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.

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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.

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Today’s Track: Flume (feat. MAY-A) – ‘Say Nothing’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has come for me to contribute to what is hopefully shaping up to be a good weekend for you with Saturday’s track on the blog, given how it’s my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! An Australian pioneer of the Future Bass genre during the 2010’s, Flume is the DJ/Producer of Harley Edward Streten who has topped the ARIA Albums Chart a few times over and he has reached Double Platinum sales in his home turf. He also won Best Dance/Electronic Album at the Grammy Awards in 2017 for his second studio album ‘Skin’. Those who are a little less familiar with the name of Flume may have heard remixes he has created for the likes of Lorde, Arcade Fire and Disclosure in the past. He has also worked with a whole host of Australian and international artists like Anna Lunoe, Chet Faker, Slowthai, JPEG Mafia, SOPHIE, Vince Staples and others on extensive collaborations throughout the years. Following up his well-received ‘Hi, This Is Flume’ mixtape that he released in 2019, as well as his Toro Y Moi collaboration hit ‘The Difference’ from 2020, ‘Palaces’ is his third canonical studio album that is set to arrive on May 20th via Future Classic Records. It has been in the works since Streten relocated to a coastal town in the Northern Rivers area of New South Wales, where he says he “found inspiration from the flora and fauna surrounding him” there, and so he has been experimenting with field recordings of nature sounds and birdsong while producing his new full-length recording. The lead single ‘Say Nothing’ features vocals by the rising star MAY-A. Let’s give it a spin below.

The AIR-Award winning musician’s new album enlists guests like Damon Albarn, Caroline Polachek, Emma Louise, Laurel, Quiet Bison, Virgen Maria, Oklou and Kučka for collaborations this time around, and, speaking on the new Alt-Pop cut, Streten explains, “This song is about feelings of post-relationship clarity”, adding, “We wrote the song midway through 2020 while the pandemic was still pretty new. I was really excited about the initial idea, but it was only once I got back to Australia in early 2021 and linked up in the studio with MAY-A that the song really came to life”, in his press statement. Starting off with a blurring effect on the Synths that shortly expands with euphoric Bass and fractured Snares, MAY-A sets up the tone of the vocals with her lovesick croon of “As far as summer goes I’m not even close/To wearing you like clothes when nobody’s home” that feels a little nervous and unsettling, as the Drum and Bass sequences gains traction and sits at the rear view mirror when the pre-chorus comes in. The chorus itself has brooding and pulsating elements that doesn’t quite allow the Bass and the Drums to fully unleash just yet, with a lean structure held together by the polished Pop sound and the viscerality of the dark Synths. It materialises with MAY-A’s declarative croon of “Say nothing, If you don’t wanna say goodbye” that feels a little poignant, and it feels emotional, especially for what predominantly remains a Dance-Pop track. ‘Say Nothing’ shifts away from Straten’s Future Bass origins to acquire a bolder Drum ‘N’ Bass feel, especially in the concluding moments where it feels more aggressively percussive. Behind the decks, he plays with duality in the track by blending dissonant drums with slower chords and elegant vocals in the backdrop, a combination that shouldn’t naturally go together on paper, but it feels pretty cohesive enough due to the Pop feel that lies underneath the leaner, experimental structure. There’s a lot of intricate details in the melting pot of sounds, but it could also fit right in with pop heavyweight DJ’s like Calvin Harris or David Guetta as it feels Pop-oriented and very polished. For me, the ‘Pop Polish’ does feel a little by-the-numbers at times as the chorus doesn’t feel particularly psychedelic or ethereal, however, I feel the production flair would be appealing to many listeners of a more casual variety, although I personally felt it didn’t connect as well as the prior section. That nitpick aside, Straten shows that he’s an excellent producer again by mixing a wide variety of tones together in a way that works to create the overall texture and the songwriting feels more interesting than it may appear on the surface due to the fractured effects on the vocals and the twists on duality as a theme. Appealing to a mainstream audience while experimenting with the tropes of modern Pop, albeit to slightly mixed results on the latter in my opinion, there is laughably an awful lot you could say about the summer-ready ‘Say Nothing’.

