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.

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Way Back Wednesdays: Natasha – ‘I Can’t Hold On’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time for us to take a quick detour from recent releases into my time machine for a throwback instead for ‘Way Back Wednesdays’ as we revisit some of the seminal sounds of the past 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! If you type ‘Natasha Pop Singer’ into your favourite search engine on the internet, you’re likely to only mostly find photos and interviews regarding Natasha Bedingfield from the 2000’s. However, ‘Natasha’ was also the name of a Scottish pop singer who rose to prominence during the 1980’s with recordings like ‘Iko Iko’, a top ten hit in the UK. Known fully as Natasha England, she developed a career in the music industry after winning a dance competition as she worked behind the management chair of high-profile acts like David Bowie, Marc Bolan and Rod Stewart. She also set up the Towerbell record label with Bob England – her ex-husband – which broke names like The Commodores and The Average White Band into relevancy. She decided to work on animal rights issues after leaving the industry behind in the late-80’s, but she briefly fronted a band called ‘Why’ in the early 1990’s, before re-launching her career in the late-2000’s following her diagnosis with breast cancer. Recent releases have included a 2013 cover of T-Rex’s ‘Get It On’ and a collaboration with experimental producer, Robert Logan, known as ‘Album Deeper Into Reality’ that was released in 2010. A new album – ‘Somehow’ – was also made available in 2018. 1982’s ‘Captured’ – meanwhile – is considered by the folk at Cherry Red Records to be one of the most underrated albums of all time. Featuring a mixture of covers and self-penned original material, it not only featured her Top Of The Pops-worthy hit of ‘Iko Iko’, but also the underlooked anthem ‘I Can’t Hold On’, which is considered to be one of the earliest examples of, what would later become more known and hammered to crowds as later in the 80’s – Synth-Pop. Let’s revisit it.

In a similar vein to her fellow 80’s pop star Rick Astley, Natasha England has also enjoyed a commercial career resurgence during the last decade or so, and that is because her most well-known 80’s single ‘Iko Iko’, of course, was licensed by Platform Records to make a prominent sync appearance during the soundtrack of ‘Un Boss In Salotto’, which was the highest-grossing Italian film of 2014 at the box office. Back to the task at hand, we start off ‘I Can’t Hold On’ with a boisterous guitar riff and an immediate Synth riff that echoes Blondie and Eurythmics to my ears, before Natasha delivers the opening refrain of “I saw you standing there, that look was in your eyes/I’ve heard from other girls that you were quite a guy” with a slightly sassy but sensual vibe that mixes vulnerability and bitterness rather tidily. The chorus sees the funk-laden rhythm guitar melodies and the drum machine work-out reach a full crescendo, with the hooks of “Tonight, this feeling’s getting stronger” and “Tonight, I can’t hold on much longer” as our lead narrator takes a fall and enters a relationship that she fears is going to become toxic out of her lust and desire, with the swelling Synths and the sharp Drum beats ramping off of their brisk pace to add a darker underlayer to the vocals. Natasha keeps everything concise as to not overstay her welcome, and it is partly the infectious guitar riff of the track that really adds a lot of personality to it as it creates an atmospheric sheen for her lyrics while the rest of the instrumentation is upbeat and more alike to Prince or Blondie. It definitely sounds like a product of it’s time in one respect, but it was an important pre-cursor for the later acts who would achieve commercial success with a similar template. While it is not greatly original in retrospect, Natasha was simply one of the first to make it work in the way it does. A catchy, well-produced callback to the simpler times of the 1980’s.

That’s all for now! Thank you very much for checking out the post that I have just written for your perusal today, and I hope that you join me for another music-related musing on the site tomorrow. We will be looking at an entirely new band from Melbourne, Australia who are known for their Gothic Lo-Fi imagery and they have experienced a 267 day-long Lockdown there. They were initially named Rosary and their debut EP out now via Dalliance was produced with Floodlights’ Archie Shannon.

