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Beth Jeans Houghton & The Hooves of Destiny &...
Yours Truly, Cellophane Nose, really is as strange as it sounds. It fuses operatic vocals, with time changes and strange stories, culminating in a diverse and yet ultimately engaging offering. It’s odd, in the same way Regina Spektor’s early work was, which though at times leaves you wondering what on earth is going on, in the end only seems to draw you in more. It’s...
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Gretchen Peters – Hello Cruel World
It’s no secret that Gretchen Peters’ success since the late 1980s has come mainly in the form of songwriting credits. Martina McBride, Bryan Adams and Faith Hill have all enjoyed far more success as recording artists by her pen than she has. Not that, as she tells it, this was accidental – Peters wanted her songs to be heard and worried that she wouldn’t be accepted as a...
Read MoreNanci Griffith – Intersection
Nanci Griffith once sang that “no one ever knows the heart of anyone else”. Nevertheless, 20 albums in and we seem to be getting close. Intersection is deeply personal, finding this much celebrated singer-songwriter once again on top form, although fans shouldn’t expect the quiet contemplation of old. Griffith describes herself as being at a musical crossroads and the result...
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First Aid Kit – The Lion’s Roar
Listening to First Aid Kit is always a slightly bizarre experience. Music by the Soderberg sisters is so irrevocably of another era that it is very easy to forget this is music by two very young Swedish girls. Like the group’s previous releases, The Lion’s Roar is awash with country folk influences from Gram Parsons to Fleetwood Mac, and each track (and indeed the girl’s...
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Foxes! – Foxes!
Today sees the release of Brighton based four piece Foxes! self titled debut album. Husband and wife duo, Adam and Kayla Bell, team up with Alan Grice (bass and keyboard) and Matt Twaites (guitar and Keyboard) to produce a sound more sugary than a sweet shop. It’s an album of infantile whimsy, charming but an acquired taste. Aisle No. 3 is as soft and cuddly as a teddy...
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Vardo & The Boss EP
You’d forgive me for thinking Colchester based four-piece Vardo & The Boss were a humble covers band based on a trawl of their Youtube videos. Whilst I particularly enjoyed the Price Tag vs Halo mash-up first hand when I saw them perform a support slot for Kate Miller-Heidke at The Water Rats last year, their debut EP sees me stand corrected on my original assumption. You...
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Frank Turner – The Second Three Years
This coming week Frank Turner’s new album The Second Three Years will be available for purchase or download. To say it is a new release is somewhat misleading as the album is a collection of the songs he has recorded over the past few years. However, what could be misconstrued by the more cynical among us as an attempt to squelch more money from fans by repackaging a selection of...
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The Twilight Sad – No One Can Ever Know
Scottish band The Twilight Sad’s third album No One Can Ever Know has been rather a long time coming – their last record, Forget the Night Ahead was released back in 2009. Following the departure of founding bass player Craig Orzel, the band have said their new record would head in a different direction, with guitarist Andy Macfarlane describing their new songs as “sparser...
Read MorePosted by Nichola Eastwood | 0 comments
Alphabet Backwards – British Explorer EP
British Explorer is the three track EP from Oxford hailing five piece Alphabet Backwards. There’s been no small amount of attention relished on this group, with the likes of Cerys Matthews and Steve Lamacq lending their support to the bands brand of sunshine infused pop. British Explorer should serve as a tantalising sample of the sugary delights this quintet can produce. ...
Read MorePosted by Jo Cox | 0 comments
Thea Gilmore & Sandy Denny – Don’t St...
I’m afraid this review must start with a note of confession. I have had this album in my CD player, on my iPod, sat on my desk since late October and only now, at the end of December, do I find myself finally writing about it as I had agreed. Procrastination in response to a writing task is nothing new or unique, I’d much rather be pointing a camera at someone than...
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