If you want to hear ‘The Difference’ that Toro Y Moi made to Flume’s sound, click here:

Flume & Toro Y Moi – ‘The Difference’ (2020) – https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/06/06/todays-track-flume-feat-toro-y-moi-the-difference/

That brings us to the bottom of the page for another 24-hour period! Thank you for your continued support for the site, and please make sure that you join me again for ‘Scuzz Sundays’ tomorrow as we take a listen to something British from the 2000’s that was probably heavy enough to be played on the channel. It comes from an Alternative Rock band from Newcastle who were pretty beloved on the blog when they released their most recent LP ‘Nature Always Wins’ last winter. This time, we’re going to look at the retro incarnation of the band who are led by Paul Smith and their first studio album – ‘A Certain Trigger’ – was nominated for the Mercury Prize in 2005.

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New Album Release Fridays: Charli XCX (feat. Christine and The Queens & Caroline Polachek) – ‘New Shapes’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time for us to look at one of this weekend’s new album releases which is so highly anticipated that it cannot be ignored 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 has been an interesting career trajectory for the Cambridge-born singer and songwriter Charlotte Emma Aitchinson to say the least, who began posting her videos to MySpace in 2008 (Ask your parents!), where she was scouted by a promoter who invited Charli to perform at urban warehouse gigs. She later signed to Asylum Records in 2010, where she had some pretty traditional and fairly mainstream Pop hits like ‘Boom Clap’, ‘SuperLove’ and ‘Break The Rules’ while also writing well-known singles for Pop heavyweights like Selena Gomez, Iggy Azalea, Icona Pop, Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello. She later became a pioneer of the emerging ‘Hyper Pop’ and ‘Bedroom Pop’ genres while gaining a lot of new fans in the alternative music community with universally praised releases like her 2020 lockdown EP ‘How I’m Feeling Now’ which she produced collaboratively with her fans in a span of six weeks while in self-isolation, a record that played with unconventional Pop structures and experimental electronic production in previously uncharted ways, and it was shortlisted for the 2020 Mercury Prize alongside appearing on year-end lists by Paste, Uproxx, NPR, The Guardian and Consequence Of Sound. Today, she fully leaves the major label Pop music world with her fifth studio album ‘Crash’, which tackles a deal-with-the-devil idea visually. Lyrically, she says that it explores the power of the femme fatale with inspiration from dark spirits and curses which follows the spirit of David Cronenberg’s 1996 film of the same title. Musically, we’re getting a bold fusion of 80’s/90’s power-pop and 00’s synth-pop with a hint of futuristic Bedroom Pop stylings that Charli says was inspired by Janet Jackson. On the BBC Radio 2 playlisted pre-release single ‘New Shapes’, she enlists the help of French Art Pop trailblazer Christine And The Queens and continually rising American star Caroline Polachek. Let’s take it for a drive below.

Charli XCX will be taking her alternative assortment of retro-futurist Pop sounds on the road for a tour of Europe and North America throughout the summer months, and her new LP record features contributions by Rina Sawayama, Digital Farm Animals, Oneohtrix Point Never and several more creatives. ‘New Shapes’ follows a simple story of a stale relationship where both sides are being manipulative, with lyrics like “I don’t know why I got a tendency to run away/Don’t know why I’m always pushing for a sweet escape” that set the scene with bright Synths and 808 beats that will remind you of freestyle girl groups like The Cover Girls or Company B, before a more complex narrative unveils where the narrator is fighting the urge to desert the relationship while feeling exhausted by it, with a cycle of mistreatment manipulating the narrator to feel like a different person while still succumbing to the sexual desire which they share for one another. There are two sides to every coin on ‘New Shapes’ seemingly, where the upbeat keys and the energetic Synth arrangements make it quite easy to overlook the frustrations of the narrator and the complications of their relationship. A strong and consistently high tempo makes the rhythm feel punchy, but the lyrics replicate something a little more mournful in balance. Polachek and Christine are there to play the role of emulating some emotional support from a girl of group friends, who are attempting to cheer Charli XCX up with a scene that may replicate how a group of girls always seem to go to the bathroom together (I went clubbing in my university days, and so that’s a trait I’ve noticed). Their verses are met by a similar soundscape of mechanical drums and reverb-drenched Synths while adding some additional voices to the track for more variety. It doesn’t feel quite as experimental as some of Charli’s other efforts and feels like more of a traditional ‘radio record’ to promote the album, but the blueprints of her wildly successful pandemic EP are still here. I always thought there was something a little different in Charli XCX’s ‘SUCKER’ days of more mainstream Pop where she dealt with overtly sexual content in very expansive ways with a punk attitude, and tracks like ‘New Shapes’ continue to add more nuance to that format. Overall, I think that ‘New Shapes’ is one of the best singles to introduce the more bolder and updated version of Charli XCX to newcomers or previous fans due to it’s accessibility and danceability. It may not feel quite as bold as the tracks on her lockdown EP, but it begs the listener to dance along with it while conveying a sense of urgency and immediacy that clicks together nicely, and that’s coming from somebody who is a little snobbish about this style of Pop music at the best of times. Charli is an extraordinarily talented young lady, and so it’s good that she finally has a platform to show what she’s truly capable of making as a performer and a producer. ‘New Shapes’ may not be her most memorable offering, but there’s something for everyone in here and it conforms to a more accessible Pop sound while not ignoring the experimental EP, and so ‘Crash’ looks more like smooth sailing to me.

