Today’s Track: Matt Berninger – “One More Second”

I could write my own tune about herbs, but I wouldn’t find the Thyme. New post is up!

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and I’m here to write up about your daily track on the blog, seeing as it is always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Known for his low-pitched, growling, somewhat “Classic” Baritone voice, The National’s frontman Matt Berninger is quickly on his way to becoming an icon of Indie Rock music, if not already. When seeing him live, he truly is a great sight to behold – and he’s been dabbling into solo work lately. “One More Second” is the latest single from “Serpentine Prison”, which marks his debut full-length solo album release. The record was originally announced nearly a year ago, and it finally dropped on October 16th following a few Covid-related delays. It’s had a few detractors, but it’s gained mostly positive reviews from critics and fans alike, landing a solid 77/100 on review aggregate site, Metacritic. It was produced by Berninger alongside Booker T. Jones (the famed producer and former frontman of Booker T & The MG’s), for Book Records, an imprint label of Concord Records which Berninger and Jones have formed. Let’s give a moment to “One More Second” below.

“Serpentine Prison” was recorded at Earthstar Creation Center in Venice, California – and Berninger has dedicated the new album to his grandmother Elaine and his old college professor Gordon Salchow. “One More Second” is a ballad that doesn’t stray too far from his established sound motifs, as part of The National, with lyrics that resemble poetry and light acoustic riffs that build to a bittersweet hook, but the focus is much more personal this time around. Berninger asks: “The last time we were together/Lately it feels like forever” and “Why can’t you just tell me what you’re doing here?/Don’t be cruel, if you’re leaving me, just do it right here”, over a lifting set of piano notes and intimate Organ work that disappears awkwardly in the intermittent spades. The chorus is built to slowly, and it sees Berninger deliver: “Smokes in our eyes or in the distance/Either way, we’re gonna miss it/When it’s gone” as a slightly off-kilter Organ line leads swiftly to an unmelodic stab of Toy-ish keyboard riffs that gradually begin to rebel against the acoustic Folk instrumentation. The lyrics deal with the breaking of a long relationship with another, even possibly hinting towards some themes of corrupted marriage and divorce, and a sense of jangly, disorganized structure seems to promote this value. I think the biggest strength of the track is Berninger and his vocal performance. He sounds like he is genuinely in a lot of pain – in a good way. This makes up for a hook that aches with ideas of heartbreak and disconnection, and it makes the bleak and darkly anecdotal vocals seem worth the downtempo listening. Although it’s not necessarily a bad thing – I feel the track falters a little in sounding a bit too much like The National rather than doing something that feels more subversive or distinct, but you could argue that Berninger’s core formula doesn’t necessarily need to change much to sound effective. For this reason, it’s solid.

Thank you very much for reading my new post! Tomorrow, we’re back at it again. I’m going to take an in-depth look at the new duo project from Richie Thomas (a.k.a. Dif Juz) and Simon Raymonde, who is the former bassist of Cocteau Twins and the founder of the respected UK indie label Bella Union. 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/

Today’s Track: Fleet Foxes – “Can I Believe You?”

A friend asked me if I believed in killer clowns. I’ve no doubt about IT! New post time!

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and I am here to write up about your daily track on the blog, because it’s routinely my day-to-day pleasure to write up online about a different piece of music every day! Fleet Foxes are an American (To tell the truth, I was originally convinced they are British, I swear they were up for lots of BRIT Awards in ’07 or ’08) Alternative Folk band who I’m not very familiar with to be honest with you, but I do know that they have always been very critically-acclaimed and have their signature sound of Woodwinds harmonies and refined lyricism. I have been hearing their latest single “Can I Believe You?” on BBC Radio 6Music in recent weeks, and it’s been steadily growing on me quite a lot, and the new album from the band has turned out to be very good, indeed. The single is taken from “Shore”, which is the fourth studio LP effort from the band. The album was released on September 22nd, which is the day after the group had even announced it. It was also released to coincide with the exact date of the Autumnal Equinox, and it is also the group’s first release on Anti- Records. Most of the new album was actually produced by Robin Pecknold, the front-man of the 5-piece band, during his time sitting at home over the COVID-19 pandemic, and Pecknold has worked with producer and mixing engineer Beatriz Artola to get the work done. Let’s have a gander to “Can I Believe You?” below.