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Today’s Track: Kings Of Convenience – ‘Rocky Trail’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and its time to catch up with some of the music that we missed earlier in the year as we approach the start of a new one, because it’s always been my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! For the Norwegian indie folk duo of Erlend Øye and Eirik Glambek Bøe, you could say that it has been a ‘Rocky Trail’ on their return to making music. After a 12 year hiatus, in which the Bergen native pair saw some relationships continue to form and dissolve, felt record label pressure, and they confronted the onset of their 40’s, the Cornelius collaborators have returned with their first album to be released since 2009’s ‘Declaration Of Dependence’, a #10 hit in Italy. During their time, Kings Of Convenience were the inspiration for the Indian dream pop duo Parekh & Singh, they topped MTV’s European list of the best music videos in 2004 for ‘I’d Rather Dance With You’ and they performed at the Primavera Sound Festivals in both Barcelona and Porto. Øye is also known for a side project, The Whitest Boy Alive. ‘Peace Or Love’, their latest LP and fourth studio album release overall, features two collaborations with the Canadian global indie pop star Feist, and it reached #26 on the UK Albums Chart. Recorded across five years in five different cities, ‘Peace Or Love’ was a mellow take on Easy Listening Pop where Bøe and Øye leaned into the appeal of ease instead of confrontation after a difficult period of time away. After all, despite envy of Europeans easy leisure, it is distinctly an American trait to look for cracks in their mirage or facade – and that facade, if there was one, was very smooth here. They recently went on tour to support the record, including a double-header at London’s Royal Festival Hall in September, and a share of these dates have already come and gone. However, they are still scheduled to visit sites in Sweden, Belgium, Netherlands, Portugal, Germany, Switzerland and Luxembourg from March until June 2022 – if Covid restrictions allow for it. Let’s hear more about their ‘Rocky Trail’ below.

“Another classic Eirik composition that skillfully ignores the verse-chorus-chorus blueprint”, Bøe and Øye said about the structure of ‘Rocky Trail’ in April during a press statement for Paste Magazine, concluding, “It’s pop music, but not as we know it”, in their teaser. A welcome re-introduction to the group and what their sound achieves well, ‘Rocky Trail’ features a humble approach to production where the Kings’ simply harmonize about life’s grief and a failed relationship with a man featuring “a world on his shoulders that needed lifting” on top of a wholesome and jaunting acoustic guitar riff. The duo recite sequences like “Brave enough to go climbing up a wall so high that no sunlight is seen through winter” and “Brave enough to go travelling the world without money to eat or sleep for” to express a deep sense of freedom and contentment that create buoyant vocal hooks and laminate reality in a more optimistic light. There are some moments of a bleaker nature, with the opening refrain of “Let’s say you give me one more time, One last chance to speak again, Let’s start from what we left unsaid” highlighting a shade of relationship break-up glumness, for example. However, the tonal differences are sugarcoated by a warm violin string section that adds a slightly bitter ache to the forefront of the track. Their intertwining vocals are uplifting, giving the anecdotes of travelling penniless and surviving hungry a more inspirational feeling instead of a pessimistic outlook. However, the in-sync and timbre voices of Bøe and Øye remain a key fixture of their charm, while lyrics like “I should have carried you to the top of the rocky trail” have moments of reflective contemplation to them, later giving the lyrics of “How am I to know about your problems and your load/I am blind to what you show” some additional meaning in the realm of forgiveness. Overall, ‘Rocky Trail’ was a solid Folk track that doesn’t show any signs of being left on the cutting room floor for 12 years. Instead, it feels like a paled back ode to restoration from the duo and it seems like a warm welcome back from them. Delicacy and care are given to both of their vocal performances, a tactic that perfectly expresses an innocence and veteran experience simultaneously, attained through their pitches. A beautiful and simple return to form.

That’s all for Monday, and, with that conclusion, it’s time for me and the Kings Of Convenience to lead you on your way through the ‘Rocky Trail’ of mid-December living. I hope that all goes well for you today, and please feel free to join me again tomorrow to resume our ‘Countdown To Christmas’ with a fresh new Grunge spin on a popular Christmas carol that was performed by a female-led indie punk band from Auckland, New Zealand. Signed to Carpark Records in the US, they have toured throughout the UK and some European cities supporting Death Cab For Cutie in 2020.