That brings us to the bottom of the page for another day! Thank you for taking a moment out of today to visit the site, and I’ll be back tomorrow to review another fresh new Pop-oriented single – this time coming from an Australian DJ/Producer who is recognized as a ‘Future Bass’ pioneer of the 2010’s with several Grammy Award nominations and ARIA Awards attention to his name. He reportedly chose his name after his favourite Bon Iver track – although his name is shared by a type of ravine.

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New Album Release Fridays: Orlando Weeks – ‘Big Skies, Silly Faces’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time for the long-awaited return of ‘New Album Release Fridays’ for the first time since the new year got off to a natural start as we start to celebrate the year’s strongest new releases as they arrive, not forgetting that it is tied in with my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! This week sees new album releases from the likes of OUTLIER label founder Bonobo (More on that tomorrow), Odd Future collective rapper Earl Sweatshirt, Liverpool indie dancefloor fillers The Wombats, a new album of refreshing covers by Cat Power and more. Our subject for this week, however, is ‘Hop Up’, the brand new album by Orlando Weeks that has been released via PIAS Recordings today, and it has already been gaining a positive reception from critics. You may know that Weeks was the frontman of The Maccabees, a soulful indie rock band that earned a cult following that seemed to grow steadily with each of their releases throughout the mid-2000’s and 2010’s. The Maccabees won the Ivor Novello Award for 2013’s ‘Pelican’ and their 2015 album ‘Marks To Prove It’ went straight to the top of the UK Album charts. He also wrote and published a book, ‘The Gritterman’, in 2017. It has only been two years since the release of ‘A Quickening’, his first full-length solo album release that tackled the emotions and anticipation that he had experienced during imminent parenthood as his first child was born. Weeks notes this weekend’s follow-up LP – ‘Hop Up’ aims to fill in the gaps of where we left off on the previous record as he writes about the anxieties and excitement of his new-found fatherhood. The album also features a hearty stew of good-sounding collaborators, as ‘Hop Up’ was produced by familiar blog favourite Bullion and it features artists like Willie J. Healey and Ben Reed too. Our first taster of the album, ‘Big Skies, Happy Faces’, also includes additional vocals from Katy J Pearson. Let’s put on a smile below.

Giving us more context into ‘Hop Up’, Weeks explains about the new LP by penning “It started with the idea of wanting to fill in some of the blanks that I felt I had left with ‘A Quickening’, but quite quickly it turned into something broader. The choice was always to take the more positive and uplifting sounding step. Perhaps it shouldn’t have, but as an approach it felt surprisingly novel to me”, in his press release. After his tour was halted in 2020, Weeks decided to go straight back into the studio and found himself in a reflective mood while co-producing Lo-Fi pop singles like ‘Big Skies, Happy Faces’ from the new album in question. Building on the themes that ran through his last LP effort while alleviating the tension that pervaded his last solo release, ‘Big Skies, Happy Faces’ allows us to see the brighter side of parenthood as he ponders lyrics like “No stopping the sky/High as it’s wide” that finds Weeks experiencing new ways to navigate his own way to the light despite the subject matter still feeling a bit cynical and self-loathing to Weeks. Lyrics like “My mind against my better thinking/Know the feeling but wonder why” stretches his voice to optimistic heights as his tale of being self-exultant when the inevitable tensions creep in. Feeling ostensibly late-80’s in the Synth Pop instrumentation and the shimmering keyboard sequences that blend with his vocals, Weeks layers up some elements of Dream-Pop that productively glorify his vocals while he lyrically captures the feelings that he wrote about in the specific time period and complex emotional state with a sense of soulful radiance and moral-driven positivity that still manage to feel ethereal while feeling breezier than Weeks’ previous output. Pearson’s backing vocals are subtle, but they feel warm and contrast the melancholy of Weeks’ slightly eerie pitch quite nicely. While it isn’t super melodic, it manages to feel quite cheerful in tone as the electronic textures feel neatly woven into the fabric of the moods. All in all, it is a positive assessment of burgeoning parenting that acknowledges the anxieties of the scenario while feeling upbeat enough to convey the strong sense of love that Weeks’ felt in the moment. It works better if you have the context of ‘A Quickening’ in your mind, based on my assumptions, but it feels like a natural step-up from the sound he founded on that record. A successful follow-up that denies the dominance of distress.