“Shore” has been recognized by the critics and the press to have a “brighter” sound than a lot of the band’s previous output, and Pecknold has described the record as “A celebration of life in the face of death” in the press release. Pecknold joked that “Can I Believe You?” is “all backwards, but that was what made it so fun to make” in reference to the verse acting as the chorus, the chorus feeling like a bridge, and the bridge is “a different song”, as he’s explained in a recent interview. The track feels mellow and soft on the ears, as Pecknold sings: “Can I, Ever know your mind?/Am I handing you mine?, Do we both confide?” over the top of an isolated acoustic guitar rhythm and a rhapsodizing piano melody. The main chorus of “It never got less strange, showing anyone just a bare face/If I don’t, well, nothing will change/Staying under my weather all day” is delivered over a rolling set of percussion, and preceded by a quick burst of heavier guitar chords. It all builds up to a very refined, soothing bridge as Pecknold drowns his voice in a swelling falsetto, singing: “When I’m one way with them, one with you/What half is it of me rearranged” as a warm, ethereal folk harmony of choral voices add spice to the focused, harmonic vocal melodies. The off-kilter time signature is still there, however, and it adds nice layers of instrumental experimentation on top of an otherwise casual, easily accessible folk sound. Overall, I just feel it’s been layered very precisely, and quite meticulously to a degree, and the mixture of the darting percussion and the soulful vocal performance is a highlight. It also just sounds perfectly suited for the autumn and the weather obviously becoming darker and cooler, rather than being the upbeat summer-leaning hit that a lot of Pop artists are still trying hard to find. Overall, I find it to be an excellent recommendation.

Thank you very much for reading my new post! As always, I’ll be back at it again tomorrow. Join me, where we’ll be taking an in-depth look at the new, debut solo album from the front-man of The National, which has just been released on Book Records, a new imprint of Concord Records formed by the man himself and his producer, from the singer-songwriter who is known for his low-pitched, classic style Baritone voice. 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/

Today’s Track: The Mountain Goats – “Get Famous”

I’m just here to win your heart and soul – That is my goal! It’s time for your daily post!

Good Afternoon to you, I am Jacob Braybrooke and I’m here to write about your daily track on the blog, as always, because it is routinely my day-to-day pleasure to write about a different piece of music every day! The dawn of Friday means that it’s time for a handful of new album record releases to drop, and one of the weekend’s selections that I am personally most looking forward to hearing is “Getting Into Knives”, the nineteenth (!) studio album by cult favourite American Indie Folk band The Mountain Goats. Back in the day, John Darnielle and Co. used to produce their own music on low-fidelity Cassette Tape recordings to be released on both Cassette or 7″ Vinyl formats, and they’ve since become one of the most influential pioneers of production and songwriting of their genre. “Getting Into Knives” follows last year’s “In League With Dragons”, 2017’s metal-themed “Goths” and 2015’s wrestling-themed “Beat The Champ”, and it was recorded at the Sam Phillips Recording Studio in Nashville with frequent collaborator, Matt Ross-Spang, in the very same room that The Cramps recorded their debut album in. The latest single, “Get Famous” features work from organist Charles Hodges, and it comes with a bobble-head themed music video marking their first official music video in five years. Darnielle had this to say about the track in a press release: “If I told you all how much fun we had making this one you wouldn’t even believe me, but we hope it comes through”. Let’s see the results below.

“Get Famous” is a Horn-Inflicted acoustic track which makes fun of modern celebrity culture, and Darnielle said this about the recording of the new LP in the album’s notes: “We would work until midnight and then return to the house where all four of us were staying, directly across the street from the studio, and hang out for hours on the patio”, showing the band’s dedication to their love for writing music and producing their material independently. “Get Famous” also feels like a satire towards mainstream industry practices, and the mentality that major record labels have of trying hard to make each of their artists get very popular, at a rapid pace, before possibly allowing them to lose a stream of relevance later on. Such ironic lyrical motifs are an old-school tactic used by the Indie Folk band, and it’s really nice to see them returning to a classic trademark of their sound once again. Darnielle’s lyrics feel bitter, if slightly relaxed, as he sings: “You were born for these flashing lights/You were born for these endless nights” with an upbeat, poetic pace as the Organ sounds and the Horn sections layer a hazy sense of Americana. There is noticeably a classical Jazz element to the overall sound, with a bold and sweeping Brass instrumental whistles through the chorus, a part where Darnielle slightly growls as he declares: “Go on and get famous/I want you to be famous” in the chorus, before a more rhythmic chorus where he sings: “Shine like a cursed star/Show everybody exactly who you are” over a fairly soulful Saxophone section that adds upon the poisoned chalice that is fame and the powerful Pop machine. Although these themes are widely typical of The Mountain Goats, there’s enough variety with a reference to late-Chicago musician Wesley Willis, and the sampled effect of a crowd applauding over a referential line from Darnielle, to keep things from feeling too formulaic or predictable, and the Jazz sensibilities are delivered at a pace which feels brisk and crisp enough to feel upbeat and witty. Overall, the sound is quite a familiar one, but it’s also one that feels delightfully old-school and classic of the band’s trademark sound in it’s approach. It’s not likely to really change the world or anything, but it feels warm and I couldn’t ask for much more as a loyal fan of their music. As the old saying goes, it’s simply as solid as a rock.