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New Album Release Fridays: Arca (feat. Planningtorock) – ‘Queer’

Good Morning to you! You are reading the words of Jacob Braybrooke and, for the final time until 2022 rolls around, it is time for us to take a deep dive into one of this weekend’s biggest new album releases, since it’s always been my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! It all comes down to this. As the curtain draws the year of exceptional new music to a close, we are left with a final notable release. Or two. Or three. Or – in the case of Venezeulan experimental pop producer Arca – four. Last summer, she released ‘Kick i’ to an interesting reception and this week, she has completed the ‘Kick’ quintet with the release of ‘Kick ii’, ‘Kick iii’, ‘Kick iiii’ and ‘Kick iiiii’ all on the same day via XL Recordings, boasting a total of 43 tracks of wild Glitch Pop experimentation. I loved her track ‘Time’ on the blog last year, but a follow-up single – ‘Mequetrefe’ – received a more negative reception from me, so it will be interesting to see where ‘Queer’ from ‘Kick iiii’ (featuring the Estonia-based English DJ Planningtorock) lands with me. The critics seem to be liking the ambitious bible of projects, however, with The Guardian writing, “A wild ride to the dark, daring side of Pop” in their four-star write up. The Times added, “Pop that’s a pleasure to be confused by” in their appraisal. I mostly know Arca, also a transgender icon, for her friendship and a few collaborations with the Icelandic role model Bjork. However, Arca has also produced work for Kanye West, Rosalia and FKA Twigs (Who famously used to date Robert Pattinson for quite a while, I believe). ‘Kick iiii’ also features Garbage’s Shirley Manson, Oliver Coates & No Bra. Give ‘Queer’ a whirl below.

Pitching the fourth part of her ‘Kick’ series of augmented records as “an entry in the sensual charge in the cycle; my own faith made into song, a posthuman celestial sparkle, psychosexual pulsewidth modulation, queering the void, abyss alchemically transmuted into a deconstruction of what is beautiful” in her partial LP’s product description, Arca continues to explore the themes of alienation from the inside and a bursting apart of old skin with the glitch-driven lead single from her ‘Kick iiii’ album – ‘Queer’. Built up to be an anthem that is celebrating courage in the face of prejudice and encouraging queer romance in all of its forms, this is a dramatically exploratory single that establishes Arca in the ilk of a ‘true artist’ like Kate Bush or David Bowie where commercial accessibility is primarily not a target and expression with an almost ‘alien’ quality, where traditionally catchy genre traits are simply disregarded in favour of a creative approach. Therefore, I can definitely see why this track may not play ever so well to casual listeners and it, even for me, was a little bit overwhelming to fully grasp on a first listen. It has a vague resemblance to the Eurovision flavour of Pop, however, that gives us somewhere to start with her. Set against the backdrop of a Witch House trap beat that has an air of Latin Hip-Hop about it, calling to my mind names like 100 Gecs and Bad Bunny anyways, Arca and Planningtorock (her actual name is Jam Rostram) exchange a series of Spanish and English lyrics between each other in a trade, with anthemic lyrics like “Tears will shower in my time/Like a queer life/Queer fire” as the Synthpop textures and the science fiction soundtrack feel of the music dives along at a brisk pace that doesn’t ever quite let up entirely. Full of processed vocals and some more interchangeable genre influences that are buried underneath the broad instrumentals, ‘Queer’ finds itself preoccupied with swelling Synth arrangements and rattling percussive arrangements that each function as a mimicry of non-heterosexual forms of love in their diverse nature. The opening of the track is a highlight for me, where a screeching sequence of samples almost act as haunting strings that get the beats off to an unrelented start. Overall, while I can certainly agree that ‘Queer’ is a lot to take in at once and it takes some hard work to get the most out of, I felt rewarded by the emotive soundscape that becomes more vibrant and expansive in scope with my repeated listening. I can also appreciate the thought that goes into the visual aspects of her art too. A tsunami of seismic material.

As aforementioned, Arca has gained a little bit of attention from my blog before. If you found ‘Queer’ to be interesting, you can see what I made of ‘Time’ here: https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/05/28/todays-track-arca-time/. You can also gain your own opinion of ‘Mequetrefe’ by visiting my take on it here: https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/06/30/todays-track-arca-mequetrefe/

That’s all for now! Thank you for finding out what music that I had to share with you today, and we will be going back to our ‘Countdown To Christmas’ in glorious style tomorrow. Join me then for an in-depth look at a new holiday-themed album release by an American Acapella group from Arlington, Texas who won the third season of NBC’s ‘The Sing-Off’ in 2011 and they have won three Grammy awards following that time. If you are a fan of the three ‘Pitch Perfect’ movies, you may find it Aca-awesome.

