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: 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

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: 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