegian singer-songwriter who has released eight studio albums and created his self-titled full-length record, released in 2011, in a short yet intense time period of three weeks. The single in question features the talents of Japanese Pop project CHAI.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever – ‘The Way It Shatters’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time for me to return to my writer’s table as we get invested in yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! The Melbourne-based 6-piece Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever emerged nine years ago with their subtle blend of 00’s Jangle-Pop and cheerful 60’s Surf-Rock – with not one, not two, but three guitarists amongst their line-up. They have now earned an established profile with popular LP releases like 2018’s ‘Hope Downs’ and 2020’s ‘Sideways To New Italy’ since those years, along with a top 5 entry on the UK’s Physical Singles Chart. They have earned acclaim from sites like Triple J, Pitchfork, Noisey, AllMusic, Pop Matters, Uncut, Far Out Magazine and others. They have also gained awards attention from the AIR Awards, Australian Music Prize, Music Victoria Awards, J Awards and National Live Music Awards as well. The typical two-year cycle between album releases is up for them, so we’re naturally getting their third album – ‘Endless Rooms’ – next month. It arrives on May 6th via Sub Pop Records/Ivy League Records, and it has been described by the group as “almost an anti-concept album“, with the title reflecting, “our love of creating worlds in our songs. We treat each of them as a bare room to be built up with infinite possibilities“, according to the band. It’s automatically clear that free time was spent by the band to craft their new record during lockdown, as the lead single finds the band experimenting with Synths for the first time to add a fresh dynamic to their folk-inspired sound. Check out ‘The Way It Shatters’ – with the music video, which taps into the new LP’s darker themes – below.

It’s about how ending up in your particular situation in life is the result of absolute randomness. If you happen to be born into wealthy Australia or happen to be born into a war zone in Syria. That’s just the way it shatters“, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever say about their album announcement and recent single, adding, “So it’s when this good luck is mistaken for a sense of pride in one’s self or their country they become confused and deluded about what’s important. It’s when those on the other side of the luck scale are completely othered and considered not worthy“, in their insightful description of it. Reflecting more of a night-time vibe than most of their previous efforts, ‘The Way It Shatters’ gets up to some speed with nimble and angular guitar melodies that fill the opening, as the soaring Synth stabs and the sharp, layered Drum melodies fill the rest of the space when they follow. Evident 00’s Jangle-Rock and 60’s Surf-Rock qualities are still there, due to how the band structure the track and how the vocals have an acoustic dynamic, but it feels more lively and energetic than before due to how the Synths play off the tension and mark a more expounded first step into electronic territory. There’s a slightly dissonant Keyboard line and an ascending bassline thrown in, and when all of these elements come together, they sound not very dissimilar to The Psychedelic Porn Crumpets or Deerhunter overall. While the hooks are quite mainstream-friendly and the progressions of the chords are pleasant, the lyrics reflect a slightly darker and a slightly more sinister spin to these proceedings. Lyrics like “It’s desolation by rote?/All around your home/If you were in the boat/Would you turn the other way?” deals with humanity and how we all find our own place within it. Later hooks like “Lost in a magazine town/It’s all falling up again and in my head, I tell myself/It’s all just a necessary evil” dig their fans into isolation habits and the fortune that favours some of us above others. It never feels over-produced, although clear signs that bigger producers have been set up with the band for tracks like these. There’s nothing here that I haven’t really heard before, however, it has a more gritty sound than 2020’s ‘Sideways To New Italy’ which I enjoyed and skews towards a decidedly 90’s Indie sound that gets a nostalgic quality across. Pleasing to fans of the band’s existing material, I also think ‘The Way It Shatters’ appeals nicely to fans of bands like Mumford & Son’s who operate in a similar genre, but have a slightly more known profile to them. A clean, solid track with catchy lyricism and progressive ideas.

Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever seemed really popular in 2020 and, as someone who likes to comment on the fuss, its only natural that we met before in the entries below:

‘She’s There’ (2020) – https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/06/08/todays-track-rolling-blackouts-coastal-fever-shes-there/

‘Cars In Space’ (2020) – https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/03/24/todays-track-rolling-blackouts-coastal-fever-cars-in-space/

That’s all for now! Thank you for checking out my latest post on the blog because I appreciate that on a Saturday, much like the band, you must feel shattered. ‘Scuzz Sundays’ is back tomorrow, and we will be tying it into current affairs once again because the central band have just released their eleventh studio album. They are known for singles like ‘Last resort’ and ‘..To Be Loved’, and the following was used as the main theme song for WWE’s ‘Monday Night Raw’ TV show between 2006 and 2009.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

New Album Release Fridays: Bloc Party – ‘If We Get Caught’

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and its time for me to get writing up for yet another daily track on the blog, because it is always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! With new albums by Royksopp, Toro Y Moi, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Kelly Lee Owens, Honeyglaze, Dana Gavanski and more all arriving today, you really can take your pick for ‘Album Of The Week’ because there seems to be something for everybody among the release slate today. I have been coloured intrigued by Bloc Party, therefore, as the established PLUG Award-winning and 30 million album-selling London rock band are entering a crucial new chapter of their careers with ‘Alpha Games’ – their sixth studio album – which is out now, as of today, via BMG/Infectious Records. The main draw for the record is how it is their first to feature their new line-up, as Gordon Moakes and Matt Tong have been replaced by Louise Bartle and Justin Harris. The urban rock band have been actively promoting the record as a twist on the band’s old dynamic, giving the sense they are steering away from their tried-and-tested formula in favour of something new, as Kele Okereke said “We’re not the same band now. The chemistry is different” and “We have a history and a legacy, but I’m more excited about the energy we have right now“, in a recent interview with NME’s Mark Beaumont. It also brings producers like Dan Carey, of Speedy Wunderground fame, on board as well. It has been backed by interesting singles like ‘Traps’ and ‘The Girls Are Fighting’, which have sounded edgy in new ways despite feeling like Bloc Party. Check out the latest single – ‘If We Get Caught’ – below.

There are only two songs that I feel like have any tenderness on the record, and ‘If We Get Caught’ is one of them“, Kele Okereke says about the LP’s penultimate track in a press release, adding, “It’s really about recognizing that the game is coming to an end and about trying to steal a moment of tenderness with your partner before the curtain comes crashing down. I think it’s about trying to find moments where you can really connect with someone amid all of the chaos that’s going on in the world“, in his evaluation. While the other singles have boasted a sharper set of fangs, being defined by their sleazy punk theatrics and their intense guitar riffs, ‘If We Get Caught’ feels more like an indie anthem by-the-numbers with a decidedly more downbeat, yet still melodic, pace. A subtle, vintage Art-Rock touch and the staccato vocals of the chorus, where the acidic and playful vibes of singles like ‘Traps’ and ‘Sex Magic’ are replaced by a sound that seems more emotionally driven. Okereke chimes in with lyrics like “Where you go/I will go” and “Stick to the story, better with an alibi/Create diversion, take control with sleight of hand” that, while retaining a relatively straightforward Dance-Rock feel, are supported neatly by a slight rap delivery that Okereke uses in the verses, before he is supported by some cooing backing vocals by Bartle and airy bass guitar riffs in the chorus. Lyrics like “If we get caught/I want you to know/I will always, ride for you” capture the quality of trying to eek out a final moment of intimacy before an inevitable final goodbye, wringing out the joy of a doomed relationship, nicely in the chorus. A light channeling of the indie rock ghosts of the 80’s and 90’s mostly characterizes the visuals and emotions here, with Okereke and the rest of the band creating a sense of unity and strength by giving the impression that there is little sense of anger whatsoever. I feel that Okereke has created a fresh outlet for himself in his solo material, with side project releases like ‘2042’ feeling more fascinating and inspired than some of his main Bloc Party music in some cases, and I can see some of that influence spreading out into new avenues here. While ultimately not quite as interesting or experimental, it feels different to the music that I’ve heard by Bloc Party or may expect to hear from them because it feels more intimate, and so I feel like the goal of mixing up their recycled tropes has been achieved here, even if the sound is a little more generic in some ways. An enjoyable single that would sound great on the UK’s mainstream radio, ‘If We Get Caught’ makes it clear that Bloc Party are not attempting to emulate their past efforts too slavishly, as this one strikes a more full-tilted and introspective chord with me – and this is an effective way to play the game.

If you’re already a fan of this NME Album Of The Year-winning band, the party doesn’t need to end here as you can check out each of my other Bloc Party-related posts here:

‘Traps’ (2022) – https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2022/01/08/todays-track-bloc-party-traps/

‘Helicopter’ (2021) – https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2021/11/07/scuzz-sundays-bloc-party-helicopter/

That’s all for now! Thank you for checking out my latest post on the blog, and we will be looking ahead to the new month tomorrow with my review for a recent single by an established Australian indie rock band who will be releasing a new album within May. Formed in Melbourne in 2013 by three vocalists-guitarists, they have gained attention by the AIR Awards, Australian Music Prize, Music Victoria Awards and others.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: Automatic – ‘New Beginning’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time is now to fill up your electric car as we take a trip of futuristic Motorik proportions to outer space as we get invested in yet another daily track on the blog, because it is always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! I don’t think that a fortnight ever goes by where we don’t cover an artist signed by Stones Throw Records – known for artists like MNDSGN, Maylee Todd, Kiefer, Sudan Archives and John Carroll Kirby – but the truth is that the California-based soul specialist label has been churning out loads of great material lately, and I am about to add Automatic to the aforementioned list of their all-star acts. A Synth-Punk trio comprised of Izzy Glaudini (Vocals/Synths), Halle Saxon (Bass/Vocals) & Lola Dompe (Drums/Vocals), Automatic became a mainstay on the L.A. dance club circuit after forming in 2017. Their biggest influence is The Go-Go’s – an 80’s New Wave band who are the only all-female band to have written and played every instrument on a #1 album in the US as of 2017 – who have also provided the three-piece’s namesake. Glaudini and Saxon have played in other Los Angeles-based bands like Mega Bog and The Black Windmill, while Dompe is the daughter of Bauhaus’ Kevin Haskins who – as a teenager – played in Blackblack alongside her sister, Diva Dompe. Automatic will be releasing their second studio album ‘Excess’ on June 24th and they will be touring alongside Tame Impala, Parquet Courts and Osees throughout 2022. Check out the lead single ‘New Beginning’ below.

The music video for ‘New Beginning’ was pitched by director Ambar Navarro as an homage to the Swedish sci-f film ‘Aniara’ – and the band have continued to tease the album’s explorations of the edge of the 70’s club underground and the industrial side of the 80’s by writing that it aims to capture “That fleeting moment when what was once cool quickly turned and became mainstream, all for the sake of consumerism“, adding, “The record is about what happens to our psyches when we’re conditioned to certain values, the consequences of those values and a desire to resist them“, in a press statement. Starting off with more of a Dream Pop-like sound set to the tune of fairly deadpan vocals that recalls many retro female vocal groups like The Ronettes, as Glaudini contemplates the idea of leaving behind a dilapidated Earth in solace of false hope created by the ultra-wealthy who are eyeing manned space travel with piercing lyrics like “In the service of desire/We will travel far away” and “Heard the final echo/It’s almost time to go” as the beats behind her gain traction with a stomping bassline and thudding drums. Once these melodies up the ante a little bit, later lyrics like “Falling through the distance/The stars will light the way” and “Endless service of desire/Every night and every day” are recited more energetically, as Glaudini weighs up some pro’s and con’s of attempting to escape the planet when it gets scorched – with a fair quality of inevitability in her rather unphased voice – as unchecked consumerism continues to reach its logical outcome. While a bit bleak, the lyrics are given more flair by the instrumentation which is undoubtedly more optimistic and colourful. The early insistent Bass groove and her intentionally ‘flat’ vocals slowly morph into heavy Synth stabs and lockstep Motorik drums that give ‘New Beginning’ its distinctly Industrial character, topped off by handclaps in tandem with the percussive combo of an atmospheric Keyboard section and fuzzed-out Snare effects. ‘New Beginning’ ultimately adds a splash of colour and imagination to an otherwise bleak topic, plus it replicates the Disco vibe and the 80’s influences with a modern twist due to the more current social commentary of their lyricism. Overall, this is another eclectic, exciting song being supported by a label who are killing it right now.

That’s all for now! Thank you for checking out my latest post on the blog, and I will be back tomorrow for ‘New Album Release Fridays’ as we preview the new album by an established urban Indie Rock band from London who were formed through an NME advert in the early 00’s. They won NME’s Album Of The Year award in 2007 for ‘Silent Alarm’ and, in addition, they have roughly sold over three million records worldwide.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Way Back Wednesdays: Eric B. & Rakim – ‘Don’t Sweat The Technique’

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has come for you to send a distress call to DedSec (A short soundtrack-related reference for those who know) right after reading your latest retro-filled edition of ‘Way Back Wednesdays’ on the blog, because it is always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Although not entirely remembered in the discussions of Hip-Hop’s greatest artists to lace up a pair of rhymes by the general public, Eric B & Rakim have still been named as two of the genre’s greatest talents by publications like AllMusic and NPR, while Rolling Stone have ranked them as #5 on their list of the 20 Greatest Duo’s Of All Time published in 2015. They were also among the many victims who were affected by the 2008 Universal fire, which caused their tapes of lost material to be destroyed in the incident. They could still take a lot of the newer artists to school though, and we are currently in session with them today on One Track At A Time, and so I’m going to pay attention and listen up to the title track from their final album – ‘Don’t Sweat The Technique’ – released in 1992 via MCA Records. Like many of the Long Island-formed duo’s critically acclaimed albums, the LP was handled mostly by Eric B. & Ralim themselves in terms of production duties at The Hit Factory in New York city. The titular track itself was a minor radio hit, while the associated album reached #9 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums Chart in the US. This is a powerful track, but it is somewhat disfigured in the memory by a music video that is riddled with the typical tropes of 90’s Hip-Hop in which the album, and Rakim’s career as a whole in particular, usually stood in a more creative opposition against. It strikes me as a piece that was designed by label executives in order to sell more records. That said, the album debuted at #22 on the US Billboard 200 chart in its first week of release, a healthy result for an alternative act. Try not to Sweat The Technique below.

Eric B & Rakim’s ‘Don’t Sweat The Technique’ was not intended to be the duo’s final album, but their contract with MCA Records was due to expire, eventually leading to lots of legal wrangling, including a court case, that would cause the duo to disband completely. However, things did not meet a grisly end because a re-union tour took place in 2018. Summing up what they do most thoroughly on releases like this LP with the frantic beats and cuts, ‘Don’t Sweat The Technique’ (the title track) is built off an infectious and funk-driven instrumental that expands into Rakim’s rhymes that feel razor sharp and cutting edge on arrival. The main bass line (Which is a sampled loop from Young-Holt Unlimited’s ‘Queen Of The Nile’) is a perfect partner for the recurring blasts of Horns (A Kool N The Gang sample), developing elements of Jazz and Soul among the Boom Bap style of production and the percussive, clicking Drum loops. Lyrically, we are dealing with a love letter to the art form of rapping itself, with Rakim giving light testimonies about his career and his relationship with Eric B. as he continually performs his methods of mental alchemy. He uses sequences like “They want to know how many rhymes I have ripped and wrecked/But research has never found all of the pieces yet/Scientists try to solve the context, Philosophers are wondering what’s next” to give the boisterous track its energetic and conscious character. His delivery is absolutely swift and nimble too, as his syllables bounce between the elastic bassline like a rubber band and syncopated rim-shots, as to aid the rhythm of the instrumentals with his internal melodies. Together, they boast a DJ/Producer dynamic that has still influenced combinations like Run The Jewels and Nas & Hit-Boy to this day, and that’s simply because the formula feels timeless. To conclude, it is a classic track that Eric B. & Rakim delivered without breaking a sweat.