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Today’s Track: Metronomy (feat. Biig Piig) – “405”

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and I’m wishing you a very enjoyable weekend along with the uploading of yet another daily track of the day, because it has always been my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! ‘405’ comes to your ears from the established Electronic Pop 5-piece band Metronomy, who have been quite prolific on the UK’s indie circuit since they were founded in 1999 by frontman Joseph Mount, merging Indie Rock influences with 80’s Pop sounds and modern Electronic soundscapes which have been grounded and progressive in their adaptations of both vocal and ambient material. The band have remixed a staggering line-up of other artists including Lady GaGa, Klaxons, Franz Ferdinand and Goldfrapp, and their most recent LP release was ‘Metronomy Forever’ in 2019, which was well-received by critics. The lead single, ‘Salted Caramel Ice Cream’ earned a rave review on this very blog too, and I’ve embedded the music video of that track to the end of this post because it’s an exceptionally amusing one. After reminding fans a few weeks ago that “there’s normally a new Metronomy album every two to three years” on social media, the quintet quietly released the ‘Posse: Volume 1’ EP that finds Mount’s misfits tinkering around with guest collaborations from Spill Tab, Sorry, Brian Nasty, Folly Group and Pinty. ‘405’ has made the daytime A-list over on BBC Radio 6 Music, and it features the seductive vocal talents of Irish producer/singer-songwriter Biig Piig (aka West London’s Jess Smith), who has been regularly featured on BBC Radio 1 and used to always pop up on focus group playlists that used to be sent to me from the SRA for student radio purposes, and so it’s always felt like she’s just small steps away from breaking into more mainstream territory for a very small sum of years now. Take their collaboration, ‘405’, for a spin with me below.

On Twitter, Jospeh Mount posted, “I made the EP after finishing the new Metronomy album, please consume it in the same spirit it was made; discover some new artists and share the music with your friends”, on Metronomy’s account. Meanwhile, Jess Smith has also spoken about ‘405’, penning, “Joe sent over the Piano instrumental and it was so beautiful and brought back so many memories. I feel like when you hear a piece of music that does that, you know it’s special. My melodies and lyrics over it came out really easily and it just felt really nostalgic”, in a press statement of her own. On ‘405’, Smith sings about frantically searching for love in different relationships with lyrics like “Cuz’ I ran off in the wrong direction/Looking for love when you were stood right there/Under my nose” and soon realizes that a true partner was spending time with her all along, singing lyrics like “You smiled in the mirror with those bright eyes/And you froze time, you’re an old soul” with a sweet and soulful tone during the verses. The delivery feels calm and assured, but the self-realization comes through with a sense of eerie contentment in her voice, and lyrics like “You taste like Vanilla, and your hand is soft” that feel romantic and quite dream-like, with an 80’s-leaning Synth Pop instrumental that reminds me of Eurythmics and La Roux’s androgynous style, and these vocals evoke her confused emotions nicely because they add a soft sense of Jazz and R&B to the gently pulsating Synth beats. The vocal harmonies from Smith add a loose, ambient mood to the silky Synth lines, with a few hints of a more shy and seductive tone that adds a little more emotional depth to the otherwise straightforward, if solid, songwriting. On the whole, ‘405’ is a great collaboration as it marries the enchanting vocal tones of Biig Piig and the 00’s Electronica roots of Metronomy together with a strong sense of cohesion and, while the Synth pads feel a little repetitive by the end, there’s a nice balance of melancholy and comfort in the mixture to give the lightly melodic sounds more atmosphere. One for the drive home.

When you write up about a different piece of music every day, you end up covering a few releases from most of the UK’s most prolific emerging artists, including Biig Piig and Metronomy. You can still check out my thoughts on Metronomy’s ‘Salted Caramel Ice Cream’ here: https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2019/08/26/todays-track-metronomy-salted-caramel-ice-cream/ and their instrumental masterpiece ‘Miracle Rooftop’ here: https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2019/10/11/todays-track-metronomy-miracle-rooftop/. As for Biig Piig, you can hear more of her soothing voice in ‘Roses & Gold’ here: https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2019/12/14/todays-track-biig-piig-roses-and-gold/

That’s all for now! Thank you for your continued support for the blog and for streaming the first episode of my new podcast – ‘The Subculture Sessions’ – if you got the memo. I’ll be back tomorrow for another new entry in our ‘Scuzz Sundays’ feature, as we take aim at a Canadian Hard Rock band who have yet to been featured in our library before. They were formed from the ashes of the 00’s band The Dropouts.