The Mountain Goats also released a surprisingly wrestling-themed album, “Beat The Champ”, back in 2015. It’s well worth a listen and you can find my thoughts on the monumental single “The Legend Of Chavo Guerrero” here: https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/04/05/wwe-wrestlemania-36-weekend-special-the-mountain-goats-the-legend-of-chavo-guerrero/

Thank you very much for reading my new post! As always, I’ll be back at it again tomorrow, with an in-depth look at the latest single to be released by another American indie rock band who I’ve also been a loyal follower of, for a number of years. The new track is made in collaboration with the new film from the film director Sofia Coppola, of which the band’s front-man is actually married to! 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/

Today’s Track: The Flaming Lips – “Will You Return/Will You Come Down?”

Reigniting that influential fire, or sadly dwindling into flames? It’s time for a new post!

Good Morning to you! I am Jacob Braybrooke and, just like always, I’m here to write up about your daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write about a different piece of music every day! Music today comes from an Alternative Rock group who performed a gig earlier in Oklahoma City this week, which was fully socially-distanced, by the way of the band encasing themselves in literally… a “Bubble”. Wayne Coyne and Co. have been around for a handful of decades now, but I’ve actually never got around to listening to any of their albums in full, personally. Criminal for a Music Journalism student? Perhaps. However, it turns out that The Flaming Lips have been very busy over the last few weeks, with the release of their sixteenth (!) studio album record “American Head”, which was released via Bella Union in the UK and Warner Bros. Records in the US. It has left a mark with it’s great score of 81/100 on review aggregate site Metacritic, and it has been generally being praised by critics as their strongest album release in a while. In their lifetime so far, the seven-piece music/art collective have been placed on Q Magazine’s list of the “50 Bands To See Before You Die” in 2002, along with winning three Grammy Awards, they also won NME’s award for Best Album Of The Year for “The Soft Bulletin” in 1999, and they also received a BRIT Award nomination for “Best International Act” in 2007. Let’s have a listen to the group’s latest single, down below!

The new album “American Head”, marks a key shift in identity for the band, who had decided to revert back to their roots in Americana and Desert Rock to explore their geographical roots on the record, and it marks the first time in which the highly established group have really thought of themselves an “American” band, as opposed to one that just comes from “Earth”, according to Wayne Coyne’s press release for the new album. “Will You Return/When You Come Down” doesn’t really include any harsh experimentation or an abrasive style of production, but it’s more reminiscent of a simple idea and, sometimes, that is all you really need. The vocals are warm and comforting, although the lyrics allude to a meteorite crashing down on Earth (“Shooting Star/Crashing in your car/What went wrong/Now all your friends are gone”) and a princess waking up from a long slumber (“Flower gun/Now you’re on the run”) while the chorus feels emotionally-driven and powerfully fragile, as Coyne questions the track’s titular line repeatedly over the top of a gentle swell of Operatic, mournful Cello strings and harmonious Xylophone notes. Coyne’s vocal performance is undoubtedly bittersweet, and the elements of Country-Rock are peppered with subtle, twinkling keyboard riffs which add to the Neil Young-esque Piano instrumentation and the lightly psychedelic guitar tones, accompanied by a heavier delivery of reverb for the chorus. At it’s best, the track seems to evoke the 60’s lo-fi acoustic sound of The Beatles, accompanied by the gauzy, starry-eyed narrative inflictions of David Bowie, and the light dream visuals call back to the 80’s Shoegaze scope of My Bloody Valentine. Overall, I love the track! It sounds alternative enough to feel exciting, but it’s just nice and simple. One of the top essential tunes right now!