That brings us to the end of roughly another 24 hour period on the blog, and I thank you, as always, for reading what I had to say about Eric B. & Rakim today. Tomorrow, I’ll be reviewing a recent single by an all-female Pop, R&B & Funk trio who became mainstays on the DIY L.A. club circuit after they started jamming together in 2017. They are currently signed to Stones Throw Records and they have a new LP – ‘Excess’ – releasing in June. They will also tour with Tame Impala and Parquet Courts in 2022.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: Dama Scout – ‘Emails From Suzanne’

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has almost come for you to delete all of the junk mail in your inbox folder after you’ve finished reading yet another daily track on the blog, because it is always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! An Indie Punk trio comprised of vocalist/guitarist Eva Liu, bassist Scot Lucci and drummer Daniel Grant, Dama Scout were formed in 2016 and they subsequently spent years self-producing nightmarish soundscapes traversing through Noise-Pop and Industrial Rock in the studio, dividing their time between Glasgow and London. The band’s name derives from a line said by the protagonist of Harper Lee’s ‘To Kill A Mockingbird’ to whom Liu has long related, as ‘Dama’ means woman or deer. You can find support for the trio on sources like The Line Of Best Fit, BBC Introducing, NTS Radio, Amazing Radio and DIY. Their debut LP – ‘Gen Wo Lai (Come With Me)’ – was released on April 22nd via Hand In Hive, and it draws from East Asian Pop and Rock influences. An LP project that was assembled internally – with all of the material getting written, recorded, mixed and produced by Dama Scout themselves – and it explores the ethnicity of Eva Liu, who was born in Northern Ireland by two parents from Hong Kong, thus becoming an object of school playground curiosity. Their bold full-length outing is a soundtrack for her journey of attracting unwanted attention in her adolescence to becoming comfortable with her identity as a young adult, told in the form of harsh Dream-Pop backdrops and various genre fluid explorations. Check your crowded inbox for ‘Emails From Suzanne’ below.

Dama Scout says the promotional single pays homage to “the world’s finest vessel of passive aggression, wrought with the sincerest best wishes, high in frequency, low in fidelity – the email” and it is enriched vividly by the visual work of the accompanying music video, which the band pitch as “a short documentary exploring the death of the office, the nature of emerging flexible work environments and the relationship between labor and the millennial condition of perpetual adolescence“, in a press statement. On that note, a disturbing slice of visual imagery is a suitable companion to the thick walls of distortion and push-and-pull pacing on ‘Emails From Suzanne’ as a sharp, piercing ode to the passive aggression of workplace communication through online messaging. The lyrics are decidedly fragmented, with sequences like “How could/I have done it/All before” and “What is her name?, I ask/Is she wanted?, Any background information?” being repeated throughout the track with a collage-style, loose structure. They are evoked by a sense of Liu muttering under her breath, getting light frustrations and underlying anger across as the emerging feel of catharsis slowly makes its way to the forefront of the loud, quirky tune by the time that it reaches the end. The track twists through the grit of 90’s Riot Grrrl in the breathy bite of the vocals and the aggressive character of the backing band’s sections, while turning through more modern explorations of Shoegaze and Hyper Pop in the ear-catching viscerality of the full-blast guitar rhythms and the rather whimsical finale punctuated by the heightened instrumentals which evoke a nightmarish, anxiety-inducing tone. Rather than having a twisted sweetness to it that brings in some unsettling elements, ‘Emails From Suzanne’ is a little more intent on delivering some high-octane Dream Rock and brooding melodies to give the feeling that something is lurking in the dark corners of the underworld. It is not for everybody due to how outright angry that it sounds, but that’s no discredit to the risks that Dama Scout are taking and how they structure their recorded material with their slow builds that replicate the feeling of a live performance. It does not feel massively improvised, but it bears a decent amount of depth to it and there are flashes of a fresh band who are daring to be different even if the thick walls of distortion feel a little bit played out in their genre, a trope they aren’t necessarily subverting. Although the band have a limited discography, cuts like ‘Emails From Suzanne’ are promising in showcasing an emerging act who have the spirit to forge their own roads in a market that is not currently experiencing a dearth of new talent. A welcome invitation to the, sometimes frightening yet often Utopian, world of a 3-piece who are in control of their career’s direction and musical trajectory.

Thank you for checking out my latest post on the blog, and I will be back tomorrow as we go retro for ‘Way Back Wednesdays’ with a revisit of a 90’s Hip-Hop classic that any fans of ‘Watch Dogs 2’ are going to love. Praised bu NPR and AllMusic, this duo from Long Island, New York were ranked as #5 on Rolling Stone’s list of ‘The 20 Greatest Duo’s Of All Time’ in 2015 and, unfortunately, their lost material was a victim of the Universal fire which affected hundreds of artists, whose tapes were destroyed in 2008.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: Sudan Archives – ‘Home Maker’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and its time for you to put those D-I-Y tools down for a few moments while I deliver yet another daily track on the blog to your eardrums and eye sight, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Also known for her recent cover of Yoko Ono’s ‘Dogtown’ for last month’s ‘Ocean Child: Songs Of Yoko Ono’ compilation album, Sudan Archives (the solo music project of violinist and vocalist Brittney Denise Parks) is a psychedelic soul and experimental R&B artist who has built up a reputation amongst the internet music community with her well-received blending of organic, African-inspired instrumentation with more futuristic, electronic music elements. She is yet to follow up on her debut album, 2019’s ‘Athena’, which included the fantastic single ‘Confessions’. Nonetheless, her resume includes the headline artist slot for the Stones Throw Showcase at the South By Southwest cultural festival earlier this year. Parks has studied ethnomusicology at Passadena City College, she has performed as part of a string quartet and she has earned plenty of support from sources like BBC Radio 6 Music, KEXP, The Guardian and The Quietus. Her latest single – ‘Home Maker’ – is an exploration of the bliss which Parks can feel in her domestic life, and it was prompted by her emotions when moving from Los Angeles to her place of birth in Cincinnati, Ohio. Let’s watch the Jocelyn Anquetil-directed music video for this below.

Parks is set to perform live at the All Points East Festival in London this August, and, talking about the single’s themes of approaching the mundanity of domestic chores by re-imagining them as dream-like activities set to a lush, Utopian background, she says, “It took nesting – building a home, investing in partners that were worth my investment – to shake my anxiety and depression”, explaining, “For me, homemaking is a service to mental health and coping with fear and isolation. This song is about the effort put into making a relationship work and giving love a place to live”, in her press release. The opening has a darker tone than expected, as Parks recites a rhythmic series of lyrics like “Only bad b**ches in my trells/And baby, I’m the baddest” and “I’ve just got a wall mount for my plants/And hoping that they’ll thrive around the madness” with a sturdy Hip-Hop deliver that contrast the warmth of urging a partner to be around you at your lowest times with the darkness of cultivating a nest of your own self-doubt. Shifts between utter confidence with later lyrics like “Won’t you step inside my lovely cottage/Feels so green, it feels like f***ing magic” and self-created uncertainty with other lyrics like “My mood’s been real sloppy/I cry when I’m alone” that feel confessional in mood while self-accepting in total as she concedes her issues with mental health, and these shifts similarly show contrasting qualities between self-assured pride and self-loathing jabs. It is also quite interesting when “I’m a home maker” is made to sound like “I’m a heart breaker” in the chorus, as it shows that she’s conjuring up a seductive vision of home life despite nothing explicit being argued, while the more cheerful sections effectively banish any thought of anxiety. One of the big highlights is the bridge where, elevated by percussive hand-claps and the occasionally sweeping string, Parks chants the refrain of “Do you not feel at home when you’re with me” as she goes full throttle into Nu-Disco mood with the Jazz influence. The rest of the track’s instrumentation soundtracks her journey to discovering self-worth, through all of her trials and tribulations mentally, in similar ways. We start off with a high-Bass synth that evolves into a smoother Synth groove punctuated by glistening Keys and the rare strum of a rhythm guitar, which is all based around the programmed drums too, before the bridge allows us to breathe a sigh of relief with its more upbeat qualities. Overall, ‘Home Maker’ is a truly excellent new single that evokes a sense of really inviting us into her world, while feeling diverse enough to tell a loose narrative and feeling experimental with its blend of different genres, proving that she’s capable of bending genre rules to meet her needs.

Thank you for checking out my latest post on the blog, and don’t forget how much that your support has meant to me today, as I just reminded you of it. I’ll be back tomorrow for more music-related musings as we review one of the latest singles by an emerging indie punk 3-piece formed in Glasgow and London born out of a shared interest in unconventional songwriting. They have received support from DIY, The Line Of Best Fit and Amazing Radio. The group have over 2k monthly Spotify listeners.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Scuzz Sundays: The Caesars – ‘Jerk It Out’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has come for us to pay a visit to one of the old ghosts of Pop-Punk’s past with a new addition to our ‘Scuzz Sundays’ library, given that it’s always been my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! ‘Love For The Streets’ was released on April 22nd, 2002 via Virgin/Dolores as the third full-length LP effort for the Indie Rock band The Caesars, as they are most widely known, who were formed in Stockholm, Sweden in 1995. Therefore, as of this week, the record has just celebrated its 20th anniversary. It makes for a really great opportunity for us to remember ‘Jerk It Out’ – the band’s most well-known track – that was taken as a single from the album. Following one re-issue in 2003 and another, more wider, re-release in 2005 – ‘Jerk It Out’ became an international success as it reached #8 in the UK Singles Chart and #70 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart. It is definitely one of those tracks that you have heard many times before, but you most probably have not heard it in ages or did not know who performed it because, admittedly, the group did not have much more impact on popular culture outside of their domestic market in the years after. The Caesars are also known by two other names, as they were originally known as Caesars Palace natively. However, they changed their name to The Caesars to avoid confusion with the famous Las Vegas-based hotel of the same name and, likely due to copyright, they are known as Twelve Caesars in Scandinavia. My head is spinning with confusion, so please do me a merciful favour and press ‘Play’ on the ‘Jerk It Out’ music video below.

‘Love For The Streets’ has actually been certified as Gold in sales in their native country of Sweden, and you may also remember their hit ‘Jerk It Out’ from a global advertising campaign for the old iPod models and the, now rather obsolete, iPad Mini products designed by the corporate tech giant Apple. An easy track to write about due to it being so straightforward, ‘Jerk It Out’ dives headfirst into the 00’s Garage-Rock revival trends with an outrageously catchy Keyboard/Synth hook that twists and turns ferociously, as the sharp yet undemanding Drums kick in and the spaced-out effects on the keyboard gives the track the swirling, dizzying vibe that has made it feel so memorable. The lyrics are incredibly laid back and clear cut, as hooks like “Wind me up, put me down, start me off and watch me go/I’ll be running circles around you sooner than you know” and “Because it’s easy once you know how it’s done/You can’t stop now, it’s already begun” convey the themes of perseverance and finding reward out of taking risks very evidently. A distorted organ sample and a gentle guitar solo, towards the end of the track, keep the mid-60’s Garage Pop quality from becoming too predictable, and the catchy lyrics are married to the unique Synth style fairly well. That is all there really is to write about the track because it is just a fun, but simple, piece of music that feels like it could have been recorded in 1966 by a Garage band in Ohio. It equally sounds like a rather basic band manifesto in writing a three-minute pop gem designed to be a hit in the charts, which doesn’t usually sit very well with me, but I give The Caesars the benefit of the doubt on ‘Jerk It Out’ because the track is well-produced in being filled with so many simple, but catchy, segments. While being pretty much the definition of a one-hit wonder, ‘Jerk it Out’ is still just good fun.

I think I’ve ‘Jerked’ out however much I can handle (No, I do not mean it like that, Rude) musically on the blog today, but thank you for continuing to support the site every day. I’ll be back tomorrow as we begin the final week of April with the diverse voice of a Los-Angeles based vocalist and violinist currently signed to Stones Throw Records known for her electric blending of African music and futuristic R&B. Earlier in the year, she headlined the Stones Throw showcase live event at South By Southwest.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: Everything Everything – ‘Teletype’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time to save some space on your hard drive for the retrieval of some new digital (and legally purchased) MP3 files as we get invested in yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! First getting their break out via BBC Music Introducing in the mid-2000’s, Everything Everything is a familiar and friendly name for many longtime UK Indie fans given their established profile and diverse discography over the past couple of decades, with the Manchester-based Alternative Pop – bordering on Art-Pop, Industrial Rock and Microhouse – band receiving five Ivor Novello Awards nominations and one Mercury Prize nomination to their name for their efforts. The band also follow in similar foot steps to projects like Django Django, Talk Talk, The The, Duran Duran and The Linda Linda’s in giving their name a multiple repeated title – and if you can think of any more good ones, please feel free to let me know on Twitter (As the link is below) or leave me a note in the comments section. Anyhow, ‘Raw Data Feel’ is the follow-up to 2020’s ‘Re-Animator’ and it will be released on May 20th via Infinity Industries/AWAL Recordings. To make the album, the band enlisted the help of an AI programme that was fed information – including terms and conditions of LinkedIn, the poems regarding Beowulf, 4Chan posts and the teachings of Confucius – to create experimental lyrics, track titles and album artwork for their full-length project. Check out the new single ‘Teletype’ below.