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Today’s Track: Polar Noir – “If Everybody Listened”

Good Morning to you! You are reading the words of Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time for me to get typing up for today’s daily track on the blog, since it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up all about a different piece of music every day! I’ve got an aquatic start to the new week for you, which is the debut single to be released from an artist who has just announced their new project with ‘If Everybody Listened’, a track that was released to raise awareness for World Ocean Day on June 8th, a time with a mission to “inform the public of the impact of human actions on the ocean”. A Munich-based singer, songwriter, producer and radio host, Sandra Gern, is drawn to her fascination for marine life, and her own interests in preserving the Oceanic eco-system, and so she took the chance to unveil her recording project, Polar Noir, to share her love for these causes with her music. The song and music video will also be used for a television advertising campaign by NGO Orange Ocean, additionally being shown in Germany on channels like Comedy Central, ProSieben and N24 Doku over the summer months. She posted on Facebook, “I’ve learned that the music you make is never really complete as long as you don’t share it”, adding, “That’s why I’ve started this project. Some of the music I am sharing is brand new, but some was written or started somewhere within the last ten years. So, you’re warmly invited to keep me company making these songs complete”. Ironically enough, you can listen to it below.

In the near two month timeframe ever since ‘If Everybody Listened’ was released, the ocean caught fire in the Gulf Of Mexico, a sunken container ship loaded with different oils and chemicals has polluted the coast of Sri Lanka, and a group of tourists petted one of the most strictly protected whales in the Baltic sea and held them for a picture, and it died shortly after. Gern says, “These are the things many of us have heard of because they sounded lurid enough to be put into a headline. But the ocean is much more at risk than we hear and see in the media. That’s why I put these words including different organisations at the end of my music video”, to the press. A fusion of ambient Indietronica and traditional Dream-Pop, Gern addresses the ocean with lyrics like “The guilt is way too heavy for my single bones to carry” and “The gift we were once given, now is monetarily driven” that address her fascination for marine life in general and apologizes profoundly for the ways that humans have treated these environments as a tool for exploiting resources. The instrumentation has a spiritual feeling throughout, with vocals that are given a shiny bit of polish and an airy weight, in fact, making them tricky to decipher at times because of their floating effects that create a more inviting atmosphere than you may have expected. The glitzy Synth tones before the bridge, where Gern croons out, “I hope we’ll be gone, before you disappear forever”, is a particular highlight because the rumbling effect of the bass has an ascending feeling, and the subtle guitar frames goes nicely with the fragile, yet urgent, style of songwriting. The vocals are admittedly a little green, but Gern sums up the dilemma pretty well through the evident honesty of her lyrics and the gently melancholic feel of the Synth beats. These different parts all contribute to a lovely piece that hits close to home with the overall apologetic substance. If you have been affected by the issues that she has raised, you certainly should consider supporting some of the organisations listed at the end of the video, and keep Gern on your radar.

A perfect way to start the new week – and thank you very much for reaching the end of the page! I’ll be back tomorrow for something completely different, as we become acquainted with a young university-trained Reggae music producer who became obsessed with vintage Dub records from the likes of King Tubby, U-Roy and Scientist, and is determined to re-create their ethos in his own uniquely driven way. His new album will be released later this week on ATO Records, where you’ll also find names such as Brittany Howard, Amyl & The Sniffers, Altin Gün, Mattiel and Chicano Batman.

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Today’s Track: Lorde – “Solar Power”

Good Lorde – she’s back, and with the help of producer Jack Antonoff. New post time!

Good Morning to you! It’s Jacob Braybrooke here – with 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! Lorde is back – the critically beloved singer from New Zealand perhaps best known for #1 hit single ‘Royals’ and 2017’s ‘Melodrama’. I’ve got to be honest, I wasn’t really there when she hit the ground running with ‘Pure Heroine’ in 2013, and so Lorde repesents a gap in the history of pop music knowledge for me. However, I know that her work is often hyped up to the hills by critics and audiences alike, so there’s a lot of anticipation building for her new album ‘Solar Power’, which is set for release on August 20th via major label Universal. It’s actually winter in New Zealand for her, and the pre-order sales should add some decent statistics to her reported figure of over five million albums sold worldwide. She’s been working with Jack Antonoff on the new record, who is a mega-producer who has collaborated with the likes of Taylor Swift, St. Vincent, Lana Del Rey and Carly Rae Jepsen, as well as leading his own indie band named Bleachers. Lorde has also shared the title single from the record, which Lorde says is all “about that infectious, flirtatious summer energy that takes hold of us all”. Grab a seat on your deck chair and give it a try below.