If you’re looking for high quality with the rule of comparison, then you need to look no further. Look back at my thoughts on ‘Safe In Sound’ from 2020’s ‘A Quickening’ here: https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/05/18/todays-track-orlando-weeks-safe-in-sound/

That brings us to the end of the page for another day! Thank you for sticking with me on the blog today, and I’ll be back tomorrow, as aforementioned, to test out a recent single release from the new LP also being released today by Brighton-born electronic trip hop producer Simon Green (Who you may know as Bonobo) who has worked with an exhaustive pack of guest vocalists including RHYE, Nick Murphy and Jamila Woods.

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Today’s Track: The Spirit Of The Beehive – ‘I Suck The Devil’s C***k’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and you’re tuned into the final part of my underrated underground series leading up to New Year’s Day as I deliver yet another daily track on the blog, because it has always been my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! ‘I Suck The Devil’s ****’ is a title as irreverent as they come, and one that I write about hesitantly due to the demonic implications of the name, however, this is the most suitable representation of ‘ENTERTAINMENT, DEATH’ – the latest album from the Pensylvania-based Prog Rock band The Spirit Of The Beehive – that we’re going to get. An insanely beautiful yet intensely difficult project to wrap your head around, the record reflects late-night paranoia music that is enigmatic and cryptic. It is also intimate without giving any significant details away, and that’s made it a favourite among the year-end lists of high-brow critics this year. Taking their name from a Spanish cinematic masterpiece released in 1973 with the same title, the band are signed up to Saddle Creek Records and boast Zack Schwartz among their lineup who honed his Vaporwave craft as a former member of Glocca Morra. A reclusive release that has gained universal acclaim this year – and one of my back-and-forth favourite listens of 2021 – ‘ENTERTAINMENT, DEATH’ is the band’s first album without the former drummer Pat Conaboy and rhythm guitarist Kyle Laganella who left the band in 2020. The second single – ‘I Suck The Devil’s ****’ – is a four-part song that essentially feels like four different singles sewn together through post-production trickery. The workout-in-hell themed music video was also helmed by a trio of different directors (Part 1 is by Ada Babar, Part 3 is by Documavision and Parts 2 and 4 by Noah Burke) that each unfold in four chapters along with the music recording. You will just have to see how it all fits together below.

In what initially feels like a labyrinth of a near 7-minute recording, the band notes, “It’s our take on ‘A day in the life’. A man, overworked and undervalued discovers a portal to another time and a place where he hears a familiar song on the radio. In the context of the record, this track specifically encapsulates the dread of required performance, ultimately leading to a freeing death”, in a joint press statement. As the band channel a multitude of influences including Post-Hardcore and Vaporwave among many others, the band deliver a lengthy ego death sentence that blurs the lines between homespun Lo-Fi Rock to mangled Dream-Pop to aggressive Post-Rock to dis-associative Ambient Pop – all while wrapped in a noise collage Shoegaze thread – to create a very psychedelic journey that takes listeners from upside-down textures to inside-out downbeat sounds. Through these ever-winding spirals of self-reflection, the group pull us from one realm of bizzare fantasy to another, while creating enough compelling rhythms and bold, if fairly obscured, textures that make up the highly experimental piece of twisted Psych-Rock and melodic bursts of Post-Rock that echo glimmering fragments of Tame Impala and Black Country, New Road among other diverse comparison points. There aren’t any particularly memorable lyrics, but there are multiple planes of eclectic instrumentation that underscore the more emotive qualities of lyrics like “Scared of needles, but not of everything” and “Another middle class dumb American, falling asleep” to a notably playful effect, and so the complete package is more enticing, lyrically, than the wonky title of the track may lead you to believe. The music, however, sounds just as mischievous – mixing up some ethereal guitar rock with peculiar tangents that keep you guessing what may come next as the trio continue to create unpredictable shifts in tone. At each point in this release, I would forgive you for thinking you were listening to a different track with each few beats skipped, but it is a testament to the band’s abilities to create something so captivating through playing with cohesion, as the track cycles through its chaotic vignettes to build to an acknowledgment of an insignificant fate of the lead character, if you will. If you have been on the fence about Spirit Of The Beehive at any point, this kind of rare recording will certainly help any listeners to decide to be on the right one.