Everything Everything have also confirmed a handful of live UK tour dates taking place between May and September 2022 – including a recent appearance at London’s Roundhouse on April 13th – which includes support slots from L’Objectif, Phoebe Green, Do Nothing and Liz Lawrence. Whetting our appetite for the band’s upcoming sixth studio album, the quartet says of ‘Teletype’ as a single outing, “This song began in a very experimental way, with Alex and Jon sampling voice and guitar then putting it through a process that randomized each chord in a chaotic and glitchy rhythm. A very direct song, straight from the heart, with a fresh new openness that we felt was a good scene-setting for the record”, in a press release. While my work is almost done, I need to share my thoughts on the track to give you a unique take on it. It starts off with a warped Synth-led instrumental which leans loosely into Breakbeat, with a scattered sense of pace that gives refrains like “It’s easy to lie when nothing makes sense anymore” and “I’m a liar, but I’m lying next to you, and you don’t care” a more psychedelic quality. These observations on the confusing world that 2022 presents to us are pushed to the forefront when the bridge closes and the chorus sweeps in, as the 8-bit inspired rhythms and the modular Drums are replaced by a more brooding bassline and a more percussive Drum beat that chirps along to the upbeat tempo of hooks like “You don’t talk a lot but I like it, ‘Cause I can’t tell you everything that went on” and “You might be everything that I want” that mold the glitchy Techno-driven production and the galloping melodicism of Jon’s vocals into a more anthemic and catchy chorus, despite the inherent aggression of the electronic instrumentals or the harshness of the Bass never quite changing much in any dramatic sense. The track maintains it’s Breakbeat origins and Glitch-Pop influences throughout, and the vocals manage to feel distinctly unsullied because there’s a lack of overdub, filtering effects or backing vocals to drown out the emphasis on Jon’s voice. Just because this is an electronically driven track does not mean that auto-tune has to make it sound overly processed, and I like that the band took that direction on this track and it avoids the feeling of the track seeming cheap or tacky. Some of the lyrics, like “I feel alright, yeah, I feel good” and “Gonna take a bit/Maybe this will take a little time to heal”, are slightly lacking in the depth department for me because they feel so straightforward, but their rhythm is still catchy despite the songwriting suffering a little from the AI programme’s influence in my opinion, although the use of the said AI scheme is still a mildly interesting idea on paper. The instrumentation is more effective, however, as the guitar and glitched samples remind me of their ‘Get To Heaven’ era and they give the track its vibrant, experimental feel that catches on infectiously. Overall, this is a vivid single that swiftly avoids the problem of not feeling like one thing, nor the other.

Everything Everything have been around for 15 years and my blog has been active for a few years, and so it is only natural that stars have aligned before. Find out how here.

‘Arch Enemy’ (2020) – https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/08/04/todays-track-everything-everything-arch-enemy/

That brings us to the end of another roughly 24 hour period on the blog, and I’ll be back tomorrow to add a new entry of the weekly ‘Scuzz Sundays’ feature. Thank you for giving me a few minutes today, and join me then as we reminisce over the 20th anniversary of a Gold-certified album in Sweden by a Stockholm-formed indie rock band who are known by many names including Caesars Palace and Twelve Caesars. They are probably best known for their 2002 hit ‘Jerk It Out’ that reached #8 in the UK.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

New Album Release Fridays: The Lazy Eyes – ‘Fuzz Jam’

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has finally arrived for us to take a walk on the psychedelic Gen-Z side of music as I take you through yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! While the new albums from Fontaines DC, The Psychedelic Porn Crumpets and Poppy Ajudha have each been coming out today and they are all shaping up to be good, nothing has quite sparked the same interest for me as the long-awaited and slightly delayed (as it was originally set to be released in March) debut album by The Lazy Eyes. ‘Songbook’ has been self-released through the Australian Psychedelic Rock band’s channels on this day – a record that, according to the Vinyl’s product description, “is evidence of an edifice slowly being formed, a trepidatious first footstep by the band into the wider world” as they match a 60’s Neo-Psychedelia influence with a kaleidoscopic aesthetic that blurs the lines between fantasy and reality. The Lazy Eyes have developed a cult following and earned acclaim for their live sets since forming as a unit in 2015 when they met at Sydney’s Newtown High School of the Performing Arts. Not only have they sold out shows across the Australian east coast, but they are also responsible for the creation of their own live music festival LazyFest. They have also earned praise from numerous sources including KCRW, FBI Radio, BBC Radio 6 Music, Triple J Unearthed and NME. ‘Songbook’ follows the releases of 2020’s ‘EP 1’ and 2021’s ‘EP 2’, and the group’s profile will continue to grow when they support The Strokes on tour next year along with The Chats. Prepare yourself for the unadulterated liveliness of ‘Fuzz Jam’ below.

Matching the dynamic structure of ‘Fuzz Jam’ with a psychedelic monochrome outset for the music video, the band’s vocalist-guitarist Harvey Geraghty has discussed the foundations of the track’s vibrant soundscape, saying, “I wrote ‘Fuzz Jam’ to use this instrument that [guitarist Itay Sasha] bought live. It’s this Hohner Planet T, and we wanted a more hard track to play on it, instead of just singing songy songs”, in a press statement. Ever the humorous bunch, The Lazy Eyes take some influence from the sprawling, cinematic post Neo-Psychedelia of The Flaming Lips and a 60’s Beatles-esque Jangle Pop vibe to conjure up a heightened Noise-Rock collage of effects-filled Synth sounds and delay pedal-dominated guitar riffs that feels almost self-referential to its core influences. This one starts off with a threatening bassline accelerated by the animalistic Drums and seductively sultry lead guitar riffage that creates a very improvisational feel to the instrumentation where the tempo chops and changes throughout the track, endlessly segueing in and out of sparkly Psychedelic Pop and ‘turn up that dial’ good time rock. These grooves mutate and twists, so you never quite know what’s around the corner. Simple lyrics like “I want it all to be ok, I want to stay the same” and “Run for the door, You’ll be okay/Don’t be afraid to say my name” often get repeated, which leans loosely on the heavy and inciting soundscape while occasionally dipping into a sweeter harmony. It can often seem like you are listening to three or four different songs thrown in a blender together here as the overall instrumentation is fairly unpredictable and the rhythms are complex, not to mention the full-blast feel of the saturation effects which turn their Psych-Rock world upside down, but their vocals are played out with some subtle sense of comfort while the incendiary electronic elements penetrate the rhythmic bass grooves to a satisfying cohesion, despite the track having its lofty ambitions. These elements are all major thorough-lines in the track, and so the pacing never feels massively out-of-place as to make the track feel incomprehensible. Overall, this is all playful fun and it seems like the kind of track that really could not have been made 20 years ago, which is a quietly incredible feat. It never shakes off the meditative qualities which have set them apart.

Thank you for checking out my latest post, and please make sure to follow the blog on Twitter (the links are below) to get notified whenever my daily posts are uploaded and help me to dominate the social media algorithm, eventually allowing me to take over the world. In the meantime, I’ll be back tomorrow to review a recent single by an established Manchester-based Art-Rock band who have a Mercury Prize nomination and five Ivor Novello Awards nominations to their name. They follow in the same tradition of Django Django, Talk Talk and Years & Years in having a double title for their name. Thinking about it – this is actually great material for a Pub Quiz question.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: Neil Frances – ‘Dancing’

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has come time to shine your favourite pair of dancing shoes before we get invested in yet another daily track on the blog, because it is always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Saying “We like the idea of our music sound-tracking people’s weekends” to Karen Gree of NME in a recent interview, Neil Frances is not a solo artist – but rather the Los-Angeles based Alternative Soul duo of Sydney-born musician Jordan Feller and Southern California native producer Marc Gilfrey, who have named their debut studio album ‘There Is No Neil Frances’ to illustrate the fact. Out now via Nettwerk Music Group, the LP was recorded in Echo Park Studio over the past year and it follows the loose narrative of an insect who is trying to find its place in a utopian dreamscape. Exploring a wide assortment of Alternative Pop and Experimental House sounds on previous releases like 2018’s ‘Took A While’ EP and 2021’s ‘Stay Strong, Play Long’ EP, Neil Frances met in New York and began the project in 2016 with their intention of creating honest and authentic music. The duo have opened up a sold-out show for SG Lewis at The Shrine. They have also supported the likes of Jungle, Unknown Mortal Orchestra and Poolside on tours across the US. The duo will also be performing at the Shabang Live Music & Arts Festival, WonderStruck Festival and Firefly Music Festival throughout 2022 as well, and so there’s a handful of places that you can find them love if you thoroughly enjoy the new album like I have, which features contributions by Benny Sings and GRAE. Give ‘Dancing’ a listen below.

Neil Frances have gained support from KCRW, Under The Radar, Magnetic, Flood and Brooklyn Vegan in the past few years, and their own cover version of Stardust’s ‘Music Sounds Better Than You’ has amassed over 70 million streams. Explaining the concept behind their latest outing, the duo say, “Our new album is about self-realization and becoming the person that you dream of. The concept is that we are insects on Earth who ascend into outer space to become divas at a galactic ball”, in their descriptive press statement. As the ninth track on the long-player, ‘Dancing’ marks a transition point into more accessible sounds that seem easier to groove to, compared to the slower build of the earlier tracks, with it’s silky and smooth Nu-Disco vibe. An airy, gently processed lead vocal mixes together with the World Fusion-based Drums in the opening as atmospheric lyrics like “As the sea comes speaking to me/Time will voice its drift out of key” and “When I see this all to my brain/Tell the lord we’ve trouble where we went” cleanly kick-starts the dense journey of Psych-Funk, Trip Hop and Progressive Soul that flows cohesively throughout the single. A bold, one-note hook of “When dancing is seeking delight” illustrates the themes of the track beautifully in the chorus. Musically, the instrumentation represents an ethereal blend of Future Funk and soft R&B that gets stretched out by effective sampling, light vocals and manipulated sounds to create the slow-burning textures and give the groove a hypnotic quality in the process. The sparse danceability reminds me of ‘The Slow Rush’ by Tame Impala, while the vintage-leaning dance music elements recall back Gilligan Moss to my mind and the calming mood of the soulful vocals makes me reminisce over MNDSGN’s material. There’s an eclectic range of influences in here, but Feller and Gilfrey manage to make the spatial trip through these layers of music their own by developing their 90’s New-Age influences with a neat amount of detail and showing their versatility as producers who are not constrained to one specific genre. Overall, ‘Dancing’ is a song that will make your feet move involuntarily to the rhythm.

That brings us to the end of another roughly 24-hour period on the blog, and I really want to wish you great luck for the rest of your week in return for your generous support. I’m going to be back for ‘New Album Release Fridays’ tomorrow as we turn our attention towards the long-awaited and slightly delayed debut album release by an Australian Psychedelic Rock 4-piece who created their own Lazyfest music festival.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Way Back Wednesdays: The Knife – ‘Silent Shout’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has come for us to go retro with a striking piece that will tell you a story of fairly recent history with another entry of ‘Way Back Wednesdays’ on One Track At A Time, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Ever an elusive and dynamic duo, cult Swedish electronic music duo The Knife (Comprised of siblings Karin and Olof Dreijer) were never afraid to, somewhat uninentionally, capture the attention of the mainstream with their dark-leaning blend of Dubstep, EDM, Art-Pop and Psychedelia, also including some slower and darker strains of Hip-Hop and R&B, throughout the years to create music that, although Pop, was more far-reaching and progressive. First gaining an international following through their 2003 album ‘Deep Cuts’, the duo managed their own record company – Rabid Records – throughout their years of activity between 1999 and 2014. They were known for donning their Venetian masks to hide their faces in many public appearances, and they have won a number of Swedish Grammis awards despite refusing to attend the ceremonies. Although the duo decided to call it a day and disband in 2014, Karin started her own solo project Fever Ray in 2009, while Olof performs as a DJ under the monikers of DJ Coolof and Oni Ayhun. Last year, The Knife celebrated their 20th anniversary by announcing a range of re-issues on Vinyl and concert streams including BTS footage of their various album’s development. ‘Silent Shout’ – their third LP and arguably most well-received release – was among the works being featured. Let’s remember the title single below.

‘Silent Shout’ spawned four singles and the music video for the title track, along with some of the promo photos doing the rounds of the album’s press campaign, were equally inspired by the works of German-American animator Oskar Fischinger and the ‘Black Hole’ series of comic books created by the American cartoonist Charles Burns. This was also a highly influential release – with fellow artists like Lykke Li, Niki and The Dove, Tove Lo and Denmark’s MØ picking up on The Knife’s Dubstep-influenced blend of Dark Electronica and subversive Dance music rather noticeably in the years following its release in 2006. ‘Silent Shout’ – the title track – is an amalgamation of the record’s club-driven musicality and rewarding lyricism, as the deep House-leaning anthem starts off with a drawing set of Synths that evoke a Sci-Fi aesthetic as they waver along to a chilling, unearthly electronic backdrop of multi-tracked Keys and brooding Drums. A barely audible vocal comes in shortly, which also evokes a ghostly – not to mention a slightly haunting – atmosphere at times as the processed vocals are crashed through the ringer of digital manipulation. The severe distortions of Karin’s lyrics create a daring and jarring presence that pulsates from the mid-tempo opening to the early 90’s Techno and Trance qualities of the slowly bubbling outroduction, telling a narrative of a life gone awry that feels tense and high-octane while suiting the template of unpredictable Pop that shapes the rest of the full-length album. The lyrics give the tempo a slightly melodic uplift with their robotic feel, but the rich electronic backdrop incorporates a wide-ranging series of Lo-Fi Hip Hop and Dark Ambient elements, especially in how the reverb keeps the Drums and Synths feeling grounded, without overstating their direct influences. Overall, ‘Silent Shout’ represents some of The Knife’s most consistent and layered work, both in terms of the heightened production and the forward-thinking concept, from their golden years. The stunning title track marries elastic vocals and cosmopolitan instrumentation to a perfectionist level and there’s clearly a valid reason why it is remembered very fondly.

Thank you for checking out my latest blog post and supporting my creativity, as you have no idea how much that it means to me to see some love being registered for the site. I’ll be back tomorrow, as always, to do ‘Thursday’ with a cheerful dance track by a Los Angeles-based Alternative Soul duo with a confusing name who, originally formed in Chicago, met in 2012. Their debut LP is out now via Nettwerk Music Group.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: Dana Gavanski – ‘Indigo Highway’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has come for me to settle my own nerves like a calming pill for a playful addition to my catalogue with yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Inspired by the live performance aspects of David Bowie, Art-Rock singer-songwriter Dana Gavanski – a Canadian-Serbian musician based in London – almost followed in her father’s footsteps for a career in the film industry, but she developed her skills in music for a year and decided to release her first record back in 2017. Following that time, she has received acclaim for her work from sources like Exclaim, Monkeybiz and BBC Radio 6 Music, with the latter naming 2020’s ‘Yesterday Is Gone’ as their album of the week. She has recorded two live sessions for Marc Riley’s show, she has supported Damien Jurado on a tour across Europe and she has worked with Tuung’s Mike Lindsay as her producer. More recently, she recorded a cover version of King Crimson’s ‘I Talk To The Wind’ as a charity single. In the near future, she will be releasing her second full-length studio album – ‘When It Comes’ – as she gears up to add another release to her impressive resume for an artist who’s only been active since 2017. Set to release through Full Time Hobby on April 29th, she describes the release with “In many ways, this record feels like it is my first. When I could use my voice, I had to focus so there is an urgency and greater emotional trajectory than before. It’s very connected to vocal presence, which extended into an existential questioning of my connection to music. It felt like a battle at times, which I frequently lost”, in her own words. The new LP was recorded between Montreal and Belgrade, finally being mixed at London’s Total Refreshment centre by Mike Lindsay. Check out Dana’s single ‘Indigo Highway’ below.