Back in early July, we took a look at “My Religion Is You” from the band. You can peruse the link to the post here: https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/07/04/todays-track-the-flaming-lips-my-religion-is-you/

Thank you very much for reading my new post! Don’t forget to check back with me again tomorrow, because it will be time for our brand new weekly installment in our year-spanning Scuzz Sundays feature! The track comes from a small American band who you just might have heard of before… led by a man who was formerly the drummer of Nirvana! 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/

Today’s Track: Nick Mulvey – “Begin Again”

With study in Ethnomusicology, you’d expect him to know all his stuff. New post time!

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke and, like typically, I’m writing up about your daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to get typing up about a different piece of music every day! I’ve always seen Nick Mulvey, an indie folk singer-songwriter and producer born in Cambridge, as somewhat of a little anomaly for Britain’s alternative music scene. After re-locating to Havana in Cuba to study music and art, he first made his mark upon his return to England as a founding member of a London-based Instrumental Percussion band, Portico Quartet, of which he used to play the Hang, which for those who don’t know, is a Pendulum-like Metal Plate instrument which is often considered to be a Steel-Pan ‘Drum’ part. His debut studio album, “First Mind”, which was released in 2014, received a nomination for the Mecury Prize award of that same year. Mulvey also studied Ethnomusicology at the University Of London’s School Of Oriental and African Studies, and so it becomes very clear that he has a fascination with the psychological and philosophical effects of World-based music, which is a rare occasion for an artist of a British, Northern Soul-driven background. The “Begin Again” EP is his latest music release, and this new 4-track project was released on July 10th via Fiction Records. Although his solo output has taken him in more of a Folk-led direction, he’s stated: “I’m always drawn to the same principles in music. Beneath each genre, at a certain level, they hold the same principles”. Let’s have a listen to the titular single of the new EP, “Begin Again”, below.

“Begin Again” is his first new release since 2019’s “In The Anthropocene”, a record that made history as the first track to be pressed on vinyl made from entirely recycled Plastic materials that were washed up on the UK’s shores. Mulvey says of the tracks, via a press release, “I see chaos, but I also see the opportunity for a new world, and a more beautiful one. We are living through an incredible shift. The old ways are dying, right before our very eyes. In a way, my songs are songs of the new ways coming through”, and a theme of nature and Earth is rather evident on the simplicity of the acoustic instrumentation and the emphasis on vocals which he portrays in the title track of his new EP, “Begin Again”. In the world we’re living in, where such a large amount of the music that we access is produced electronically, it can make for an engaging deviation from the tried-and-true formula of the now. Mulvey starts off: “Mary was my mother’s mother and my sister too/There’s a rain in the river, there’s a river running through” as he begins the story of Mulvey wanting to learn about his grandmother, who sadly died before he was born. The instrumentation here has a light groove, with shaking guitar strums and simmering percussion beats, with a gentle Hang melody thrown in for good measure, and to call back to his past. The lyrics also play on the topics of acceptance: “Can we begin again? It’s me again, I know you are so different to me/But, I love you, just the same” over the top of a plucky guitar melody that feels upbeat and easy on the ear. The rest of the vocals play on the Coastal and Nature themes of Mulvey’s previous releases, as he recites: “Sister by the side of the sea/Take the War out of me”, with a poetic twang to it. The vocals skew towards a bit of a Spoken Word delivery at points, with a quality that sounds emotive and well-educated at certain points. This makes the track feel rather sweet and down-to-earth. It reminds me of Ed Sheeran, but without most of the over-commercialism that has really downplayed his newer releases. Personally, I can’t really hear the World elements of his past work too clearly, but there are some blueprints of that education here, with the rhythmic guitar patterns and the lyrical devices that play on nature and environment feeling subtle, but well-paced. I would quite like to hear Mulvey get that big ol’ Hang instrument for a few more experimental tinkerings in the future, but there’s strength in the acoustic instrumentation and the emotive, confident lyrics in the track. This is a good way to bring the month to a close.