That brings us to the end of a very interesting post. It was nice to deviate from my typical formula a little with this segmented single, and I thank you for joining me by reading the results. Tomorrow, we’ll be looking back at a mid-00’s winter Folk classic in the spirit of the New Year’s Eve and Christmas season. The single comes from a well-known and critically acclaimed Seattle-formed Alternative Folk band who took a hiatus between 2013 and 2016 when the frontman pursued an undergraduate degree.

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Today’s Track: Confidence Man – ‘Holiday’

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time for me to ensure that yet another daily track on the blog bursts your eardrums in spirit, because it’s always been my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! A quirky Alternative Dance group, led by the wacky characters of Sugar Bones and Janet Planet, the Brisbane native indie pop band Confidence Man have continued to find success throughout their musical journey since their debut album, ‘Confident Music For Confident People’ brought their dorky concoction of costumed rhythms and lightly acidic beats to the international club circuit in 2018. The band have found themselves performing at many festivals like Splendour In The Grass Festival and Falls Festival, while also remixing the likes of DMA’s, Working Men’s Club and Erasure over the years. They have also received wins and nominations at the AIR Awards, J Awards, National Live Music Awards and Queensland Music Awards over the years since they became active in 2016. Although singles like ‘Does It Make You Feel Good?’ and ‘First Class B**ch’ have filled the gap a little, Confidence Man have just announced their first album in four years. Their second studio album, ‘Tilt’, will be released on April 1st, 2022 via the I OH YOU label. According to a press release, the new album is “fierce, flirty and full of anthems” and listeners “might need to sit down before you hit play”. Back in September, Confidence Man also unveiled an extensive run of rescheduled and new tour dates across the UK and Ireland that will hopefully start in May of next year. The list includes dates in Brighton, Cambridge, Norwich, Nottingham, Edinburgh, Sheffield and more. Before then, let’s book a ‘Holiday’ below.

Talking about the inspiration behind ‘Holiday’ – the Aussie dance outfit’s latest euphoric anthem – Janet Planet stated, “No one tells Confidence Man what to do. Who said a holiday can’t last forever?”, explaining, “Spend big and live free, that’s our motto. And it can be yours too. A vacation is just sunburn at premium prices but a holiday is a state of mind”, in her joint press notes with Sugar Bones. Elaborating on the ideas of holiday and relaxation as a mindset instead of a physical destination, Planet and Bones join their fellow bandmates in conjuring slightly acidic Synth beats and some high tempo Drum rhythms to the tune of lyrics like “Best weed back on the block, I’ll take it” and “When I was a child, I was so naked” that creates the distinctly nerdy and comedic attitude that Confidence Man are known for evoking. The instrumentation continues to add some variety to the proceedings, with a lengthy sequence of backing harmonies in the opening sequence and some 80’s film soundtrack-esque Synth stabs to create silky ambient washings in the closing sequence, continuing to give off a light-hearted and care-free Summer formula. The vocal hooks are super sized, with the likes of “I live it up on the go/I’m getting high, I’m never low” and “Kicking off and I lose control/I’m born to fly/I want it all” being recited quickly, as to match the frivolous energy of the Acid Disco rhythms and neatly aligned basslines. While there’s no subtlety to the vocals, the brief String sections and the stinging Synth stabs are complemented by the floor-filling feel of the sound. A decent reminder that Confidence Man are all about having fun, ‘Holiday’ is a familiar summer anthem to see their own country of Australia throughout the summer months. Due to this ‘summer release’ feel, however, it feels a little odd when you are listening from the rest of the world as the rain gets frequent and the bitterness of the cold keeps sharpening. This also feels a bit more straight-faced than usual from the group than usual, although they’re still donning some Synths that wouldn’t sound out of place on the ‘Top Gun’ soundtrack. Despite not being in season for me, this is still a solid return from Confidence Man. Camp, unique and irreverant, ‘Holiday’ is everything you might want (and expect) from the forward-thinking Australian project.