Gavanski pitches ‘Indigo Highway’ as an unguarded Moog-built track that captures the loss of childhood relationships with sincerity and absurdity in her press release, as she explains, “From the beginning of my interest in songwriting, I’d tried many times to write about this relationship and never could. It felt too fragile, too fraught with experience and distant in many ways. However faraway the time feels, no matter what came next, ‘Indigo Highway’ endeavors to return to what made the relationship special. This song is like a prayer, or a way back, temporarily, to innocence and silliness and sunshine on a field”, in her words. The fun starts off with an idiosyncratic arpeggio groove and a distinctly retro kick drum beat that paves the way for Gavanski’s abstract vocals to find their mark, as lyrics like “I think I’ve found my way back home, Wandering out” and “When you come over and visit me, We’ll sit by the willow tree” offer pastoral and peaceful reflections on plunging yourself back through time to return to your innocence before the times that followed in adolescence. A Piano drops in rather whimsically, at a later point, to a jaunting set of verses where Gavanski passionately projects her voice with lyrics like “I’ll find your face, it’s changing in different ways/And I’m looking around to see” to contemplate the platonic friendships that she has been finding and declining, or naturally progressed away from, during her lifetime. Propelled by an obscure Synth hook and pierced Keyboard melodies that are locked together frenetically by a consistently no-frills drum kit, Gavanski conjures up a presence that feels highly original in the way that she mixes her playful musicality with youthful personality. Her warm crooning feels both familiar and otherworldly when paired to the otherwise percussive arrangement that feels reasonably melodic, but textured by the eccentric instrumentation and the transcendant qualities of her child-like lyricism. There’s shades of Nico and Cate Le Bon in here, as well as more Folk-costumed nods to Aldous Harding or Weyes Blood’s material, and so it should appeal nicely to a decent range of Alt-Folk and Country-Rock fans with it’s bright, yet widescreen brand of quirky atmospherics and whimsical daydreaming although it feels slightly faster in tempo than most of the music by the aforementioned influences. A joyful and cinematic piece that we could all connect to.

That brings us swiftly round to the end of the Indigo Highway for today! Thank you for coming along for the ride, and I honestly can’t believe how short this week feels because it’s almost time for a fresh new entry of ‘Way Back Wednesdays’ that will be arriving on the site tomorrow. This time, we’re looking back at a very influential Swedish Prog-Pop duo with a cult following who have been celebrating their 20th anniversary with a number of re-issues since 2021. They are also known for wearing Venetian masks in their public appearances, and managing their Rabid Records label.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: EARTHGANG – ‘All Eyes On Me’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time to wipe the chocolate from those Eggs off of your face for a few moments as we listen to yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! The music video for ‘All Eyes On Me’ has recently surpassed over one billion views on YouTube, a great result for the Atlanta-based Hip Hop duo of Earthgang, which is comprised of southern rappers Olu (aka Johhny Venus) and WowGr8 (aka Doctur Dut – who was born as Eian Parker) who were co-founders of the Spillage Village collective which also includes JID, Hollywood JB, JordxnBryant, 6LACK, Mebera and Benji. Earthgang mostly feels like a side project for the two creatives, who have released a trilogy of EP’s and one major album on the Dreamville Records label that fellow rapper J. Cole heads. The duo released a few singles like ‘American Horror Story’, ‘Aretha’ and ‘Erykah’ to showcase the diversity of subjects being disected throughout the record, but ‘All Eyes On Me’ seems to be one of the most symbolic examples of their new album’s sound and core values. ‘Ghetto Gods’ – their second studio album – has received positive acclaim from publications like AllMusic, Exclaim, NME and Rolling Stone, along with consistent radio airplay from KEXP, making their top ten list of albums being featured regularly on their DJ’s shows. It was produced by Kawan “KP” Prather and SinceThe80’s, and it features a varied range of guest collaborators too. Among these names are people like CeeLo Green, Baby Tate, Future, JID, Ari Lennox, and more. Check out ‘All Eyes On Me’ below.

Referencing the hardships that everyone has been dealing with throughout the pandemic, such as the loss of jobs and the missed opportunities in our lives due to the long-term effects of recent years for their music video, Olu and WowGr8 encourage us to enjoy the most profound things in life while celebrating their survival as black people in America. An effective opening sets the scene with lyrics like “Warriors die, but they live in the sky/I’ve never seen a Gucci watch in my future, sign of the times” that Olu spits out to reference the financial difficulties that many have been struggling through. WowGr8 tells his side of the coin in the next verse, as he raps about taking care of his family despite personal issues in order to tell a larger narrative of the ‘target’ that is placed on the back of his community and the judgment that black people are still constantly subjected to within the environment. The chorus brings together the themes of poverty, addiction, police brutality and prejudice in the legal system with an upbeat spin anyways, as the pair shout us out with sequences like “You survived last year/Get your hands up” and “I know that money tight, that slimmy check light/I should stash some, but we gon’ ball for the night” that illustrates the point of living for today and not showing an overload of concern for tomorrow. The rougher topics of racism, tragedy and horror stories from the hood are still gently crammed into it, but the general vibe is a more relatable and uplifting one overall. These lyrical musings play out to the calming tune of hi-hat’s, chirping backing vocals and an 808 knock that creates a mellow groove throughout, and the duo’s production has a similar energy that drives the emotional, booming Bass beats forwards as the two celebrate their simple achievements of chasing your dreams in a world full of creatives that is plagued by external struggles, and I can see why the track has found so much popularity recently because the points being made are rather universal, but they still feel deep enough to stand out a little bit. I’m not sure that I would revisit it hugely often because it is straightforward, but the verses feel very conscious and the chorus has a catchy energy to it, which makes it feel engaging despite clearly being influenced by mainstream trap. An important act of just patting yourself on the back.

That brings us to the end of another roughly 24 hour period, and the end of another daily post on the blog. Thank you for showing me your support as always, and I’ll be back tomorrow to review a single from an upcoming new album being released by a Canadian singer-songwriter, of Serbian heritage, who is based in London. She has recorded two sessions for Marc Riley’s show on BBC Radio 6 Music, and she recorded a cover version of King Crimson’s ‘I Talk To The Wind’ as a charity single in 2020. Monkeybiz, a website, have described her previous album as “a beautiful work of art”.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Scuzz Sundays: Hard Fi – ‘Hard To Beat’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and I’m wishing you a good Easter Sunday with my latest installment of ‘Scuzz Sundays’ on the blog, given how it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! To be 100% transparent, I barely thought about ‘Easter’ this year and since ‘Easter Music’ isn’t really a thing, and it is not inclusive for all cultures and relgions anyway, I thought that I’d simply cover a band who have been in the news lately this week. The band in question is Hard-Fi, who released three albums between the years of 2004 and 2011 which all did decent business, spawning well-remembered hit singles like ‘Cash Machine’ and ‘Living For The Weekend’ in the process, before going on hiatus in 2014. The band received one Mercury Prize and two BRIT Awards nominations for their work, as well as a #1 album in 2007 and a 2x platinum certification for the sales of their debut album. They also dipped their toes into podcasting with their series ‘Hard-Fi: Rockin’ The City’ that was widely available in 2007 and even got nominated for ‘Best Podcast’ at the Digital Music Awards that year. I think that ‘Hard To Beat’ must be their best-known single as it did the rounds on the soundtracks of ‘FIFA 06’ and ‘MLB 06: The Show’ shortly following release and it reached #9 on the UK Singles Chart as well as #34 on the Billboard Hot Modern Rock Tracks Chart in the US too. If you’ve been following Hard Fi-related news lately – and you would be forgiven if you haven’t honestly due to them not being around for such a long time – they have been teasing a rare fifteenth anniversary show for ‘Stars Of CCTV’ with posters spotted on the London Underground that features a date pointing to a gig in mid-October. Just don’t shout ‘Hard-Fi’ if you see it next to your fellow passengers because they would probably take you for some kind of a mental lunatic. Let’s revisit ‘Hard To Beat’ below.

A series of social media posts relating to ‘Stars Of CCTV’ have been posted gradually by Hard-Fi elsewhere and they have not performed live together since 2014. In April 2020, Richard Archer – the frontman of the Staines-Upon-Thames formed indie rock outfit – told NME that Hard-Fi were considering a return to the stage to mark their unforgotten first album’s 15-year milestone, saying, “That album has defined people’s lives and when they were growing up. We’ll definitely do it at some point, but with new music too so we’re not just trading on past glories”, in an interview. ‘Hard To Beat’ takes obvious cues from Daft Punk’s ironically overplayed 2002 hit track ‘One More Time’ with filtered disco guitar sounds mixing with a more urban twist created by the lightly distorted Synths and Grunge-driven Bass melodies. Lyrics like “You in a short skirt/Shining eyes of deep brown/You had a dirty hook, you caught me on your hook” feel rhythmic and have a catchy twang to them, but the light darkness of the sexually aroused emotions consummates the rather evident marriage between the LCD Soundystem-influenced House genre explorations and the more “ladd-ish” feel of the ruthlessly driving mid-00’s lead guitar riffs. A hint of paranoia comes through, with lyrics like “I said come on, let’s dance/We’ve got to take our chance/You whispered in my ear/You wanna get out of here?” that talk about living in an environment like London, even though the band are much closer to Cornwall. Some obvious shots of Franz Ferdinand and The Clash are in here too, with the danceable Synths drawing out the vocals at the end and gruff Drum melodies riffing against the slightly more expansive electronic effects that create the Disco vibe most vibrantly. There is a light political commentary on surveillance and urban decay within their songwriting in the grander scheme of things beyond ‘Hard To Beat’ as a standalone single, but Archer doesn’t quite have the sharp-pointed vocal dexterity of Maximo Park’s Paul Smith or the socially observational abilities of Arctic Monkeys’ Alex Turner – two comparable indie rock bands that also found fame in a similar timeframe – but there’s an admirable attempt to ground the material in a sense of place that isn’t just tied to London in here, nevertheless. The Disco vibe is damn infectious too, but the lyricism works better when they’re smoothly trying to pick up love interests instead of reciting pains of urban dilapidation. That said, the track is a fun and melodic single that wears it’s influences on it’s sleeves and it simply feels very catchy. It felt a little disposable for the time but, admittedly, it still gets a fair amount of airplay today. It has stood the test of time because it is so memorable and pretty dynamic, if nothing very special. It goes to show that sometimes a simple throwback is, well, hard to beat.

Thank you for checking out my latest post because your support is absolutely valued every time, and I will be here kicking off the brand new week’s worth of music posts tomorrow with a review for a recent release by an Atlanta-based Hip-Hop duo who are also founding members of the Spillave Village collective. Their well-received second studio album, ‘Ghetto Gods’, was released in February via Dreamville Records.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: Superorganism (feat. CHAI & Pi Ja Ma) – ‘Teenager’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time to bring the sunshine to your weekend with yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! It’s really nice to hear that Superorganism are back for more, because their original album was so fun, visually creative and musically compelling. If you somehow missed out on all of their rage a decent number of years ago, Superorganism are a London-based collective of musicians who are spread out across the globe, so half of them met online while the other four members previously played as The Eversons together. Currently signed to Domino Recordings, they released their self-titled debut LP in 2018 and scooped up a place in the top 25 of the UK Albums Chart, alongside nominations at the MTV Europe Music Awards and the Sweden GAFFA Awards. A year later, they also contributed a track to the soundtrack of ‘The LEGO Movie 2: The Second Part’ entitled ‘Hello Me & You’ to widen their mainstream exposure. Their second album – ‘World Wide Pop’ – is set for release on July 15th and they have revealed that Ruby, Emily and Robert Strange have left the band. However, they have pulled in an international range of collaborators including Stephen Malkumus, Boa Constrictors, Dylan Cartlidge and Japanese actor Gen Hoshino to contribute to the full-length recording. Pi Ja Ma joins them for ‘Teenager’ – the lead single – which also involves CHAI, who supported Superorganism for their UK and Ireland tour in 2018. It was produced by Stuart Price too, who has previously worked with Madonna and Pet Shop Boys. As you would expect from Superorganism, the music video is a goofy and imaginative affair about refusing to grow up. It stars Will and Grace’s Brian Jordan Alvarez. Check it out below.

Teasing a bit more information about the album without giving too much away, the product description for their new album explains, “World Wide Pop is a showcase for Superorganism’s newly deepened understanding of each other’s interests and impulses, the kind of creative convergence you’d expect when online friends start spending time together IRL”, on Rough Trade’s website. Their previous album was recorded remotely, and so the new outing promises to put them in the same room together. A ‘Jam Band’ tune of a result, ‘Teenager’ continues their uniquely brash and multi-cultural aesthetic with a very bright and processed assortment of sounds that captures the widescreen and virtual vibe which they have always sought so far in their careers, forming a collage of loud samples and crunching Drums that dip their toes into Hyper-Pop, Hypnagogic Pop and Noise Pop that feels comfortable for existing fans. I certainly hear more of a Post-Punk influence that was not particularly prominent before, however, because the overall production feels quite raw and DIY in texture. Distorted guitars and inconsistent Bass sounds add up the finishing touches, completing the vibe with a youthful and unstable quality that suits the key theme of the track. The lyrics are a commentary on how we never really completely change our character beyond our younger years, but the direct hook of “I’m gonna grow up and be a teenager” communicates the message in a quirky and free-wheeling way. Lyrics like “Had enough of growing up, keep making your mistakes and misbehave” find the band clinging to the ‘lost’ feelings of their titular developmental period in life, while lyrics like “Got no time for class/today we learn about the past, and the present, and the future fading so damn fast” suggest that we never move beyond such a pivotal state. It feels almost like a late-00’s children’s theme to an extent, with cartoons like ‘The Amazing World Of Gumball’ and ‘Kick Buttowski: Suburban Daredevil’ coming to my mind, due to the colourful soundscapes and the filtered effects in play. A solid return which manages to capture the wit and engagement of their signature material.

Thank you for checking out my latest post on the blog, and I’ll be back tomorrow for ‘Scuzz Sundays’ as we rekindle the chatter about a not currently active but quite well-remembered 00’s indie rock band formed in Staines-Upon-Thames known for hits like ‘Cash Machine’, ‘Satellites’ and ‘Living For The Weekend’ that have all performed well commercially. They’ve just teased a 15th anniversary show for their ‘Stars Of CCTV’ LP.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

New Album Release Fridays: Kurt Vile – ‘Like Exploding Stones’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and you’re tuned into One Track At A Time – your daily destination for all things nice and niche – musically – as we gear up for yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Fresh albums by the likes of 50 Foot Wave, Fozzy and High Pulp are all landing in the shelves of your favourite record shop today, but whenever there’s a new album by the Liberty Bell-award winning Pensylvania-born alternative rock singer-songwriter Kurt Vile joining the equation, it’s always worth a listen. You may know Vile for being the former lead guitarist of The War On Drugs and, in 2017, he recorded ‘Lotta Sea Lice’ with Australian indie rock powerhouse Courtney Barnett as a collaborative LP project. His free-wheeling ninth solo studio album – ‘Watch My Moves’ – is out today via Verve Records, and it is his first album release for that label. This promises to be a surrealistic and psychedelic expansion of Vile’s trippy universe, and it marks his first solo recorded project since 2018’s ‘Bottle It In’ increased his exposure to the world. The main draw of attraction to the new album is that it marks the reunion of The Violators, his dedicated touring and backing band. He will also be touring throughout Europe, the UK, and the US in 2022, with a performance at All Points East Festival in London this summer. On that note – get yourself prepared with the 7-minute ballad, ‘Like Exploding Stones’, below.