In an email sent to her fans with the release of the track and the album’s announcement, the Golden Globe-nominated singer-songwriter revealed that ‘Solar Power’ will be “a celebration of the natural world, an attempt at immortalizing the deep, transcendent feelings I have when I’m outdoors”, upon entering her new era. I can definitely hear shades of the Covid-19 pandemic being reflected in her songwriting on the tune, which is given a cult-ish and Midsommar-like aeshetic in the video, but it’s actually just about appreciating the warm weather, and the power that summer music adds to our hot season. This is all emphasized through the smoky Jazz sounds, like the soft splashings of Trumpet and Saxophone melodies, and the long vocal harmonies that drive the Sunshine Pop beats forward. There’s a nod to A Tribe Called Quest when she calls out “Can I kick it? Yeah, I can” and a modern twist on summer culture when she sings “My boy behind me, he’s taking pictures” for Instagram, no doubt. Antonoff plays the bass guitar with simplicity, and the backing vocals have a Gospel quality that shows her newfound euphoria. The chorus is a simple refrain of “Solar Power” that is held long and nimbly, with warm percussion and an intimate, acoustic instrumental underneath. Lyrics like “I’m kind-of like a prettier Jesus” and “The girls are dancing in the sand/And I throw my cellular device in the water/Can you reach me, no, you can’t” have an 80’s, sexual Pop quality to them. Everything is destined for some chart success in the mainstream over the summer, with a nice message that is conveyed simply and rhythmic Pop sounds that are easy to find catchy, but it never goes overboard with cluttered hip-hop production or auto-tune effects, and so I like how it’s rather basic, and the lack of urgency feels refreshing. Overall, I wasn’t crazy about it. I felt the ending was a bit too close to comfort to George Michael’s ‘Faith’ for me, with the same timing structure of the beats bordering a bit on plagiarism for me. However, I still found it to be an enjoyable listen. It’s fine and perfectly competent summer Pop, but I felt that it could have done more for me, as I also felt the lyrics lacked much to say. Otherwise, it’s a comforting slice of intelligent Jangle-Pop with solid radio play on the cards. I liked it. I just didn’t love it.

That’s all for now! Thank you for your continued support for the blog, and please feel free to join me again tomorrow for another weekly entry in our ‘Scuzz Sundays’ feature. The track marks the second appearance on my humble site by a unique Christian metal band who have sold over 12 million records worldwide. Their abbreviated name stands for Payable On Death.

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Today’s Track: Jungle – “Keep Moving”

Um Bongo, Um Bongo, they made this one in the Congo in the Jungle. New post time!

Good Evening to you – I’m Jacob Braybrooke, I’ve just finished off my scripts for my Ambient Music documentary as a part of my MA coursework, and that means I’ve got to quickly jump on-board for your 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! ‘Keep Moving’ is the new single from the London-based now-duo of Electronic Soul artists Josh Lloyd-Watson and Tom McFarland, which has been getting support across the dial from the likes of BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 6 Music, NTS Radio, and now my humble abode of OMG Radio, over the course of the last handful of weeks. They have released two critically acclaimed albums, with their self-titled debut LP getting nominated for the Mercury Prize in 2014. Their third album, ‘Loving In Stereo’ is set for release on August 13th via Caiola Records, and it’s their first one to feature collaborations in the shape of US rapper Bas and the emerging Tamil-Swiss vocalist Priya Ragu. The music video was shot in one take and directed by Charlie Di Placido. Let’s check it out below.