If you liked the sound of ‘Holiday’, you may like the various other tracks by Confidence Man that have appeared on the blog over the years at various points. If you want something still recent, you can check out my review of ‘First Class B**ch’ here: https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/10/20/todays-track-confidence-man-first-class-bh/. If that doesn’t mate you feel right, you can see if this ‘Does It Make You Feel Good’ here: https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/02/26/todays-track-confidence-man-does-it-make-you-feel-good/. Or, for something more in tune with the festive season, you can view their seasonal single ‘Santa’s Comin’ Down The Chimney’ here: https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2019/12/04/todays-track-confidence-man-santas-comin-down-the-chimney/

That’s all for now! I hope that you enjoyed the trip, and thank you for continuing to support my content like this. I’ll be back tomorrow for ‘New Album Release Fridays’, as we divert our attention to an indie rock band from Croydon in South London who have been signed to the Boston-based label Counter Intuitive Records. They have toured in the UK with NOAHFINNCE and they went on a debut headline tour this year.

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Way Back Wednesdays: The Free Design – “Kites Are Fun”

Good Morning to you! You are reading the words of Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time for us to enjoy an in-depth revisit of a pre-00’s sound of the past that has become very influential for the present for ‘Way Back Wednesdays’, which is in-keeping with my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of new music every day! Having caught an old episode of Cherry Red Radio on a whim two or three weeks ago, I quickly learned about The Free Design, an early 60’s to mid 70’s family pop group who were formed in Delevan, New York and went on to become huge influences for the likes of The Beach Boys, Beck, Stereolab and Belle & Sebastian, despite receiving relatively little attention during their earlier stages of their career. Comprised of three of four Dedrick siblings, this “harmony group” – of many from the time – speedily recorded a two song demo and subsequently found a home with the independent easy listening record label Project 3, a platform that allowed more creative freedom for them than most competitors. The band dabbled in Neo-Psychedelia, Jangle-Pop, Sunshine Pop and soft Funk, but failed to land a hit because their label suffered from their low resources to promote their artists very aggressively. Almost four decades later, however, Light In The Attic Records had re-issued most of the quintet’s back catalog of albums and singles, revealing a band that were unfairly slept on to a new generation of new-found fans. 1967’s ‘Kites Are Fun’ was cited as a huge influence for Japanese percussionist Cornelius, and the title track was the only real single release from it, having reached #33 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary Charts in the US, thus becoming their only single to chart. Unveil the mysteries of ‘Kites Are Fun’ below.

Indie acts such as The High Llamas and Pizzicato Five have all cited The Free Design’s music as influences for their own for their happy-go-lucky brand of late-60’s Baroque Pop and pastoral Soft-Folk, and the critics have always seemed to be in agreement with this level of praise, and the title cut of 1967’s ‘Kites Are Fun’ earned single status on Billboard’s ‘Bubbling Under The Top 100’ and ‘Top 40 Easy Listening’ surveys in the US. The sounds on the title track are so 60’s that you might want a pair of sunglasses and a convertible Cadillac to complement your easy listening experience. It is a lovely mix of sophisticated Pop music and chilled Folk melodies, however, with the hushed croon delivering lyrics like “We’d like to be a zillion miles away from everyone/’Cause Mum and Dad and Uncle Bill don’t realize Kites Are Fun” as they celebrate child-like innocence with the gentle thump of a Tambourine and a whimsical Horn section carrying us to a peaceful chorus. The lyrical themes follow the typical embrace of peace and love that strangely didn’t resonate with the ‘Hipster’ crowd of the time due to its lack of commercial success, but the band deliver plenty of high notes when the intimate lyrics such as “See my kite, it’s green and white” that use gentle rhyming schemes to emphasize the nostalgic atmosphere of the cheerful sounds. It’s not massively upbeat however, and what strikes me most about their choice of instrumentation is how they emphasize sophisticated chords that are more often associated with Chamber Folk or Classical Jazz music to blur the lines between psychedelic pop, folk music and lounge Jazz in a way that gives them an individual edge over their peer groups of the time. This renders ‘Kites Are Fun’ as a lovely listen throughout, where a subtle sense of melancholy and a strong pushing of Sunshine Pop boundaries make for a mix of late-60’s and early 70’s music that was not quite done by another band in the same way since their time. Lyrics like “But we like each other more than anything” have a somewhat comic effect, while the orchestral instrumentation, especially the Flute sounds that all get peppered throughout the choral melodies, slot the track into a relaxed Easy Listening vibe that feels emotive enough, but expands the vocabulary of the writing. Just like Kites – this is a lot of fun!