Lo-Fi and home-focused, the new album was recorded mostly in his own Mount Airy-based studio of OKV Central to follow in the past footsteps of Waylon Jennings’ DIY recordings in Hillbilly Central, which used to be Tompall Glaser’s studio. He teases, “It’s about songwriting. It’s about lyrics. It’s about being the master of all domains in the music. I’m always thinking about catchy music, even though it’s fried, or sizzled, out. It’s my own version of a classic thing – it’s moving forward and backward at the same time”, in his reflective statement on ‘Watch My Moves’ in a press release. Vile revs up the guitar and vocals from the off-set, laying down a languid sequence of sprawling Synths and a melodic kick drum beat as the very stoner-like guitar riffs simply linger along to his psychedelic vibe and slowly ascending Tempo. Lyrics like “Dreaming of a time where everything rhymed and I was calm, cool and collected” and “Thoughts become pictures, become movies in my mind” paint a vibrant picture of Vile’s mental space, while hooks like “Pain ricochet in my brain, like exploding stones” are set against the backdrop of euphoric Synths and lop-sided guitar lines. His vocals sound plaintive and deadpan, to a point, throughout – yet he comes off as more unburdened and zoned-out than melancholic or miserable by the way that he conjures images of dreaming and travelling without worrying about where they may lead. He references movie marathons, pinball machines and guitar feedback in his lyrics to make him feel self-aware among the highly textured instrumentation. There’s also a neat saxophone solo towards the end recited by James Stewart of Sun Ra Arkestra that blows against the accompaniment of Vile’s running commentary to add more punch to the proceedings. Seven minutes is long for a traditional single release, but Vile manages to justify the length by keeping the elements fresh and paying off the moving parts with his vivid textures and his thoughtful musings on his anxieties. Like Exploding Stones – it goes down naturally and feels like an explosion of concepts.

That’s all for now! Thank you for checking out my latest post on the blog, and I’ll be back tomorrow to review the returning single from one of the world’s most popular virtual Art-Pop bands who were formed as a collective of creatives assembled across the globe, releasing a UK Top 40 album in 2018. They have also contributed a track to the soundtrack of ‘The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part’ that was released back in 2019.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: Yunè Pinku – ‘DC Rot’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has come for me to get typing up for yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Teen Techno music producer Yuné Pinku is an emerging name in the alternative dance music community with a love for Madonna and Billy Joel drawing from her influences of 90’s Acid House and classic UKG recordings. Her sturdy profile includes a collaboration with Australian experimental music producer Logic1000 for the track ‘What You Like’ from 2021. She has also been co-signed by Joy Orbison, who invited her to contribute a guest mix for his residency on BBC Radio 1 last year. The 19-year-old artist has her roots found in Malaysia and Ireland, and you can hear her most recent work through her debut EP release – ‘Bluff’ – which is out now via PLATOON. She says, “Bluff is about letting go and reeling in, finding your feet in the night life world. I think this song is kind of an ode to London night life and it’s a song I think really sums up my feeling of the good times I had as a teenager in London, but also with the slight paranoia of the danger that exists in the night world”, when explaining her experiences of carving out her niche as a bedroom pop producer in the EDM world. If you live in London, you can also catch her playing at The Bermondsey Social Club for her debut headline show appearance on April 29h. The penultimate single to be lifted from the EP is ‘DC Rot’, and the music video acts as an ode to the homemade skateboarding reels of the 00’s. It stars her sister Faith – who also happens to be a pro skater. Let’s check it out below.

Acknowledging her passion for the craft of Skateboarding in Synth-heavy style on ‘DC Rot’, the London-based DJ says, “DC Rot is an exploration of a year and all the things you can do in one”, adding, “Whether it’s coming out of hibernation and getting older, experiencing in excess whether that be negative or positive. Putting yourself out there and sometimes getting hurt, but just going on a pilgrimage of all the things you can and can’t do. In this case, a motif is skate culture hence the title DC Rot, it can be such a freeing culture but can be pretty shakey at other times, constantly shifting”, in her attached notes. ‘DC Rot’ captures the vibe of a 00’s throwback like Peggy Gou and Park Hye Jin, balancing out a multi-tude of wavering beats and interchangeable grooves that are initially built from dissonant piano house keys and a robust kick drum sequence, while Pinku’s nonchalant vocals recite melodic lyrics like “Funky baby on the clock/Vodka tonic, 3 ‘o’ clock” and “3 more lover, down with hot/I can’t not see you enough” with a hazy, relaxed feel that makes the EDM-driven track feel like a suitable accompaniment to an evening where you are preparing for a night out. The phased-out breakbeats and the crystalline synths make for an intriguing contrast to the conversational, gently spoken-sung delivery of the vocals. This successful blurs any idea that Pinku is placing herself into a box of specific genre conventions, and the gleaming warmth of Pinku’s production manages to make the melodic progression feel quite futuristic. Her voice, meanwhile, sighs and demures magnetically to draw you into her sonic pallete before the pace spirals more uncontrollably. The pipe harmonies and the Chill Hop-oriented breakbeats pull the scene back on course later, creating a sense of unpredictable layering that feels reflective of Pinku’s lyrical themes of expressing her perceived loss of purpose in life outside of the night club’s doors. Charming and refreshing, ‘DC Rot’ shows that Pinku has the talent to disregard old traits and step into a more futuristic sound instead, while carrying herself as more than just a monetisable project with her more gripping statement of intent creatively.

That brings me right to the end of another daily post, and thank you for continuing to support the site every day! I’ll be back tomorrow, where it’s shaping up to be a ‘Good Friday’ because there’s another entry of ‘New Album Release Fridays’ in store for you. We’ll be previewing the new solo album from a Tom Petty and Neil Young-influenced rock star known for his work as the former lead guitarist of The War On Drugs, if you’d like to join me then. He also co-created ‘Lotta See Lice’ with Courtney Barnett in 2017.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Way Back Wednesdays: Hamid Al Shaeri – ‘Ayonha’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has come for us to go retro for another new weekly entry of ‘Way Back Wednesdays’ for yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Egypt’s leading representative of Arabic Pop (A genre that sounds like westernized synthesizer pop music) is Hamid Al-Shaeri, a key artist for the SLAM! label throughout the 1980’s and 1990’s. Often considered to be the key pioneer of Al Jeel music, this Libyan-Egyptian singer, songwriter and producer is acclaimed by critics for providing a homegrown alternative to foreign Pop artists, both as a solo musician and for his production and writing work for other artists. His impact also extends to the wider popular culture of his native country, following his recent appearance as a guest judge on an Egyptian alternative to the ‘Got Talent’ franchise of TV talent shows. In 2011, he also condemned the actions of Muammar Gadaffi – his native country’s then-ruler – against the Libyan people and he issued a call for Egypt to support them. On 25th February, ‘Habibi Funk 018: The SLAM! Years (1983 – 1988)’, was released. His first single – ‘Ayonha’ – roughly translates to the title of ‘Her Eyes’ in English and it still holds a special heart of the Habibi Funk label’s team. They say, “If you were to ask us for a defining Habibi Funk track, there are a few that come to mind. However, none are as widely connected with us at this point as Hamid El Shaeri’s ‘Ayonha”, in a press release. Although it was not as commercially successful as the popularity of his later work that ran into the 00’s, Egyptian music journalist Malak Makar considers the era as a precursor to El Shaeri’s Al Jeel style than representative of genre. In 2017, Pitchfork’s Andy Beta also described his London-produced cut ‘Ayonha’ as “the most arresting track” on Habibi Funk’s seventh release.

The recent compilation is dedicated to Hamid El Shaeri’s work for the SLAM! label throughout the times, and the idea for the project came about when Habibi Funk met Hamid El Shaeri through singer Youssra El Hawary in 2016 at his office and rehearsal space in the outskirts of Cairo. They insisted on collaborating with him after hearing his songs from the early 1980’s, composed at a time where he had just left Libya to pursue his career in Egypt via a detour in London, where he also recorded his first album. The label recalls, “He liked the idea of an effort to amplify his early works again, which, when originally released, were far from an economic success. While he was down to assist with an interview and his blessing for the project he also told us that for any license we needed to speak with the original label SLAM! who released these songs, still held the rights and also remained in business over the decades though they didn’t actively release any new music”, in a press statement. ‘Ayonha’ is an upbeat and whimsical offering that wouldn’t sound out of place on morning AM radio in California, as the cheerful melodies and the easy-going vibe, combined with the abundance of glistening Synths and the airy harmonies which convey a radiant mood, captures a burgeoning interest in wistful production and exuberant, glitzy Pop sounds for El Shaeri. The lyrics are just as generally glowing in atmosphere, as they roughly translate to lines like “Take me in your hands/Take me to a moon in the clouds” and “Give the life which has gone and which I lost back to me, let me forget the sadness and the wounds, and years of loss and suffering” in English, according to the lyricstranslate.com website. The sound is not excessively Pop-based, but there’s a generally upbeat feel evoked by the opening 60’s-leaning Strings and the percussive acoustic lead guitar melody. Ultimately, this is a crucial encapsulation of the career of a top European star. While he may be relatively unknown to music lovers in the West and there was an initially underwhelming reaction to his early work at first, it hasn’t aged terribly at all and it can lift your spirits on a day where your mind is somewhere else. Buoyant spectacle that became popular across generations in his native market.

That brings me to the end of yet another daily track on the blog. Thank you for checking out my latest post and showing me your support today, and I hope that you found it interesting. As my duty demands, I will be back tomorrow to highlight some refreshing new music by an emerging experimental electronic music artist who utilizes 90’s Acid House sounds and UKG influences to the best of her abilities, and she has a Malaysian and Irish heritage. Her debut EP, ‘Bluff’, is out now via PLATOON.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: Junior – ‘Long Way Home’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time to walk in the light of a potential future star for yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Making music is central to the coming-of-age story of the 24-year-old rapper, songwriter and producer Junior – whose real name is James Watkinson – who grew up recording a bunch of self-produced work while growing up in a summer cabin, being influenced by his surroundings to pen music about his career aspirations. Although he cites one moment where he got up on stage with Pharrell Williams as an adolescent fan as a definitive one in his career, Junior is becoming one of the best new kids on the block within the UK’s independent Hip-Hop and Grime music scenes for himself. He hails from a self-described “sleepy town” in Bedfordshire, located just outside of London, and his key influences include Jay Z, 90’s R&B and the supporting work of SBTV (An organisation based in London who promote emerging artists through their platform). ‘Lone Way Home’ is a fantastic new single by Junior, which was recently played by Tom Ravenscroft during a recent episode of The New Music Fix on BBC Radio 6 Music.

“I look at music as a way to summarize my life, treating every release like a chapter of a book, starting with my first project, ‘Adolescence’ to my most recent, ‘When A Flower Blooms'”, Junior explains about the statement of intent that he intends to fearlessly communicate on the fresh single, explaining, “On a journey to find my own sound and become who I am meant to be, I have had to walk a long way home”, in a press statement. The wonky soundscape of the track is clearly noticeable from the offset, with a Chill Hop-oriented backing beat comprised of fluctuating Synths and a hazy, psychedelic inverted guitar hook that feels playful and, all the while, Junior uses sharp percussion and a gently cinematic range of Hip-Hop instrumentals to ground himself and think carefully about his songwriting for the material. Vocally, his flow is not too unfamiliar to fans of Eminem or Mac Miller, where he matches a smooth and melodic flow to the offbeat tune of the quirky Hip-Hop backdrop. Lyrics like “From a small town/Breaking walls down, you can guarantee I’m a find way” talk about his ambitions to live an adventurous career despite a less than ideal living situation for his desires and wishes. His songwriting manages to feel intimate, while drawing and expansive. The result is a track that feels equally anthemic as it does personal, with his fresh percussion and his confessional style of lyricism standing out in a Hip-Hop world plagued by Meme-targeting commercialism. There’s no auto-tune here in that sense, but there’s simply an inspiring ballad about taking a leap of faith regarding your next big step in your career and, for Junior personally, revealing your ambitions when the Hip-Hop world takes a hold of you. It gets his personality as an open-minded and well-mannered rapper across nicely, while also establishing some relatable themes for his audience that takes influence from the mildly differing styles of Hip-Hop across the spectrum. This is a great showcase for Junior’s abilities to write, produce and record his own music all at once. This could be a star of the future.

That brings me to the bottom of the page for another morning! Thank you for reading all about what I had to say about Junior today, and I will be back tomorrow to go ‘retro’ with a new entry of our weekly ‘Way Back Wednesdays’ feature on the blog. We will be revisiting a classic 80’s Arabic Pop/Dance track by a Cairo-based musician who is largely seen as the godfather of Al Jeel Music throughout Egypt and Libya. In 2011, he condemned the actions of Muammar Gadaffi – his native country’s then-leader, against the Libyan population and issued a plea to the fellow Egyptians to help them.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: James Righton – ‘Pause’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has arrived for me to get you re-acquainted with some new music from a familiar face with yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! If you remember the Mercury Prize-winning New Wave rock band Klaxons, known for tracks like ‘Golden Skans’ and a cover of Grace’s ‘It’s Not Over Yet’ in the late-00’s, that will be why you’re so sure that you’ve seen Stratford-Upon-Avon’s James Righton before and couldn’t quite put your finger on exactly where. Righton is married to actress Keira Knightley of all people and he also fronted the Shock Machine project that he began in 2016. He also worked on ABBA’s Voyage virtual concert tours in London last year and following from that project, a new solo album has been announced. Produced by Soulwax, ‘JIM, I’M STILL HERE’ is hitting record store shelves in July through DEEWEE. It follows the shiny Synth-Pop single ‘Release Party’ that he released on the same label last year for DEEWEE’s ‘Foundations’ compilation album release. It’s also the follow-up to 2020’s ‘The Performer’, an Alternative Pop record about the distinction between performer and person that he released during the height of the pandemic in March 2020. This was a record that I grew fond of, due to the Baroque instrumentation and the String sections that he played around with. It saw Righton grappling with his own identity, and the upcoming new album plays a somewhat similar role in exploring the family-based serenity that Righton experienced during the promotion of ‘The Performer’ through lockdown in the eyes of an alter-ego named Jim, and the songs were written in Jim’s perspective as an outrageous rock star. The new album features a guest appearance from ABBA’s Benny Andersson, and ‘Pause’ has been unveiled as the first single. It gets accompanied by a music video that was directed by Julian Klincewicz.