The theme of ‘Loving In Stereo’ is new beginnings, a feeling emulated by the aim of the big dancefloor vibe of the lead single ‘Keep Moving’, which was premiered as Annie Mac’s ‘Hottest Record In The World’ one evening on BBC Radio 1 when it was first aired on the radio. Experimenting with a choir, Lloyd-Watson and Tom McFarland mix up an anthemic, festival heavy-hitting Neo-Soul sound with a very pop-oriented, Disco sound that feels nostalgic enough for a relative throwback to the days of old when we were allowed to pack out a beach resort in Malibu and sip cocktails. I think that it succeeds because it manages to feel relevant to our times socially, but these connections feel vague enough for the single to stand the test of time. The hooks are excessively melodic, and a light Gospel backing vocal complements the ongoing groove, which has a more boasting and strutful personality to it. Call backs to 70’s Bee-Gees are present here, but the detailed guitar licks and the toe-tapping Drum beats fulfill the needs of a modern listenership. The lyrics such as “Unless you understand it, Then find out what to do” and “Don’t think about it, I’ll be running with you” are catchy, and play on not looking back. It’s nothing too political or anything, but it encourages dancing and combines the Soul sound with some more intriguing explorations of Funk. It also has a big ‘Summer Anthem’ feel with it’s rich, percussive melodies and it’s upbeat Violin samples that bounce along to the beat. Overall – I quite like this, and I could see it going for some decent crossover appeal and potentially leaving a mark on the commercial charts. I enjoy that it sounds well-produced, but not overproduced. There’s a lot of polish to the production and the vocals, but it never goes overboard on the auto-tune effects or tries to throw too many elements at a wall to see what sticks. This feels like a very effective Comeback track. Groovy Baby!

That’s all I have time for today – but I’ll be hoping to publish another entry to our ‘Scuzz Sundays’ feature tomorrow, so join me back here in roughly 24 hours time to revisit a staple from THAT PHASE – this time coming from a well-known Hard-Rock, Ska-Punk and Street Punk project who are still making music today, and have independantly sold over four million albums globally making them one of Punk’s most successful independant Metal crossover groups. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Way Back Wednesdays: New Order – “Fine Time/Don’t Do It”

Just over 20 years later – Is there still ‘Truth Faith’ in this track to soar? New post time!

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time again for me to get typing up for your daily track on the blog, because it is always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of new music every day! It’s Way Back Wednesday – where we revisit one of the important sounds of the past that has influenced the exciting, fresh sounds of the present. New Order are cool – and it’s about ‘Fine Time’ that we featured some of their material on the blog. Although this track probably isn’t given the same mainstream airplay as ‘True Faith’, ‘Blue Monday’ or ‘World In Motion’, it still reached #11 in the UK Singles Chart. Although I probably wouldn’t consider New Order to be one of my top favourite artists upon my initial instincts – I have consistently enjoyed the music that Bernard Summer and his co-horts have put out over the years, and since a bulkload of that music was from before my time, I think that has something to say about their funky musicianship and crossover appeal. ‘Fine Time’ was officially released in 1988 as the A-side of a 12″ Vinyl release, which included the B-side of ‘Don’t Do It’. Written and recorded partially while the band were on tour in Ibiza, the lyrics were modeled after a witty incident where drummer Stephen Morris’s car was towed, and he had nearly forgotten to pay the fine for the penalty. It was another modest hit for the band in the UK, but it also found success within the Top 10 chart in Finland, Ireland and New Zealand, along with finding commercial success in the US, where it landed a spot on three of Billboard’s genre charts. The track was later included as a single from the band’s fifth studio album, ‘Technique’, a year later. Let’s cast our minds back with the official music video below.

“My car had been towed away and I had to remind myself to go and pay the fine”, Summer said to his press team on the track back in the day, “I just wrote ‘Fine Time’ on this piece of paper, to remind myself to go get it and, I thought that’s a good title” was the statement that he used to explain how, at times, the human eye is the most responsible component for creativity. The critics were also big fans of the single, with Aaron Febre of Niner Times writing that it’s off-kilter sound had “refurbished the band and gave them a fresh start, and Ned Raggett of AllMusic writing that it “not only had paid attention to the acid-house/Ibiza explosion but used it for its own ends, capturing the frenetic energy that the musical eruption on British shores had unleashed with strength and style” in his review. It certainly has a vibrancy and a sense of experimentation which gives it a distinctive edge, especially for a group who were off the back of their commercial peak at the time, with the low-pitched voice samples and the hyper-energetic synthesizer sequences going for an outgoing vibe. The keyboard sections also feel wonky and not conventionally structured, with an overall Disco influence that feels subverted by the explorations of Neo-Psychedelia. The vocals contemplate the moral universe of the dancefloor, and by extension, party life. Lyrics like “You’re much too young, to be a part of me” and “You’ve got class, but most of all, You’ve got love technique” feel enigmatic, but witty due to their drunk-sounding effects. We get to a bridge were “The past doesn’t matter” is repeated by a robotic sound effect that evokes the Industrial Motorik of Kraftwerk or Visage, but the instrumentation feels less flat and the lyrics feel more daft. Overall, it is a likeable anthem because it sounds like something I would feature on my “That Was A Hit” segment of my radio show, in the sense that it feels like a hit that was unusual for being that. This clearly breaks away from the typical Pop format with the seemingly unrelated vocal hooks and the musical non-sequiturs making for a strange mixture. It felt like a bold creative direction for the group to take, however, because they were determined to re-invent with the use of a crazy, silly ode to the Ibiza Club and Acid House dance music explosion and, for all of these risks, it succeeds in paying them off.