Thank you very much for reading my new post! Duty shall call for me again tomorrow, and we’re going to hit our stride in the new month by kicking off with the excellent new single from a much more established act, who create a wide variety of Electronic Dance and Ambient Chill-Out music, producing “At The River” which appears on vol. 1 of The Classic Chillout Album series. The group have released eight full-length studio albums, four of which have charted within the Top 50 of the UK Albums Chart. The duo achieved chart success, mostly in the 90’s, for the tracks “I See You Baby” and “Superstylin”, which still receive a decent level of radio airplay today! 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/

Mercury Prize 2020 Special: Michael Kiwanuka -“Hero”

Winner, Winner – Michael needs to eat his chicken dinner! It’s time for a special post…

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and I’m writing up about your daily track on the blog because, as per usual, it’s my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Another year has quickly rolled by ever since North London MC Dave won last year’s Mercury Prize with his controversial album “Psychodrama”, and that means it’s time for the judging panel (which actually includes one of my heroes, Supergrass member, Gaz Coombes) to crown a new winner for this year’s edition of the prestigious award, of which includes previous winners such as PJ Harvey (the only two-time winner ever to date), Skepta, Pulp, Elbow, Arctic Monkeys, and rather more forgettably, Klaxons. I breathed a sigh of relief as soon as I found out that the results had been announced, to find out that my predicted pick of Dua Lipa’s “Future Nostalgia” had not won. (I thought it would, since I guessed the media would want to ram her down our throats just that little bit more). It was actually Michael Kiwanuka who walked away with the award, for his third full-length LP effort “Kiwanuka”, which was released in November 2019, which is still within the annual eligibility period. To earn the award, Kiwanuka beat out the likes of Kano, Moses Boyd, Porridge Radio, Sports Team, Lanterns On The Lake, and Stormzy. I’m not very familiar with Kiwanuka’s work if I’m being truly transparent with you, but I know that he is very critically-acclaimed and he is very popular in the US, and I know this thanks to one certain presenter on KEXP who had played him three times in a row as a competition when I was listening into their show one afternoon. Kiwanuka won BBC’s Sound Of 2012 poll, along with receiving nominations for BRIT Awards, MTV Europe Awards and BBC Music Awards, and so I have definitely heard his name quite a lot! Anyhow, let’s hear what the fuss is about with the album’s single, “Hero”, below.

Jimi Hendrix would be the obvious comparison to make here. That’s a good thing, and I feel that “Hero” is also drenched in a post-60’s psychedelia that feels layered and embedded textually within the decadent guitar riffs. He is clearly taking a lot of influence from 70’s Soul for the track as well, and this adds more sumptuous detail to complement his defiant vocals, which have a contemporary, hard-hitting impact as he compares the murder of 1960’s activist Fred Hampton with the newsworthy shootings going on in the US as he sings: “It’s on the news again, I guess they killed another” in the opening verse. The first half of the track consists of simplistic, gentle acoustic guitar strums as he discusses racial issues across the pond. The instrumentation is diversified for the second verse, which marks a dramatic key change for the track, as Kiwanuka begins to hit his stride into a 70’s Psych-Rock groove, as he repeats: “Am I a hero now? To die a hero, is all that we know now” above a scratched vocal effect and also a reasonably distorted synth line that lingers in the background. The vocals never really develop into a further rhythm that takes the lyrical context beyond it’s initial meaning, but the progression of the chords and his expression of dissent add different moods and textures that flicker between guitar-driven pacing and more neo-psychedelic sounds at a swift fluidity. For me, this keeps the rather repetitive hook from getting too stale, with rousing guitar melodies that change between a 60’s Blues feel and a soulful 70’s aesthetic with a moment’s notice. Overall, I like it. For me, I probably wouldn’t rush out to the Piccadilly Records and just buy it, but I’m still looking forward to hearing more of it through streaming the record online. Personally, I feel as though more thematic progression of the lyrics may have kicked it up to another level, but it still feels intriguing and cool. I do think he is a decent pick to win the Mercury Prize though because it feels very expressive and nicely culturally diverse, while not seeming overly P.C. in the sense of it feeling “forced” or “preachy”, and the news-related lyricism mostly make it sound as though these themes are a natural part of this music. He receives a seal of approval from me.