“The alter ego of Jim came to me whilst promoting my previous album The Performer during the first week of lockdown. Life shut down and became centered around family and domestic life. At the same time (and this did feel rather strange) I had to promote The Performer. I was asked more and more to live stream concerts through various social media platforms”, Righton says about the creation of his Jim character, adding, “So, I’d put the kids to sleep, head downstairs to my garage studio, put on my Gucci suit and became someone else. The juxtaposition of these lives felt extreme but also interesting to me. I created Jim. Jim would be the deluded rock star, living out his fantasies from the confines of his garage”, about the exaggerated semi-fictional version of himself in the form of Jim. Prince and Midnite Vultures-era Beck are clear influences the second that you press play on ‘Pause’, with 80’s Synth textures and quirky basslines creating a clear relationship between the sonic juxtapositions of Soulwax’s instrumentation work and Righton’s silky voice, where the eminently danceable Synths and the crunching Drums collide to form a warped take on 90’s Synth-Funk. The lyrics reek of narcissism and sensuality, but there’s a hint of actual romance in the more vulnerable tones of Righton’s voice despite the smooth Synth and keyboard work. A variety of lyrics including “Girl there’s never going to be no other/If I could only be your lover” setting up the stage for this contrast, while the cascading backing vocals and the preening artistry of sequences like “You can’t pause with me for the rest of my life” play with the duality between James’ true personality and the more fanciful aspirations of Jim as his alter ego. It’s an interesting proposition for the new album as the lyricism is not too different to those of 2020’s ‘The Performer’ on the surface level, but the sound is a lot more electronic and the Soulwax blueprints are definitely there. While the sound evolves the palette of The Performer’s sounds, the themes still feel just as intriguing and the explorations of self-identity remain intact. Overall, this was a refreshing and welcome return for Righton.

If you don’t want to hit ‘Pause’ on James – fast-forward to some of his other cuts here.

‘Release Party’ (2021) – https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2021/05/17/todays-track-james-righton-release-party/

‘Edie’ (2020) – https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/04/02/todays-track-james-righton-edie/

That brings me to the bottom of the page! Thank you for checking out my latest post on the blog, and I will be back tomorrow to introduce you to a brand new artist who goes by the name of Junior, a 24-year-old rapper and songwriter based in Bedford – here in the UK. His fantastic new single – ‘Long Way Home’ – was recently spotlighted on a recent episode of BBC Radio 6’s ‘The New Music Fix’ curated by Tom Ravenscroft.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Scuzz Sundays: Alice In Chains – ‘Them Bones’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has arrived for me to pay a visit to one of the ghosts of Pop-Punk’s past for another weekly entry of ‘Scuzz Sundays’ on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Having sold over 30 million records worldwide, scored 18 top 10 entries on Billboard’s Mainstream Rock Tracks chart in the US and named as the 15th greatest live band by Hit Parader in their time, Alice In Chains were a visceral part of the 1990’s Grunge movement who have released six studio albums together between 1990 and 2018. An aura of sadness exists within the band, however, as original lead vocalist Layne Staley passed away in 2002 due to ongoing issues with substance abuse, with co-lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist William DuVall stepping up to fill the role later. ‘Them Bones’ was a fan favourite single that reached #30 on the Alternative Airplay chart in the US. It was taken as a single from 1992’s ‘Dirt’ – the band’s second studio album – which was featured on the soundtrack of Cameron Crowe’s 1992 film ‘Singles’ and, commercially, the record has been certified four-times Platinum by the RIAA and sold over five million units. The band also released their fourth studio album – ‘Black Gives Way To Blue’ on the 17th anniversary of ‘Dirt’ on September 29, 2009 – which is a great little tribute. Check out ‘Them Bones’ below.

Sharpening it’s blade for tackling emotionally charged themes like depression, anti-social behavior, relationships, drug addiction, anger and conflict throughout it’s near-hour run time, 1992’s ‘Dirt’ has aged rather well and it has been included in the 2005 version of the ‘1001 Albums You Need To Hear Before You Die’ book. Upon release, it was nominated for the Grammy Award for ‘Best Hard Rock Performance’ and, in retrospect, Loudwire has named it as one of the best Metal albums of the 90’s. ‘Them Bones’ was classic Alice In Chains, starting off with some portentous guitar riffs and jaunty sing-a-long vocal hooks before breaking into a chorus which feels like a lighter relief to the distorted chords of the verses. ‘Them Bones’ was built on a central guitar riff that was written in 7/8, and a friction remains between the very grounded lyricism and the chromatic riffing against the sustained long notes, with the open fourth vocal harmonies being a staple of Staley’s vocal work throughout his time and influence in the band. Lyrics like “I believe them bones are me/Some say we’re born into the grave” have a sense of prescience and bleak tragedy to them, while later lyrics like “Dust rise right on over my time/Empty fossil of the new scene” are given a lightly uplifting sense of black humor, where the absurdity of realizing that you’re going to die one day, no matter what, rings true. Staley commands his presence on the track with a nasal tone which seems to shift tones as he keeps holding the voice for longer and longer, but ruminating on your death is never truly considered to feel like an outlandish prediction due to the gritty textures of the guitars. It is mostly about our morality as human beings and how the thought that your knowledge or experiences can simply end when you’re gone for good is important, as opposed to lingering solely on how we’re all going to pass away eventually. It may not be everybody’s cup of tea due to it’s bleak theme, although it is not necessarily executed as such by Staley and the band, and the track ends just a little too abruptly for my personal liking. However, it seems like it has aged pretty well because the lyrics still have a relevance and the Glam Metal influences still seem relatively fresh. Rest in peace – Layne Staley.

Thank you for checking out my latest post on the blog, as your support always means so much. I will be back tomorrow to review the latest single by a Statford-born singer-songwriter who used to be the keyboardist of Mercury Prize-winning New Rave band Klaxons and he is married to the actress Keira Knightley, of all people. He previously fronted Shock Machine and his new Soulwax-produced album will be released in July.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: Porridge Radio – ‘Back To The Radio’

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has come for me to add some variety to your weekend with a review for a new track from a recent favourite with yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! I remember covering ‘Born Confused’ by Brighton-based indie rock band Porridge Radio in 2020 because I loved lead vocalist Dana Margolin’s interchangeable switches between moods on that track so dearly, and so I was chomping at the bit for more when I heard that the Secretly Canadian-signed band will shortly be releasing a new album – ‘Waterslide, Diving Board, Ladder To The Sky’ – on May 20th. This will be the follow-up to 2020’s ‘Every Bad’, an album that was nominated for the Mercury Prize and also appeared in year-end best lists compiled by Pitchfork, NME, Under The Radar, Stereogum, Paste and Brooklyn Vegan. During their time together, Porridge Radio have also appeared on The Guardian’s Top 40 New Artists of 2018 list and they have performed two great live sessions for Marc Riley’s show on BBC Radio 6 Music. Porridge Radio have also released three more singles since 2020 including a collaboration with LaLa LaLa and they have recently collaborated with Metronomy for a track taken from their latest LP ‘Small World’ that the group released in February. To co-incide with their upcoming album, Morgolin’s band of misfits will be embarking on a run of in-store performances and a UK tour to support their imminent release around the UK, kicking off in May and October, respectively. You can catch the band playing in Cambridge, Sheffield, Exeter, Nottingham, Leeds, Southampton and more locations throughout the year, with tickets now on sale. Check out the eclectic new single ‘Back To The Radio’ below.

“Back To The Radio feels like a huge introductory hello or a big ceremonial goodbye”, says the 4-piece’s leading lady Dana Margolin, who later adds, “The song grew out of a feeling of intense loneliness and being unprepared for what everybody was promising me was about to happen – and a strong desire to escape without knowing what I wanted to escape to. To me, there’s a huge feeling of catharsis in this song, of letting go and letting it sweep you away”, in a press release. ‘Back To The Radio’ finds the band gradually finding their flow with a tension-releasing string of static effects and chugging guitar riffs, as well as a slow groove of steady drums, with an outpour of lyrics like “Nothing’s the same and I swear that I’m haunted/It’s not fair to you, and it’s not what I wanted” and “I miss what we were, but you’ve closed yourself off to me/We sit here together, the same as we’ve always been” that present a scathingly honest depiction of quiet fears that slowly grow to become more frightening anxieties. It’s not an all-out, hyper melodic rock anthem designed for radio chart domination by any means, but it provokes some interesting thoughts on how we confront change and how we construct our own doubts for ourselves in a relatable way that builds up to an emotionally scattered finale that feels genuinely uplifting despite some stressed lyrics. An emotional call to arms where Margolin sings “Lock all the windows and shut all the doors and get into the house and lie down on the cold, hard floor” and “Talk back to the radio, think loud in the car, I miss everything now, We’re worth nothing at all” to the assist of the backing vocals from the rest of the band with a mood that ultimately releases a lot of tension despite the tension never properly going away, as such. It plays out in the tried-and-tested fashion of Porridge Radio, with a slightly euphoric feel within the final sing-a-long of a sweeping verse that plays off how Margolin has the unimitable gift of holding you hostage, as the listener, to her commanding presence as soon as she opens her mouth. Her fears are comparable to a stressed teenager, and so the track feels like a satisfying exploration of those situations where we feel everything all at once and have no idea how to handle all of it, in a sense. This feels witty at times, but the band are absolutely taking their message seriously. There is definitely an “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” approach to the track where it’s recycling the band’s usual shtick as opposed to innovating their sound very much, but it definitely plays to their strengths and creates the sense of clearing clouds that Margolin really conveys through her vocals and she is supported, as always, by a solid performance by the rest of the band, who add even more depth and substance to her interchangeable vocal delivery. It is nothing new, but it gets you warmed up for the album, because it captures the vibe that only they could release it.

If you loved ‘Back To The Radio’, why not check out ‘Born Confused’ on the blog too?

‘Born Confused’ (2020) – https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/09/11/todays-track-porridge-radio-born-confused/

That’s all for today! Thank you for checking out the latest post on the blog, and I’ll be back tomorrow to take you through another weekly entry of ‘Scuzz Sundays’ as we remember the ghosts of Pop-Punk’s past with a signature track by a 90’s Glam Metal band that were previously led by Jerry Cantrell, who sadly left us in 2002. They have sold over 14 million records in the US and they have received eleven Grammy Awards nominations. They have also been ranked as the 15th ‘Best Live Band’ by Hit Parader.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

New Album Release Fridays: Kae Tempest (feat. Kevin Abstract) – ‘More Pressure’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time to tune our ears to the more club-oriented gears of one of the modern day’s most progressive poets for ‘New Album Release Fridays’ with yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! An album about letting go and falling instead of anxiety into surrender, ‘The Line Is A Curve’ has been shaping up to be absolutely ace. This is the newest album from Kae Tempest, a poet from Westminster who has become a prominent name on BBC Radio 6 Music’s playlist throughout the 2010’s. Tempest came out as non-binary in 2020, shedding their former name of “Kate Tempest” and embracing the pronouns of they/them. Since becoming active in 2012, Tempest has been nominated for the Mercury Prize twice and they were nominated for ‘Best Female Solo Artist’ at the BRIT Awards in 2018. Outside of their music, Tempest is also a Sunday Times best-selling author and they won the ‘Breakthrough Author’ award at the Books Are My Bag Readers Awards in 2017. ‘The Line Is A Curve’ looks to repeat the success of these projects, and the BRIT School alumni mastered the record at Abbey Road Studios. It was produced by Dan Carey, which will become fairly obvious to you in a moment, executive produced by Rick Rubin and mixed by Christian Wright. The LP features guest contributions from artists like Lianne La Havas, Fontaines DC’s Grian Chatten, Confucius MC and more. The cover photograph was shot by Wolfgang Tillmans, who worked on Frank Ocean’s ‘Blonde’. Speaking about the collaborative process of the album in an interview for NME, Tempest says, “For me, this album is about increasing resilience and raising your threshold for tolerance and acceptance and it’s a very beautiful album, because so many people involved in making it are people that I’ve known and loved for a very long time”, and it is out today via Fiction Records. ‘More Pressure’ isn’t the latest pre-release single from the new record, but I chose to write about it because I feel it is a track that really showcases how Tempest can stretch that voice beyond traditional Spoken Word genre boundaries. It features a verse by Kevin Abstract – who you might also know from their music in Brockhampton. Give it a spin.

“Throughout the duration of my creative life, I have been hungry for the spotlight and desperately uncomfortable in it. For the last couple of records, I wanted to disappear completely from the album covers, the videos, the front-facing aspects of this industry”, Tempest tells Brooklyn Vegan, later elaborating, “But this time around, I understand it differently. I want people to feel welcomed into this record, by me, the person who made it, and I have to let go of some of my airier concerns. I feel more grounded in what I’m trying to do, who I am as an artist and as a person and what I have to offer”, about their decision to include an image of themselves on the LP’s cover artwork for the first time. This sense of progression and comfort is replicated by ‘More Pressure’, which is anchored by abstract lyrics like “More pressure, more release, your eyes, your cheeks, your features crease” that communicate ideas of taking the weight of the world away from your shoulders and believing in your own body for reassurance. Lyrics like “One step forwards, two steps backwards/One soul’s epiphany, another soul’s madness” hits you with a more virtuosic nature, as Tempest talks about reach and distance through reflection, resulting in a sense of unsullied intimacy that is delivered in Tempest’s emotive space between music and speech. Abstract, as the featured credit, adds more intimacy to the final verse and trends towards a Hip-Hop direction, as the Synth beats become more liberating behind here. Speaking of the instrumentation, it feels interesting in not being a far cry from Sinead O’Brien’s ‘Kid Stuff’, a cracking tune by the Irish Post-Punk poet, in the similar sense of how the Dance-Rock influences come together through the insulating Synth rhythms. Instead of reaching out as most club-driven music does, however, Tempest looks inward to gain cues for the lyrics and reflect on the weight and stress in a relatively personal way. It certainly feels like some of Kae’s most accessible work, but the almost Disco-tempo melodies and the spacious bass lines still make their vocals stand out amongst the typically mainstream variety of modern music. Ultimately, ‘More Pressure’ is a strong showing that pin-points how Tempest can stretch their voice in fascinating ways to meet their own needs with the more rhythmic structure of the track and the idiosyncratic Dance influences that are still of Tempest’s heavy and reflective mood in prior releases, but the flow is simply much groovier and so it really stands out whenever you hear it on the radio. It is a really euphoric release of tension.

That brings us to the end of another daily post! Thank you for giving a moment out of your day to support the blog, and I will be back tomorrow to review some more new music from a recent favourite on the site. This Brighton-formed indie rock band were listed among the Top 40 New Artists of 2018 by The Guardian and their previous studio album – ‘Every Bad’ – was nominated for the Mercury Prize in 2020. It also appeared on year-end best lists by Under The Radar, Stereogum, Paste and Pitchfork.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: Honeyglaze – ‘Female Lead’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time for me to cut to action on the set of another daily track on the blog, with a movie theme today, that helps me to fulfill my goal of writing up about a different piece of music every day! Born out of lead songwriter Anouska Sokolow’s “un-desire to be a solo act”, according to Red Light Management, Honeyglaze are an emerging indie rock trio based in Southern London who met officially at their first rehearsal together just three days prior to what would become a near-residency at The Windmill in Brixton, where bands like Black Midi and Squid have also found their footing. They have also performed at festivals including Green Man Festival, Fred Perry’s All Our Tomorrow’s Festival, Live At Leeds and Cardiff’s SWN Festival across the last couple of years too. Their debut studio LP is self-titled, and it will be coming out on 29th April 2022 via Speedy Wunderground, a Dance-influenced Post-Punk label that is, of course, partially run by well-respected producer Dan Carey. Pierre Hall, the A&R representative of the label, says “We’re so excited to announce Honeyglaze as our next proper signing to the label. We were blown away as soon as we heard their music, and then, furthermore, when we met them in person. It’s felt like such a natural partnership and they’ve created something really special. We can’t wait for the world to hear. Be prepared to fall in love”, about Honeyglaze’s music. The latest catchy single to be taken from their upcoming 11-track project is ‘Female Lead’, which gets accompanied by a music video that was directed by James Ogram and Sokolow herself, and it stars Jojo Macari, an actor who has also starred in Netflix’s ‘Sex Education’ TV series. Check out the pre-release offering below.