Well, it really has been a pleasure to stop and muse as always… but it’s about “fine time” that I got on with a few other jobs on today’s list now. I’ll be ready to go back at it again tomorrow, however, with an in-depth look at a collaborative single that seems to have gone down as a hit for the BBC Radio 6Music listener’s group on Facebook, coming from a lesser-known US indie Post-Rock band from Illinois who based their debut album on the frontman’s early experience of living among a Cult. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Way Back Wednesdays: AIR – “Kelly Watch The Stars”

Stephen Hawking is great at Air Guitar – he has solid String theory. Let’s go Way Back!

Good Afternoon to you – my name is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time for me to get typing up about this week’s pre-2000’s track for “Way Back Wednesdays”, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to get writing to you about a different piece of music every day! This week, I’m going to take you ‘Way Back’ to 1998… with “Kelly Watch The Stars”, the second highest-charting UK single to come from the French ambient pop duo, Air. This French electronic music duo are perhaps best known for “Sexy Boy”, which really managed to cross the lines between mainstream-friendly and alternative music appeal rather well, and the album that spawned both of these tracks – “Moon Safari” – went down as a classic of the downtempo music style when it was released back in 1998, via Virgin Records. These days, the Versailles-based duo of Nicolas Godin and Jean-Benoît Dunckel are still going strong, with festival appearances and rumors of a retirement circulating for within the new year. I believe that Air were heavily influenced by David Bowie, Lou Reed and Iggy Pop – and this track in particular reminds me of Daft Punk in it’s robotic electronic textures, and it’s strangely accessible Pop sounds. Air are a quietly very successful act, and I’ve only recently tucked into their discography – with reported sales of 386,000 copies for “Moon Safari” in the US – at time of writing. Check out “Kelly Watch The Stars” below.

“Moon Safari” went down as a classic album for the duo – with lush space-pop explorations and a heartening range of instrumental tracks garnering praise for the producers – and, in 2008, to mark the 10th anniversary of the record’s original release, it was re-packaged with a re-release that included a printed book, a DVD short film documentary about the duo, and an extra CD of live performances, along with some remixes of their old, classic tunes. For me, “Kelly Watch The Stars” sets up a Chic and Shiny theme, where visions of surreal fashion imagery and retro car drives with sunglasses in a Cadillac on a hot summer’s 70’s day flood to my mind – these imaginary pictures being supported by the dream-like sequences of the music video. The single manages to sound created in a time period between 80’s retro electronics and future, robotically enhanced instrumentals, with the two ideas feeling bizarrely commonplace. The four lyrics of “Kelly Watch The Stars” are continually layered above repetitive French synth grooves and the use of a Vocoder to give the music a strutting Funk feel. Combined, the mixing of the laidback bass guitar riffs and the syncopated keyboard riffs feel playful and have a bright tone, while the scatterings of Acoustically driven sounds give things a more Cosmic and sophisticated setting. Just over 20 years later – it still manages to sound original, high-tech and old-school at the same time. I think the Synth grooves may get tedious after a while, but I really enjoy the European dance touches and the surrealist, robotic vocals. It’s certainly more of a head-nodder, with a just-about-Pop style that is just pleasant – and free of nonsense.

Thank you for joining me – on the “Moon Safari” to Way Back When. Meet me down the road again tomorrow, as we look to the future instead, with an in-depth look at a recent single from an up-and-coming Australian Folk/Country singer-songwriter who I can see huge potential within. You may know her for her work as a part of the band Phantastic Ferniture, and she’s released two solo albums following this period of her career. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/