You can also still read my breakdown of last year’s Mercury Prize winner, Dave, here: https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2019/09/21/mercury-prize-2019-special-edition-dave-streatham/

Thank you very much for reading my Mercury Prize Special Edition post! It was a good one, right? Do not forget that I’ll be back for another special blog post tomorrow with a new weekly installment in our Scuzz Sundays series, where we have an in-depth listen back to an ancient relic of the Emo-Rock and the Pop-Punk genres, released between the late-1990’s and the mid-00’s, to see if it holds up in the present times! 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/

Today’s Track: JW Francis – “New York”

Those New York city folk certainly love a steaming hot cup of Joe. It’s new post time…

Good Morning! I am Jacob Braybrooke and, as always, I’m writing up your daily post on the blog, because it is routinely my day-to-day pleasure to write about a different piece of music every day! Suffice to say, I don’t think J.W. Francis, a NYC-based indie singer-songwriter signed to Sunday Best Recordings, is the kind of artist to really take himself dead seriously. Francis describes himself as “a bedroom recording artist who writes musical diaries about living with his best friend in New York City.” He has been ramping up some popularity in recent months with listeners of BBC Radio 6Music and Dudlab with “New York”, the lead single from his forthcoming debut album, “We Share A Similar Joy”, which is set for a release in a few months time, on November 6th via Sunday Best Recordings. After a recent string of consistently lo-fi, upbeat Indie Pop-Rock singles and EP’s, the debut record will arrive to be as highly awaited by the diverse Internet Music Community. Speaking on “New York”, Francis said via press release: “I’m a licensed tour guide of NYC. This place has taught me so much. I wanted to write an homage, but also express how I feel, which is mostly contained in the first line of the song ‘I’ll sleep when dead’. This song is an ode to the city I live in. It’s about feeling frustration but also inspiration.” Let’s take a tour of “New York” with JW below.

In what feels like the USA’s answer to UK christmas classic “The Snowman”, JW Francis delivers an amusingly appropriate music video to complement the hazy, psychedelic atmosphere created by the funky, glossy guitar grooves of the track, as a product of itself. Beginning with the opening hook of “I sleep, I’m dead” to mark the arrival of the wonky, push-and-pull production of the bass guitar-driven refrains, Francis lays out a core melody that consistently shifts the leading pace of the track, and reveals new influences to the sound. He rhythmically quotes “It’s easier, I was on the up, I was with ya'” and “In the fall, you should call, you wrote a story” over a stumbling line of acoustic guitar riffs and a stuttering signature of Drum beats that sound frantically paced, but they never seem heavy or chaotic due to the mellow template of the subtly comforting and light-hearted warmth of Francis’ vocals. “I feel it in myself” marks a drastic key change, with the same guitar riffs of before feeling more subdued and relaxed, and the distracting Drum fragmentation is replaced by a steady-strummed signature which complements these slowed guitar riffs, before it gradually enters the fray again and slowly reverts back to the kinetic pacing that was previously withheld. While this track is part of an over-crowded Indie Rock market that may render this as forgettable by it’s commercial value, there’s no denying that “New York” is a track very fit for wishing it was summer in the approaching, wet and rainy autumn. It reflects the frantically moving hustle-and-bustle of it’s city’s lifestyle, yet the whimsical, ballard-driven elements and stop-and-start melodicism of the overall sound is enough to provide a break from the mundanity of a “typical life in NYC”, for me. This is a vibe that I’ve caught onto and it’s what makes this work so well.

Thank you for reading this post! As per usual, I will be back tomorrow, with an in-depth look at another emerging artist. This time, we’re heading closer to my home in the UK, as we catch a glimpse of an emerging indie singer-songwriter from Leeds who performs under his own seperate moniker. His new track was recently featured on John Kennedy’s X-Posure show on Radio X, and he played a large hometown gig with a slot on the BBC Introducing Stage at the mainstream-friendly Reading and Leeds Festival in 2017. 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/

Today’s Track: Drab City – “Troubled Girl”

Will this Problem Child find itself in a serious bit of Jeopardy? It’s time for a new post!

Good Morning! I am Jacob Braybrooke and I’m writing about your daily track on the blog, just like always, since it is my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! “Troubled Girl” is a recent-ish track that I sadly didn’t quite get the time to spotlight nearer to it’s release, back in April. Drab City is made up of US Witch-House producer Chris Dexter-Greenspan and Berlin-based producer Asia, who perform under the guises of Islamiq Grrls and oOoOO, respectively, for their Drab City project. The two started working together from a joint-album, “Faminine Mystique”, which was released in 2018. Their debut album under the Drab City name is “Good Songs For Bad People”, which they released on 12th June via the Bella Union label. Their sound has been likened to Portishead and Broadcast by Jude Rogers of The Guardian, as their dark palette incorporates elements of Dub, Alternative Hip-Hop, Dream-Pop, Pop-Punk, Art-Pop, Progressive Folk and Experimental Jazz into their lyrical themes of social alienation, violent revenge and spiritual salvation. Not much is known – as this is a very secretive project. Let’s stream “Troubled Girl” below.