Honeyglaze will be performing headline gigs at venues in London, Portsmouth, Margate, Manchester and Hull throughout May in the UK, and it follows their support slots for Katy J Pearson and Wet Leg. Talking about the video for the track, Sokolow says, “Given that the song itself is so narrative heavy, we knew we wanted to make something with it’s own seperate story”, adding, “It started off with some ideas about duality and stolen identity. I had recently watched ‘Casablanca’ and that’s where we got the idea of this movie character coming to life and we ended up writing a full scene for a made-up, 50’s romance.”, in a press release. Tackling these themes of self-understanding and personal worth in the track itself, the trio back up Sokolow’s explorations of changing your appearance and feeling overwhelmed in your ambitions through the lens of flashy hair dye. Lyrics like “I put it in my black hair, and waited for an hour/But when I washed it out, oh, god, I’ve let my mother down” and “I look nothing like Madonna/More like an 80’s horror film/I’ll have to wear a hat, Until my golden hair turns black” are geared towards the witty side, but they provoke serious thoughts about how we view ourselves and compare ourselves to famous faces. The narrative builds up with soft vocals, steady drums, melancholic guitar riffs and delicate splashings of Bass that are kept simple and concise within the song’s short 2-minute runtime. The key lyrics are delivered to a vintage-leaning tune that was influenced by The Shangri-La’s, according to the trio themselves, and the buzz of the British narrative-based Pop songs that were all of the rage in the cinematic 60’s. They replicate the vibe well, while adding a ‘timeless’ feel to the track. The vocals sound pure and intimate, with a fragile mix of a spoken and haiku-like format to present what is being written between the lines with a rather direct sense of well-versed clarity. Although it is kept short and to the point, ‘Female Lead’ has enough depth and substance overall to spread its message of romanticized ideals and self-judgment through the temporal era of retro cinema. Who knows, going by this track record, maybe Honeyglze will put in a more Oscar-worthy performance in the future?

Thank you for checking out my latest post, and I look forward to bringing a new entry of ‘New Album Release Fridays’ to your eye line tomorrow, as we turn our attention to a multi-time Mercury Prize nominee who came out as non-binary in 2020. A breath of fresh air on the Spoken Word genre, they share one particular thing in common with Honeyglaze. They also had a residency at The Windmill in Brixton. Aside from music, they are a Sunday Times best-selling and Costa Book Of The Year-nominated author.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Way Back Wednesdays: Betty Davis – ‘Come Take Me’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time for us to go retro for ‘Way Back Wednesdays’ on the blog, which helps me to fulfill my goal of writing up about a different piece of music every day! We’re going to be remembering Betty Davis today, a North Carolina-born singer-songwriter who made an erotic string of Afro-Funk, R&B, Soul and rock-tinged Blues albums during the 1970’s. Davis was also known for her sexually provocative lyricism and her flamboyant live performances and, although she never became a household name, she developed a cult following and she has been cited as an influence by contemporary artists like Janelle Monae, Outkast and Jamila Woods, as well as fellow icons like Prince and Grace Jones, for her experimental blend of genres. Davis wrote, arranged and produced all of her own music in her time, a rarity for any female artist, yet alone a Black woman, during her era. She started out as a model, appearing in magazines like Glamour and Seventeen and working with designers, before she became the second wife of the legendary trumpeter Miles Davis. Although their marriage ended after a year due to implied abuse, she personally introduced him to Jimi Hendrix and Cream. She also penned material that got The Commodores signed to Motown Records. Davis sadly left us, aged 77, in February in Homestead, Pensylvania – where she had lived since her childhood – after being diagnosed with cancer a week prior. At one point, Marc Bolan of T-Rex fame encouraged her to write music for herself and she took that advice to heart when her self-titled debut studio album was released in 1973. Originally released by Just Sunshine Records (an upstart label), the record preceded three more solo albums and it got a CD and Vinyl re-issue in 2007 via Light In The Attic Records. She enlisted the help of The Pointer Sisters, Neil Schon, Sylvester and more guest contributors to bring the distinctive record to life and my focus track – ‘Come Take Me’ – was previously an unreleased track until 15 years ago, when it was included on special editions of her self-titled LP. Get a better idea of her sound with the cut below.

Her AllMusic profile describes Betty Davis as “a wildly flamboyant Funk diva with few equals… [who] combined the gritty emotional realism of Tina Turner, the futurist fashion sense of David Bowie and the trend-setting flair of Miles Davis”, according to the website, and so the music world continues to feel the effects of her tragic loss earlier in the year. ‘Come Take Me’ feels like textbook Betty Davis at her finest and most distinct, although the Vinyl re-issue of her entire back catalogue felt as though it was long overdue before the mid-00’s and it had not happened properly yet. That said, if you like the Jazz-tinged Psychedelia of Sly & The Family Stone, the loose Funk influences of Beck’s ‘Midnite Vultures’ era and his unconventional song structures, and the aggressive delivery of 70’s Rock ‘N’ Roll stalwarts, this one is for you. The intro feels a little unorthodox, before the guitar stabs and the wonky bassline comes in, with Davis croaking lyrics about not disrupting the rhythm and treating a lover right albeit with a frenzied and rather crazy attitude. The drums progress nicely throughout the track, starting off with a slow and steady vibe, before controlling the rhythm with a more frantic pace. Davis recites her lyrics with an instructive growl in her voice that complements the unapologetically Funk production of the track, where the warbling vocals carry the wobbling guitars and the trickling fusion of the Motown-esque Bass and Drums to create a rather irresistible groove. It doesn’t sound too out of date and although the songwriting may sound dated, Davis’ imagination of combining then-contemporary Blues-Rock sensibilities with creative, provocative explorations of lust, desire and sexuality in her howling vocals and erotic Jazz/Funk melodies is still there. Davis was a class act who was ahead of her time. The wide world wasn’t ready for her.

That’s all for now! Just to let you know that if you enjoyed today’s tribute to Betty Davis, a re-issue for her final album is also planned to be happening through her label sometimes in 2022. Thank you for checking out my latest post because your support is always highly appreciated, and I’ll be shifting our attention back to new music releases tomorrow with a review of a recent single by a South London-based indie rock band who will be releasing their self-titled debut album via Dan Carey’s Speedy Wunderground label on April 29th. They have performed at festivals including Green Man Festival, SWN Festival in Cardiff, and Fred Perry’s All Our Tomorrow’s live Festival.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs – ‘Blood In The Snow’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has come for you to get invested in yet another daily track on the blog, despite any incredulous looks on my face, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! 2012 (Although I discovered this soon-to-be specified record a year or two later). Picture the scene. I was a young sprog, sitting on the college bus every morning, beginning to experience alternative music outside of the mainstream for the first couple of times with a hair full of dandruff, finding my place in the world. I was being simply swept away by the vibrant Drum ‘N’ Bass and ethereal Jungle sounds of Orlando Tobias Higginbottom (aka Oxford-born House producer Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs) who injected colour in to the club environments of the 2010’s with his melancholic textures and a sense of longing in his voice, one in few of which I truly connected with at the time, with TEED’s critically acclaimed debut album release of ‘Trouble’. An entire decade later, ‘When The Lights Go’, the follow-up to that “Jacob Classic” of an album, is finally set to arrive on July 22nd. Higginbottom is a classically trained musician who is the son of a former choir conductor from New College, Oxford and he found his own footing through his studies at the Junior Royal Academy Of Music in London, before he became obsessed with electronic music through tapes lent by his siblings. He has since become one of my favourite musicians, and one of Britain’s most underrated exports in my honest opinion, although he is currently based in Los Angeles. To say that this dinosaur has been totally er, extinct between the ten year gap would be totally untrue, however. He has released several EP’s like 2013’s ‘Get Lost VI’, 2020’s ‘I Can Hear The Birds’ and 2021’s ‘The Distance’ to typically amazing results. ‘Heartbreak’, a collaboration with Bonobo, was also nominated for the ‘Best Electronic/Dance Recording’ nod at this year’s Grammy Awards. He has also collaborated with the likes of Anna Lunoe, SG Lewis, Kelsey Lu, Shura, Dillon Francis, Porter Robinson and Amtrac over the years too, as well as touring regularly. There is a great deal of excitement towards the new album, as it represents his most substantial body of material in ten years. Check out the lead single – ‘Blood In The Snow’ – below.

‘When The Lights Go’ will feature seventeen tracks, which were all largely recorded at Higginbottom’s own home in Los Angeles, California. He will also resume touring the US and Europe throughout the spring, including a Brooklyn show at Elsewhere Hall on April 29th alongside Kate Garvey and Heathered Pearls, with solo shows in Miami, Austin, Chicago and more to follow. Talking about the arctic theme of ‘Blood In The Snow’, he says, “The song is about melting glaciers and about wanting a daughter, and where to put love in this tailspin”, in his press assertion. Hitting the ground running with a haunting Double Bass intro accentuated by glistening Keyboard riffs and hazy Synth pads, Higginbottom warmly sings lyrics like “How much longer?, Before the damn begins to break” and “Precious winter, enough will all the growth” that feel downbeat and contemplative, while ominous and slightly reclusive in tone, as he questions his ambitions towards some parenthood and compares the emotions to the cyclical processes of nature. The chorus is gentle but striking, with the colder textures combining to the somber tune of lyrics like “Names for a daughter/Blood in the snow” and “But I want her, More than you know” that feel insular and precise, although the beat-driven pacing is laid out fairly sparsely. The instrumentation blends these arena-level electronics with his human, poignant vocals, where the distorted Synths create some interplay with the melancholic qualities of his vulnerable vocals by building gradually towards a halting crescendo, where his layers of textures simply crunch together. The verses are given space by the progressive Jazz-influenced Drums and the warping Synths that build to a slight alter in pace and mood in the late stages of the track where the different Snare sound comes in and, like his vocals, these changes feel subtle but delicate and merticulously crafted. This feels very different to the more club-driven sound of 2012’s ‘Trouble’ because the assortment of sounds deliver a low-key groove instead of an anthemic ‘danceability’ to them, but the delicate vocals of Higginbottom and the progressive, yet certainly grounded, take on Indietronica is still in there. It is admittedly a slow burn, but it makes for an emotional experience when you hear the different elements come together by the end and it has a similar tone of quintessentially British sadness and almost deliberately ‘flat’ vocals that only Higginbottom could really get away with, while the lyrics promise more maturity and growth from him as a songwriter, and it feels like rarity for him to use his own voice as the producer in this day and age too. ‘Blood In The Snow’ really stands out if you hear it on the radio, and it feels different to the spectrum of genres that he is often associated with, while sounding unmistakably like him in its bold production. Instead of totally extinct, this feels totally brilliant – and I’m stoked to hear the album.

Here’s my TEED-related posts to get you warmed up for this highly anticipated album.

‘Los Angeles’ (2020) – https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/08/05/todays-track-totally-enormous-extinct-dinosaurs-los-angeles/

‘Heartbreak’ (with Bonobo) (2020) – https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/10/06/todays-track-bonobo-totally-enormous-extinct-dinosaurs-heartbreak/

‘The Distance’ (2021) – https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2021/10/16/todays-track-totally-enormous-extinct-dinosaurs-the-distance/

That brings us to the end of yet another daily track on the blog, and thank you for continuing to support the site, as your time and attention is always appreciated very highly. It feels quite unbelievable that we’ve almost come up to another ‘Way Back Wednesdays’ post so swiftly, but that feature continues tomorrow with a post regarding a North Carolina-born Funk, R&B and Soul singer-songwriter who sadly left us in February. She was known for her controversially sexual-oriented performance style and songwriting. She was also the second wife of beloved trumpeter Miles Davis.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: Blue Lab Beats (feat. Fela Kuti, Killbeatz, Kaidi Akinnibi & Poppy Daniels) – ‘Motherland Journey’

Good Afternoon to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, as usual, and I’m writing fresh off this marathon of a WWE WrestleMania 38 weekend with yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Pitching their sound as “Jazz-Tronica”, Blue Lab Beats are the North London-based experimental electronic music duo of sampler and producer Namali Kwaken (aka NK-OK) and multi-instrumentalist David Mrkaor (aka Mr DM) who have sat in the additional production seats for their work with artists like Ruby Francis and Age Of Luna, and they have remixed A-list pop culture superstars like Dua Lipa and Rag ‘N’ Bone Man. The follow-up to 2021’s ‘We Will Rise’ EP is the Grammy award-winning and MOBO-nominated musicians’ latest full-length studio album ‘Motherland Journey’ which they released in late February on the legendary Blue Note Records label. The new creative project explores a whole suite of Avant-Jazz, Prog-Jazz, Afro-Funk, Trip Hop, Boom Bap, Northern Soul and Contemporary R&B influences, and it has been described as an “extremely special album” to the duo, who say, “This album took us two-and-a-half-years to finish, or longest process to make an album, but it was so worth it. On this album you’ll hear many fusions of genres and inspirations that we gathered throughout that time frame and especially to work on so many of the songs during the first lockdown, it was a test in itself”, about their recent release. The title track samples Afrobeat activist icon Fela Kuti’s 70’s song ‘Everything Scatter’ and they were given permission by the BLB estate themselves to use that sample. It features guest contributions from Kaidi Akinnibi and Poppy Daniels, while they also travelled to Ghana to record it along with Killbeatz as the producer. Let’s give it a spin.