That brings us to the end of the page for another day! Thank you for ringing in the new month with me, and it is my birthday tomorrow, but I look forward to finding some time to talk about some new music regardless. Tomorrow’s pick comes from an American Bedroom Pop singer-songwriter who began making music at the age of 13 and he grew up in Moraga, California situated in the San Francisco Bay area. He’s become prolific in a short span of time, and IQ says that his music is “genre-bending”.

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Way Back Wednesdays: Book Of Love – “Book Of Love”

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and this is ‘Way Back Wednesdays’ – the part of the week where we take a good, hard look at the sounds of the past that have become influential to the present, and that fits in with my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Book Of Love were a Synthpop band from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania who were releasing their own innocent brand of New Wave and sultry Dream-Pop during the height of those genres’ popularity in the 1980’s, and they were later based in New York. Comprised of lead vocalist Susan Ottaviano, keyboardist Ted Ottaviano (bizarrely – of no biological relation to Susan), Synths programmer and other keyboardist Lauren Johnson, and percussionist Jade Lee. The quartet gained exposure in the 80’s as the support act for Depeche Mode on tour in 1985 and 1986, and the band have been praised by the Houston Press as “forward thinking” for lyrics dealing with gender politics and sexual orientation. Book Of Love released four reasonable successful albums before the band decided to move on with their solo projects in 1994, but they scored a massive club hit with ‘Boy Pop’ in 1993, a track that reached the top five of the US Billboard Hot Dance Club Play Chart. Their self-titled debut album, released in 1986, was a huge hit with the critics. Four singles were released from the LP, including the title track named after the band, and each of them gained a place on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play and the Hot Dance Singles Sales charts in the US. Let’s give their signature title track a spin below.

The band seemingly didn’t want to become a parody of themselves, and I can understand their decision of gradually getting out of the game when the fangs of the 1990’s bit deep into the neck of sweetness through synthesizers. There was simply limited demand for dreamers in a musical landscape that was dominated by Hip-Hop, Grunge and Dance music, and their final album – 1993’s ‘Lovebubble’ – sold poorly and had little promotion to reflect this. However, most of the band’s members found new success with side projects like The Myrmidons. Book Of Love’s images were notably murky and low-lit, and this could potentially be down to cost-cutting production or simply a reality of printing graphics on their type of cardboard, but it still nicely reflects the slightly Gothic aesthetics that can be seen with an act like Book Of Love, a band who aimed to harness the energy of all the summers expired and the past of children playing freely in the playground for the nostalgic sound of singles like their self-titled signature cut. Built on some simple and strong melodies, ‘Book Of Love’ is a Hypnagogic Pop anthem that becomes more catchy with subsequent listens. Twinkling Keyboard melodies get the child-like atmosohere across, while lyrics like “Pages from my book of love” and “If you should ever happen to leave/I’ll add your book to my lovelorn library” feel poetic and gentle, delivered with a cheerful vocal pitch over the top of forlorn Drum jolts and soulful Synth sequences. The sprawling Horn section and the dreamy use of a Glockenspiel bring an aura of Shoegaze to the table in the later stages, adding some beautiful sounds to the track as it naturally draws to a close. The track’s verses remind me of The National, where strangely ebullient vocals match the slowed quality of the joyous instrumentation. Overall, ‘Book Of Love’ is rather of-its-time, but that time seems to have been an irrepressible one for the band. The band play with simplicity to perfection, and the honesty of their throwback feel to their songs is what puts them over effectively, not affectedly. A bookmark for an essence that could no longer quite be recaptured fully.

That’s all I’ve got lined up for you today, and thank you for reaching the end of the page with me! As I have already mentioned before, I will be taking a few days away from the blog to celebrate my sister’s wedding. Also, when it really is your day-to-day pleasure to write about a different piece of music every day, it can sometimes feel like a lot of work, so I’m looking forward to resting and refueling. I will see you on Sunday!

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