“Troubled Girl” is a narrative-driven story piece about a misunderstood and belittled teenage girl’s dreams of her escape from a neglectful home life and her emotional dealing with her angst through a runaway trip. This is a classic pop trope, but it gets reconfigured with a ghostly sentimentality and the enigmatic presence of Greenspan and Asia as left-field producers. The track begins with a whispered vocal delivery, as Asia sings: “There was a troubled little girl/From a small troubled town/With nowhere to go” during a Spoken Word intro that builds to a mid-tempo drum groove that plods along to an airy vocal section, feeling laidback and mean-spirited in both measures. The slow Drum backing develops in interesting ways, with a doo-wop Trumpet melody and a Spanish guitar-laced chord riff that throws in a 1960’s Art-Pop aesthetic. The lyrics progress to a calmed stage, as Asia recites sections like: “Some day, no, I won’t come back/Some day, mother knows what others say” and “You don’t know your own/Whatever they will have” over the top of a muted production flair and some prickly, vintage Jazz qualities that balance the tone out. The mood is downbeat and hopeless, but there are glimmers of peace and hints of a content emotion buried within, especially towards the closing stages of the track. It sounds a little bit like a Shoegaze track, with a semblance of My Bloody Valentine and Pale Saints in the painted, cerebral instrumental qualities, yet it feels melodic enough to latch on contemporary Emo-Pop sounds closer to Billie Eilish or Dashboard Confessional. This will take longer for some listeners to connect with and it falls into a “niche” box, but I really like what I am hearing. There is a woozy Alt-Jazz sensibility which is curiously appealing, and the eclectic drum centric layout develops in subtle, but tasteful, ways.

Thank you very much for reading this post! I’ll be back tomorrow, as always promised, with an in-depth listen to “(The World) Outside My Door”, the new single by Brighton-based 4-piece Pop band The Magic Gang, taken from their second studio album, “Death Of The Party” which releases tomorrow, via Warner Bros Records. 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/

Today’s Track: Ghostpoet – “Concrete Pony”

Give up the Ghost – For this London rapper has a chilling presence! It’s new post time!

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke and I’m writing about 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! “Concrete Pony” is a recent track that I sadly didn’t get around to covering on the blog nearer to when it was a brand new release. It comes from Ghostpoet, the alias for black South London-based rapper, songwriter and producer Obaro Ejimiwe. Ejimiwe burst onto the scene in 2011 with his debut album, “Peanut Butter Blues & Melancholy Jam”, which was nominated for the Mercury Prize that year. Ejimiwe also earned a second Mercury Prize nomination for his third LP record, “Shedding Skin”, which was released in 2015. His style is difficult to box into a specific genre, but it’s predominantly a mix of dark Folktronica and Alternative Hip-Hop, although Ejimiwe used the tagline “I am not Hip-Hop” to promote a live tour in 2018. His latest album, his fifth overall, was released on May 1st, under the title of “I Grow Tired But Dare Not Fall Asleep”, by the PIAS Recordings indie label. It gained positive critical acclaim and it reached #8 on the UK Independent Albums chart. Let’s have a listen to the album’s lead single, “Concrete Pony”, below.

Ejimiwe explained, via a press statement, that “Concrete Pony” is a reflective piece which deals with how, as a society, “We seem to have everything and nothing at all. Infinite possibilities and choices galore, but we seem set in stone”, finishing: “Oblivious to the storm clouds in the distance”, conveying an observational style to the lyrics, and allowing potential for a diverse pattern of music influences. Ejimiwe uses a repeating “Ohh, yeah” refrain to build a somewhat melodic structure around the brooding, cold core sound. A shifting, distorted synth intro leads into cerebral keyboard melodies, and he croons: “Thoughts on a cigarette pack, oh yeah, oh yeah” and “Don’t text me nothing I’m gone, oh yeah, oh yeah” over a sublime piano section, with keys that twinkle and sparkle, contrasting the cerebral and bleak lyricism. There is a slight raise of tempo in the chorus, where Ejimiwe recites: “Fade to black and credits roll, Find the financers” and “Whispers on Twitter feed, no lie, no die”, before a “There Is Nothing” refrain which runs through each line of the chorus. These vocal sections are delivered other the top of whistling Harmonica arrangements, fluttering string sections and dark synth work. A cowbell comes into play in the Post-Bridge, adding a light sense of wit and irony because it sounds more upbeat and driven by melody. “Concrete Pony” isn’t likely to get mainstream attention, but it was doing the rounds on BBC Radio 6Music a little bit earlier in the year, however. The sound is challenging, but intellectually stimulating. There is an overarching Spoken Word format that interests me, with the very slight hip-hop beats in tow. The lyrics are poetic, and the themes are complex, yet relevant. All in all, I think it’s more suited to cosy winter listening rather than a summer release. However, it’s excellent. Deep and ironic, but it feels percussive enough to hook casual listeners in. This is a piece of art. If nothing else, the name alone warrants some good exposure – That’s Concrete Pony!