Much like all of the classic Afrobeat music releases of the 70’s and 80’s, ‘Motherland Journey’ is designed to replicate a communal experience where all of the different influences and the guest contributors are welcome as long as the album’s flow is not disrupted, and the duo also comment, “When we got confirmation to have Fela Kuti’s vocals from his publishers in Nigeria we were honestly blown away that he could really feature on our tracks. An absolute dream come true.”, on Kuti’s featured artist credit for the eclectic track. The track gets off to a bright and warm start immediately, with a quickly established groove formed by the percussive African drums and the prominent Amapiano stabs that pulls apart the standard tropes of their favourite genres with the introduction of the electronic music elements and the sparse guitar melodies to give the classic sound a more modern, updated feel. The pair layer up some of the Trumpet samples and the Afrobeat-tinged backing vocals together to blur the contrasted electronic and organic sounds together occasionally, but the rotating instrumentals and the upbeat textures creates the most dominant impression where we’re witnessing something improvisational and organic from a live house band, like the performers who used to visit Kuti’s shrines at the heart of the Afrobeat cultural movement, who are simply taking to center stage and jamming with one another, creating a timeless feeling as opposed to overtly recycling outdated ideas for simply nostalgic effect. It is not necessarily futuristic, but it feels well-built and structured neatly, with new melodies being bought into the mix to keep the grooves from getting a little tiresome. Overall, ‘Motherland Journey’ is a wonderfully encouraging listen that pulls off a fresh re-boot of it’s ideas by blending the organic percussion of the classic Afrobeat days with the progressive electronic production standards that we’re used to hearing more often from the west. The final results feel quite accessible and engaging to a fairly wide audience, without the feeling of commercialism ever truly dominating their sound in a blatant way. It just feels timeless and eminently buoyant.

That brings us to the end of another uplifting track on the blog, and thank you for continuing to support the site. I’ll be back tomorrow to discuss the new single from an Oxford-born classically trained electronic music producer who has been covered more than once before, since I’m such a huge fan of his work. He’s going to release his first album in a decade this July, and his collaborative single ‘Heartbreak’, which he created with Bonobo, was nominated for this year’s ‘Best Dance/Electronic Recording’ honour at the Grammy awards. The British musician is currently based in Los Angeles.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Scuzz Sundays: Foo Fighters – ‘Everlong’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has come for me to get writing up for the 968th time (That means we’ll soon be coming up to my 1000th post on the site) for ‘Scuzz Sundays’ with yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! It is always interesting to write about music from a famous band who have an absolutely gigantic fanbase like Foo Fighters, but it’s also very saddening that it’s happened due to some very unfortunate circumstances this time around. In case you’ve been living under a rock for the last two weeks, their beloved drummer Taylor Hawkins has died at the age of 50, and the band have also cancelled their performance at the Grammy Awards and the rest of their tour dates to allow for a time of somber reflection instead. How they move forward as a band is unclear, but what is clear, is the influence and the gifts that Hawkins bought to the world. Hawkins was born in Fort Worth, Texas in 1972 and he attended school with Yes vocalist Jon Davison, who became a close friend of Hawkins, and the two friends graduated from Lagune Beach High School together in 1990. Hawkins went on to play in experimental bands like Sylvia and Sass Jordan on the Orange County rock scene, before he was scouted by Canadian 90’s star Alanis Morissette, and he appeared in a handful of her music videos. Hawkins joined Foo Fighters in 1996, when Dave Grohl fell out with previous drummer William Goldsmith while they were in Seattle to record their second album with Gil Norton as their producer, and Grohl was suprised to learn that he wanted to voluntarily join Foo Fighters because he wanted to be a drummer in a rock band rather than a touring drummer for a solo artist. Hawkins went on to record eight albums with Foo Fighters, as well as pursue many side projects including The Birds Of Satan, Chevy Metal and The Coattail Riders, and he has performed a number of key vocal and songwriting duties as part of Foo Fighters too. ‘Everlong’ is a very important part of the band’s legacy now, and I’ve chosen to cover the track because it was the last song that he had played live with the rest of Foo Fighters in a live performance at the Lollapalooza Festival in Argentina on March 20th, 2022. You can see the live video above or you can remind yourself of the original music video below.

“Our hearts go out to his wife, children and family and we ask that their privacy be treated with the upmost respect in this unimaginably difficult tine”, Foo Fighters share about Hawkins’ death. It is very fitting and poignant how their performance of ‘Everlong’ at Lollapalooza ended, as Hawkins tossed his drum sticks out to the crowd and took a bow with the rest of his band before a hearty embrace with Grohl, and so it is very tragic for us to know what would unfold just five days later now. Commenting on his relationship with Hawkins in an interview with Rolling Stone published last year, Grohl said, “I think Taylor really under-estimates his importance in this band. Maybe because he’s not the original drummer, but, my god, what would we be without Taylor Hawkins? Could you imagine? It would be a completely different thing”, in celebration of his service to the group. A single originally recorded for their second album – ‘The Colour And The Shape’ – in 1997, ‘Everlong’ peaked within the top three of the US Billboard Alternative Songs chart and it was written about Grohl’s romance with Louise Post from the band Veruca Salt. Rather than developing ‘Everlong’ like a Grunge off-shoot as expected by the press, Grohl wanted it to feel more sentimental and incorporate Pop sensibilities into the sound, and he did so with gripping and upbeat lyrics like “Breathe out, so I can breathe you in, Hold you in” and “Come down, and waste away with me, Down with me, slow how you wanted it to be” that encourage intimacy with a special person that hasn’t been experienced for a long while by our narrator, while lyrics in the chorus like “If everything could ever feel this real forever/If anything could ever be this good again” touch upon the realization that you have fallen in love after doubting the fact that you could ever again for a few years prior. The themes are simple, but the music thoroughly conveys the emotional qualities behind the track as the vocals dive between subdued and atmospheric, while the simple chord structure is catchy and the softer parts are calming, while the guitar riff is distinctive enough for the track to feel fresh in it’s heyday and the tones are honest and cheerful without coming across as overly twee or gushy. Overall, it is a natural radio hit and a stadium crowd-pleaser that reminds us all to grasp wonder despite any practical or intellectual concerns and relishing the feeling of joy or harmony without not sentimentally rejecting it. It brings the same sense of happiness that Hawkins clearly brought to this band over the decades that he played with them.

Given how Foo Fighters are such a beloved band who have left a large blueprint on our culture, it is only natural that we have talked about them in the older posts below.

‘Monkey Wrench’ (1997) – https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/10/18/scuzz-sundays-foo-fighters-monkey-wrench/

‘Waiting On A War’ (2021) – https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2021/02/05/new-album-release-friday-foo-fighters-waiting-on-a-war/

That’s all for now, and my thoughts and prayers go out to all of Hawkins’ loved ones who have been deeply affected over the past two weeks. Thank you for checking out what I had to share on the site today, and I’ll be back tomorrow to kick off the new week’s worth of regular blog posts with a summer-friendly new single by a Grammy and MOBO awards-nominated London-based Afrobeat duo who pitch their sound as “Jazztronica”, and the title track of their new album was built from a Fela Kuti sample.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

Today’s Track: Fontaines DC – ‘Jackie Down The Line’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has come for us to sit comfortably and find our reading glasses as we prepare to get invested in yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Since bonding over their shared passions for literature and poetry while attending college together at BIMM in The Liberties, Dublin – Fontaines D.C. have become renowned for their extensive live touring and the consistently upwards trajectory of their career, as their critical acclaim and public popularity veer closer towards the mainstream consciousness with every successful album release. They signed up to Partisan Records in 2019, before their debut album – ‘Dogrel’ – was released in 2019 to widespread acclaim since it was voted ‘Album Of The Year’ by BBC Radio 6 Music, as well as listed as ‘Album Of The Year’ on Rough Trade’s website. It was also nominated for the Mercury Prize and the Choice Music Prize. They quickly followed up these credits – to similar results – with 2021’s ‘A Hero’s Death’, a bleak but therapeutic record that was nominated for ‘Best Rock Album’ at the 2021 Grammy Awards. Known for writing and recording material in the midst of their touring duties, as well as their frequent collaborations with high in demand producer Dan Carey, they are set to release yet another album – ‘Skinty Fia’ – on April 22nd. The band have promised for their new LP to feel “much more expansive and cinematic” than the previous two aforementioned efforts in their press materials, and the group recently performed the lead single ‘Jackie Down The Line’ on ‘The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon’, bringing their confessional brand of taut Post-Punk and self-loathing spoken word lyricism to the US. The track’s title derives from ‘Jackeen’, a derogatory term used against the folk of their hometown of Dublin although they are currently based in London. Check out the Hugh Mulhern-directed music video below.

‘Skinty Fia’ is an Irish phrase that roughly translates to “The damnation of the deer” in English, and it is used to express annoyance or disappointment, and it resonates with vocalist Grian Chatten as a response to the “mutation” of Irish culture abroad. Speaking about the highly-anticipated new album and it’s main themes, Chatten has stated, “A large part of what Skinty Fia is about is the way Irishness becomes exaggerated and embellished when we’re abroad and how whether it’s parts in London, Boston or Vancouver, we still cling together for various reasons including the discomfort of being ‘othered’, which I’ve been feeling. It’s fertile soil for creativity”, in an interview with Hot Press. ‘Jackie Down The Line’ is an exploration of these ideas, with Chatten casually reciting lyrics like “My friend Sally says she knows ya, Got a funny point of view, Says you got away with murder, Maybe one time, maybe one time” that talk about cheating in a relationship, and the later refrain of “What good is happiness to me?, If I’ve to wield it carefully/For care I’ll always come up short, It’s only right” makes it more evidently clear that qualities of paranoia, alcohol abuse and drug abuse have led to the demise of the relationship. His vocals feel dark and brooding, but there’s an 80’s softness to the guitar rhythms that gives it a mature and very accessible approach, and the sing-along hook of “I don’t think we’d rhyme, I will wear you down in time, I will hurt you, I will desert you/I am Jackie down the line” addresses how his Irish culture just doesn’t gel with the former partner while the rhythmic structure creates something deceptively melodic about the otherwise dark, edgy Post-Punk anthem. The songwriting feels rather clever in this sense, yet the instrumentation feels quite simple. The chorus has a spoken-sung pace that glides across the subtle Grunge influence of the bassline, while the lead guitar and the drums add sparse, but gloomy, ripples of textures that add further intensity and drama to the proceedings. There’s nothing massively complicated about this, but it feels on-brand for the band and it sharpens the edge of the knife lyrically, so to speak. If you have ever heard anything from Fontaines DC before, even casually, I think ‘Jackie Down The Line’ will feel familiar because it feels like a continuation of their journey thus far rather than a re-invention of the wheel, and it offers the same unapologetic and thought-provoking fare that previous records have earned their strong reviews for, and I feel that ‘Jackie Down The Line’ has managed to catch my attention because it feels more exciting for them because it sounds more catchy while retaining the harsher, dissonant elements of their pre-existing sound in the process, although I’ve never been a huge fan of this style before. Jackie has her authority here.

That brings us to the very end of yet another daily track post on the blog. I hope that you enjoyed reading it, and I will be back tomorrow for another weekly iteration of ‘Scuzz Sundays’ that is delivered on a somber and reflective note, as we take the chance to pay tribute to the recently deceased Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE

New Album Release Fridays: Warmduscher – ‘Twitchin’ In The Kitchen’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and you are tuned into a fairly off-kilter edition of ‘New Album Release Fridays’ as we prepare for yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of new music every day! Although you may mistake them for a quirky German pop band at first glance, Warmduscher are actually a London-based Post-Punk band currently signed to Bella Union who are famed for their inside jokes and eccentric live performances, and they have been supported by BBC Radio 6 Music very regularly over the years since their formation in 2014. Warmduscher have collaborated with the likes of Iggy Pop and Kool Keith, and their previous studio album – 2019’s ‘Tainted Lunch’ – received a stunning 9/10 score from The Line Of Best Fit’s review as well as a place on BBC Radio 6 Music’s Albums Of The Year list at #6 in 2019. They have also released a remix EP – 2020’s ‘European Cowboy’ – to coincide with Record Store Day in 2020 featuring contributions from Soulwax, Savage Gary and Decius, and it was strictly limited to just 1000 vinyl copies. Thankfully, their new album is more widely available and it takes the form of their fourth full-length LP, ‘At The Hotspot’, which arrives digitally today before being released on Vinyl on July 1st. Warmduscher have gained so much praise for their originality and humor that they were previously given a shout-out on the blog when I wrote about ‘Disco Peanuts’ in late 2019. The new LP incorporates more influences of Funk and Disco than before, and it was originally going to be produced by Speedy Wunderground’s Dan Carey, who has also produced countless records for artists like La Roux, Sinead O’Brien, Squid and Black Country, New Road in recent years. However, he fell ill with Covid-19 and the Clash-praised group turned to Hot Chip’s Alex Doyle and Joe Goddard instead. It includes the new single ‘Twitchin’ In The Kitchen’ that comes accompanied by a Brixton-shot and Niall Trask-directed music video, whose previous credits include well-received videos for Fat White Family and Working Men’s Club. Let’s give this pre-release cut a spin below.

Warmduscher played a gig at Cambridge’s The Junction venue on March 26th, which was moved to a larger room due to high demand. They will also be hitting the road for dates in Brighton, Bristol, London, Manchester and Sheffield later in the year, some of which have been sold out already, and a few later dates in European locations like Amsterdam are coming up shortly too. Their frontman, known as Clams Jr, notes, “We’re just really psyched to play this whole thing live now, and it’s a whole revamp – new label, new producers, new logo – new everything”, rather matter-of-factly, in Bella Union’s press release about their new record. ‘Twitchin In The Kitchen’ gives you a good idea of what to expect, establishing a raucous mixture of aggressive Funk and harsh, dissonant Synth melodies that builds up to a screamer of a chorus. The instrumentation sounds unapologetically Post-Punk, while the lyrics complement the spacey, disco vibe of the verses because they sound pretty daft and they find the band putting on a show with their wit and sense of distinctively quirky character, as Clams recites lines like “I can’t take it, here I’m sweating/I’m clucking like a chicken” and “Grab a bowl, scrape it clean/Two-four out the door, sniff it off the kitchen floor” that are pretty silly, but they are sung with a low-pitched croon typical of Clams’ cowboy character. The vocals feel energized and heightened for certain, while the looping arrangement feels industrial and psychedelic through it’s combination of Post-Punk and Progressive Funk beats, before building to a child-like sing-along that makes the final refrains sound like a schoolyard chant-a-long of the chorus. A perfect pick-me-up for kitchen disco lovers all around the UK, Warmduscher have created an infectious Alternative Funk anthem for those who love to do a bit of ‘Twitching In The Kitchen’ with no apologies given in their typical quirky fashion. It may drive you Disco Peanuts.

If you’d like to hear more of what’s in store, you can also check out my previous Warmduscher post that was published in the build-up to ‘Tainted Lunch’ back in 2019.

‘Disco Peanuts’ (2019) – https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2019/11/30/todays-track-warmduscher-disco-peanuts/

That’s all for now! Thank you for ‘Twitching In The Kitchen’ to this tune with me today, and I’ll be back to guide you through another track on the blog tomorrow, where we’ve got new music coming from an Irish Post-Punk band who, although being mentioned a few times due to their frequent collaborations with Dan Carey as their producer, haven’t been covered for a fully-fledged article on the blog until now. Their second album was nominated for Best Rock Album at the 2021 Grammy Awards, and their debut LP, ‘Dogrel’, was named the ‘Album Of The Year’ by BBC Radio 6 Music.

Connect with One Track At A Time:

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OneTrackAtATim1?fbclid=IwAR2demHDssZESnHDMi6gzTGNZJvdS42Ot930CA9Rttw7n4CJ5nvB8VJbWxE