Thank you very much for reading this post! As usual, I’ll be back tomorrow, with an in-depth look at the latest single from a recent signing to the Bella Union record label. It comes from a female rock songwriter and musician, also from London, who is also the lead vocalist of the British indie band The Duke Spirit! If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when each new post is up and like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime

Today’s Track: The Flaming Lips – “My Religion Is You”

The Flaming Lips are back! Will they leave you burning with desire? It’s new post time!

Top O’ The Weekend to you, I’m Jacob Braybrooke and I’m writing about your daily track on the blog, because it is always my day-to-day pleasure to write about a different piece of music every day! Always a band to make a meaningful statement, The Flaming Lips have decided to go patriotic for the sixteenth album of their established, storied career. “American Head” is set for release on September 11, 2020, via Warner Bros. Records in the US and via Bella Union Records in the UK. This upcoming full-length release from the experimental art rock project, who were placed on Q Magazine’s list of the “50 Bands You Need To See Before You Die” poll in 2002, is “based on a feeling”, according to the 7-piece group’s front-man Wayne Coyne, who says: “A feeling that, I think, can only be expressed through music and songs”. He continues: “Mother’s sacrifice, Father’s intensity, Brother’s insanity, Sister’s rebellion… I can’t quite put it into words”… I’ll leave the meaning of that down to you for interpretation. Let’s have a listen to the latest single – “My Religion Is You” – below.

Paired with the chilling music video that sees Wayne Coyne clutching giant Roses next to a prairie bonfire, the band largely explore God above Country as Coyne murmurs through a series of lyrics about religions, in a psych-folk ballad sense, shrugging them off as the downbeat acoustic folk instrumental slowly increases into an Acid-shaded falsetto that slightly resembles Pop. He hums: “Yeah Budda’s cool and you’re no fool, To believe anything, You need” and “If Hari Krishna, Maybe it’s the thing for you, it’s cool”, over the top of sampled string melodies that form in the centre of a psychedelic swing that’s led by a synthesized bass drums, with warm acoustic guitar strums that shape the two verses, but they fade away in the electronic-led chorus. I can detect a sense of unity despite differing beliefs in the post-bridge, where Coyne adds: “If being a Christian is your thing/Then own it, friend”, before a sweeping chorus section where he sings: “I don’t need no religion/You’re all I need/You’re the thing I believe in/Nothing else is true”, layered above soft bass guitar strums, before he concludes: “My religion is you”, repeating the line over the three-line sequence. The track has a mournful, yet warm, tone, and the fairly off-kilter psych-pop instrumentals blend well with the lighter, acoustic guitar-driven opening sections to create a track which, lyrically, is a plea for focused universal love, which is suitable for a time where loads of political groups feel divided, and most of us are still effectively under house arrest. There’s an element of humor to it, with the quirky lyrics to balance the brutality out. Although The Flaming Lips are taking the similar creative approach to The Killers’ “Caution”, where it sounds more like a classic Flaming Lips track than an innovative creative breakthrough for the band, their messages are heartwarming on this track, and it’s a well-structured piece that artfully discusses what it means to believe in love.

Thank you for reading this post! In regards to #BlackLivesMatter, we endorse the peaceful protests on One Track At A Time. Please go and check your local area for good charity causes that help those directly affected by racism and injustice. I’ll be back tomorrow with your brand new weekly edition of Scuzz Sundays the day of the week where we have a look back at an emo-rock or pop-punk classic from between the late 1990’s- mid 2000’s to see if it holds up to modern standards! If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when each new post is up and like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime